Ross Harris' Symphony No 5 opened Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra's Voices of Youth concert on Thursday on a distinctly sombre note.
Conductor Eckehard Stier underlined the gravitas of its opening Adagio, 10 minutes of woodwind stealth and restrained outbursts from the strings, in which one felt the almost stifling pain of thwarted passion.
Seven years ago, in his Symphony No 2, Harris contemplated the anguish of World War II in France through the poems of Vincent O'Sullivan.
Now the wartime setting is Budapest, with Panni Palasti's slice-of-life verses providing more personal reminiscences.
The three Palasti settings, which punctuate the instrumental movements, are economically scored and not afraid of frankly tonal serenity. Yet the nervy, fragmented treatment of the text made one long for more full-bodied song.