Wednesday, 29 April 2009

Lee Chin & Friends: A Strings Extravaganza / Review

LEE CHIN & FRIENDS
A STRINGS EXTRAVAGANZA
Siow Lee Chin, Violin

Albert Tiu, Piano & Harpsichord
RGS String Ensemble
Lorenzo Muti, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Monday (27 April 2009)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 29 April 2009.

Singaporean violinist Siow Lee Chin, whose homecoming concert last November sparked frenzied scenes at the Conservatory, played to a far-bigger audience at the Esplanade in an event that also demonstrated how young women have progressed as musicians in Singapore. It is no exaggeration to state that today the most prominent violin names here belong to women.

Siow’s friends in concert included the String Ensemble of Raffles Girls School, her alma mater, and a couple of her students from South Carolina. The sight of an all-girl band with four solo violinists conducted by the Italian conductor Lorenzo Muti is reminiscent of Vivaldi’s Ospedale della Pieta orchestra of orphaned girls in Venice.

Quite appropriately, they gave an invigorating account of Vivaldi’s Concerto in B minor for four violins. Even though one of the young soloists dropped the baton along the way, there was a real sense of camaraderie as Siow gave her an encouraging pat on the back, like any good elder sister would. The concert opened with a larger body of strings in Black American composer George Walker’s elegiac Lyric for Strings, a refreshing alternative to Barber’s Adagio, with a gentle and clearly defined warmth.

Two students, Peruvian Jimena Lovon and Singaporean Lanabel Teo, then fearlessly raced through Sarasate’s virtuosic Navarra for two violins. It was never going to be perfect, but it was full of heart.

The rest of the evening belonged to Siow and her superb pianist collaborator Albert Tiu. Three movements from William Grant Still’s Suite for violin and piano were ample evidence of her wide-ranging assets – razor-keen reflexes, an acute sense of nuance, rhythmic exuberance and a beautiful singing line. Woman power came to the fore with her signature piece, Amy Beach’s Romance, written for the pre-eminent American lady violinist Maud Powell.

Its lovely cantabile, milked for all its worth, contrasted wildly with the rhapsodic lashings of Ravel’s gypsy-inspired Tzigane. Also dedicated to a woman violinist, the free-spirited Hungarian Jelly d’Aranyi, out came the stops with a no-holds-barred, take-no-prisoners reading. The encores – Li Guo-Quan’s lyrical Fisherman’s Song At Sunset and Wieniawski’s fiery Polonaise – reprised this winning formula. Finery and fireworks, just about perfect.
Footnote: The concert raised $130,000 for the President's Charities.

Tuesday, 28 April 2009

BUY THIS! Siow Lee Chin's Début CD Album Songs My Father Taught Me

Here's a pitch for my friend Siow Lee Chin's début CD recording, Songs My Father Taught Me. Interestingly, this may be the very first solo recital CD from a Singaporean violinist (No, Vanessa-Mae doesn't count) and it sets a very high standard for future efforts. Lee Chin plays on a 1750 Guadagnini on loan from the National Arts Council, and is sympathetically partnered by pianist Albert Tiu.

BUY THIS! Not because I wrote the Lee Chin interview but because of the sensitive playing - lots of lovely lyrical lines, soaring virtuosity and requisite fireworks. Here's the programme: a healthy dose of gypsy music and mouth-watering lyrical pieces.

Hint: The CD costs $20.95 at Popular Bookstore / CD Rama, $24.95 at Borders and $27.95 at HMV.
For more information, please check out: http://www.leechin.com/

Elaine Chang with the Kaohsiung City Symphony Orchestra / Review

Elaine Chang and the
Kaohsiung City Symphony Orchestra
Hsiao Pang-Hsing, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saunday (26 April 2009)


This reviewer has had the fortune of hearing the Kaohsiung City Symphony Orchestra twice. The first was almost exactly eleven years ago, in Taiwan’s southern port city itself while enjoying a spot of R&R (rest and recreation) from the rigors of overseas army in-camp-training. The ensemble in an all-Russian programme of Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky, I noted, was raw but enthusiastic.

This same orchestra, albeit pared-down, graced the Esplanade in a charity concert in aid of the Buddhist Tzi Chi Foundation that showcased popular classics and accompanying well-known Taiwanese songbird Elaine Chang (aka Zhang Xing Yue).

Conductor Hsiao Pang-Hsing’s idiomatic handling of a selection of Brahms Hungarian Dances, Dvorak Slavonic Dances and excerpts from Bizet’s Carmen and L’Arlesienne Suites was allied by much spirited playing. Apart from an excellent oboist who had a lion’s share of solos, the woodwinds in a group tended to sound anaemic - like some school band - while brass occasionally wild and over-exuberant.

The main draw was the diva herself (left), who sported four glitzy changes of outfits and gowns and entertained with a variety of Chinese songs – including folksongs, spiritual / inspirational songs and popular Taiwanese oldies. Although amplified, her delivery exuded a wide range of expressions and nuances, with the dramatic and bittersweet qualities – as evoked in Yue Qin, Siziwan Bay and a horse-inspired number – coming through particular convincingly.

