Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Some Words with CHISATO KUSUNOKI



The Japanese pianist CHISATO KUSUNOKI is back in Singapore, performing two piano recital at the SIA-LaSalle School of the Arts on 12 and 15 July. As before, she has chosen to perform an all-Russian programme entitled "Romancing Russia", a sequel to her highly successful "From Russia With Love" recital in 2010. I was fortunate to have a few words with this Russophile, who leads a very interesting and cosmopolitan existence in London. The programme for both evenings are:

RACHMANINOV Morceaux de Fantaisie Op.3 (including that Prélude!)

RACHMANINOV Sonata No.2 in B flat minor, Op.36

LYADOV Variations on a Polish Song

MEDTNER Forgotten Melodies Op.39


Date: 12 & 15 July 2011 / Time: 7.30 pm, SIA LaSalle School / Tickets available at SISTIC.



A: You are a Japanese pianist, born in Germany, living in England, and specialising in Russian music. How did that exactly happen?

I spent my early childhood in Dusseldorf, Germany and London before returning to a small town called Yokosuka (near Yokohama) at the age of 3. We then came back to London again when I was 14 because of my father’s profession. I remember my first few years being a struggle for not being able to speak English. Interestingly it was during this period that I craved for widening my knowledge of the piano repertoire. Also I spent hours practising the piano everyday. Music thus became for me a form of escapism at that time. I frequently visited my local library which stocked a good selection of classical recordings including the rarer ones. My discovery of lesser-known Russian Romantic works began after I borrowed a CD of Nikolai Demidenko and Dmitri Alexeev playing Rachmaninov’s Suite No.2 for two pianos (on Hyperion). It so happened that Medtner’s only works for 2 pianos were also on the same disc. So that was my first introduction to the world of Nikolai Medtner.



What was it in Russian piano literature that captivated you the most? Did you have any favourites among the Russian composers? And Russian pianists?

My father always listened to Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven and I was lucky to be exposed to these works from an early age. I found a cassette tape of Sviatoslav Richter (left) playing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto and Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto at home. His performance of the Rachmaninov and the music struck me so overwhelmingly, and since then I have been exploring much Russian music. I think it is the Slavic temperament which moves me from bottom of my heart; the warmth, depth of emotions and its narrative quality are so rich, as in most Russian arts. I also enjoy the challenge of the complex and pianistic writing of the late 19th to early 20th century piano music.

I have always loved Rachmaninov as a pianist and composer, and increasingly find myself programming his works in recitals. I would like very much to learn his Variations on a Theme of Chopin Op.22 and First Sonata in the future. I am constantly drawing inspirations from Russian pianists of the past and present, such as Medtner, Richter, Heinrich and Stanislav Neuhaus, Emil Gilels, Benno Moiseiwitsch, Shura Cherkassky, Maria Grinberg, Vladimir Sofronitsky, Mikhail Pletnev, Alexei Sultanov, Arcadi Volodos and Grigori Sokolov.



The piano music of Nikolai Medtner (left) appears in your recital programme. Some misguided people refer to him as a “poor man’s Rachmaninov”. What does one overcome such stereotypes and actually make his music popular?

I am often put off by this misconception, especially when I programme his music. To me Medtner’s music is as magnetic as that of Rachmaninov’s. And the depth and quality of his music seem to increase by repeated listening. Medtner’s musical language comes from his understanding of German music as well as his natural Slavic temperament. His mastery of counterpoint combined with dazzling virtuosic writing (he was a real composer-pianist) means that the textures can become both dense and highly complex. My former teacher Hamish Milne, who has dedicated himself to the study of Medtner, often said that it is the pianist’s challenge to bring clarity in such intricate writing. Also the narrative quality should be clearly brought out in the most expressive singing manner.

Are there other Russian composers that you think audiences should be more exposed to?

