Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

大象传媒 SSO - MacCunn, Chisholm, Spratt, MacMillan (part 2)

Conclusion of a concert for Commonwealth Day, with the 大象传媒 Scottish Symphony Orchestra under James MacMillan. Alasdair Spratt: Obsess. MacMillan: The Confession of Isobel Gowdie.

In a special Monday-night concert to mark Commonwealth Day, Glasgow -the home of this summer's Commonwealth Games, and formerly 'second city of the Empire'- hosts a concert of music which has its origins in the west of Scotland.

Live from City Halls in Glasgow
Presented by Jamie MacDougall

MacCunn: The Ship o' the Fiend
Chisholm: Piano Concerto No.2 (Hindustani)

8.20 Interval

8.40
Alasdair Spratt: Obsess
James MacMillan: The Confession of Isobel Gowdie

Danny Driver (piano)
大象传媒 Scottish Symphony Orchestra
James MacMillan (conductor)

The 大象传媒 Scottish Symphony Orchestra opens with a work by Hamish MacCunn. Born in 1868 in the town of Greenock, a significant Scottish port at the time, his dramatic overture "The Ship o' the Fiend" has sea-faring in mind, though not from a Scottish source, and concerning a vessel of a ghostly nature.
In the early Twentieth-Century composer Eric Chisholm was known as 'McBartok'. Although of Scottish origin he exercised a keen interest in a wide range of international folk music idioms. He spent much time living and researching in Cape Town South Africa, and his Piano Concerto No. 2 draws material from Hindustani themes and the concepts of raga. It is performed by Danny Driver.
Alasdair Spratt is a young composer who was born in Glasgow and his work "Obsess" for mixed ensemble -first heard in Manchester in 2003- is inspired by the idea of obsessive negative introspection.
As a composer and a conductor James MacMillan is one of the most significant international musicians to emerge from Scotland in recent years. This evening he concludes the programme with his own "The Confession of Isobel Gowdie", a work of passion and immediacy it draws inspiration from 'witchcraft' executions in Scotland during the Reformation, including the hysterical and sadistic burning-at-the-stake of the titular 'witch'. It is a dramatic and programmatic work: setting out to explore ideas of good and evil, persecution and cultural insecurity, and ultimately attempting to "capture the soul of Scotland in music.".

2 hours, 5 minutes

Last on

Mon 10 Mar 2014 20:40

Music Played

  • Commonwealth Day Concert part 1

    • Hamish MacCunn

      The Ship o' the Fiend - overture Op.5

      Conductor: James Macmillan. Performer: 大象传媒 Scottish S O.
    • Erik Chisholm

      Concerto no. 2 (Hindustani) for piano and orchestra

      Conductor: James Macmillan. Performer: Danny Driver. Performer: 大象传媒 Scottish S O.
  • Commonwealth Day Concert part 2

    • Alasdair Spratt

      Obsess for orchestra

      Conductor: Sir James MacMillan. Performer: 大象传媒 Scottish S O.
    • Sir James MacMillan

      The Confession of Isobel Gowdie for orchestra

      Conductor: Sir James MacMillan. Performer: 大象传媒 Scottish S O.

Credit

Role Contributor
Performer 大象传媒 Scottish Symphony Orchestra

Broadcast

  • Mon 10 Mar 2014 20:40

New Music on Radio 3

New Music on Radio 3

A chance to listen to recent broadcasts of new music - including premieres - on Radio 3.