THE TIMES 6 JANUARY 2004
Murray McLachlan
By Geoff Brown
Concert Wigmore Hall

 

HOW MANY fingers does Murray McLachlan have? Far more than 20. How else could he generate from those orderly rows of black-and-white keys the cascades, the whirlwinds, the Amazon forests of counterpoint?

Not only does this pianist come digitally enhanced, he also boasts a distinct taste for the unusual, the eccentric and neglected — not a taste that a mainstream career encourages. John Ogdon was another such explorer, and some of the composers McLachlan favours (Busoni, Ronald Stevenson) were Ogdon’s people too.

The Scottish-born composer Erik Chisholm has become a McLachlan specialty. Had he stayed in Britain teaching, organising ground-breaking concerts and composing (think Bartók with Scottish knobs on), Chisholm would probably be more widely regarded; but for most in this country he fell off the map when he moved to the University of Cape Town in 1945. The principal exhibit was a 38-minute, four-movement whopper of a piano sonata, successfully premiered in 1939 but subsequently lost from sight.

Bagpipe twirls kick the piece into life, leading into the pibroch melody An Riobain Dearg (The Red Ribbon), the work’s descriptive title. Chisholm favours chunky textures, expansive gestures and driving rhythms: no problems here for McLachlan, though I was glad when the pounding quietened for the moving third movement, a remembrance of June 1, 1939, when the submarine HMS Thetis sank during its maiden dive in Liverpool Bay, leaving 99 dead.

Wrapped around this exhilarating if ear-battering piece came music from Chisholm’s friends and peers. Here there were disappointments. Sorabji’s Fantasiettina of 1961, a birthday tribute to the poet Hugh McDiarmid, clogged up a couple of minutes with fortissimo snarls and perfumed wanderings; but since the last Sorabji piece London heard lasted five hours I suppose we got off lightly.

Stevenson’s A Threepenny Sonata, meanwhile, spent five minutes proving you could make ungainly music by combining Threepenny Opera tunes in counterpoint.

The glories lay elsewhere. Less force and more textural clarity might have polished McLachlan’s account of Busoni’s extraordinary Bach spin-off, the Fantasia Contrappunistica, though the performance remained exemplary for raw vigour. More memorable still was the Janácek sonata From the Street, commemorating a student protester’s death, in which McLachlan let the pain in the sounds reverberate.

It would be tough if every piano recital were like this, but you couldn’t ask for a more bracing musical start to the new year.

THE TIMES 6 JANUARY 2004
Murray McLachlan
By Geoff Brown
Concert
Wigmore Hall


 


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