There are many composers that I have special affinity to and I hope to be able to introduce their works to wider audiences. I am especially fond of Myaskovsky’s piano sonatas and cello sonatas. His orchestral works are also extremely appealing. There are indeed many other composers to list: Anatol Lyadov ( his orchestral works were much loved by Rachmaninoff and he conducted many of them), Catoire, Lyapunov, Balakirev, Konstantin Eiges, Oleg Eiges, Georges Conus, Alexander Alexandrov and Samuil Feinberg.



Another composer you have championed is the Scotsman Ronald Stevenson (left). How did that come about?

I was lucky to have studied the piano with Nicholas Austin who introduced me to all sorts of unusual piano repertoire and Ronald Stevenson’s music was among them. Ronald Stevenson has been an important friend and mentor, and he has taught me most valuable lessons. He is also one of the last remaining members in the great tradition of Romantic composer-pianists, a the tradition that embraced Paderewski and Busoni, two figures with whom he feels a particular closeness.

What does Chisato enjoy outside of the world of music?

My interests are rather eclectic. I love animals, wildlife, dress making, many forms of arts and crafts, baking Central European cakes, yoga and literature. Amongst my favourite writers are Pushkin, Chekhov, Pasternak (incidentally he was also a composer!), Turgenev, Proust, Hardy, Zweig, Kundera, Mann and Kafka.

JASPER GOH Flute Recital / Review




JASPER GOH Flute Recital
Artists Academy, One Commonwealth
Monday (27 June 2011)



An edited version of this review was published in The Straits Times on 29 June 2011 with the title "A poignant farewell".

The Singapore National Youth Orchestra has nurtured so many of Singapore’s talented young musicians over the decades that its place in our cultural life is irreplaceable. There however comes a time when a young musician has to leave its ranks to answer a higher calling, such as overseas studies or national service in the case of 18-year-old men.

Flautist Jasper Goh’s farewell recital before his enlistment to arms provided some poignant but treasurable moments. Having thrilled with Lowell Liebermann’s ebullient Piccolo Concerto almost a year ago, his hour-long and well-balanced programme provided more of the same glitter.

Opening with Telemann’s brief unaccompanied Fantasia No.2, his sweet and smooth tone soothed while comfortably negotiated the alternating slow and fast movements for an appetising palate tickler. Then came the recital’s big work, Prokofiev Flute Sonata in D major (Op.94).

Well known it its violin version, this engaging but tricky masterpiece revels in its bittersweet lyrical melodies, ambushed by unsuspecting rhythmic shifts. Goh coped with the complexities admirably, while making the music sing with sinuous charm. Partner to the endeavour was sensitive pianist Loh Wan Shan, who ensured that her exuberant piano part never overwhelmed in this little cosy venue.




Cecile Chaminade’s popular Concertino was another showpiece, where Goh’s winning way with cantabile was topped with his immaculate technique on many flashy scales. A dazzlingly delivered cadenza was the icing before a spirited conclusion.

Goh was later joined by fellow flautist Teo Shaoming in Friedrich Kuhlau’s delightful Duet No.3 in G minor. Here both players were nigh inseparable, each providing the other with delicious harmony, steady accompaniment and delicate counterpoint. Give and take was the name of the game.

Pianist Loh returned for Franz Doppler’s Rigoletto Fantasy, based on themes from Verdi’s opera. There were to be no academic pretentions in this out and out crowd-pleaser, which saw both flautists attempt to outdo each other in floridly dressing up familiar melodies like La donna e mobile, the Quartet and Caro nome. With tongue firmly in cheek, the duo delighted in variations on the latter aria as it morphed into an outrageous waltz to close.

It is hoped that a flourishing talent like this will continue to grow, and stay true to his art during his two years as a soldier.

Tuesday, 28 June 2011

MARCO POLO: THE CATHAY YEARS / The Philharmonic Winds / Review



MARCO POLO: THE CATHAY YEARS
The Philharmonic Winds 
Esplanade Concert Hall
Sunday (26 June 2011)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 28 June 2011 with the title "Oriental touch for Spanish trilogy".

