
The week in classical: Mary, Queen of Scots; Academy Symphony Orchestra/ Wilson; James MacMillan: Ordo Virtutum
In a move as plucky as it was, in some ways, baffling, English National Opera presented Mary, Queen of Scots in a modest semi-staging by director-designer Stewart Laing (woolly hats, anoraks, railings and a dismal, half-built frame marquee). Cast, chorus and orchestra, under the baton of Joana Carneiro, had mastered Musgrave's complex score and wordy text (the composer's own) to the highest standard. The regret was that this exhaustive effort, for whatever reasons of cost or nerve, resulted in only two performances – both sold out.
Making her ENO debut in the title role, the American soprano Heidi Stober gave a ferocious account of a power-hungry monarch determined to follow her own path when her drunken husband, Darnley (Rupert Charlesworth), half-brother James (Alex Otterburn) and the seedily rapacious Bothwell (John Findon) prove useless. After the slow explication of the first act – a full production might have clarified all the patrician comings and goings – the pace quickens. Intimate scenes have dramatic force. The noisy, roaring volleys of brass, keening woodwind and outbursts of orchestral menace grip the attention, gathering speed and volume towards the finale.
The 96-year-old composer, Edinburgh-born but living in America for more than half a century, had travelled to the UK for the occasion. Taking her bow, she was greeted by an ovation from the enthusiastic audience. Musgrave has managed to bypass the withering nullification of female composers prevalent for most of her career, admired and played if never having the limelight she deserves. An exact contemporary of Karlheinz Stockhausen (1928-2007), she harnessed her talent to deft instrumental writing when electronic experiment was monster king. She has lived long enough to see that taste has moved on, female composers released from perpetual anchorage and (nearly) properly valued. After this performance, a co-production with San Francisco Opera, she might see, too, that her own work will live on.
Lack of money, loss of morale, the effects of Brexit: these issues dog the lives of professional musicians, however determined they are to give their all as artists. At the Royal Academy of Music last week, a new generation of players, average age 20, demonstrated a can-do determination riven into every note they played. The intake at the RAM is still around 58% British, a number to monitor as UK music education continues to unravel. Fewer students come from Europe, post-Brexit, many from farther afield. Jonathan Freeman-Attwood, a wise and inspired principal of the academy as well as a practising musician, is fervent in his belief that a positive mantra can bring about change. He instils this in his students and will not countenance compromise. Nor, too, will the conductor John Wilson, who holds the Henry Wood chair in conducting at the academy.
After working together for an intensive week, six hours a day, Wilson and the Academy Symphony Orchestra gave an outstanding concert of Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto and a suite from Prokofiev's ballet Romeo and Juliet. One aspect of the ensemble was immediately clear: the quality of the string sound. This defining section of any orchestra is the hardest in which to achieve blend and expressivity: 50 or so players, with instruments of different quality, using different fingerings or bowing techniques, all able to play the notes but doing it their own way. Wilson, known for his meticulous scrutiny of detail, has introduced them to the sacred principle, which sounds easy enough, of listening. The results were formidable.
There was risk here too. The Tchaikovsky, with a first-year student from Texas, 18-year old Adriana Bec, the virtuosic soloist, was a wild, hair-raising ride, Bec clearly revelling in the chance to pour her energy into a Stradivarius, on loan to her from the academy. The strength of her playing prompted me to ponder the weight of a violin bow: average 60 grams, about the same as an egg. Bec made it at once granite-like and featherlight. She still has three years of study left. Watch for the name.
A short word, because if I get going on Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) it may turn out long, on a work inspired by her morality play Ordo Virtutum (Order of the Virtues). James MacMillan has created a choral drama, luminous, contrapuntal and ecstatic, out of the German nun-mystic's 12th-century chant. The BBC Singers and National Youth Voices conducted by Sofi Jeannin, with percussionist Andrew Barclay adding sonic colour, gave the UK premiere at Milton Court. Humility, chastity and the rest of the heavenly virtues conquer the Devil. You'd better believe it. Hear it on BBC Sounds and live in hope.