She also caused a stir of recognition and nostalgia in songs sung in the Hokkien dialect – once discouraged in Speak Mandarin Campaigns of the past. The song loosely translated as You Are Spring And Flowers (Li Si Chun Ti Pun Si Huei) was so authentic as to be hard to resist. The orchestrations were of anodyne Hollywood quality, the sort to be heard in spaghetti Westerns and B-grade romances but no matter, it never threatened to overwhelm Chang and her love duets with tenor Chu Hung-Chang, who sung mostly in the baritone register.

Even the encores had a touch of idiosyncracy: a Taiwanese insect-inspired song (arranged in the style of a John Sousa and Leroy Anderson march) that got the audience clapping along; Chang returning in a Hokkien song about the moon above (Ti Teng Ei Gueh Neo) – excellently rendered - and a rather inimitable version of Memory from Cats. One question: What language was she singing in?

Friday, 24 April 2009

CD Reviews (The Straits Times, April 2009)

A MOZART ALBUM
STEPHEN HOUGH, Piano
Hyperion 67598
Rating *****

British pianist Stephen Hough’s concept albums over the years have been a total pleasure because they unite magnificent pianism with the joy of discovering new and unexpected repertoire. 40 minutes of this anthology is devoted to original unhyphenated Mozart, including two Fantasies (K.475 and 396, both in sombre C minor) with the contrastingly cheerful choice of Sonata in B flat major (K.333). These are tasteful and non-idiosyncratic readings. The inveterate pianophile will seek the Mozart-inspired pieces and transcriptions. These bring to light Ignaz Friedman’s elaborate dressing-up of a Minuet), a homage by J.B.Cramer and three of Hough’s own “transformations” in the piquant style of French composer Francis Poulenc. Fireworks come in the form of the Liszt-Busoni Fantasy on The Marriage of Figaro – a veritable showstopper. Simply irresistible.

MENDELSSOHN
Violin Concerto in E minor
Piano Trio No.1 / Violin Sonata in F
ANNE SOPHIE MUTTER, Violin et al
Deutsche Grammophon 477 8001 (CD & DVD)
Rating *****


This year marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1809-1847), the German composer celebrated for his prodigious facility and memorable melodies rather than originality. Who needs to be an avant-garde when one can write tunes as beautiful as those in his E minor Violin Concerto (Op.64)? This is Anne-Sophie Mutter’s second recording, one that builds upon her teenage effort (with Herbert von Karajan) by having acquired a fuller tone with maturity. Her musical sensibilities remained undimmed and her present partners - Mendelssohn’s own Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra with Kurt Masur – are excellent.

In the D minor Trio (Op.49), Mutter is partnered by cellist Lynn Harrell and hubby André Previn, whom at 80 remains amazingly dextrous as he steals the show with its scintillating and virtuosic piano part. Mendelssohn’s Violin Sonata in F major (1838) is a rarely heard but enjoyable makeweight. This premium-priced issue also includes a DVD of all three “live” performances and a 18-minute documentary on Mutter’s musings on Mendelssohn.

CAPRICCIO
Renaud Capuçon, Violin
Jerome Ducros, Piano
Virgin Classics 3740872
Rating ****1/2

Despite the album’s Italianate title, there are no Paganinian showstoppers. Instead it is an oblique reference to Elgar’s charming little trifle La Capriceuse, a lilting salon piece. This is a winning collection of encore pieces, mostly transcriptions of songs, including German Lieder (Schubert, Schumann and Mendelssohn all feature here) and dances. The best items are also the least heard pieces: Karol Szymanowski’s haunting Roxana’s Song from the opera King Roger, Erich Korngold’s Garden Scene from the movie score Much Ado About Nothing, Josef Suk’s Un poco triste, and the rapturous Waltz from Richard Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier. French violinist Renaud Capuçon has a seamless and lovely tone that serves the music well. An enjoyable romp.

Tuesday, 21 April 2009

Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra / Review

TOKYO METROPOLITAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Kazuhiro Koizumi, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Sunday (19 April 2009)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 21 April 2009.

Japanese orchestras are generally known for their discipline, technical prowess and refinement of execution. These qualities and more were amply displayed by the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, on its first overseas tour in seven years, in a concert that centred on the music of Tchaikovsky.

It is all too easy to deliver a surfeit of emotion on the temperamental Russian’s music, but to do so intelligently and without resorting to histrionics and over-indulgence takes some skill. The Polonaise from the opera Eugene Onegin could have sounded loud and over-powering, but the orchestra traded volume with cohesiveness and buoyancy. With the lovely cellos radiating sheer warmth and evenness, it made for an impressive curtain-raiser.

The Fifth Symphony, a favourite among visiting orchestras, is arguably the sanest and safest of Tchaikovsky’s final trilogy. The motto theme, which appears in all four of its movements, lends unanimity of ideas and unity to the work as a whole. The orchestra’s Resident Conductor Kazuhiro Koizumi (left), who conducted from memory, expertly guided the ensemble in its transformation, from despair and tragedy, though inevitable rushes of adrenaline and fulsome climaxes to eventual triumph.

