Friday, 30 May 2014

VICTORIA CONCERT HALL REOPENS! A Lucky Audience Gets A Sneak Preview In Acoustic Test Performance



At long last! After a four year wait, Victoria Concert Hall has now reopened! A select audience was given a sneak preview of the wonders of the 109 year-old Victoria Memorial Hall in an acoustic test performance with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra on Thursday 29 May 2014.



First, all who came with expectant thoughts were startled by the new structural changes to the Victoria Concert Hall and Theatre complex. The space between the two auditoriums has been transformed into a spacious plaza with a glass ceiling. Gone forever is possibly Singapore's slowest ever lift (installed in 1980 to accommodate then-SSO Patron Dr Goh Keng Swee)!  Much of the old architecture and all of the old pillars have been retained. The whitewashed interior looks wonderful.




The symmetrical staircases that lead from the first and second floors are still there, only the busts of Singapore's former colonial governors have yet to be restored. The grand staircase to the Circle has however been removed, and in its place is a strange looking spiral staircase (below), which looks like a pale shadow of its predecessor.


The test performance opened with organist Dr Margaret Chen
performing Louis Vierne's Carillon de Westminster,
which sounds magnificent on the Klais organ. 

Shane Thio was the soloist in the Andante slow movement
from Mozart's Piano Concerto No.21.
The piano in the new acoustic sounds brilliant and over-bright.
Imagine what Liszt or Rachmaninov would sound like here! 

Orchestral musicians shut their ears during a full-frequency
audio sound-check conducted with fancy equipment (right).

Part of the VIP audience, including Prof Cham Tao Soon,
Mrs Goh Chok Tong and Prof & Mrs Lim Seh Chun.

Beethoven's Fifth Symphony from the Singapore Symphony
Orchestra led by Associated Conductor Jason Lai.
Again the sound is bright but not over-reverberant.
Perhaps one needs to sit a little further back not to be
overawed by the sheer impact of the sound.


As the hall empties, one marvels at the space.
The balcony has been greatly reduced, so that
the sound travels better to the back stall seats.
The hall now seats 673 people, down from the previous 883.

More views of the Central plaza.



One keenly awaits for the real opening of the new Victoria Concert Hall. It is going to be a truly joyous and momentous occasion!

Thursday, 29 May 2014

CD Reviews (The Straits Times, May 2014)



RACHMANINOV Piano Concerto No.3
PROKOFIEV Piano Concerto No.2
YUJA WANG, Piano
Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra
GUSTAVO DUDAMEL
Deutsche Grammophon 479 130 4 / *****

It’s official: Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto and Prokofiev’s Second Piano Concerto have become the most performed 20th century concertos by young pianists of today. Both accounted for two thirds of the six finalists’ choices at the 2013 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, and now this latest disc by young Chinese keyboard superstar Yuja Wang. Conceived within three years of each other, both exude Russian pathos at its darkest and most brooding, but take divergent paths to stratospheric virtuoso heights. Rachmaninov’s is the last great Romantic concerto, while Prokofiev’s melding of steely dissonance and percussiveness heralded a new age.

These are terrific live recordings which made up one explosive concert programme in Caracas, Venezuela in February 2013. Wang’s approach is reminiscent of Vladimir Ashkenazy’s scintillating first recording of the Rachmaninov in 1963. Lithe and mercurial, both used the smaller and lighter of two 1st movement cadenzas, and Wang shaves a full minute off Ashkenazy. The blistering pacing she and the young players of the Simon Bolivar Orchestra led by the charismatic Gustavo Dudamel adopt in the Prokofiev, especially in the tempestuous finale, leaves all rivals in their wake. This one does not disappoint.



BRITTEN Complete Orchestral
& Instrumental Music
Decca 478 545 1 (13 CDs) / *****

Although Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) was best regarded for his operas and vocal music, his orchestral and instrumental music hold a special place because of their accessibility and and inventiveness. Young listeners will always be indebted to his Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra and concert-goers to his concertos, Sinfonia da Requiem and Frank Bridge Variations which do get performed off and on. In this definitive Decca commemorative release, it is Britten himself who conducts the major works, supporting major artists like Sviatoslav Richter (in the Piano Concerto), Mstislav Rostropovich (Cello Symphony), Mark Lubotsky (Violin Concerto) and Julius Katchen (Diversions for piano & orchestra) in definitive readings.

Much of his earlier instrumental music and student works for almost every instrumental combination possible (from humble recorders to pipe organ and string quartet) are virtually unknown. Some were written with children in mind and every note has been brought together in this multi-label (13 at last count) enterprise. These reveal an eclectic and innovative voice, sometimes naïve, playful but always witty, which eventually coalesce into his highly individual, often dissonant yet distinctive style. Many of the performances here are first recordings. There are surprises aplenty and repeated listening will be rewarded manifold.

This set retails at $84 
(excluding postage and packaging) 
at www.prestoclassical.co.uk

Monday, 26 May 2014

SUZHOU-SINGAPORE YOUNG TALENTS COMPETITION 2014



SUZHOU-SINGAPORE YOUNG TALENTS COMPETITION
Saturday (24 May 2014)
SIP Youth and Children Centre

The Chinese city of Suzhou in Jiangsu Province has been for centuries synonymous with classical garden-residences and the musical arts, no better represented by the antique Kunqu opera tradition and its more intimate relative Suzhou pingtan. Today Suzhou is a happy confluence of the hallowed past and an exciting, modern and rapidly-progressing present. Just minutes separate the laid-back canals and bohemian alley-ways of Pingjiang Lu from the chrome and steel skyscrapers of Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP), a sure sign that China has firmly laid claim to the 21st century while proudly reflecting on its colourful history.

