RSNO cellist Peter Hunt's pre-concert talk began with a reading from Salman Rushhdie's novel, The Ground Beneath Her Feet. This reworking of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, was the inspiration for Open Ground by Russian-born (now Sweden-based) composer Victoria Borisova-Ollas. The novel's principal character, Vina Aspara, is caught up in an earthquake in Mexico. The complete work, a staged performance for orchestra, singers and narrator, also contains rock trio and harp. The 2006 première featured a film directed by Mike Figgis.
With so many elements missing, you might expect this 10-minute extract to be a pale shadow of the 80-minute original. The impression was quite the opposite. Scored for full orchestra, with four percussionists and piano, the piece begins extremely quietly but very quickly reaches the opposite end of the dynamic spectrum. Borisova-Ollas' depiction of the earthquake prompted me to consider the parallels between architecture in music and construction. In both cases, movement in the foundations soon causes instability. At this point, I became very aware of live music's ability to let the eyes inform the ears. The sight of so many left arms scurrying up and down the necks of cellos and double basses must surely have brought this acoustic tremor to everyone's attention. But what of the musical language? The composer herself describes her music as "a healthy blend of everything." This piece was certainly tonal and very cinematic. Some of the wonderfully played trumpet moments could have been be mistaken for Spielberg's composer of choice, John Williams. One of the most atmospheric moments was a 'scene' depicting stretcher-bearers retrieving bodies from the rubble. Judicious use of tubular bells, and their solemn refusal to blend exactly with the attendant harmonies, hinted at other more permanent realms - perhaps, given the literary inspiration, below ground.
Anthony Bateman's excellent programme notes described Schumann's ambition to rescue the piano concerto from being "a shallow virtuoso showpiece with the orchestra relegated to the status of near-passive bystander." In his Piano Concerto in A minor, Op 54, while not eschewing solo virtuosity, he certainly employed a sustained, homogeneous musical argument between soloist and orchestra. This was achieved partly through a series of exchanges between pianist and orchestra - particularly woodwind. Moreover, at one point in the second movement, the soloist assumes an accompanying role while the cellos enjoy the theme of the moment.
Soloist Barry Douglas was ideally qualified for such a piece. One of very few non-Russian winners of the Tchaikovsky Medal, he is a virtuoso player. As director of Camerata Ireland, he is no stranger to a holistic view of musical preparation and performance. His solo skills shone in the first movement's extended cadenza which begins with reflective counterpoint and passes through a more frenzied harmonic passage before settling into the final, quiet trills which invite the orchestra to rejoin. Douglas' more collegiate skills were best heard in musical conversations with the excellent Stephane Rancourt (oboe), John Cushing (clarinet) and Katherine Bryan (flute). This was a supremely musical performance which the audience seemed to enjoy enormously. Barry Douglas, his long hair and height reminiscent of Schumann, looked touch by this warm reaction to the performance.