There were glorious episodes aplenty, not least the silver-maned Sumiharu Arima’s heartrending French horn solo in the slow movement that ushered in further excellently crafted solos from the clarinet and oboe in counterpoint. Genuine tension and excitement also reigned in the finale’s inexorable drive to the edge of the abyss, before closing in a show of robust verve and spirit.

In between, the orchestra marvelously supported young Singaporean Lim Yan (left) in Grieg’s over-familiar Piano Concerto. Refusing to be drawn into barnstorming, his delivery from the opening cascade of octaves to the final resounding chords was on a measured side, but always came off subtle and sensitive. Straddling a fine line between restraint and reticence, the gloves came off to superb effect for the first movement’s Lisztian cadenza and the rollicking Norwegian dance of the finale.

This highly successful Japan-Singapore collaboration clearly demonstrated that the best of our young classical musicians can hold their heads high on an international musical platform.

Monday, 20 April 2009

Romantic Fantasy Worlds / Review

ROMANTIC FANTASY WORLDS
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra
Wang Ya-Hui, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (18 April 2009)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 20 April 2009.

The Conservatory Orchestra performs four concerts in an academic year, the final one invariably held at the Esplanade, thus drawing its biggest audiences. Performing the technically most demanding works, it is also the culmination of a year’s efforts, lessons and rehearsals.

Pairing two widely differing giants of the Romantic period - Mendelssohn (left) and Berlioz - showcased the orchestra’s versatility. The innocent comedic turns in the former’s Incidental Music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream was a study in finesse and control. The prodigious Overture, written when the composer was at an age younger than most of the performers, was distinguished by lightness and elfin charm.

This was repeated in the bubbly Scherzo and ensuing fast movements. The French horn and bassoon chorale of the Nocturne exhibited an enviable warmth and mellowness but inappropriate inter-movement applause probably distracted the trumpets as they went off-pitched momentarily in the opening of the familiar Wedding March.

Berlioz’s (left) highly ambitious Symphonie Fantastique provided a much stiffer challenge, and while revealing many fine qualities, exposed certain vulnerabilities. At the height of the first movement’s passions, there was a major desynchronisation that lasted the best part of two minutes – or what seems an eternity for the performers – before order was restored. In the second movement’s waltz, the pair of harps fluffed their lines in what should have been their golden moment.

Fortunately, the last three movements were the saving grace. The solo cor anglais and offstage oboe were excellent in the Scene In The Fields, as were the four timpanists as they evoked distant thunder. Blaring brass had a field day in the fatal March To The Scaffold, striking genuine terror before the final grotesqueries of the Witches’ Sabbath.

Individual instrumental prowess and taut ensemble were the keys to the final raucous romp that brought this stridently modern masterpiece (for 1830) to a triumphant end. Then something truly remarkable and unprecedented occurred: an instrumental erratum, as conductor Wang Ya-Hui (left) rallied the forces to replay the offending segments of the opening movement. This time it sounded close to perfection.

It was a courageous, ultimately honest and commendable gesture to set things straight. Now everybody can afford an undisturbed night’s sleep.

Alliance Française de Singapour 60th Anniversary Concert / Review

Alliance Française de Singapour
60th Anniversary Concert
AF Theatre
Friday (17 April 2009)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 20 April 2009.

The 60th Anniversary Concert of Singapore’s Alliance Francaise turned out to be a light-hearted and enjoyable affair, a departure from the anticipated avant-garde from the land that gave the world Boulez, Barraque and Varese. French music did not feature exclusively, but the segments skillfully programmed by Belgian-Singaporean composer Robert Casteels reflected the cultural activities of the Francophile association.

The three lovely ladies of I-Sis Trio opened with the finale of Jacques Ibert’s Trio, its jazzy and frothy bustle contrasting with the reposeful Reverie by Debussy. Natasha Liu’s soulful cello sang in Fauré’s Apres un Reve, gently accompanied by Katryna Tan’s harp. Joined by violinist Cindy Yan, the threesome also celebrated movies and dance in Ennio Morricone’s Cinema Paradiso and Ernesto Lecuona’s Malagueña, again displaying diversity in rhythms and inspirations.

Trio became quartet with pianist Albert Lin’s participation in the World Premiere of Casteel’s Trois-vingts (composer pictured left), the title being an old-fashioned French way of expressing the number “sixty”. Its joie de espirit, encapsulated by a fanfare-like motif that sounded 60 times through its five minutes, smartly mirrored the Ibert and made a perfect bookend for the first half.

Pianist Lin (left) had the most notes to play, first in two food-inspired pieces from Rossini’s Sins of Old Age. Whoever thought that Dry Figs could sound this scintillating or that mere Almonds could conjure up such an insouciant waltz? The Italian opera-composer once boasted that he could set a laundry list to music, and nearly proved it here.

