Friday, December 4, 2009

CATS, HERONS & Other Friends: Bali December 2009

Housepet looking curious at Nyuhkuning, Bali.


Yawn! It does get very quiet here.
Not too close for comfort!

Housepet at Nyuhkuning.

Sole heron on a field in Petulu.

Flocks of herons roost at
the village of Petulu every evening.

Denizen of the Monkey Forest of Padang Tegal.

Its siesta time at Gunung Kawi.

Friendly dog at the Neka Museum.

Wary of visitors at the
Monkey Forest of Padang Tegal.

Carving of sleeping dog at
Agung Rai Museum of Art.

The Luwak (Asian palm civet),
champion processor of Balinese coffee beans.

BALI: 28 November - 3 December 2009

Lotus pond at Puri Saraswati
(Ubud Water Palace).

The legendary house of Walter Spies
at the Tjampuhan Hotel.

Pura Dalem Agung (Temple of the Dead)
in Ubud Monkey Forest.

The mysterious Goa Gajah
(Elephant Cave) at Bedugul.

The 13th century reliefs of daily Balinese life
at Yeh Pulu, south of Bedugul.

The ancient royal "candi"
memorials of Gunung Kawi.
A familiar vista of rice terraces
at the village of Tegalallang.

The herons of Petulu

Balinese actor about to don the
Rangda costume in the Barong play.
View of Gunung Agung
from Garden View Cottages,
Nyuhkuning, south of Ubud.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Singapore Symphony Orchestra: Ode To Joy / Review

BEETHOVEN FESTIVAL: ODE TO JOY
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Soloists & Combined Choruses
LAN SHUI, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Thursday (26 November 2009)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 28 November 2009.

The Singapore Symphony Orchestra’s Beethoven symphony cycle in celebration of its 30th anniversary came to a shuddering climax with its performance of the Ninth Symphony in D minor, popularly known as the “Choral Symphony”. It was a reading for the open-minded, not for the faint of heart.

But first, the presence of famed German soprano Juliane Banse ensured she got a spot of her own. Beethoven’s concert aria Ah! Perfido was the ideal vehicle for her vocal prowess. Almost operatic in character, it was Beethoven’s prescient musical representation of Kubler-Ross’ five stages of grief, beloved of psychologists and counselors.

A woman decries the infidelity of her man, traversing from denial and anger, bargaining through depression, to final acceptance. Banse (left) projected the highly dramatic music well, with an emotionally charged vibe that gradually worked its way into a warm and lyrical denouement.

Its thirteen minutes whetted appetites for the Ninth Symphony, which clocked in at an alarming 60 minutes. With pared-down forces, extra-fast tempos and a lean sound dictated, a jolt to those who favoured the gravity and grandeur of a Karajan or Furtwangler. The unsettling first movement raced ahead, followed by the rapid fire scherzo-like second, relentless like a juggernaut.

The respite craved for in the slow movement came and went, its heavenly length unimpeded by a natural flow that was pleasing but offered little that was profound. There was simply no time for ruminating or meandering. All this set the stage for a brilliant final movement, which was to be the ultimate triumph of the performance.

The first furtive appearance of the Ode to Joy theme was subtly shaded, and the bass Wilhelm Schwinghammer’s declaration of fraternal solidarity rang out imposing and heroic. The four soloists (which had three Germans, including alto Carolin Masur) were well-matched, each holding their parts well, even if American tenor Thomas Cooley’s solo in the Turkish-segment sounded hectic and rushed.

The 200-strong combined choir, augmented by the Singapore Symphony Children’s Choir, was marvelous throughout. Always sensitive to dynamic changes, it also dotted the i’s and crossed the t’s, as expected from its exacting director Lim Yau. The orchestral and choral fugues were simply thrilling, generating the frisson for a grandstand finish.

Music Director Lan Shui’s view of Beethoven remains controversial and challenging as ever, but was it not Gustav Mahler who once said “tradition is sloth”?

