Contemporary classical music is happening in all manner of unexpected venues in London at the moment, from Peckham car parks to pubs. But it isn't just getting edgier – it's also getting more respectable, if last night's suave affair in the Royal Albert Hall's Elgar Room is anything to go by. Set in a relaxed, up-market bar lounge area with the performers having to squeeze their way past beer-sipping patrons to get to the stage, all that separated this recital from a debonair evening of light jazz was a rather reverential, attentive atmosphere and some intense lighting. Oh, and the music.
In this recital, soloists from the London Contemporary Orchestra presented a range of solo pieces written in the last fifty years or so. All were played with technical excellence and a real sense of engagement, which turned the evening into as intimate and personal an event as its setting suggested – even if a couple of the pieces veered into more austere territory than I was quite prepared for.
The first piece was Luciano Berio's Sequenza IXa for clarinet. This is one of the calmer entries in Berio's legendarily difficult series of solo Sequenze; though still a vigorous technical workout, it lacks the manic edge of some of the others, and in the assured hands of Scott Lygate it had a light, conversational air. As impressive as any of the passagework-style virtuosity was Lygate's control of tone, and most impressive of all was some wonderfully controlled soft playing, including the gentlest of gentle endings.
The atmosphere of easygoing, chatty virtuosity thus established was built on in Antoine Françoise's two piano solos, Thomas Adès' Darknesse Visible and Jonathan Harvey's Homage to Cage, à Chopin (und Ligeti ist auch dabei). The former is a beautiful showpiece, all about texture and registral shifts, raptly recasting a lute song by John Dowland into an excitable contemporary idiom. The Harvey piece is also based on another composition – in this case the finale of Chopin's third piano sonata – and to complicate matters its title is something of a contemporary music in-joke, which references György Ligeti's piece Selbstporträt mit Reich und Riley (und Chopin ist auch dabei). However cliquey its name, though, it's a thrilling listen which feeds the Chopin material through a piano prepared with the same configuration of screws and other things on the strings as John Cage's Sonatas and Interludes. Françoise handled both of these testing works fantastically, and with a real sense of enthusiasm.