Cedric Tiberghien is a familiar figure to New Zealand concert audiences. When he joins Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra on Thursday for the final instalment of its 2016 NZ Herald Premier series, it will be his third appearance with the orchestra.
On his first visit, in 2009, the French pianist performed a spine-tingling Ravel concerto; returning two years later playing Brahms, he brought a distinctly Gallic sensibility and poise to what are essentially two nocturnes nestling in the Andante of the German composer's Second Concerto.
His main concern with tackling Brahms was preserving stamina. An enthusiastic jogger, he stressed the need to measure one's energies so the music remained fresh right through to the runaway finale.
"It has to be like spring," was his explanation. "Full of fresh air, green leaves and little birds."
In 2009, he professed affection for the mainstream German repertoire, despite carrying off first prize in the most celebrated of French competitions, the Long-Thibaud, in 1998. Above all, he was determined not to be trapped in the music of his own country. "I played so much as a teenager, I didn't want to be put into a compartment as a French pianist who only played French music," he told me.