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Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony Stuns Dunedin Audience

A massive collaboration between the Dunedin Symphony and New Zealand Symphony orchestras brought Mahler's Second Symphony to life in a powerful performance.

Mahler’s Resurrection Dunedin Symphony Orchestra New Zealand Symphony Orchestra City Choir Dunedin, guest singers, guest soloists Friday, May 15, Dunedin Town Hall Review by Sam Henderson Under the precise baton of conductor James Judd, about 120 instrumentalists from the Dunedin Symphony and New Zealand Symphony orchestras combined with a chorus of about 120 voices to perform Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No 2 “Resurrection”.. Guided by musical director David Burchell, the City Choir Dunedin was bolstered by

guest singers from a wide range of local vocal groups.. Soprano Anna Leese and mezzo-soprano Deborah Humble featured as the evening’s stellar soloists.. The performance began with Fanfare Kotahitanga, a specially commissioned piece by local composer Anthony Ritchie.. He conceived the central theme overnight while undergoing chemotherapy, constructing a long arching pentatonic melody that radiates hope and determination.. The piece carries a fresh, purposeful air that to me evoked the sound of the New Zealand

bush, where disparate noises blend into an atmosphere of restless energy The programme then shifted to Mahler’s epic symphony.. It was written between 1888 and 1894 and first performed in 1895.. The first movement had its origins in a symphonic poem called Totenfeier or ‘Funeral rites’.. Inspiration to develop it as a symphony struck Mahler in 1894 at the funeral of conductor Hans von Bülow, where he heard a setting of Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock’s poem

Die Auferstehung.. Although I am not an expert on classical music, that background was entirely unnecessary to appreciate an evening that transformed academic purity into raw emotion.. The music cuts directly to the heart of human endeavour, artistry and versatility.. Judd commanded the vast array of singers and musicians to deliver an extraordinary range of dynamics sweeping across the entire audio spectrum.. From the lightest instrumental touches that barely register a sound to an overwhelming,

crushing force, the symphony demands terrifying precision, which the combined ensemble executed perfectly.. The vocalists were equally spellbinding, particularly in the fourth movement, Urlicht, where Humble’s rich mezzo-soprano voice reverberated powerfully across the auditorium.. An arresting spatial effect was achieved during the fifth movement, Im Tempo des Scherzos, with the deployment of a Fernorchester, a small extra orchestra positioned outside the main concert hall.. The faint, offstage echoes of trumpets and percussion created the distinct

illusion that music pierced the very walls of the Dunedin Town Hall.. Mahler’s score drags the outside world into the performance space, suggesting the sheer volume of emotion cannot be contained within the building, like tears spilling uncontrollably from a face.. The final section began with the massed singers and Leese delivering “Aufersteh’n, ja aufersteh’n wirst du” (Rise again, yes, rise again) in a hushed, purely a cappella arrangement.. This delicate opening deliberately paves the

way for a spiralling wall of sound, integrating the full might of the instrumentalists, combined vocal groups and the venue’s massive “Norma” organ.. As the final triumphant chords crashed to silence, the audience leapt to its feet in a fiercely enthusiastic standing ovation.

Mahler Resurrection symphony, Dunedin Symphony Orchestra, James Judd, classical music review, City Choir Dunedin, Anthony Ritchie, New Zealand music

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