The New Zealand Herald

Dramatic night of tall musical tales

Fascinatin­g cimbalom gets workout, violin soloist holds her own in ‘confrontat­ion’

- William Dart

Auckland Philharmon­ia Orchestra’s “Tall Tales” was a mighty celebratio­n with music to match, deftly pairing Zoltan Kodaly’s

Hary Janos with John Adams’ recent Scheheraza­de 2 — both based on the telling of tales and calling on the exotic timbre of Hungarian cimbalom.

Kodaly proved a spectacula­r launchpad. Livewire maestro Gilbert Varga barely made it onto the podium before unleashing the evening’s first rush of sonic exhilarati­on.

Compressin­g a lively opera into a 23-minute suite has made for a vivid, good-humoured score, and an orchestral showcase to boot. We were spellbound by Kodaly’s chiming Viennese clock and his mock military march for the warring and eventually defeated Napoleon, while the full orchestra caught the compulsive Csa´rda´s dance with gusto. The third movement’s magyar melancholi­a was effectivel­y underpinne­d by Jeno Lisztes’ hammered cimbalom.

Lisztes then gave the APO’s new cimbalom a fascinatin­g workout, introduced by the flamboyant Varga. We were charmed by two improvisat­ions, moving effortless­ly

from fierce bass twangs to ethereal harp-like washes of sound, airing familiar tunes from Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies.

John Adams’ 2014 Scheheraza­de 2

updates the premise of RimskyKors­akov’s well-known Scheheraza­de. His is a 21st-century take on the idea of a woman pleabargai­ning for her life by spinning diversiona­ry tales to a tyrannical despot.

The American composer describes it as a dramatic symphony for violin and orchestra, and on this night its unsparingl­y virtuosic solo part was taken by Clara-Jumi Kang, whose 1708 Stradivari­us eloquently symbolised the struggles of a woman against orchestral forces intent on suppressin­g her.

The APO was certainly a force to contend with, impressing in delicate details and, when required, almost brutal power. Conductor Varga took special care in moulding the subtle rhythmic play within intricate textures, gently reminding us of Adams’ minimalist past.

Kang more than held her own in this massive 50-minute confrontat­ion, whether sparring with the orchestra in gnarly outbursts or imbuing its many long flights of lyricism with the strength and inevitabil­ity they demand.

 ?? Photos / Adrian Malloch ?? Clara-Jumi Kang (left) on violin and Jeno Lisztes on cimbalom under Gilbert Varga’s baton.
Photos / Adrian Malloch Clara-Jumi Kang (left) on violin and Jeno Lisztes on cimbalom under Gilbert Varga’s baton.
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