Carlo Curley is marketed as the Pavarotti of the Organ. However, his Saturday night concert suggested there is also some debt to be acknowledged to Liberace and P.T. Barnum.
For nigh on three hours, including a riotously amusing pre-concert conversation with the suave Kerry Stevens, the American gave the King of Instruments the full showbiz treatment.
In interviews which were more like triggered monologues, Curley had us chuckling over such phenomena as the "legitimate leg massages" that the large vibrating organ pipes can bring.
He paid tribute to organists who had gone before, remembering the manic driving skills of Virgil Fox and the arthritic suffering of E. Power Biggs - "Your heart goes out, no matter what style he played in."
In recital, Curley gave the Town Hall instrument a major work-out.
Pulling the tempi of the Londonderry Air like taffy to accommodate relentless registration changes may not have been to everyone's taste, but myriad many magical colours were our reward.
Yet colours did not always run true. Some of the tonal palette brought out for his transcription of Wagner's Liebestod seemed not so much high opera as homely funeral parlour.
Then there was the richly eccentric gimmick of an automaton of singing birds chirruping away during a John Stanley voluntary - warranting, as one might have expected, a humorous account of his tangles with customs over the bizarre twittering machine.
While purists may have shuddered at Handel's Largo, signing off with what sounded like a revved-up Harley-Davidson somewhere in the pipes, John Ireland's Elegiac Romance was a rare opportunity to sample a lesser-known gem of the repertoire, sensitively rendered.
And, for all the rip-roaring fun of the fair, Saint-Saens' Marche Militaire Francaise filled the bill magnificently.
Best of all, this gentleman could not stop telling us how much he loved our new organ, a glorious specimen of "Empire organ-building gone bananas", an instrument which "speaks with utter conviction but needs a stern hand to guide it".
Curley's guidance was not limited to the keyboard. As a closing gesture, he led us in a folksy sing-along to Goodnight Irene - the perfect showbiz envoi.
What: Carlo Curley.
Where: Auckland Town Hall.
When: Saturday.
Concert Review: Carlo Curley, <i>Auckland Town Hall</i>
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