The concert’s tour de force was Lin’s mighty traversal of Mussorgsky’s Pictures At An Exhibition. Although not note-perfect, the way each piece was thoughtfully inflected and evocatively characterised revealed a keen mind and mature artist at work. The troubadour’s song in The Old Castle was beautifully coloured, while the pathetic quality of Schmuyle (the second of the two Russian Jews) was brilliantly captured.

That alone would have successfully closed the evening’s fare, but the added bonus was six Singapore songs – old and new, traditional and original – sung in English, Malay and Mandarin by a cappella group Vocaluptuous (left). Over-amplified and over-reverberant, many of the words were lost, but the six-member group crooned and entertained with great pizzazz. Only the cloth-eared and stone-hearted could have resisted this evening’s varied offerings.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Singapore Symphony Orchestra: In Anxious Times / Review

Singapore Symphony Chorus (SSC)

IN ANXIOUS TIMES
Singapore Symphony Orchestra & Choruses
LIM YAU, Choral Director
LAN SHUI, Conductor
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (9 April 2009)
This review was published in The Straits Times on 13 April 2009.

The peculiar title of this concert comes from the Missa in Angustiis (Mass In Anxious Times) by Joseph Haydn (below), composed in 1798 when Napoleon Bonaparte’s armies were threatening to sweep across Europe. It was the timely intervention of Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of the Nile that halted French progress, hence its more popular title of the Nelson Mass.

It was the hundred-member strong combined chorus trained by Choral Director Lim Yau that stole the show. Such performing sizes were uncommon in Haydn’s time, but in the vast expanse of Esplanade Concert Hall’s acoustic space, that was undoubtedly the best solution. Its opening entry in a shrill and stressful Kyrie eleison (has there been a more defiant plea for mercy?) was spot-on, upon which a show of general excellence was established.

Exhibiting the best of both worlds, the chorus responded cohesively like a chamber group yet generated the volume befitting a mass throng. Exemplary control and sensitivity were displayed in the subdued opening of the Sanctus, with hope and ecstatic optimism coming through generously in the Credo and final Dona nobis pacem.

The quartet of soloists was a well-balanced one, the lion’s share of solos going to the confident soprano Klara Ek, and a sonorous Qui tollis peccata mundi gratefully and authoritatively lapped up by bass Andrew Greenan. All these contributed to a performance that radiated a distinctly warm glow to salve our anxious times of economic upheaval and theo-political uncertainty.

Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations opened the concert, receiving a clean and clear-headed account as any. Resisting the temptation for histrionics and jingoism, Music Director Lan Shui sought for musical objectivity and beauty of sound. Nowhere was the latter better revealed than in Variation 12 (B.G.N.), where acting Principal Jonathan Ayling’s cello sang with great sweetness, matched only by the balance of the strings in response.

The indefatigable Variation 9 (Nimrod) was a true model of nobilmente, neither tainted by vulgarity nor hubris, and the final Variation 14 (Edu), Elgar’s own musical self-portrait, registered with such sincerity that it was impossible to dislike. If only the pipe organ part were allowed to ring out unfettered, it would have been close to a perfect performance.

Note: The choruses which combined to perform this concert were the Singapore Symphony Chorus, Singapore Bible College Chorus, Hallelujah Chorus and The Philharmonic Chamber Chorus.

Virtuoso Piano Transcriptions: A Piano Recital by Kenneth Hamilton / Review

VIRTUOSO PIANO TRANSCRIPTIONS
KENNETH HAMILTON, Piano
Esplanade Recital Studio
Sunday (12 April 2009)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 14 April 2009, with the byline A Performer Who Brings On Goosebumps (!)

In a third recital in as many years, Scottish pianist Kenneth Hamilton, music lecturer at Birmingham University, regaled a committed band of pianophiles and students with yet another show of oratorical wit and imperious pianism. His is a glorious reliving of a swashbuckling brand of programming and performance values, unafraid of favouring transcribed music over originals, and bringing the cult of the performer to the forefront.

In this recital unabashedly filled with transcriptions – once considered no-no’s to purists and puritans – brought forth the usual suspects, including the highs and lows of Franz Liszt (left). His mighty Reminiscences de Norma after Bellini’s bel canto opera was delivered with a fearless bravura that made light of its extremely taxing demands. Only a minor muddle in the middle revealed Hamilton to be human after all.

Contrast this with the Capriccio alla Turca, possibly Liszt’s worst transcription of Beethoven’s worst music, a vulgar march from The Ruins Of Athens overloaded with meretricious effects but saved by the startlingly modern-sounding Dervishes’ Dance. With the Romantic period, there is often no separating the ridiculous from the sublime.

No such issues with Ferruccio Busoni’s Carmen Fantasy, where Hamilton brought out the opera’s darker and ironic aspects through its veneer of superficial familiarity. The selection of Percy Grainger (left) pieces was excellent, beginning with the Ramble (Grainger’s own description) on the final love duet from Richard Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier. Although simulating ultimate cocktail music, the technique required to pull it off (including all three pedals of the grand piano) even transcends the virtuoso realm. The Tune from County Derry (or Danny Boy) and its close cousin Colonial Song brought on the goose bumps.

