One of the delights of the Edinburgh Fringe is getting into venues you might pass by routinely all year and yet know nothing about. The Royal Over-Seas League in Princes Street was a case in point: it provided a charming boutique venue with a bar giving views of the Castle, Princes Street Gardens, and the street itself, busy with people at the start of this festival.
The Fringe programme billing for this early evening concert promised Scots songs from James Oswald, Haydn, Resphigi and James MacMillan, featuring mezzo-soprano Beth Mackay with Scottish players Paul Livingston on violin and Ian Watt on guitar. Apart from the Oswald, what we actually got was a completely different programme with soprano Ginny Wilson. Singers can get unwell and may be suddenly unable to sing: it comes with the territory, and audiences understand this. On this occasion, a completely different concert was offered with absolutely no explanation from anyone. It was particularly disappointing for those who came especially to hear the billed singer.
What should have been a concert featuring Beth Mackay became one that showcased young guitarist Ian Watt’s considerable talent. Scottish composer James Oswald (1710–69), who would eventually become chamber composer to King George III, published much Scottish traditional music and wrote Colin’s Kisses in the Baroque style. Watt provided perfect and positive accompaniment to Ginny Wilson’s clear soprano lines, lively and optimistic in the “Meeting Kiss”, and melancholic in the “Parting Kiss”. Paul Livingston interposed sensitive phrases on the violin between the verses.
Douze études pour guitare was commissioned by guitar virtuoso Andrés Segovia and written by Villa-Lobos when he was in Paris in 1929. Here, Watt played the final four études with lots of attention to detail, and plenty of variation in tone, from sweet-sounding notes near the fingerboard to harsher tones near the bridge. Even struggling with a bottom string which doggedly refused to stay in tune, this was a compelling and stylish bravura performance.