The title of this concert refers to the second part of an on-going wind orchestra trilogy by Spanish composer Luis Serrano Alarcon (below). Commissioned by The Philharmonic Winds, the 20-minute work received its World Premiere conducted by America-based Singaporean conductor Leonard Tan. Written in the form of a four-movement symphony, it was more like a huge concerto grosso graced by a sextet of Chinese instruments from the Ding Yi Music Company as soloists.

The Oriental feel in the music was immediately palpable, skilfully enacted by a master colourist and orchestrator. This was achieved without quoting actual Chinese melodies, but by the deft use of the pentatonic scale and modes, much like the atmospheric scenes created in Turandot by Puccini. The exoticism, ceremonial rites and visions of the Far East came through so winningly that one almost forgot that Marco Polo and the composer were in fact Mediterranean in origin.

Make belief is as much part of the equation, as the sheer quality of the delivery, confident and always responsive, belied the fact that most of the young players were non-professional. Such was the thread running through the whole concert, which will be repeated in the World Association for Symphonic Bands and Ensembles (WASBE) conference in Taiwan next month.


Equally trenchant was the razor-sharp accompaniment provided by a chamber sized ensemble for Japanese trombonist Ko-ichiro Yamamoto in John Mackey’s Harvest. The three-movement concerto brought out an arsenal of trombone tricks in a quasi-jazzy idiom that shifted ever so naturally from quiet whisper to irrepressible Dionysian revelry.

Three other works in the showcase were performed recently by the ensemble, but it was good to make their re-acquaintance, in particular Singaporean Wong Kah Chun’s Krakatoa, a tone poem of seismic proportions that moved from gamelan sounds to an outright riot of volcanic energy. Here is a striking young talent who will go far. Percy Grainger’s Marching Song of Democracy opened the concert on a burnished high.


The Philharmonic Winds also proved its mettle in music of a more austere nature, and that does not come more spikily than Adam Gorb’s Farewell, which pitted two ensembles of opposing instrumental colours before closing in a clarinet and oboe duel-duet. Led with authority by renowned wind band maestro Timothy Reynish (left), who premiered the work in 2008, it was ample proof that wind performance had come of age in Singapore.

Sunday, 26 June 2011

Finalists of International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition 2011 announced



The five finalists of the International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition 2011 have been named. Over the next 4 evenings (27-30 June 2011), they will perform 2 concertos each, one of which must be by Tchaikovsky. No surprises, all of them have elected to perform the First Piano Concerto in B flat minor (Op.23) over the much-maligned (and more difficult to pull off) Second Piano Concerto in G major (Op.44). The finalists include two Russians, one Ukrainian and two Koreans. They will be performing in this sequence:

ALEXANDER ROMANOVSKY (Ukraine): Tchaik 1 / Rachmaninov 3

SEONG JIN CHO (Korea): Rachmaninov 3 / Tchaik 1

DANIIL TRIFONOV (Russia): Tchaik 1 / Chopin 1

YEOL EUM SON (Korea): Rachmaninov 3 / Tchaik 1

ALEXEI CHERNOV (Russia): Tchaik 1 / Brahms 1

The concerts may be caught on-line at: http://pitch.paraclassics.com/#/live/piano

Friday, 24 June 2011

CD Reviews (The Straits Times, June 2011)




PIOTR ANDERSZEWSKI PLAYS SCHUMANN
Virgin Classics 64202204 / *****


It seems just typical for the maverick French-Polish pianist to serve up a disc of Robert Schumann’s most obscure piano music. Perhaps the least unfamiliar is his Humoreske (Op.20), a rambling half-hour long work in six conjoint movements, much like the better known Kreisleriana. Imagine a song cycle sans vocal contribution, and one gets the essence of Schumann’s lyricism. Its sequences of melting cantabile, turbulent upheavals and whimsical asides make for congenial company, touched by Anderszewski’s ravishing piano sound.

