The New Zealand Herald

Bellincamp­i serves up delectable slice of Danish

- What: Reviewed by:

Giordano Bellincamp­i launched the Auckland Philharmon­ia Orchestra’s Beethoven 7 concert with a welcome taste of Danish, reflecting his own associatio­ns with that country.

Back in 2006, Danish composer Poul Ruders lavished craft and wit on a commission for the Alabama Power Company titled Light Overture. For the APO, this piece was a suitably high-voltage prelude, a virtuoso outing that gave the musicians a bracing workout.

Ruders is a master of the mercurial, shifting from the bustle of fugal jousting to moments in which he seems to be gently joshing Cinemascop­e Western stylings. Ruders was followed by a substantia­l Danish main course — Carl Nielsen’s Violin Concerto, with soloist Kolja Blacher giving one of the standout performanc­es of this season.

Nielsen’s harmonic writing can be a minefield for intonation but Blacher was unflinchin­gly on the note. A Largo, with the subtlest of orchestral tinting, led into a rousing Allegro Beethoven 7, Auckland Philharmon­ia Orchestra William Dart cavalleres­co of chivalric power, with full-booted orchestra and fierce fiddling, so infectious it drew spontaneou­s applause.

A Poco adagio introduced cooler emotions, Blacher weaving glorious melody around sculpted woodwind, and the closing rondo was a wry waltz.

Of all Beethoven’s symphonies, the Seventh is the most relentless in its momentum. Bellincamp­i is just the maestro to keep its symphonic fire ignited, building up the suspense of its opening Poco sostenuto until the irrepressi­ble Vivace bursts forth.

The obsessive Allegretto sounded particular­ly fresh thanks to meticulous balancing and nuancing and, after a gleefully joyous scherzo, the finale might well have had voltmeters bouncing into the red.

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