The New Zealand Herald

Youth celebrates with flourish

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This coming together of the NZSO National Youth Orchestra and the New Zealand Youth Choir was a just celebratio­n of our country’s finest young musicians.

It was a culminatio­n of a century’s nurturing, marking the orchestra’s 60th anniversar­y and the choir’s 40th. First came a sampling of local composing talent in Glen Downie’s light speckled droplet.

Conductor James Judd introduced it as “very, very special”. Anchored on a bed of complex, jagged rhythms, the orchestra laid out soundscape­s in which cool string harmonics and the bark of brass were prominent. The singers expertly layered their wafting vocalisati­ons, navigating knife-edge harmonies.

The choir was highlighte­d in Robert Wiremu’s ingenious arrangemen­t of Tuirina Wehi’s Waerenga-a-Hika, lovingly conducted by music director David Squire.

Wehi’s poignant words, lamenting the 1865 siege at Waerenga-a-Hika, bridged two languages and moved from hushed chant to vibrant climax. A telling contrast of vocal styles had a radiant Te Ohorere Williams and Bianca Davidson delivering powerful karanga.

Judd and his orchestra made Sibelius’ The Oceanides so atmospheri­c that one could almost feel spray on the face.

After interval, Judd brought his Elgarian expertise to fire his young musicians in a mighty performanc­e of The Music

Makers.

The orchestra revelled in passages of pomp and circumstan­ce yet gave us tender lyricism as well, especially when familiar quotes from other Elgar works passed by.

With a fine soloist in Australian mezzo Catherine Carby, the choir was magnificen­t.

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