(Star ratings) out of five
Mary, Queen of Scots ★★★★
Academy Symphony Orchestra/Wilson ★★★★
James MacMillan: Ordo Virtutum ★★★★
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
14 minutes ago
- Scotsman
My Festival – Lorna Rose Treen: 'I play everything from a trucker to a personal detective'
Character comedian Lorna Rose Treen is bringing a surreal show to the Fringe in 2025. We caught up with her to chat all things comedy and Fringe. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... There are thousands of shows in Edinburgh this month. Please tell us why we should come and see yours. 24 Hour Diner People is a character comedy show entirely set in an out-of-time, out-of-place 'American' diner. It's ridiculous and surreal and silly and like a live cartoon. I play everything from a trucker with really long arms, to a personal detective hiding in strange places. It's dark and weird and whimsical and stupid. Who or what was the biggest inspiration for your show? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad So many TV shows and films are set in diners, and often my characters really come from skewering how women, particularly, are portrayed on screen. I've been watching a lot of genre-themed stuff to incorporate as much of the parody into the show as possible. So for this show: Twin Peaks, Mystic Pizza (thanks to a tip off from Lola Rose Maxwell), Gilmore Girls, Cheers, Saved by the Bell. It's been a real pleasure to mine that nostalgic fake American TV hole. What's the best review you've ever had, and the worst? Being a character comedian around London can be very humbling. Lugging props about, having make-up all over your face on the way home, etc. In this show, I use a pair of really long arms. I was commuting to a gig with my arms, but my bag broke so I had to carry my arms just in my arms. I was trying to find a seat on the Lizzy line when a seven-year-old pointed at them, and said to his dad. 'Long arms! Now that is funny.' Cheered me up about all the other more judgmental looks I was getting. Who or what are you most excited about seeing this year? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I'm excited to see Ada and Bron, Alice Cockayne, Priya Hall, Lucy Pearman, John Tothill, Cabbage the Clown and the man who works in Che's chippy. Who do you most like spending time with in Edinburgh? Three Norwegian clowns called Marie, Anne Marie, and Amanda. They are so wholesome and whimsical and stupid. Also, Jonathan Oldfield, my director - he chills me out. How anyone manages to do a show without a director blows my mind! I urge you to start using one, it's like a weighted blanket for your brain. Tell us something about you that would surprise people. I've failed my driving test five times and still haven't passed. I imagine this will surprise people because I give off an air of coordination and patience. Thanks for the interview! We'd like to buy you a drink. Where are we going and what are we drinking? Black Medicine. Oat flat white.


Scotsman
14 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Love is Blind: UK couples: where are Netflix couples now?
