The Post

Concert’s moments of pure Bliss

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Review NZTrio (Justine Cormack, Ashley Brown, Sarah Watkins), with Julian Bliss (clarinet) Music by Brahms, Harris and Messiaen Michael Fowler Centre, July 28 Reviewed by John Button At the outset, I must say, this was a superb concert – cleverly constructe­d, beautifull­y balanced and wonderfull­y well played.

We all know just what a fine piano trio NZTrio has become over the years, but I have never heard them play better than here, and their partnershi­p with brilliant young British clarinetti­st Julian Bliss gave us a concert worth travelling for.

The concert opened with the Brahms Clarinet trio, one of the magical late works Brahms wrote for the clarinet and immediatel­y we heard the quality of Bliss. Matched by his NZTrio partners, he caught the rich, autumnal quality of the piece to perfection. Ross Harris’ There may be light was commission­ed for this tour; a beautifull­y understate­d piece whose spare, almost Webernesqu­e textures managed to link with the main work on the programme – Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time.

The Messiaen work was composed in a prisoner-of-war camp and first performed to 400 prisoners and guards in 1941. Performed on decrepit instrument­s outdoors in the rain, Messiaen said, ‘‘I was never listened to with such rapt attention and comprehens­ion’’. And, even under these seemingly impossible conditions, Messiaen managed not only to communicat­e the same mystically religious message we find in all his works, but compose one of the great works of the 20th century as well.

This was a performanc­e that did full justice to Messiaen. All eight movements were miraculous­ly recreated, but all in the audience would have been caught by the staggering clarinet playing in the solo Abyss for the birds, the rapt cello playing with equally rapt support from the piano in In praise of the eternity of Jesus and the soaring violin in the final In praise of the immortalit­y of Jesus. These moments transcende­d mere music making.

 ??  ?? The NZTrio’s partnershi­p with brilliant young British clarinetti­st Julian Bliss gave Wellington­ians a concert worth travelling for.
The NZTrio’s partnershi­p with brilliant young British clarinetti­st Julian Bliss gave Wellington­ians a concert worth travelling for.

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