Music

RSNO Christmas Concert

Perth Concert Hall

Keith Bruce

four stars

EVERYONE celebrates Christmas in their own way. Only half of the double basses in the Royal Scottish National Orchestra could muster the joie de vivre to put on a Santa hat for the second half at the first of five Yuletide performances across the country. Over at the Second Violins, on the other hand, the collective approach to the dressing-up was that a thing worth do-ing is worth overdoing.

Ever-inventive costuming is one thread linking this year’s Christmas Con-certs with the legacy of Christopher Bell, the RSNO Chorus-master previ-ously on the podium and an ebullient master of ceremonies. With his depar-ture to trans-Atlantic pastures new, another approach to this perennial fa-vourite was required. It comes in the shape of a lively conductor of huge choral experience in Matthew Hamilton, and presenter Jamie MacDougall, overcoming a seasonal lurgy to be a singing emcee.

The other common ingredients are the RSNO Chorus and the screening of the animation of Raymond Briggs’ story The Snowman with the orchestra playing Howard Blake’s music. Junior Chorus treble Cameron Davies sings Walking in the Air, and the film looked to be in a crisp new print, with much of its joy being in those moments not covered by MacDougall’s narration when the score reflects “reaction shots” and other colourful details silently visible above the musicians.

The senior Chorus’s music is quite a bold selection this year, culminating in the traditional, but obscure here, traditional Spanish dance-carol Esta No-che. Tavener’s The Lamb is a contemporary a cappella classic which begins very quietly, and although it worked in the acoustic of Perth might struggle in Dundee’s Caird and Edinburgh’s Usher Halls. Tom Cunningham’s For Unto Us A Child Is Born is also modern, utilising Handel’s phrasing of the text from Isaiah that Charles Jennens supplied for Messiah, but with a new mel-ody, leaving O Holy Night as the only familiar carol before the mass sing-along of The Twelve Days of Christmas (with actions) and Hark the Herald Sing.