Six Canonic Studies for Pedal Piano (Op.56), usually heard on four hands, make for a hardly appetising title. Anderszewski’s transcription for two hands, goes for aural beauty rather than contrapuntal prowess. Finally, Gesänge der Frühe (Morning Songs, Op.133) was Schumann’s last piano work before being committed to an insane asylum. Its five brief sections work their way from solace to agitation, and closing with quiet resignation. Never has a swansong, and more poignantly an ode to death, sounded this persuasive.



RODRIGO Concierto de Aranjuez / GOSS The Albeniz Concerto
XUEFEI YANG, Guitar / Barcelona Symphony / Eiji Oue
EMI Classics 6983612 / ****1/2


The Concierto de Aranjuez by Joaquin Rodrigo (1901-1999), composed in 1939, is by a long stretch the world’s most popular and hence over-recorded guitar concerto. Xuefei Yang, the first internationally renowned Chinese guitarist, enters a crowded field but gives an excellent account. One fully attuned to its rhythmic intricacies and sultry mood disposition, her finery of articulation is well matched by the Catalonian orchestra’s alert partnership that does not stint on the details.

The new work on show is Stephen Goss’s Albeniz Concerto, completed in 2009. It is however not an original work but an adaptation and orchestration of piano pieces by Isaac Albeniz (1860-1909). Piano-fanciers will recognise movements like El Albaicin and Evocacion from Iberia, and dances from Suite Espanola. The four pieces with cadenza however dovetails nicely as a whole, with substantial and grateful writing for the guitar, contrasted and well backed with colourful orchestral textures. Yang’s own transcriptions of Albeniz’s 6-movement Espana Op.165, including the famous Tango, completes a largely enjoyable musical tour of sunny Spain.

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

MALAYSIAN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA / Review




PERRY SO’S PROKOFIEV
Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra
Dewan Filharmonik Petronas, Kuala Lumpur / Saturday (18 June 2011)


Make no mistake, the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra (MPO) is a class act. And what a pleasure it is to experience the 13-year-old orchestra in his home, the magnificent Dewan Filharmonik Petronas (DFP), once the envy of Singaporeans in those seemingly long pre-Esplanade years. The MPO still reinforces its “dress up” code for men, which means jackets/coats and tie or long sleeve National costume for men, and that isn’t really a bad thing. When you are required to dress better than you normally would attending church service, chances are you would behave better. Which is why the infamous incident of schoolboys thrashing a SSO concert would never happen in KL, at least not in DFP.

The concert this weekend was entitled “Perry So’s Prokofiev”. So what’s so special about So and his relationship with Prokofiev? “Gergiev’s Prokofiev” or “Petrenko’s Prokofiev” might be perfectly understandable for a concert of all-Russian music, if they were conducting. But who is Perry So? I thought “The Heart of Russia” or “Russian Soul” might have worked better, but the proof of the pudding is in its eating.





The concert began with Alexander Mosolov’s (1900-1973) only work in the active orchestral repertoire, The Iron Foundry (or just Zavod), four minutes of white noise representing the dehumanising 1920s industrialisation of the Soviet Union. Grinding dissonances and ostinatos ruled the waves, and its one claim to fame – the use of a large metal sheet beaten by a hammer. There it hung unapologetically in the percussion section and employed to devastating effect. The short work also showed Mosolov could possibly churn out effective film music.

The concerto of the evening was Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, played by the Ukrainian Valeriy Sokolov. He is a big guy with a sound to match. Having said that, the performance, the third to be heard within the space of a month, was decidedly middle-of-the-road. It was definitely competent, without being too distinctive in a good or bad way. There were lovely moments for sure, and he did attempt to lovingly linger in the Canzonetta and the slower middle section of the finale, and brought out the fireworks to close. There were multiple curtain calls, and the audience even halted their applause in anticipation of an encore, and all he did was wave his hands, as if to say “That’s all folks!” Bizarre. Verdict: Definitely better than Lara St John (with the Singapore National Youth Orchestra), but trails behind Midori (with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra).





