What: Nikolai Demidenko
Where: Auckland Museum Auditorium
When: Sunday
Reviewer: William Dart
On Sunday, Nikolai Demidenko launched Auckland Museum's 2015 Fazioli International Piano Recital Series with a thoughtful and testing Chopin programme.
The Russian has played in this venue before and this, combined with some impressive concerto appearances with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, ensured a good, responsive audience.
Demidenko seemed determined to reveal the more explorative side of Chopin's music, opening with the late Polonaise-Fantasie. In a work that tempers exhilaration with mystery, he treated the leisurely introduction as a moody improvisation and, later, sculpted contrapuntal shadings from within the musical textures.
The B minor Sonata that followed had its problems, with recurrent slips in its opening Allegro maestoso and some bumps in the ride through the Scherzo. Demidenko's explanation, between movements, was the unsympathetic and distracting coloured lighting, which was turned off for the second half of the evening.
However, even with blurs, this man, with artistry and intelligence, showed how subtleties of pedalling, tempo and touch can lend cohesion to a sprawling first movement.