Hamilton’s own teacher Ronald Stevenson, a Busoni acolyte, was represented by his Three Elizabethan Pieces, which turned John Bull’s courtly dances (Pavan, Galliard and The King's Hunt) for the virginal (an early harpsichord-like instrument) into cathedrals of sound. Hamilton truly reveled in these gems, as with John Ireland’s Decorations, three little-known impressionist visions that could out-Debussy Debussy.

Finally Leopold Godowsky’s Symphonic Metamorphosis on Johann Strauss’ Kunstlerleben – a Frankenstein monster of the original waltz – brought the house down amidst a riotous marrying of melodies with decadent harmonies. Hamilton’s encores? More Grainger (Maguire's Kick) and his own transcription of the famous aria from Saint-Saens’ Samson And Delilah, suggesting that his great pianist-composer forebears had not laboured in vain.
This recital was presented by the University of Birmingham.

Monday, 13 April 2009

Reviews of Kenneth Hamilton's Singapore Piano Recitals 2007 & 2008


Before uploading the review of Scottish pianist and piano historian Kenneth Hamilton's (left) most recent recital at Esplanade Recital Studio, here are newspaper cuttings (The Straits Times) of his Singapore recitals in 2007 & 2008, beginning with his recital on 23 March 2008.

Here is the review of Kenneth Hamilton's piano recital on 18 April 2007:

Thursday, 9 April 2009

The Art of Transcriptions: An Interview with Kenneth Hamilton

Kenneth Hamilton, pianist and author of After The Golden Age, is no stranger to Singapore. His recitals of outsized Romantic repertoire have become popular yearly affairs, matched only by those at the Singapore International PianoFest. His recital on Sunday 12 April 2009 (Esplanade Recital Studio, 7.30pm) features only piano transcriptions, a first recital of this kind since 2001 (Frederic Chiu @ PianoFest). Like his previous interview, erudition and humour are equal and happy partners.

Transcriptions aren't exactly new. Bach wrote them (of works by Vivaldi, Marcello et al) and so did Mozart (his early piano concertos and wind arrangements of his operas). Why are they considered a phenomenon of the Romantic era?

To be perfectly frank, they're often regarded as typically Romantic through sheer ignorance! Many people don't know the Bach and Mozart arrangements you mention. In fact, the very earliest surviving keyboard music - the 14th-century Robertsbridge Codex, which is now in the British Library in London - consists largely of transcriptions of vocal motets. So we can actually say that keyboard instruments - whether piano, organ, harpsichord or clavichord - have always been thought of as specially suitable for transcriptions of vocal and ensemble music. Indeed, it's really only the keyboard that can manage this sort of arrangement, because only the keyboard player is able to reproduce both tune and accompaniment, or a complex mixture of parts, all at the same time.

Of course, the association with the Romantic era also has its justification. It was only then - around the middle of the 19th-century - that the piano became flexible and powerful enough genuinely to imitate the impact of an orchestra, and naturally many Romantic composers made thunderous transcriptions with these dazzling new qualities in mind.

Liszt was arguably the greatest transcriber of all time. Yet he was sometimes vilified for this work. Were his transcriptions so variable in quality?

I don't think many would disagree that as far as transcriptions go, Liszt was “the greatest”. In terms of piano writing, Liszt's transcriptions are all of the same astonishingly high imaginative level. In terms of the music transcribed, alas, this is not always the case.

Although Liszt had a very good ear for what sort of music would work on the piano, he was occasionally forced for diplomatic reasons to arrange music that would have been better left in decent obscurity. Perhaps the worst of all is his transcription from the opera Tony by the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Liszt wanted to do the Duke a favour, but the Duke's musical talents were in inverse proportion to his egotism. All Liszt's pianistic skill can't disguise the utterly pitiful quality of the themes. In fact, the final effect borders on the hilarious, as if you were spending a lot of money fitting trendy leather seats and new headlights to a rusty old car with no engine! You'll be delighted to know that I'm not planning to play the Tony transcription in Singapore anytime soon.

What, in your opinion, makes a piece of music particularly worthy for transcription?

I know it sounds rather old-fashioned to say so - but you really need a piece with a good tune, or at least some segment of memorable melody. That's why most of the Liszt opera fantasies, or the Johann Strauss/Godowsky waltz transcriptions work so well. On the other hand, if the original piece has too many fast-moving parts weaving in and out of the texture, then it probably isn't suitable for piano transcription. That's the case with the big orchestral pieces of Richard Strauss, for example. A symphonic poem like Don Juan sounds fantastic when played by a good orchestra, but would really be a damp squib on the piano. There's simply too much going on at the same time for successful transfer to the keyboard.

Are there transcriptions which are actually better than the original work? What may these be, for example?

Well, this is where things get a bit contentious. Personally, I actually prefer Busoni's Bach Chaconne to Bach's Bach Chaconne - but I'm sure this view will call forth wails of protest from Bach purists [and violinists. Ed.] I'm obviously very tasteless!