The true mettle of the MPO came to the fore for the second half’s Prokofiev Fifth Symphony in B flat major (Op.100). The young guest conductor Perry So, Associate Conductor of the Hong Kong Philharmonic and still in his 20s, was the winner of the International Prokofiev Conducting Competition (St Petersburg) in 2008, hence the significance of the unusual title. The MPO may be hailed as a great band on the strength of this performance, which had everything one could have desired and displayed every section of the orchestra to their advantage. The brass was particularly good, and rose to the occasion every time it was called upon. The gigantic climax built up towards the end of the first movement was a moment not for faint hearts, as the orchestra went for the jugular and did not let go.


The trenchant wit of the Scherzo, full of acid spewed and sniping asides, was brilliantly communicated as was the droll slow movement and its poignant sentimentality. Of the orchestral soloists, clarinettist Marcel Luxen was the easy standout, his solos were beautifully shaped and well projected. The machine gun rapid fire of the finale was engaged at full throttle, as the music rumbled ever so inexorably to its triumphant close. There is a section towards the end when the volume dips suddenly so that the complex turning of the wheels and gears of the war is heard unchallenged – played with much finesse and relish - was indicative of this orchestra’s virtuosity. Conductor So, whose sympathy, keen and taut conception of the work as a whole, helped make this brilliant orchestra shine. One looks forward to his visit to the SSO soon.

For this regular concertgoer, there were also other reasons to feel much at home. The excellent programme notes in a smart booklet (which cost RM 7 by the way) were written by the inimitable Marc Rochester (now resident in Singapore); SSO’s first violin Seow Jin Chong was free-lancing, SSO’s former cellist Elizabeth Tan (a Yong Siew Toh alumnus) is now a proud member of the MPO, as is former SSO librarian Khor Chin Yang, both Malaysians returning home to serve national musical service. Simply put, No trip to Kuala Lumpur is complete without attending a concert by the Malaysian Philharmonic.


The magnificent organ and ceiling of Dewan Filharmonik Petronas.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia / 17-19 June 2011

Here's the reason why I missed much of this year's Singapore International Piano Festival. Having made a final rail trip up north to Kuala Lumpur, we could not resist doing a spot of sightseeing and shopping. If Singaporeans thought they had it good, the Malaysians can be said to have surpassed their neighbours in many other ways.


A view of Kuala Lumpur's Golden Triangle from the KL Tower.

A view of the Petronas Twin Towers from KL Tower.


The conjoint phallic symbols of Malaysian economic might.




Lush KLCC Park, the Malaysian "Central Park".


The Malaysian Philharmonic @ Dewan Filharmonik Petronas.


Bustling Bukit Bintang by night.


The National Monument, dedicated to heroes of the Malayan Emergency 1948-1960.


Forestry Research Institute of Malaysia (FRIM).



Sunday, 19 June 2011

SINGAPORE (Tanjong Pagar) TO KUALA LUMPUR BY RAIL: One Final Fling

So I finally got to go on my rail trip from Singapore's soon-to-be-defunct Tanjong Pagar KTM Railway Station, for a 7-hour trip to the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur. A trip into nostalgia was well worth the effort, never mind the crowds and niggling problems. Come 1 July, such a trip will have to begin in the sterile Woodlands Railway Station and checkpoint. Its so sterile that photos are not allowed to be taken in its premises, which is probably a good thing anyway.

The long queue for the 8 am Ekspres Rakyat.

This is what the 1st Class (Premium) carriage looks like.

I could not resist taking a shot of Bukit Timah Plaza.


The residences of Choa Chu Kang / Stagmont.


