Tonight’s The Rest is Noise programme, containing important pieces by British composers written in the 1990s, gave an impression that was perhaps one-sided, but still compelling. All pieces were rhythmically powerful, and the shining star of the evening was the percussion section, on which all four pieces relied heavily. The London Philharmonic Orchestra and Vladimir Jurowski were expert guides through these pieces, with Thomas Adès’ Asyla the high point.
Reversing the order in the first half of the concert, the LPO started with James MacMillan’s Veni, Veni, Emmanuel, a percussion concerto written in 1992 for the evening’s soloist, Evelyn Glennie. It is an exciting piece, full of wondrous rhythms and recurring melodies that become distorted yet remain instantly recognizable. Glennie’s performance was impressive yet the percussion completely overpowered the orchestra too often. In “Dance”, for example, you would expect the percussionist and orchestra to melt together into one organic whole, thereby making the music all the more persuasive, yet the strings were much too soft for this to come to fruition. The ending, with Glennie on tubular bells, was dramatic but lacked emotional impact, the music dying out without a lasting effect.
Julian Anderson’s The Stations of the Sun was another tremendously rhythmic piece. With many jazz-like elements and a significant amount of percussion, it was a satisfying follow-up to Veni, Veni, Emmanuel. Unfortunately, the strings of the LPO again seemed a bit too subdued, lacking intensity. Perhaps this is partly because of the music itself; despite all the seemingly exciting elements in the piece, they did not really add up to make a commanding whole.