Percy Grainger's folk-song arrangements have a richness of harmony that could hardly be imagined from looking at the relatively simple, single-line source material, and some of Liszt's Donizetti transcriptions are much more sophisticated productions than the original numbers in the operas. And that's before we even get to something like Liszt's transcription of Hans von Bülow's song Dante's Sonnet. Even von Bülow himself admitted that the Liszt version was far better than the original!

Transcriptions have often overshadowed the original works of the transcribers eg. Busoni and even Percy Grainger. Is this a regrettable thing, or were these pianist-composers just better as transcribers than composers?

Busoni and Grainger probably produced their most characteristic work as transcribers- and audiences seem to have felt this, even though some of their original creations, like the Busoni Toccata or the Grainger Colonial Song, are really splendid pieces. On the other hand, there's no reason to undervalue their astonishing achievements as transcribers.

Some composers, like Schumann, wrote many fine original pieces but truly awful transcriptions. Schumann had virtually no talent for transcription at all. We should value artists like Busoni and Grainger for their best work, whether it was produced in the guise of transcription or as 'original' composition. And anyway, some notable composers, like Ronald Stevenson, think that there's really no difference between an 'original' composition and a good transcription - both require the same imagination and creativity.

Among the living pianists who wrote transcriptions eg. Ronald Stevenson (left), Earl Wild, Frederic Meinders, Marc-Andre Hamelin, Stephen Hough and Arcadi Volodos. Whose work do you particularly appreciate and why?

I play quite a number of Ronald Stevenson's transcriptions, not only because he was one of my teachers, but because they're always ingeniously written, and utterly idiomatic for the piano. The fact that Ronald is a real composer, and not just a hack arranger, is obvious whatever he's writing. When playing them you can really understand the reasons why he thinks that composition and transcription are basically the same thing.

Earl Wild's Rachmaninoff song transcriptions are also splendid, and played by their creator with great gusto. The other pianists you mention have written many very effective arrangements, and I would add Cziffra and Pletnev to their number. I've always felt, however, that their pieces are best left primarily for their own performance - they contain characteristics typical of their own playing style that could be imitated by other players, but not reproduced with such conviction. In other words, why should you bother going to hear me play a Hamelin arrangement when you can go to hear Hamelin play it instead? Each to their own.

Have you written transcriptions of your own? And when do you play them?

I've written quite a few transcriptions, which I trot out mainly as encores. The one I've probably performed most frequently is an arrangement of Softly Awakes My Heart from Saint-Saëns' Samson and Delilah - a wonderful aria that contains not one, but two beautiful tunes. I must admit, though, that in my dark and distant student days I used to play in cocktail bars to make some money, so I reckon that I've improvised my way through hundreds of tunes, from Nessun dorma to Somewhere Over The Rainbow. I once even gave a concert that consisted of nothing but improvisations on popular melodies. The audience seemed to enjoy it - and I absolutely loved it. After all, I didn't need to practise - I just stepped on stage and played whatever came to mind. It was the easiest concert I'd ever given!

Living With... Lim Hui & Lim Yan

LIVING WITH…
LIM HUI, Violin
LIM YAN, Piano
The Living Room, The Arts House
Monday (6 April 2009)


The 2003 edition of Singapore’s National Violin Competition, during the days before Chinese nationals swept all the prizes, yielded only one violinist in the grand finals of the Open Category. Young Singaporean Lim Hui – who performed Bruch’s Violin Concerto No.1 - was an awkward, even painfully shy but totally musical personality, one for whom an injection of confidence would have been of immense help. She was awarded the 2nd prize with a 1st prize being withheld.

Fast forward some six years, this Eastman and Indiana graduate, currently teaching at the Nanyang Academy’s School of Young Talents, is a transformed being. No longer sporting a stooped posture and now looking the best part of a glamour puss, her stage presence has also been upped several notches.

Recitals in the Living With… Series at The Arts House usually showcase light, bite-sized pieces but here was a full-length concert with three substantial sonatas. Ironically the recital began with the encore, Glazunov’s Meditation, which established her as one with a firm yet warm tone and of utmost musicianship.

Beethoven’s Sonata in D major (Op.12 No.1) then offered her the opportunity to sink her teeth into something even more passionate, displaying typically Beethovenian grit and brio. The first movement was resolutely wrought, full of vigour, which contrasted nicely with the chorale-like slow movement’s Theme and Variations. Here both violinist and pianist (her first cousin Lim Yan) offered a wide range of colours and responses. The final Rondo also bubbled vivaciously to life.

Presenting an even greater challenge was Brahms’ Sonata No.1 in G major (Op.78), which was a progression from Beethoven’s aesthete. With Romantic gestures and aspirations coming to the fore, the ante was upped considerably. Lim Hui coped well with its more extreme range of emotions, from yearning nostalgia to passionate agitation. The volume of sound was similarly ratcheted upwards and vibrato widened, but there was no hint of hardness or harshness. The undertow of turbulence in outer movements (based on two earlier Op.59 Lied by Brahms), straddling between joy and sorrow, was marvelously captured.