The Causeway and the Straits of Johore.


Miles and miles of oil palm estates in Johore.


More oil palms until we reach Segamat.


A new station will soon be built in Gemas.


The capital of Negri Sembilan, Seremban.


The Moorish Mines Resort means we're near KL.


The familiar smog-laden skyline of Kuala Lumpur and KL Sentral station. Our rail trip was undertaken on Friday 17 June 2011. It was good to be back!

CD Reviews (The Straits Times, June 2011)



MAHLER Symphony No.2 “Resurrection”
Orchestra of the Music Makers / CHAN TZE LAW
OMM Live! / *****


It is often said that recordings can never replace the experience of a “live” concert. However if that concert happens to be one of massive significance, a recording of it becomes a treasured document. 10 July 2010 at Esplanade Concert Hall presented such an event, one that marked a definitive coming of age of classical music in Singapore. The goosebumps generated by the Orchestra of Music Makers in Mahler’s Second Symphony on that magical evening may be relived over and over.

It is not just that the young group of musicians (average age: 21 years) performed like professionals that impressed, but their ability to live their dreams in playing of such confidence, assurance, and ultimately passion. Strings were especially fine, woodwind solos shone, while brass chorales (on and offstage) had a memorable burnished quality. Even the solo voices of Rebecca Chellappah and Jeong Ae Ree have been lent an extra shine on this recording. The sheer sweep, masterfully guided by Chan Tze Law, kept this listener transfixed, all through its 78 minutes. Now who needs to rush out to buy Sir Simon Rattle’s latest recording?

JANINA FIALKOWSKA Piano Recital / Singapore International Piano Festival 2011 / Review




JANINA FIALKOWSKA Piano Recital
Singapore International Piano Festival
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory / Thursday (16 June 2011)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 18 June 2011 with the title "Pole position on keyboard".


The theme of this year’s piano festival is Transformation, manifested on the keyboard by a play on transcriptions, variations and the metamorphoses of themes. The opening recital was given by the Canadian-Polish pianist Janina Fialkowska, whose miraculous recovery from a debilitating form of cancer to a full concert schedule held a certain resonance.

Her wonderfully varied programme however began unsteadily, with a performance of Schubert’s little Sonata in A major (Op.120) dogged by wrong notes and a memory lapse. However the way she shaped its sunny themes, filled with songlike radiance and suppleness, left little doubt of her artistry.



In the music of her fellow Poles, a sure-footed authority held sway. In Karol Szymanowski’s Étude in B flat minor (Op.4 No.3), once his singularly most popular hit, quietly brooding chords built up to a crashing climax. This gave way to the impressionistic flights of fancy in The Isle of Sirens (from Metopes), where her delicate and always imaginative touch were a premium.



Fialkowska’s view of Chopin (left) was no less satisfying. The Waltz in A flat major (Op.34 No.1) had lightness and scintillation, the trills of the Nocturne in B major (Op.62 No.1) lingered ever so deliciously, while sheer vehemence and violence of Scherzo No.1 in B minor (Op.20) was given loving respite by a tender Polish lullaby.

The second half’s offering of Franz Liszt (below) – original works and transcriptions – was performed without a break. Love or loathe him, Fialkowska presented his two diametrically opposing sides. There can be no more subtle or sublime work than Liszt’s Benediction de Dieu dans la solitude (The Blessing of God in Solitude), which received the dream performance. The right hand’s gentle filigree, in communion with the baritone song by the left hand, created the spiritual high of the evening.



Three of Chopin’s Polish Songs in transcription brought the listener back to more earthy reaches. Fialkowska played a less familiar version of the Schubert-Liszt Soirees de Vienne No.6, but the rhythmic pulse of the waltz was ever pervasive. The ante was upped for the vulgar Waltz from Gounod’s Faust, where she went for the jugular of the Devil. Missed notes notwithstanding, it was a thrilling ride from the first to last note.

