Cargill, Yoshino, SCO, Ticciati, Usher Hall, Edinburgh

Chamber orchestra pushes boundaries with sinewy Mahler

“Mahler, with a chamber orchestra?” In his introduction to the Scottish Chamber Orchestra’s winter season brochure, principal conductor Robin Ticciati anticipates the reaction of an audience brought up to believe that a chamber orchestra leaves its comfort zone somewhere in the early 19th Century.

theartsdesk in Verbier: Festival with Fireworks

THEARTSDESK IN VERBIER Mozart and Mahler at a festival that's about so much more than just star-power

Mozart and Mahler at a festival that's about so much more than just star-power

Mahler’s Sixth Symphony is dominated by the doleful clang of cowbells. They are an other-worldly intrusion into an otherwise familiar musical scene – unless you happen to be in Verbier, that is, in which case they are just another everyday part of the aural landscape.

Prom 24: BBCSSO, Runnicles/Solemn Vigil of Commemoration, Westminster Abbey

PROM 24: BBCSSO, RUNNICLES/SOLEMN VIGIL OF COMMEMORATION, WESTMINSTER ABBEY Vaughan Wiliams and Mahler in the Albert Hall, while Purcell and Bach crown a sacred rite

Vaughan Williams and Mahler engaged as World War One laments, but Purcell and Bach crown solemnities

Despairing in the depths of the Second World War, Richard Strauss turned to Mozart’s string quintets as well as the complete works of Goethe for evidence that German culture still existed. Vaughan Williams might well have done the same for his native art during the so-called Great War in homaging the music of Thomas Tallis.

Prom 4: World Orchestra for Peace, Gergiev

PROM 4: WORLD ORCHESTRA FOR PEACE, GERGIEV  International orchestra brings the light of hope in a very dark week

International orchestra brings the light of hope in a very dark week

This was a rare outing by the World Orchestra for Peace, which has performed fewer than 20 concerts since the death of its founder Sir Georg Solti in 1997. UNESCO had designated this BBC Prom as "The 2014 Concert for Peace", the definite article implying a uniqueness which - according to rumour - is because concerts planned for Munich and Aix failed to get beyond the planning stage. It drew a respectable house to the Royal Albert Hall, which looked about three-quarters full.

theartsdesk Q&A: Conductor Robin Ticciati

THEARTSDESK Q&A: CONDUCTOR ROBIN TICCIATI Major new force in British music discusses adventures at Glyndebourne and in Scotland

Major new force in British music discusses adventures at Glyndebourne and in Scotland

Poised when I met him six weeks ago between 40th anniversary celebrations of  the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, of which he has been a shaping chief conductor for the past five years  and putting his new music directorship of Glyndebourne into action, Robin Ticciati hardly seemed like a man in positions of power, more an idealistic youth with a touch of the dreamer softening a powerful intellect.