Every so often, Peter Scholes lifts an Auckland Chamber Orchestra concert to a new plateau through a stellar turn by the evening's soloist. On Sunday, Friedrich Gulda's Cello Concerto, a work idiosyncratic to the point of wacky, was the perfect vehicle for the
brilliant Santiago Canon Valencia.
Gulda's own admonition, "Whatever swings is good, whatever doesn't is bad, or at least surplus to requirements," energised all involved.
The orchestra - mainly brass and woodwind - went into celebration mode. The brass punched out riffs that could have slipped from a Lalo Schifrin TV theme while Shane Currey tore into his drum kit.
It was lederhosen and edelweiss time with the woodwind's yodelling Landler, and John Philip Sousa's spirit hovered over an uproarious oom-pah Finale.
For Valencia, it was like a workout in a musical gym, veering effortlessly through the treacherous lines of the Overture, firing away in almost demented moto perpetuo over the closing March.