With two delightful little encores by Chopin and Mendelssohn, the transformation from Mephistopheles to Saint Janina was complete.


The Singapore International Piano Festival was presented by Singapore Symphonia Co. Ltd.

Thursday, 16 June 2011

ELENA CASOLI Guitar Recital / 9th Singapore International Guitar Festival / Review




ELENA CASOLI Guitar Recital
9th Singapore International Guitar Festival
RELC Auditorium / Wednesday (15 June 2011)



This review was published in The Straits Times on 17 June 2011 with the title "Strings of soul".

Luck has it that two of Singapore’s major international music festivals – for guitar and piano – fall on exactly the same week. Lovers of both instruments are thus split between two distant venues. In any event, the guitar festival opened first, with a recital by Italian virtuosa Elena Casoli.

Bespectacled and garbed like a 1960s folk singer, she looked more like your friendly bohemian elder sister rather than fire-breathing diva. Her recital showcased music from two opposite ends of the musical spectrum, the period predating the Baroque and the 20th and 21st centuries. The guitar is both an ancient as well as contemporary instrument, as she showed.

The juxtaposition of early Italians Pietro Borrono and Ambrosio Dalza with living composers Nicola Campogrande and Ludovico Einaudi was an euphonious one. All the pieces were of a quiet and serenade-like quality; cough and you will miss out on the intricacies. It did not help that she had to battle air-conditioning going full blast. Fortunately, the latter was soon turned off and music-making prevailed, a small price to pay.

The most interesting pieces were six of twelve Ink-jet Preludes by Campogrande, written for Casoli and so-titled because she first received these one by one through e-mail. The little mood portraits and vignettes expressed wide-ranging feelings and sentiments while exploring light and shade. She coloured these miniatures with much care and intimacy.




There were also familiar favourites, among them Harold Arlen’s Over The Rainbow, Gershwin’s Summertime and the Beatles’ Yesterday, but heard through the transcribing genius of Japanese icon Toru Takemitsu. The unusual harmonies and chord progressions piqued the ear, with the wonderful melodies lovingly laid bare.

In the second half, early music was represented by Josquin Desprez, Luis de Narvaez, Bach and John Dowland, where the more gentle textures of the lute were relived. The Dowland lachrymose pieces cried out for a singer, but Casoli’s artistry more than made up. The element of song and dance also came through winningly in Ponce’s nostalgic Estrellita, Campogrande’s jazzy Africa Blu and Leo Brouwer’s lilting Cancion de Cuna.

Casoli swapped the nylon strings of her instrument for the steel cords of festival director Thomas Liauw’s amplified guitar, and the contrast was stunning in Einaudi’s Giorni and three West-meets-East pieces from Lou Harrison’s Guitar Book. It was ample proof that guitars were like people, each with a voice and soul of its own.

The 9th Singapore International Guitar Festival runs till Sunday 19 June, and closes with a Gala Recital at 2.30 pm featuring all four guitarists - Elena Casoli, Maria Isabel Siewers, Gaelle Solal and Kaori Muraji - in concert. The Festival is presented by Tomas Music Consultants.

OMM's next concert: WINDFLOWER: GABRIEL NG PLAYS ELGAR

Don't miss the latest concert by the Orchestra of the Music Makers (OMM) this Friday 17 June 2011, featuring the phenomenal 16-year old violinist Gabriel Ng in Elgar's Violin Concerto in B minor. Conducted by Chan Tze Law, OMM will also perform the Mussorgsky-Ravel Pictures at an Exhibition.


Where: Esplanade Concert Hall
When: 7.30 pm, Friday 17 June 2011

Tickets available at SISTIC.



Here is the interview which I did with Maestro Chan Tze Law and Gabriel Ng, published in the April 2011 edition of Singapore Medical Association (SMA) News.

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

TCHAIKOVSKY INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION 2011 starts today!