CD Reviews (The Straits Times, November 2009)

GREAT PIANISTS OF THE CENTURY
Brilliant Classics 9228 (5 CDs)
***


This modest box-set attempts to encompass a century’s worth of keyboard greats in just five discs – an impossible task, made worse by not having any sleeve notes of any sort. The earliest of 22 pianists featured is Scotsman Frederic Lamond (1868-1948), a student of Franz Liszt who performs his master’s Liebestraum No.3 and Un sospiro. The latest is Russian Nikolai Lugansky (born 1972), one of four living pianists, who frankly does not belong in such august company yet. In between there are some truly great performances, including Serge Rachmaninov in Schumann’s Carnaval, Dinu Lipatti partnering Herbert von Karajan in Schumann’s Piano Concerto, and Benno Moiseiwitsch’s magisterial take on Liszt’s mighty transcription of Wagner’s Tannhäuser Overture.

There are some oddities; Claudio Arrau barnstorming convincingly in Balakirev’s Islamey (a 1928 recording), Alfred Brendel playing Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No.2 (from 1968) and a precocious 16-year-old Martha Argerich’s winning performances of Liszt and Prokofiev at the Busoni International Piano Competition. A mixed bag in reality, but there are more gems than duds.

20th Century Classics
SHOSTAKOVICH
EMI Classics 2376862 (2CDs)
****1/2


If the name of Russsian composer Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) still engenders trepidation in listeners, allow Sarah Chang, Han-Na Chang, Sir Simon Rattle and Mariss Janssons to address that phobia in this super-budget anthology. Despite a penchant for the ironic and morbid, a by-product of the Stalinist years, Shostakovich was a genuine and deeply expressive communicator. His Symphony No.1, a teenage effort, never loses its witty fervour on repeated listenings. Three of his concertos are included; Violin Concerto No.1 and Cello Concerto No.1 share a common dark humour topped with searing virtuosity (from the Korean-American Changs), while the ebullient light-hearted Piano Concerto No.2 (with the late John Ogdon) fizzes like soda pop.

The most serious item here is String Quartet No.8 (from Canada’s St Lawrence Quartet) Shostakovich’s most celebrated piece of chamber music and semi-autobiographical tribute to the victims of oppression including himself. At the opposite pole lie his Jazz Suite No.1 and Tahiti Trot, the latter a most outlandish transcription of Tea For Two. This was his mechanism of keeping sane in a society gone all potty. Shall we dance?

ALONE
QIN LI-WEI, Cello
Cello Classics 1022
*****

The voice of the cello is a most haunting one, a fact not lost to composers from Bach to the present day. This hour-long album is a cross-section of unaccompanied cello music from the second half of the 20th century, beginning with Sonatas by avant-garde composers Hungarian György Ligeti and American George Crumb in their earlier years. Both works were influenced by Kodaly and Bartok, which make them eminently listenable – no hair-pulling scrapes for their own sake. Even Paul Hindemith’s Sonata (Op.25 No.3) sounds aggressively spiky by comparison. The Latvian Peteris Vasks’ Das Buch alternates between violence and contemplation, bringing the human voice into the mix, while Italian Giovanni Solima’s Alone makes for a stunning encore.

Singaporean Ho Chee Kong’s recently premiered Tembusu Evenings is the icing on the cake. It is an evocative 5-movement suite imbued with an Asian aroma, distinctive yet subtle, laden with what the composer describes as “misty memories to last several lifetimes”. Shanghai-born cellist Qin Li-Wei is a poet of the bow par excellence, for whom virtuosity is but a servant to ultimate expression.

This CD may be ordered at: www.celloclassics.com

Monday, November 23, 2009

HAVE INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITIONS LOST THEIR EDGE?

A scene that could have come from the 19th century,
Van Cliburn plays for an adoring audience
at the 1958 Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition.


HAVE INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITIONS LOST THEIR EDGE?

This was an article I was asked to write for the bilingual periodical ZBBZ. The publication is a lifestyle magazine for English-speaking Chinese yuppies, not the obvious audience for such a story. Needless to say, it was never published. Here it is, anyway.

There was a time when winning first prize in an international piano competition meant something – instant fame, concert engagements galore and a lucrative contract with a major recording label.

At the height of the Cold War in 1958, the American Van Cliburn defied the Soviets in Moscow to conquer the First Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition. Posterity was immediately assured. A New York City ticker-tape parade fit for war heroes ensued, and his LP recording of Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto sold over a million copies. Even losers had their day, with the enigmatic Serb Ivo Pogorelich winning sympathy and notoriety after being ejected at the semi-finals of the 1980 Chopin International Piano Competition. How times have changed.