Debussy’s sublime little Violin Sonata was one of six projected late works that aimed to express and celebrate French ideals in music, as opposed to well-worn Germanic ones. Whatever these may be, the piece with its more elusive themes, subtler material and variegated textures could have yielded far less than the notes played. Thankfully, both Lims were up to the task demanded, bringing much insight to its many shifts in dynamics. The performance was never showy for its own sake, but revealed Lim Hui as a considerable artist who has developed and matured beyond recognition. As for Lim Yan, he is now without doubt on his way to becoming Singapore’s finest and busiest collaborative pianist.

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

Modern Icons: Dream Worlds / Review

MODERN ICONS: DREAM WORLDS
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory New Music Ensemble
Chan Tze Law, Conductor
Esplanade Recital Studio
Sunday (5 April 2009, 7.30pm)
This review was published in The Straits Times on 7 April 2009.

The fourth concert by the Conservatory’s New Music Ensemble was the longest in its ongoing series, but one touched by an uncanny symmetry. One initially wondered what contemporary composers like Singapore’s Phoon Yew Tien, Luciano Berio, Andrew Schultz, Liza Lim and Brett Dean had in common. However as the programme unfolded, and with ears opened like never before, the logic of sound and sense soon became apparent.

Luciano Berio’s Chemins II (composer pictured left)was an expansion of his iconic Sequenza VI (1967) for solo viola. A highly virtuosic work, it is a study in repetition, with its multiple short variations constantly resonating and evolving without remission. Although fiercely avant-garde, its frequent changes in colour, dynamics and textural patterns proved strident yet hypnotic. The excellent violist Jiang Hansong was the obvious centre of focus, but it was his hardworking ensemble colleagues whose vital support proved pivotal for the performance’s success.

Phoon Yew Tien’s Variants On Kuan San Yue (1988, revised 2008, left) worked on a similar principal, but with an ancient Chinese melody deconstructed and distributed to different instrumental parts and groups. Mosaic-like, these fragments of sounds and harmonies coalesced and resounded in a variegated patchwork that was both satisfying and appealing. Between these was Australian Andrew Schultz’s Septet No.2: Circle Ground (1995), which had the most reassuring tonal allure, one recalling minimalist and New Age idioms.

The idea of dreams dominated the second half, in works by two other Australian composers. Liza Lim’s Songs Found In Dream (2005) was inspired by Aboriginal mythology and rituals, but had the aural quality of a nightmare. Its mélange of seemingly random scrapes and squeaks are precisely what gives new music its undeserved reputation of audio-nasties.

Brett Dean’s Dream Sequence (2008, left) however developed an inexorable arch-like sense of flow, from the depths of somnolence through the apparent violence of the subconscious (how many of us have not had disturbing dreams?), finally dissipating into gentle arousal. Its deft use of orchestral devices included a first ever use of a copy of The Straits Times as a percussion instrument!

In its short 18 months, the Conservatory’s forum of new music under its chief proselytizer Chan Tze Law has grown from an audience of merely 30 people to one nearly filling the capacity of Esplanade Recital Studio. Long may that trend continue.
Footnote: Another serendipitous point of symmetry: Phoon Yew Tien and Brett Dean were classmates.

SSO Casual Concert / Review

SSO CASUAL CONCERT
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Darrell Ang, Conductor
Sunday (5 April 2009, 5pm)
Esplanade Concert Hall


This review was published in The Straits Times on 7 April 2009.

It has been customary over the decades for the Singapore Symphony Orchestra to delegate its outreach, outdoor and short concerts to a younger group of conductors. Lim Yau, Lan Shui (when he was a young guest conductor in the early 1990s), Bart Folse, Wang Ya-Hui and Chan Tze Law all had their turns in such diversions in the past. However rarely has an hour-long Casual Concert been as technically demanding for both orchestra and conductor as the one mastered by young Darrell Ang (below) this evening.

Beginning with the multi-layered complexities of Debussy’s Iberia (from Images), the orchestra delivered a highly disciplined and tautly marshaled account. While exhibiting typically Hispanic fervour in its raucous opening, it was in the tender slow middle segment Les Parfums de la nuit (The Fragance of the Night) where the orchestra’s greater strengths laid.

Its overall sultriness, sensuous and atmospheric murmurings were magnificently realised, none better portrayed in Rachel Walker’s haunting oboe solo. It was however in the restive final section (The Morning Of The Festival Day) where a certain cautiousness could have made way for an unbuttoned show of exuberance.

No reservations arose in Ang’s stupendous vision of Tchaikovsky’s symphonic poem Francesca da Rimini. Its journey through Dante’s inferno was as harrowing as it was awe-inspiring; tongues of fire leapt as molten lava boiled over, with the ill-fated lovers clasped in a fatal final embrace. And then came the love music.

It is no exaggeration to assert that only Ang comes close to Music Director Lan Shui in extracting hot-blooded juices of passion from any torso of love music. On this occasion, his efforts were aided by clarinetist Li Xin’s wonderfully fulsome clarinet solo, which brought this over-sentimental music to new heights.