The prestigious International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow starts today, and will run till 30 June. Simultaneously , the violin, cello and voice competitions will also be taking place in different venues in Moscow and St.Petersburg.

The 30 competitors for the Piano competition, with their performing repertoire, and a sample video of playing, may be found on this link: http://www.tchaikovsky-competition.com/en/2011/piano/competitors

Interestingly, the top two prizewinners of the recently concluded Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Competition are among the contenders, Daniil Trifonov (1st) and Boris Giltburg (2nd). The 3rd prizewinner of the last Tchaikovsky Competition in 2006 - Alexander Lubyantsev - is also in contention. This time, under the directorship of Valery Gergiev, a 1st prize will be awarded.

To access live and archived performances, please click on the Webcast icon on this link:

Tuesday, 14 June 2011

GUITAR vs PIANO / Two Instrumental Festivals in Singapore this week!

Two of Singapore's finest instrumental festivals take place this week!


Singapore International Guitar Festival, 13-19 June 2011 / RELC

Singapore International Piano Festival, 16-19 June 2011 / YST Conservatory


Here is the article published in the May 2011 issue of SMA (Singapore Medical Association) News, where I interviewed both Thomas Liauw and Lionel Choi, Artistic Directors of the guitar and piano festivals respectively.
http://news.sma.org.sg/4305/Concerts.pdf


To find out more, please check these websites:
http://www.tomas-music.com/tomas_music_consultants/default.asp


Monday, 13 June 2011

I MUSICI 60th Anniversary Concert / Review




60TH ANNIVERSARY OF I MUSICI
School of the Arts Concert Hall / Saturday (11 June 2011)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 13 June 2011 with the title "Film themes on ancient instruments".

What a pleasure it is to attend a concert at the new concert hall of the School of the Arts at Dhoby Ghaut. It is an intimate space with an illusion of a vast expanse, where the sound of instruments fills with a gratifying glow and vividness. It was exactly what the crack Italian string ensemble I Musici (literally “The Musicians”) deserved, as it had to cope with lousy acoustics in an Orchard Road hotel on its last visit almost 20 years ago.

I Musici performs on historical instruments, including Amati violins and the odd Guarneri viola, whose cumulative ages amount to a staggering thirty thousand years. However the ensemble does not preach period performance practice, thus playing with a lush and lusty vibrato without apology.




A foretaste came with Luis Bacalov’s Concerto Grosso, written for its 60th anniversary. A neo-Baroque work brought up-to-date with lightly sprinkled dissonances and surfeit of emotional devices, it included a most sentimental of slow movements. Leader and violin soloist Antonio Anselmi milked it for all its worth.

Entitled I Musici’s Oscars, the concert continued with film music. Ennio Morricone’s Suite rehashed melodies from four movies, including Once Upon a Time in America and The Mission, where violinist Marco Serino’s Amati sang with an even and refined cantabile. Roberto Granci’s I Love Cinema medley painlessly strung together 13 film themes, including Moon River (Breakfast at Tiffany’s), Schindler’s List, Cinema Paradiso and The Godfather before closing with a trio of marches from The Magnificent Seven, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Star Wars.





I Musici’s signature piece The Four Seasons by Antonio Vivaldi had to appear sometime. With over 25 million records sold worldwide, it had something personal and valid to say although this performance may not be one to retire to every night. Leader Anselmi was not the most subtle of soloists. His in-your-face manner came across as aggressive at times, but at least he could never be called boring or routine.

The ensemble responded to his entreaties with typical gusto, demonstrated lightness in Spring and Autumn while weathering the storms and stresses of Summer and Winter with much liveliness. The greeting “Grazia mille” (“A thousand thanks”) and three encores, more Vivaldi (Allegro from Concerto "Alla Rustica"), Rossini (Bolero) and Mascagni (Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana), rewarded the enthusiastic ovations for it was an evening to remember.


I Musici in Singapore was presented by the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts.