Wednesday, February 24, 2016

#Likes was performed on Saturday but didn't live up to its name as far as the adjudicator was concerned.  I thought too that the applause was polite rather than enthusiastic so the audience may have shared his opinion.  Disappointment reigned supreme until dissolved in alcohol.

Endgame at the Citz on the other hand was greeted with lots of applause.  It exhibited what might be thought of as contradictions.  It was both entertaining and incomprehensible.  I sought understanding in the reviews but found none.

Incomprehensibility was the order of the day though.  I was going on from Glasgow to a jazz event in Kirkcaldy before returning to Edinburgh but rail ticket pricing meant that I would save £10 by going back to Edinburgh before setting out for Kirkcaldy.  So I did.

The jazz was good.  Vocalist and fiddler Seonaid Aitken fronts a group called Rose Room who were joined by saxophonist Konrad Wiszniewski and the Capella String Quartet and played a mixture of great tunes from Django Reinhardt's Paris and from the Great American Songbook.

Amongst great Russian piano concertos one of the best known, thanks to its prominence on the soundtrack of Brief Encounter, is Rachmaninov's 2nd which was given a rousing airing in the Usher Hall by Boris Giltburg with the RSNO.  He's back with them this week to bash through Rachmaninov's 3rd which I'm sure will be equally exciting.

In between those two giant concertos the RSNO played the pretty gigantic Symphony No. 1 by Vaughan Williams, known as A Sea Symphony.  There must have been over 100 musicians on stage and I counted a choir of around 130.  Together with baritone and soprano soloists those forces created wonderful music.  I can't say that it particularly brought the sea to my mind but I thoroughly enjoyed the noise and it somewhat dwarfed Debussy's La Mer which was presented in the same programme.

Back in the land of incomprehensibility, until you applied a little thought to it was the sub-prime mortgage and banking fiasco which was ably and entertainingly explained and illuminated through the lives of a number of participants in the movie The Big Short.  The film or the book it came from should be part of the school curriculum to help kids get wise to the big bad world of money.    

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