It was a charged atmosphere as violinist Justine Cormack signed off at NZTrio's Swoop concert after 15 years with the group.
Frank Bridge's Phantasie in C minor was an elegiac rhapsody from that musical no man's land between the 19th and 20th centuries. Its many moods were perfectly captured, with Bridge's penultimate Andante a vision of Rachmaninov in an English country garden.
Two recent offerings reminded us of the NZTrio's lively commissioning policy.
Chris Gendall's Dulcet Tones created pinprick colours with a plethora of string techniques and keyboard flourishes, making it seem like an exotic private ritual, a soundworld complementing Shen Nalin's Meng Yuan that followed.
This transcription of an earlier piece for guzheng and trio called for much zithering on piano strings. On the whole, however, it was more effective in ominous drone and reverb mode than in its banal climax catching, in Ashley Brown's words, "a whole room full of percussion instruments really going for it".
After interval, Schubert's B flat Piano Trio provided a surfeit of sweet melodies here and there tinted with melancholy.
The trio's trademark fiery playing made a glorious tussle of the first movement's development section and Schubert's delicatissimo Scherzo danced on point, but perhaps it was the passions and emotions of the occasion that brought a disturbingly rough edge to some of the string unisons.
Classical review
What: NZTrio
Where: Q Theatre Loft
When: Sunday