In recent years Aucklanders have heard both Gautier Capucon and David Geringas as soloists in the Dvorak Concerto.
On Friday, Daniel Muller-Schott did not have quite the lithe impulsiveness of the Frenchman nor the driven, Slavic intensity of the Lithuanian. Nevertheless, capitalising on the power of his Goffriller instrument, he gave a robust and highly charged account of the score.
The opening movement had an optimistic stride while the Finale balanced the lyricism of nostalgia with forthright folkishness. Between, one felt a real coming together between Muller-Schott and the orchestra's fine woodwind players.
An encore, for Britten's centenary year, was the opening Declamatio from the composer's Second Cello Suite, so fervent that one wished it could have been followed by Britten's rather impish Fugue.
The mortally ill Rachmaninov put great store on his Symphonic Dances, written just a few years before the Pruden Soliloquy. This was his "latest and best work", he wrote; Inkinen was determined it should sound so.
The bold extrovert outer movements, with their precision ensemble, incisively charted by Inkinen's baton, enclosed some tender beauties.
The first movement, a charming diversion for the wind, was inevitably dominated by Simon Brew's plaintive saxophone; in the second, one was impressed by the almost Gallic subtlety of the composer's most delicate traceries.
Classical music
What: New Zealand Symphony Orchestra
Where: Auckland Town Hall
When: Friday