

SCO & Francois Leleux, Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh ****
After some sizeable stage shifting, a ten-strong wind ensemble, plus cello and bass, assembled for Dvořák’s gruff, rustic D minor Serenade, in what ended up a surprisingly aristocratic account. It was exquisitely balanced and full of rhythmic suppleness, with a mischievous scamper to the furiant section of its minuet, and some beautifully caressing duetting between Leleux as lead oboe and SCO principal clarinet Maximiliano Martín. If Leleux slightly rounded off the work’s rawer edges and bucolic charm, he made up for it with sheer sonic beauty, and his bounding, breathless finale confirmed the piece’s irresistible sense of fun.
Things calmed slightly after the interval, for Brahms’s six-movement First Serenade, which brought the SCO winds and strings back together, but that only seemed fitting for this weightier piece. Unchallenging or not, Leleux’s trio of serenades charmed and delighted. - David Kettle