Don McGlashan has spent decades at the coalface of the New Zealand music industry. And while most have no difficulty in recalling the hits he's penned - Dominion Road, Anchor Me, Bathe In The River to name but a few - it's easy to overlook his earlier musical endeavours, particularly those in dance.
But if you comb through McGlashan's lengthy and esteemed biography, you'll spot the year he spent in New York in the early 1980s playing drums with the Laura Dean Dancers and Musicians. There are also the pieces he wrote for the Kiwi dance company Limbs, throughout the same decade.
So it's not surprising that McGlashan's been drawn back to fold, this time as musical director for the New Zealand Dance Company's first-full length creation, Rotunda.
The concept of the piece, which involves eight dancers and 25 brass band players, is based on the band rotunda, an iconic symbol of community, and pays tribute to all those impacted by wars, conflicts and peace operations since World War I.