Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra promised Russian Fire on Thursday and the promise was delivered. Rimsky-Korsakov's Sadko is unlikely to grace our opera stages any time soon, but the composer obligingly compressed its fanciful fairy tale into a 12-minute orchestral "musical tableau" which opened the concert.
The Russian took pains to acknowledge the influences of all his contemporaries on this music, but today we're more likely to hear premonitions of his pupil Stravinsky - especially when Eckehard Stier swept the orchestra towards a shattering chord that could have come from Sacre.
Shostakovich's First Violin Concerto is no easy listen.
Written during what must have seemed an eternal Stalinist winter, its mournful melodies sear and its romps are triple-edged.
Alina Ibragimova was an inspired soloist; her poignant lines not afraid to test the limits of audibility in the opening Nocturne, fearless as the orchestra stalked around her.