The principal string players of Aurora Orchestra proved on Saturday evening that if they wished to take up chamber music full-time they would immediately vault into the front rank of chamber players. They were joined by the talented Swiss pianist Louis Schwizgebel in an elegant live-streamed concert from Kings Place that included a chamber version of Mozart's Piano Concerto no. 26, in D major, K.537 “Coronation”, Ravel's ravishing Piano Trio in A minor, and the premiere an Aurora-commissioned new work, Lucid, by Sasha Scott, winner of the 2019 BBC Proms Young Composer Competition.
The Mozart concerto, originally scored for solo piano with flute, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani (in D, A), and strings, was performed as chamber music in an arrangement by Ignaz Lachner for string quintet and solo piano. The imaginative scoring did not leave one wishing for winds and brass; the score was stripped to its essentials, played with elegance. Schwizgebel is a sensitive, colorful pianist. In the second movement, the first four repeated piano notes each had subtle differences in attack and color. There was unanimity of phrasing between pianist and strings throughout.
BBC Radio 3 veteran Tom Service was the presenter for the concert in what were apparently pre-recorded videos outside Kings Place. During the first break, he interviewed composer Sasha Scott about her new work, which she described as portraying those moments between wakefulness and sleep. The seven-minute work for string quartet and double bass progressed from quite harmonious passages, often with the first violin taking the lead, though more "confused" passages of short motifs piled upon each other, as if the brain is spinning with ever more data heading to slumber. Sometimes these motifs almost become melody, only to be stymied by other fragments. The musical shape-shifting morphs into a brief climax before calming by using string harmonics and a pianissimo end. The composer's description seemed accurately fulfilled in Aurora's performance.