Grammy Award-winning violinist to play in Tauranga

Augustin Hadelich

Tauranga will play witness to Grammy Award-winning talent, playing live on stage at Baycourt Theatre next week.

Hailed as one of the world's finest violinists, Augustin Hadelich, makes his New Zealand Symphony Orchestra debut next month.

Hadelich joins NZSO's Beethoven & Brahms tour which is coming to Tauranga on 9 August.

Over the past decade the Italian-born 34-year-old has entered the upper echelon of the violin world and is now a must-see virtuoso.

The New Yorker has labelled him as a 'singularly gifted, characterful musician who has a flair for bringing older music into the present tense” in a recent profile.

'When Hadelich first came on the scene, he was noted for his pinpoint brilliance and for his sweet, cultured, almost old-fashioned tone. It was as if a Golden Age violinist had jumped out of the grooves of a 78-r.p.m. record.”

In recent years Hadelich has also been praised for his interpretations of modern composers.

When he performed a Shostakovich Violin Concerto in the United States earlier this year, one reviewer likened him to a rock star.

'Hadelich wielded his axe, a 1723 Stradivarius, as a guitar god handles his Stratocaster, spinning a complex, emotional story on his violin.”

Hadelich has been praised for his performances of key works from the violin repertoire and in Beethoven & Brahms will play Beethoven's Violin Concerto – the only violin concerto written by the great composer.

Beethoven & Brahms is the third of NZSO Music Director Edo de Waart's 2018 Masterworks series.

De Waart has previously worked with Hadelich and was keen to introduce him to New Zealand audiences.

'He is a beautiful player,” says De Waart. 'Beethoven's Violin Concerto is not an easy concerto that every violin virtuoso can play. He's great at it.”

The NZSO will also perform Brahms' lush, romantic and uplifting Symphony No. 2.

Brahms took 20 years to write his First Symphony to a mixed response from audiences and critics. But his Second Symphony, which premiered a year later, was fully embraced and is still an audience favourite.

'It's a great symphony,” says De Waart.

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