Fans might be wondering where the couples from Love is Blind: UK are now 💕📺 Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Love is Blind: UK made its debut on Netflix in August 2024. Audiences fell in love with the couples on the show - and some tied the knot. Fast forward a year and where are the couples now? It is almost time for Love is Blind: UK to return for a new season. The hit show will be welcoming a new group of participants into the pods this week. Netflix has confirmed the exact time that the second series will start. Just like the first set of episodes, it will be released over three weeks. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But before the latest episodes arrive, it is time to look back on the class of 2024. Here's all you need to know: Where are the Love is Blind: UK season 1 couples now? Jasmine from Love is Blind: UK series 1 | Netflix It has been a year since the British version of the hit Netflix dating show first rocked our world. Hosts Matt and Emma Willis will very soon be welcoming a whole fresh batch of participants to take part in the social experiment. However, before we meet all the new faces for the second series, it is time to catch-up on the original pairs from season one. Netflix has revealed where the 2024 couples are now and if they are still together: Jasmine and Bobby - Still Together Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Jasmine and Bobby from Love is Blind: UK are still together | Netflix Having shown each other the 'good, bad, and the ugly' in the pods, Jasmine and Bobby came out of the experiment as a couple. They got married at the end of the first season. Since audiences last saw them, Jasmine and Bobby have moved in together and recently announced that they are expecting their first child. They will become parents later in the year - congrats! Nicole and Benaiah - Still Together Nicole and Benaiah from Love is Blind: UK season 1 are still together | Netflix After being tested during the process, Love is Blind: UK couple Nicole and Benaiah tied the knot in the season one finale. Benaiah told Tudum: 'I'm very comfortable and confident in us.' The couple are still married and are hoping to have another wedding, this time with Benaiah's family. He explained: 'It's important for me to celebrate our marriage and the journey we've been through and where we are now.' Sabrina and Steven - Not Together Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Sabrina and Steven from Love is Blind: UK are no longer together. | Netflix Despite tying the knot in Love is Blind: UK in series one finale, unfortunately Sabrina and Steven are no longer together. They are in the process of getting the marriage annulled, Tudum says. Sabrina said: 'Obviously life is very different than I imagined it was going to be after the show, so it's been a bit of a roller coaster. I was rooting for us, too.' The second season of Love is Blind: UK will start on Netflix on Wednesday, August 13. It will be broadcast across three weeks. If you love TV, check out our Screen Babble podcast to get the latest in TV and film.


Scotsman
31 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh Fringe comedy reviews: Zainab Johnson Charlie Mulliner
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Zainab Johnson: Toxically Optimistic ★★★★ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 24 August Zainab Johnson calls herself 'toxically optimistic', the legacy, perhaps, of a terrible accident she suffered as a teenager, hospitalising her for a year but leaving her relatively unscathed. That's the context for her disclosing she's bought a gun. The US stand-up may be debuting at the Fringe. But she's performed in Europe enough to appreciate the frisson of discomfort such a statement might cause in these isles. As a tall, elegant, black, Muslim woman, she's nobody's image of a stereotypical, pistol-packing American. And her relationship with the weapon is complicated. For one thing, it's a talking point on dates. Although she entertains worst-case scenarios, arguing with amusing but persuasive logic about the precautions she takes before embarking on these liaisons, her optimism tells her that even if there isn't a romantic spark, she'll at least get some stories. And so it proves. Johnson is open to matching with 'short kings'. But she is tender while letting down those who don't interest her, reasoning 'you gotta keep the nice ones nice', performing a patriotic service for American women by gently sending them back on their way. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It was a male friend who convinced her to get the gun, his advice to her as a single woman living alone only making her feel more in peril. Johnson is wise about the various power relations in play here. So she and us can only guiltily enjoy the sass that she wields when she acquires the shooter. The final third of this smoothly related, consistently compelling hour seems to take a leftfield turn, with Johnson recalling the bond she formed with an actual home invader, an opossum. However, prompted by the experience of another comic, there's justification for this tactic, with her demonstrating she can do anything she puts her mind to on stage. Jay Richardson Love Hunt ★★★★ Just the Tonic at The Caves (Venue 88) until 24 August A vivacious blend of character comedy and clowning, Charlie Mulliner's Love Hunt delightfully depicts yearning, desire and soul-searching in all its messy chaos. Her principal creation is Amber, a privileged but pitiable young woman. She's poured herself into a decade with Rob, an unfeeling, oblivious rugger bugger, who leaves her utterly distraught and desperate when he casts her aside. Relating their relationship in heartbreaking, unwitting testimony, unable to fully appreciate the wretchedness of their loveless procession through skiing holidays with well-to-do friends, the whirl of endless weddings and external pressure to tie the knot, Amber is a beautifully realised study in personal implosion. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Thanks to Mulliner's affecting, exquisitely pitched performance, you'll find yourself laughing hard at the character's romantic naivety, her commitment to conventional illusions of happiness, then sad and guilty for doing so. Never for too long though, because you're invested in Amber's recovery. And Mulliner intersperses her resurgence with various other, more outlandish characters. The first of these is a wild-eyed nun, slavish in her commitment to rooting out lustful thoughts in the crowd, pelting hither and thither with a bloodhound's nose for sin, inhaling the reek of carnality as a vicarious turn-on. At the opposite end of the spectrum and indeed, the universe, is a lonely star, RSF32, hesitantly dipping its points into dating, its shy inhibition expressed in a winningly soft Welsh accent. A hardcore, antipodean personal trainer is maybe the least original of Mulliner's set, her commitment to the burn and ill-disguised mismanagement of her own issues approaching caricature. But then the vampiric femme fatale is a familiar archetype as well. And the comic imbues hers' with a viscerally gruesome horror. Entertainingly involving the audience, getting them on board to support her, Love Hunt is a fun, early afternoon diversion to gladden your heart and soul. Jay Richardson Trevor Lock: How to Drink a Glass of Water ★★★ Hoots @ The Apex (Venue 108) until 24 August We are asked to observe our fellow audience members closely at the start of the show and to compose a couple of lines of poetry. We will learn a lot about everyone in the room – where they are from, relationship status, even spiritual beliefs. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Lock, who is drinking a glass of water, asks a series of questions which divide the room, over and over again, into a myriad of different possibilities. Some of the questions are comic, some are intriguing, others are psychological and some are positively cosmic. It's an object lesson in the way comics capture our attention and analyse a room, but this time we are part of the process. It becomes quite dream-like as an experience. We are all the same, even if we have different points of view. We are an audience. Lock talks us through a few of the entries in an alternative dictionary he claims to be writing. And he suggests a plethora of alternative ways to configure a hipster restaurant. It's a strangely hypnotic show which reveals our common humanity by showing what separates us and what we have in common. The poems, which Lock reads out to us at the end, are surprisingly lovely. Claire Smith Tiff Stevenson: Post Coital ★★★ Hive 1 @ Monkey Barrel Comedy (Venue 313) until 24 August She might have mis-sold this show by giving it such a sexy title, particularly as it's taking place in one of Edinburgh's most notoriously smelly cellars. But Tiff Stevenson has a lot to get off her chest – and she's not going to let the sulphurous surroundings get in the way. Her subject is womanhood – and the expectations placed upon us as we age. In her youth, Tiff was a bit of a babe. It has to be said she's ageing very gracefully, but she's noticed that the world doesn't leap to attention for her in the same way it used to. Now she's fully in her power, but also starting to think about ageing, especially as she's concerned about her dad, who is living with dementia. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Tiff always has an interesting perspective on class, and she brings out some choice hypocrisy about the way women are treated depending on their accent and their social status. I loved her material about dementia, which was beautifully written and full of insight and compassion. I'd actually like to hear her talk about the subject for a full hour, particularly if it could take place in a fragrant, light-filled room. Claire Smith Robin Ince: The Universe and the Neurodiverse ★★ Gilded Balloon at the Museum (Venue 64) until 17 August Once a regular nerdy comic known as a lover of rare and obscure books, Robin Ince is now a popular broadcaster who brings a bit of levity to shows about science and hobnobs with the stars. The show starts well with some lovely photos Robin took on his morning walk around Arthur's Seat. There's some poetry, some half-arsed observations about art and science, rather a lot of name-dropping and far too many exhortations for all of us to 'Be Kind.' His audience, who he describes as mostly librarians and knitters, listen politely. Perhaps they are being kind. Claire Smith 50 Ways To Succeed at a Pointless Job ★★ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Hollywood at Laughing Horse @ City Cafe (Venue 85) until 24 August It is tricky to put one's finger on quite why this show fails to be funny, because the premise is good, some of the writing is not bad, and there is such a wellspring of ridiculous business jargon and methodology to draw on. But when the guy from the audience who wins the Pointless Bingo prize comes up at the end to give the bucket speech and wipes the floor with both performers, you realise that a comic needs to be more than someone who just says the occasional well-crafted comedy line.