Any chamber music festival that kicks off with Czech genius Martinů’s Parisian jeu d’esprit ballet-sextet La revue de cuisine and ends its first concert with Saint-Saëns’s glory of a Septet for trumpet, piano and strings is likely to be a winner. This one was. It transpires that this year’s curator Kathryn Stott is not only a remarkable pianist but also an inspired programmer, bringing to the 10 players of Ensemble 360, core of the fabulously enterprising Music in the Round, an unfamiliar repertoire and special guests with whom they made sparks fly.
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Stott’s carefully-planned turning point came in Beethoven’s C sharp minor Sonata … The reason for its placement was that Shostakovich quotes or adapts fragments from the famous first movement in the last music he ever composed, the Viola Sonata of 1975.
Ensemble 360’s superb viola player, Rachel Roberts, gave a true collaboration with [Tim] Horton which went deep and meditative, as it must, in the final Adagio.
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