The New Zealand Symphony Orchestra must be extremely happy with the good-sized audience on Friday for the first of its 2013 subscription series.
Dvorak's Cello Concerto would have been a major contributing factor, along with Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances; however, the concert's carefully chosen title, Echoes of Home, resonated from the very first piece of the evening, written by New Zealand composer Larry Pruden.
The NZSO strings gave Pruden's 1944 Soliloquy an expansive reading, with conductor Pietari Inkinen bringing the same sweep that we expect when he takes on Mahler.
Pruden, who wrote some particularly perceptive programme notes for the NZSO when it played Mahler back in the 1970s, would have been heartened to hear the players luxuriating in his lush harmonies, and thrilled when the violins soared from a forest of orchestral tremolos.