Between two pillars of orchestral masterpieces was a short concertante segment that featured former Menuhin protégé Jin Li (left) in Saint-Saen’s Havanaise. Any hint of reticence in Jin’s stage demeanor was immediately dispelled by his wide vibrato and the unabashed pyrotechnics he commanded. Music transforms lives and personalities, and in this case, it was clearly for the better.

Emma Kirkby & London Baroque / Review


EMMA KIRKBY
with London Baroque
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (4 April 2009)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 April 2009.


The English soprano Emma Kirkby, blessed with one of the most distinctive voices in all of music, made her Singapore debut in a programme of mostly George Frideric Handel (1685-1759). To be more precise, the recital captured the years 1707 and 1708, when the young German lived in Rome as the guest of Marquis Ruspoli, the patron for whom all three varied cantatas performed were written.

This was much before Handel’s (left) fame as composer of opera and oratorios, but the seeds of future genius had already been sown. The secular cantata Notte Placida e Cheta (Calm And Quiet Night) conjured a mood of mystery, of dreams and love. Kirkby’s intimate, rosy and youthful voice, with purity of conception and crystal-clear diction, fully captured its nuances of quiet elation amidst contemplation.

The vocal range demanded in early music is seemingly narrower, but Kirkby projected an enormous range of emotions - from sorrow to joy and much in between - through subtle colouring and varying of shades. In the sacred cantata O Qualis de Coelo Sonus (What Is This Heavenly Sound?), there was even opportunity for brilliance, in its dizzying runs and the celebratory gigue-like Alleluia!

Sacred or secular, all this contrived to make music from the classical and romantic periods sound vulgar by comparison. Between cantatas and as a palate-cleanser, the immaculate London Baroque (left) – violinists Ingrid Seifert and Richard Gwilt, viol-player Charles Medlam and harspichordist Steve Devine – performed trio sonatas by Corelli, Bach and Handel.

The final cantata Tu Fedel? Tu Constante? (Are You Faithful?) was a feisty affair, with Kirkby’s protagonist in accusatory mode, questioning her lover on his fidelity. Its bustling minor key strains strengthened her steely resolve with each admonishment, before a resolution in a triumphantly major mode. The woman dumps her man for a better man and life, ending with a wry smile from the singer. Women’s lib was by no means a 20th century affair.

Two short encores in English – by Henry Purcell and Thomas Arne – brought the evening’s offerings to a sublime conclusion. Kirkby is as close to having heard the voice of an angel from heaven.

Singapore Symphony Orchestra: Mahler's Tenth / Review


MAHLER’S TENTH

Singapore 
Symphony Orchestra
LAN SHUI, Conductor
Friday (3 April 2009)
Esplanade Concert Hall



This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 April 2009.

Just when one thought that the Singapore Symphony Orchestra had wrapped up Gustav Mahler’s symphony cycle with the 90-minute Third Symphony in 2008, yet another unperformed symphony rears its convoluted head.

All that was left of the Austrian composer’s Tenth Symphony (1910) were a fully scored Adagio and sketches of four other movements. Various musicologists undertook the task of crafting a concert-worthy performing version of complete work, with Deryck Cooke’s being the familiar and most often recorded. SSO’s take on the evening was the American Clinton Carpenter’s less celebrated edition, which is the most densely orchestrated of the lot and arguably the most difficult to pull off.


Not one to shirk a challenge, Maestro Lan Shui (left) and the orchestra plunged headlong into its thickets of thorns, and emerged with more hits than misses. First the misses: with limited rehearsal time, there was bound to be balance issues and moments of rawness in ensemble. The orchestration could sometimes leave well alone, notably in the finale. Its poignant flute solo – a quintessential Mahlerian gem – was obscured with excessive counterpoint, while the violent funereal thuds on the bass-drum – a dramatic gesture in other versions - were reduced to a distant whimper.

Ultimately this 80-minute final love letter to an estranged wife was overflowing with the same ardour and angst that SSO has so memorably delivered in previous Mahler outings. The scherzos pulsed with whimsy and wit while the climaxes suffused with intoxicating passion, were milked for all their worth. And nobody knows how to draw out a slow movement, especially one brimming with luscious string textures, with such purpose and persuasion as Shui. Come May, when the SSO takes this Mahler Tenth on tour to Beijing, it should be close to perfection.


The ostensible reason why most people came was to hear the young French virtuoso Renaud Capuçon (left) in Mendelssohn’s evergreen Violin Concerto in E minor (Op.64). Here was a seemingly effortless performance, one pulled off with such great polish and aplomb as to be straight out of the recording studio.

Playing in the “Panette” Guarneri del Gesu that once belonged to Isaac Stern, the flawless intonation and sugary sweetness that flowed in the concerto and subsequent encore – Gluck’s Melody from Orpheus – was string lovers’ paradise. Somewhere, the Saint of Carnegie Hall must be smiling.

Watch this video of the 
Mahler Scherzo from the Tenth: