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SUSAN NICKALLS
GUITARIST Simon Thacker is an uncompromising musical explorer, and for this
Inner Octaves programme, presented by ECAT, he blended Asian and Western musical
styles to great effect, particularly in the new commissions played by the
specially formed Nava Rasa Ensemble. Alongside Thacker this features the
Edinburgh Quartet, percussionist Iain Sandilands, double bassist Mario Caribe
and, giving the music its pulsating heartbeat, Indian carnatic violinist Jyotsna
Srikanth and tabla master Sarvar Sabri.
Nigel Osborne's The Birth of Naciteka is based on ten thaats, or scale patterns,
which correspond to different parts of the day. These were beautifully evoked in
this delicately layered and atmospheric work by the exotic keening of the
carnatic violin and ghostly sigh of the waterphone, an intriguing circular
instrument with tonal rods that emit an eerie resonance when bowed, or struck.
The guitar was used more as a solo instrument in Shirish Korde's Nada Ananda,
Ecstasy of Sound. Taking the raga Lalit as a foundation, Korde's lively,
episodic work was toe-tappingly rhythmic, paying homage to John McLaughlin's
1970s jazz-inspired Shakti ensemble. Thacker demonstrated his virtuosity with
some nimble fingerwork backed by the tight throb of the double bass and tabla.
The surprise of the evening was two Japanese dance-inspired gems for string
quartet written in the 1930s by John Blackwood McEwen, contrasting with Minoru
Miki's Nuori verso (A Young Sprout), the theme from the film The Realm of the
Senses, written for koto and transcribed for solo guitar.
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