Quick, who were the last six winners of the Leeds International Piano Competition? That question will draw a fit of head-scratching and a blank. The names of Sofya Gulyak (left), Sunwook Kim, Antti Siirala, Alessio Bax, Ilya Itin and Ricardo Castro (Leeds winners going back to 1993) mean little to most. Good pianists as they may be, not one is a household name.

Have piano competitions lost their Midas touch?

There are plausible reasons for this perception, and most are not musical. The Alink-Argerich Foundation (world authority on piano competitions) lists over 300 competitions on its website – from Sydney, Australia to Trömso in the Norwegian Arctic Circle. But are there enough concert stages to present these winners, or record labels to hawk their wares? With “big” competitions losing their lustre in the onslaught of dozens of “small” rivals, prestige has become so passé.

Competitions have also tended to encourage a gladiatorial approach to music-making. Most involve multiple rounds, where years of musical training are reduced to 40 to 50 minutes of make-or-break playing. The brilliant and spectacular are usually favoured over the sensitive and profound. Competitors who make least mistakes or sound most agreeable to a consensus-seeking jury often win. The most personal or individual of interpretations are often rejected. Is there any wonder why so many pianists, whether from China, Russia or USA, begin to sound the same?
The jury at the 2005 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
sit in judgement on the careers of 35 young pianists.

Another contentious issue involves competition juries. This coterie formed by established pianists, conservatory professors and sometimes organisers of competitions is small and insular, often revolving in a merry-go-round of fixtures. Even more egregious is when students of jurors win prizes whenever they preside. Tacit arrangements arise where collusion ascertains certain outcomes, with similar favours reciprocated at the next competition. Transparency is often mooted but almost never realised.

An international piano competition is now only as great as its sphere of influence. A competition in USA only affects American concert life but rarely across the Atlantic, and vice versa. Many competitions further an organiser’s agenda and serve local commercial interests first, while competitors enjoy trickle-down effects, if any. Winners receive prize money, local fame, a run of concerts mostly in small venues, all lasting two to three years, or until the next competition beckons.

So is there a perfect formula for the perfect piano competition? Sadly no, however several competitions are attempting for uniqueness, setting them apart from all the others.

The Van Cliburn International in Fort Worth, Texas has comprehensive coverage, with every note broadcast “live” via the Internet and archived for a global audience. The London International expressly forbids jurors to enter their students, and the final is a collaboration with the London Philharmonic. The Hong Kong International has an A-list jury led by renowned Russian pianist-conductor Vladimir Ashkenazy, who will conduct the concerto round in its next edition. The competition has its own recording label, a concert circuit around East Asia, and promotes its winner in perpetuity. This competition believes that nurturing a talent is a long-term commitment.

Some perspective may be had in the case of 23-year-old New Zealander John Chen (left), who at 18 won First Prize at the 2004 Sydney International. He has since participated in several competitions without replicating his earlier success, but is grateful for the exposure and opportunities - a 50-concert tour of Australasia, four CD recordings and recognition. He believes that competitions provide a good leg-up but post-competition success comes down to the artist himself, a right attitude and sheer hard work. While working on his doctorate in California, he is pleasantly surprised at the number of engagements that still come his way five years after Sydney.

The more commonly heard story is that of a pianist who reaches his pinnacle at the concours but comes crashing down when cold hard facts of a concert career rear its head – living out of a suitcase, unfamiliar venues, poor instruments and unfavourable reviews. The recent debacle involving Li Yundi, who performed execrably with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, proves that unless an artist keeps himself focused and in top from, he is only as good as his last concert.

In reality, winning a piano competition is merely a calling card, the rest is up to the artist himself.

SINGAPORE LYRIC OPERA: An Evening of Romantic and Tragic Love / Review

AN EVENING OF
ROMANTIC & TRAGIC LOVE
Singapore Lyric Opera
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (21 November 2009)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 23 November 2009.

The Singapore Lyric Opera’s Evening of Romantic & Tragic Love seemed like a redundant title for a concert. After all, what repertory opera has not featured romantic and tragic love of any kind? At any rate, it was an entertaining two hours fare of arias, duets and bleeding chunks.

