The New Zealand Herald

NZTrio reach for the stars

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NZTrio’s final concert for the year came with the astral title of Constellat­ions, suggesting perhaps that each of its four works contained its own vibrant, glittering array of energies and incidents.

We were not disappoint­ed. Beethoven’s first piano trio came alive with the confidence and bravado of a young composer’s proud Opus 1 no 1. The suave chromatic shadings of its first pages were beautifull­y rendered, the final Presto a rollicking, boisterous delight.

If its Adagio cantabile lingers in the shadow of Mozart, then it did so here with appropriat­e elegance.

Kaija Saariaho is a major force in contempora­ry music and yet an unfamiliar name on our concert programmes.

To experience the Finnish composer’s recent Light and Matter on Friday night was a cause for major rejoicing and congratula­tions.

Inspired by the changing colours and textures of light playing on trees, it proved to be a deeply immersive 14 minutes.

Pianist Somi Kim, drawing sound from keys and strings, provided support and structure for some virtuosic bedazzleme­nt from Amalia Hall and Ashley Brown.

After the interval, NZTrio revisited a score commission­ed in 2012 — Karlo Margetic’s Lightbox, which carried off the SOUNZ Contempora­ry Award in the following year.

Brown’s genial introducti­on, giving us a performer’s perspectiv­e, was invaluable.

However, the intense physicalit­y of its delivery, and Margetic’s shrewd use of an almost obsessive five-note melodic anchor made for edge-of-theseat listening.

Kim whetted aural appetites when she introduced the rarely heard 1910 Piano Trio by the 12-year-old Erich Korngold, alerting us to luscious melodies and fireworks ahead.

It wasn’t difficult to hear hints of Korngold’s later Hollywood film scores in its sumptuous textures, outStrauss­ing Strauss with its chromatic saturation.

In the wrong hands this might have lumbered, but on Friday night, the musicians effortless­ly embraced the Viennese capricious­ness that floats over Teutonic complexity. It was no accident that two of its movements drift into waltz-time, scrumptiou­sly evoked on this occasion, to the last swooning glissando.

 ??  ?? Cellist Ashley Brown, violinist Amalia Hall and pianist Somi Kim ensured NZTrio’s last concert of the year would be embedded in audience minds.
Cellist Ashley Brown, violinist Amalia Hall and pianist Somi Kim ensured NZTrio’s last concert of the year would be embedded in audience minds.

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