Romanian soloist Alexandra Dariescu shone during her appearance with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra. Photo / Marco Borggreve
Launching a new season with the first of its Great Classics concerts, Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra presented a rousing if mostly familiar selection of Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky and Mussorgsky, under the banner Colours of Russia.
Speaking from the stage, chief executive Barbara Glaser was quick to bring up the recent struggles of
our country's only classical music radio network. Her "very extra special welcome to our audience all around New Zealand", received a spontaneous roar of approval from the hall.
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While the opportunity to set off a new year with a local composer was missed, Shostakovich's Festive Overture was an agreeable diversion, exuding all the fun of the circus, without any of the composer's ironic subtexts. Giordano Bellincampi fashioned a trim romp out of it with spectacularly sonorous brass, sparkling woodwind, soaring violins and tasty percussive seasoning.
It is difficult to resist the visceral appeal of that hardiest of warhorses, Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto, especially when it proved a brilliant showcase for Romanian soloist Alexandra Dariescu.