What qualities make for a good storyteller? Someone with a captivating voice to draw in listeners. Someone who makes eye contact. Someone who brings a story alive through vivid characterisation, be it humour, a hushed voice, an hypnotic phrase. It helps to have an interesting story to tell. Scheherazade had the very best, a thousand and one life-saving stories to entertain the sultan. Translated into music by Rimsky-Korsakov, it gave Elim Chan and the London Symphony Orchestra chance to flex their storytelling muscles. But pianist Alice Sara Ott also had tales to weave and proved the more engaging narrator.
Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto no. 1 in B flat minor is every inch as much the warhorse as Scheherazade, yet with Ott there is never a sense of routine. The bold sequence of opening chords were not thumped, but almost caressed. She has the most delicate touch, the first movement cadenza pirouetting with the grace of a music-box ballerina. Cohesive narrative was maintained through persuasively shaped phrasing. Eye contact with the woodwinds – and over-the-shoulder glances at the violins – teased out dialogues, especially in the central movement which took on the quality of intimate chamber music. She transformed the finale into a playful Scherzo, playing cat and mouse with the orchestra.
The LSO was not always as responsive. Climaxes tended towards the fierce and much of the brass playing was thunderous, Chan happy to let them off the leash when a little reining in was required. But there was refreshing clarity to Gareth Davies’ flute solo to open the Andantino semplice and many of the woodwind exchanges were sensitive, responding to Ott’s coaxing glances.