The inaugural Bristol Proms are nearly over. Indeed, if you’re reading this any later than Saturday evening, they’ve been and gone. The festival, run by the Bristol Old Vic, has deliberately been unlike its London namesake. It has been on a much smaller scale and much more self-consciously edgy yet accessible (even if the Twitter-friendly hashtag the organisers insist on adding to the title is a bit much). The stage on the penultimate night was graced by Nicola Benedetti, in a concert that was as much about showmanship and an all-round creative experience as about music.
The theatre’s artistic director Tom Morris made a point of personally welcoming the audience and telling us we could have drinks and clap whenever we fancied. But there was very little applause during the music. This was because what was on stage was riveting. For starters, the first half was show-stopping. And secondly, before Benedetti appeared, a University of Bristol scientist was on hand to give us a lesson on vibration, from string theory to the motions of the universe. There were some curious pieces of equipment standing on the stage. They were the instruments of “danceroom Spectroscopy”, a technique created by one Dr David Glowacki, that splashes moving patterns onto a screen in response to performers’ movements. This was effectively choreographed and very entertaining. To a generation used to watching music videos in particular, an accompanying visualisation seems the most natural thing in the world. There will be those who call it a distraction, of course, and with a lesser player than Nicola Benedetti, it might be. But she was still the most impressive part of the evening.
Benedetti took time for a different sort of string theory, introducing what she was playing. It can be awkward when performers do this, but not in her case. Alone on stage, she seemed to enjoy the Spectroscopy show behind her instead of competing with it. Bach’s Chaconne from the Partita no. 2 in D minor was predictably arresting. This largest section of the second Partita is generally agreed to be a brilliant piece of composition that’s become a concert standalone in its own right. From the opening chords, Benedetti’s was a concentrated performance – not yet seeming comfortable, but no-one can blame her given the piece’s notorious difficulty. Her tone had a meaty edge, which warmed a bit in the instantly recognisable Paganini Caprice. Benedetti obviously knows this inside out and started to sneak glances to the projections behind her. Still, it was a pretty convincing performance. The audience nearly left by accident before Eugène Ysaÿe’s 1923 Sonata no. 5 in G major. A good thing they didn’t. From the simultaneous bowing and plucking near the start to the brisk double stops and runs of the ending, the two movements (“L’Auror” and “Danse rustique”) were sensitively brought to life.