The New Zealand Herald

Whirlwind world tour of musical discovery

- William Dart

It was as if Womad had dropped into the Auckland Town Hall with a preview of its current Taranaki festival, offering a first-class musical voyage around the world in just 80 minutes.

It’s been 21 years since cellist YoYo Ma instigated his original Silk Road Project and on its latest visit, the nine players of Silkroad Ensemble came up with a bag of cultural allsorts — pieces by Ravel and the radical American John Zorn cheerily sharing the playlist with Vietnamese folksongs and Indian drumming.

This was music fired with life, right from the opening fanfare, in which Cristina Pato’s Spanish bagpipes sparred playfully across the stage with the piercing reeds of Wu Tong’s suona.

Another terrific moment came when Tong’s sheng — a Chinese mouth organ — rose triumphant­ly from mesmerisin­g percussion to lead the band in riffs that were more New York than New Delhi.

Various musicians handled introducti­ons along the way. Pato, describing herself and many in the group as immigrants, spoke of the richness that comes about when one takes one’s culture to new lands and then brings it back, re-charged.

A richness that, at one point, delighted us with some jazzy, lightas-air solos from bass man Jeffrey Beecher.

Another adventure was introduced by percussion­ist Sandeep Das, preparing us for rhythmic hypnosis and promising some “spice” when the music got cooking. And it positively sizzled, particular­ly with Nora Fischer’s spirited vocal exchanges with the instrument­alists.

An unexpected personnel change meant we missed out on Dvorak but we did get to meet John Zorn’s fallen angel, Zavebe.

The catchy jam session with this title, served up Latin style with Middle Eastern twists, launched a bracket of pieces inspired by Heaven, the truly celestial highlight of which was a heartrendi­ng solo from Tong on his shimmering gold and stunningly sculptural sheng.

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