The Arts House Living Room
Thursday (24 May 2012 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 26 May 2012 with the title "Young composers show promise".
The realm where the young composers of Singapore today inhabit looks like
a vibrant and thought-provoking environment to be part of. This chamber concert
showcased the diverse talents of five such individuals, all alumni of the
Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, who are unafraid to bare their souls and express
their innermost secrets.
Chinese music with a Singaporean vibe: Ernest Thio's Poise. |
The stereotype of the unapologetic Schoenbergian
or Boulez-wannabe seems to be in the minority these days, with more composers
re-embracing tonality and its aural comforts. Ernest Thio, whose music opened
the closed the concert, has a fine ear for harmony through exotic timbres. In I Felt a Funeral in My Brain, based on
Emily Dickinson poems, he skilfully blended two voices with lush piano chords
in a work that saw death as a passage of solace rather than anguish.
Ernest Thio's Nian employed an unusual quartet of Samuel King (piano), the composer (ukulele), Dominica Chua (erhu) and Rozie Hoong (zhonghu). |
In the brief Poise,
an erhu and zhonghu played out an elegy as counterpoint to the piano’s bare
theme. Most memorable was Thio’s Nian
for huqins, piano and ukulele, a
memory of his Hokkien-speaking grandmother who lived in a Buddhist temple which
used a chant as its subject. Thio’s part on the Hawaiian guitar simulated that
of a strummed Chinese instrument. This is a reminiscence of Chinese music,
viewed through Singaporean lenses.
The ensemble for Luo Enning's My One True Love: the composer (piano), Yap Pheck Chuan (violin), Doreen Yeo (clarinet) and Bernard Yong (glockenspiel). |
Luo Enning’s My
One True Love was even more unusual, a 21st century work that
completely avoided dissonances and even minor chords. Scored for violin,
clarinet, glockenspiel and piano, its vision of eros resembled the quasi-jazzy
and deliberately simplistic dance music of Shostakovich, but minus the irony
and guile.
Lu Heng's Blues of the Day was played by the composer (piano), Christoven Tan (viola), Clarence Chung (electric guitar) and Shaun Soh (drums). |
In Lu Heng’s Blues
of the Day, a spirit of improvisation came to the fore. The electric guitar
and drum-set made it sound more like a rock band rather than jazz combo.
Rhythmic from start to end, one would not have been too surprised had the riffs
of Lalo Schifrin’s Mission Impossible
Theme burst out with guns blazing.
And then there were two solo works that showed
that atonality was not completely dead. Alicia De Silva’s 12-minute-long Cadenza (from Suite for Viola), played by Christoven Tan, was almost a suite in
itself as it explored a myriad of moods and responses, from its ruminative
beginning to Schnittke-like pages of seething violence.
Christoven Tan (Viola) and Gabriel Lee (Violin) |
Similarly, Bernard Lee Kah Hong’s And it Happens to Drop from Beneath, the
work that won the 2011 National Violin Competition composition award, truly
tested violinist Gabriel Lee’s mettle. Operating at a narrower range of
dynamics, its understated virtuosity nevertheless probed varying degrees of
psychological disquiet.
This 70-minute snapshot of our nation’s varied
compositional landscape was both an invigorating and encouraging signpost of
how and where our music is heading to.
The composers' circle (from L to R): Ernest Thio, Lu Heng, Alicia De Silva, Donna Koh (Moderator), Bernard Lee Kah Hong and Luo Enning. |
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