Dominating the stage was Korean tenor Simon Kyung Lee (left), one who delights in and probably worships his heroic glory notes. Those peaks in Verdi’s Celeste Aida and Puccini’s Che gelida manina (La Boheme) were well within his booming mechanism, often breathtaking, but the downside was a shortage of subtlety. He all but drowned out his partners in duets and ensemble pieces, as in the Quartet of Rigoletto, so intent in displaying his can belto abilities.

The only exception was in the presence of Chinese baritone Zhang Feng, a more sensitive soul, who matched with decibels of his own. Thus, the Pearl Fisher’s Duet by Bizet came off with semblance of balance and some aplomb. Zhang’s arias in Verdi’s Il Trovatore and the Toreador Song (Carmen) were similarly distinguished.

The evening’s finer moments however went to the UK-based Singaporean soprano Yee Ee-Ping (left), who had the greatest range of expressions, both vocal and facial. Her Si, mi chiamano Mimi (Boheme) radiated with the warm flush of first love, and Micaela’s Air (Bizet’s Carmen) filled with the same innocence that greeted her SLO debut in the same role some 11 years ago. Her totally sympathetic contribution as the ill-fated Nedda in excerpts from Leoncavallo’s I Pagliacci completed a multi-faceted display.

The only Singapore-based singer, mezzo-soprano Anna Koor, was by no means overawed in this company, registering sensitive readings in Gluck, Saint-Saens, and the plum role of Carmen. The Habenera could have oozed more sex appeal, but she and tenor Lee had a good thing going in the final duet before being murdered by a hyper-charged Don Jose.

With due respect to Lim Yan’s superb piano accompaniment, these singers and this music, in particular, cried out for an orchestra’s partnership. Budgetary issues probably put paid to that notion anyway, but the variety and quality offered was enough to send the opera-lover more than half-way satisfied.

Nocturnal Fantasies II: Piano Recital by ALBERT TIU / Review

NOCTURNAL FANTASIES II
ALBERT TIU, Piano
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Concert Hall
Friday (20 November 2009)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 23 November 2009.

The piano music of Chopin (below) is universally loved, whilst that of Russian composer Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915) trails behind considerably, appreciated mostly by pianophiles, acolytes and mystics. Conservatory professor Albert Tiu’s coup in programming juxtaposed works of both pianist-composers, side by side and like for like, for comparison and contrast.

With tongue firmly in cheek, Chopin’s skittish Butterfly Étude (Op.25 No.9) prefaced Scriabin’s Mosquito Étude (Op.42 No.3), so named for its pesky triplet trills on the right hand. Never had comparative entomology and musicology so fortuitous a field day, boosted by Tiu’s rock secure technique and imaginative sense of shading.

Two Waltzes followed, both in the key of A flat major, Chopin’s exuberance balanced by Scriabin’s bittersweet musings. The Mazurkas, from different periods of the composers’ lives, struck a common vein of Slavic melancholy. Chopin’s Polonaise-Fantasie (Op.61) and Scriabin’s Sonata-Fantasie (Op.19) were united by a declamatory opening gesture, one falling while the other rising.

Never a hint of academism, this was gorgeously sensuous music performing with obvious passion and conviction. The smouldering Andante of the Scriabin (left) sonata, with its multiple interweaving lines, issued forth whispers of hidden voices. Innuendo turned into full-blown consummation with the ensuing Presto and its carnal outbursts.

The second half followed along this path of pairs, with rapidly flowing Préludes, the bel canto seamlessness of Nocturnes (including Scriabin’s gem for the left hand alone) and the seemingly improvisatory manner of Impromptus.

The most monumental pieces were left for last. The march-like decorum of Chopin’s Fantasy in F minor (Op.49) and its rhapsodic development were the perfect foil for Scriabin’s Fantasy in B minor (Op.28), surging with brooding and seething disquiet. In their soft centers lay a wellspring of melody, which Tiu tapped like a prospector of liquid gold.

His encores included a morsel of Scriabin, of course, and the ultimate of graceful encores, Godowsky’s delectable transcription of Saint-Saens’ The Swan. The latter evoked for this listener the cherished memory of Shura Cherkassky (left) in his 1994 Singapore recital. When excellence of execution meets inspiration, the results are rarely forgotten.

15-year-old Korean wins 7th Hamamatsu International Piano Competition


The 7th Hamamatsu International Piano Competition has been won by a 15-year-old Korea pianist, Cho Seong Jin (left). He is the youngest pianist to win 1st prize in this competition, and possibly the youngest in all international non-age-grouped piano competitions. The Hamamatsu competition has had an excellent track record of unearthing hitherto unknown talent. Previous winners of recent editions have included Alexej Gorlatch (2006), Rafal Blechacz & Alexander Kobrin (tied for 2nd, 2003) and Alexander Gavrylyuk (2000).

The final placings as follows:
1st: CHO Seong-Jin (Korea)
2nd: GASANOV Elmar (Russia) + Audience prize
3rd: HUH Jae-Weon (Korea)
4th: DUMONT Francois (France)
5th: KIM Hyung-Jung (Korea)
6th: ANN Soo-Jung (Korea)

Friday, November 20, 2009

Hamamatsu International Piano Competition 2009: Finalists named


The six finalists of the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition 2009 have been named. This edition of Japan's top piano competition has been dominated by Koreans; there are 4 Korean pianists in the finals. Like in this year's edition of the Leeds International Piano Competition, Beethoven's Emperor Concerto is going to be heard three times!

The finalists are as follows:

FRANCOIS DUMONT (France) playing BEETHOVEN No.5
ANN SOO-JUNG (Korea) playing RACHMANINOV No.2
CHO SEONG-JIN (Korea) playing BEETHOVEN No.5
HUH JAE-WEON (Korea) playing RACHMANINOV No.2
ELMAR GASANOV (Russia) playing RACHMANINOV Paganini Rhapsody
KIM HYUN-JUNG (Korea) playing BEETHOVEN No.5

The competition finals on 21 & 22 November may be viewed here:

WASSY FANTASIA: Piano Recital by MIYUKI WASHIMIYA / Review

WASSY FANTASIA
MIYUKI WASHIMIYA Piano Recital
Esplanade Recital Studio
Tuesday (17 November 2009)


An edited version of this review was published in The Straits Times on 20 November 2009.

Stranger things have happened, but it took a French-trained Japanese pianist to pull off the belated World Premiere of Singaporean composer Tan Chan Boon’s (pictured below) Magnum Opus for the piano, Reminiscence. Originally commissioned for the Young Virtuoso Recital of the 2008 Singapore International Piano Festival, the 24-minute work in four linked movements was deemed unplayable by the pianist and dropped.

Contrapuntally dense and awkward for ten fingers it certainly was, but unplayable? Miyuki Washimiya eloquently brought out the multi-layered textures of the strolling introduction, with its passing resemblance to the African-American spiritual Deep River, and surmounted the three ensuing fugues with great lucidity. Hers was not merely a reading, but a solid interpretation revealing many fine details, sculpted with the pristine care of a lapidary.

Making little concessions for the listener, this was “Charles Ives meets Busoni in Singapore”, a thorny devil of a masterpiece which could easily be hailed as Tan’s Fantasia Contrappuntistica, a major landmark in the Singaporean piano repertory.

The rest of Washimiya’s programme was far more audience-friendly, beginning with Mozart’s popular Sonata in A major (K.331). The opening Theme And Variations could have been inflected with a greater degree of dynamic variety, but the Minuet and familiar Turkish Rondo romped home with aplomb.

Her Chopin set was nicely shaped, reliable rather than revelatory, but the left hand octaves in the "Heroic" Polonaise (Op.53) were remarkable for sheer stamina and power. The first half closed with two Rachmaninov Préludes; the G minor number (Op.23 No.5) was aristocratic and well-judged – putting Lang Lang’s self-serving performance from 2007 to shame – while its counterpart in C sharp minor (Op.3 No.2) pealed with genuine Slavic clangour.

Washimiya’s true sympathies lay in Latino music, displaying much flair and sensitivity in three dances – including the indestructible Malaguena - by Cuban Ernesto Lecuona, and her encores of Granados’ Andaluza and Falla’s Ritual Fire Dance well and truly brought down the house.

In between these, Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue rocked with the swagger of a jazzman, even if the excisions she made in the score left out some of the juiciest bits. Given the wide-ranging selections over two hours, there was little to complain but much to celebrate.

This piano recital was sponsored by Kris Tan and Lim Liang Chuan in celebration of their 21st wedding anniversary.