Suzhou or Singapore?
The Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP) is perhaps a bit of both.

In the field of Western classical music, the Chinese have made major in-roads, with the emergence of international superstar artists like pianists Lang Lang and Wang Yuja, just to name but a few. Once purged and denigrated as product of the degenerate and decadent Occident, Western classical music has now been embraced by the Chinese as a status symbol of exalted taste, good living and “having arrived”. 

The SIP Youth & Children's Centre

So it was not a major surprise that a fruitful Suzhou Saturday afternoon be spent in the company of the Singapore Chinese Orchestra and the newly established Suzhou-Singapore Young Artist competition. The fact that these two fixtures were even possible spoke volumes of the level of cooperation between the cities of Suzhou and Singapore, spear-headed by the Suzhou-Singapore Township Development Pte Ltd. Twenty years of far-sighted Singaporean investment in Suzhou as a hub of research, development and manufacture has transcended industrial and commercial concerns to now encompass the aesthetics of artistic endeavour and music-making.


The Young Artist Competition was held at the SIP Youth and Children Centre, a space-age, multi-purpose venue built to resemble the arching petals of a flower in bloom. Its symbolism was not lost on the 140 young string players from Suzhou and Jiangsu under the age of fifteen who applied. 30 musicians (29 violinists and a sole cellist) were selected to perform at the Grand Finals, and true to form, there was not a single no-show in the three-hour long event.

Dressed to thrill, and dressed for the kill.
Somehow someone forgot to tell the pianist!

Every player took his or her opportunity seriously, whether informally attired in tee-shirt and jeans or dressed to the hilt as if attending a debutant’s ball. Each performed a short work from the standard Western or Chinese violin repertoire, including single movements of well-known concertos. The overall standard of playing was generally high, comparable to the Junior and Intermediate categories of the biennial Singapore National Piano & Violin Competition. Mastery of the printed score was the pre-requisite, and many possessed the ability to breeze through their repertoire quite effortlessly. Several went further by communicating through heart and soul, moving the audience with a singing tone and technique that went beyond mere notes.

Chen Tianqi was the deserved 1st Prize winner.

The three-member jury led by Singaporean violinist Siow Lee-Chin, Head of violin studies at the newly-formed Bard College of Music in Soochow University awarded the 1st prize to Chen Tianqi, whose confidence and finely-honed tone impressed in the first movement of de Beriot’s Violin Concerto No.7. His reward included a bounty of 10,000 RMB and an all-expenses paid trip to Singapore to participate in Symphony 92.4 FM’s Young Artist Competition on 27 June. 


2nd place went to Huang Yiqun for a solid reading of the first movement of Bruch’s Violin Concerto No.1. For my own part, it was difficult to resist the pluck and resolve of little Dong Daoyi, all cherubic cheeks in a bright red dress, who sang and soared in Li Zhili’s Fisherman’s Harvest Song. She was awarded a deserving 3rd prize. It would seem like all three, as well as several others, have been well-schooled by their teachers, heartily supported by their parents, and a bright musical future awaits them. That is, if they continue to work hard and pursue their dreams.

Siow Lee-Chin addressing the audience.

As the organiser of the competition, Siow had encouraging words for this Suzhou-Singapore initiative which will hopefully continue as an annual event. "Although this competition is a "baby" compared with major international competitions, I am heartened that the students have embraced this opportunity.  When I was a student competing in competitions, I did not always win. But it was the small steps I made preparing for smaller competitions that helped me win the Henryk Szeryng International Violin Competition which launched my career. This was a major motivation for me to help this event happen for the young people of Suzhou and Jiangsu Province," she mused. "It was very fulfilling that a music project to benefit the young could arise from the investments in physical infrastructure that our pioneers had made over the last twenty years. Who would have thought that a music competition be a by-product of an industrial park?" she added.

A guest performance by students of
Soochow University School of Music,
all students of Siow Lee-Chin.

The future of China, as well as the world, lies in its young people. They will become the leaders of tomorrow, and their collective responsibility may begin quite simple with the discipline that comes with learning and mastering a musical instrument. Singapore is proud to work hand-in-hand with Suzhou to develop talent and leaders for the future.

The winners received their prizes from
the Consul General of Singapore in Shanghai.
Siow Lee-Chin with Dong Daoyi,
a fiddler for the future.

A BRIEF DIARY OF SINGAPORE CHINESE ORCHESTRA'S CHINA TOUR: Part 1



A BRIEF DIARY OF
SINGAPORE CHINESE ORCHESTRA’S
CONCERT TOUR OF CHINA 2014

As an invited member of the Singapore Chinese Orchestra’s Artistic Committee, I was honoured and privileged to join the orchestra on its ten day concert tour of three cities in China. This was the SCO’s third tour of China (the last being in 2007) and a significant landmark in the orchestra’s short but august history.

In the small world of professional Chinese orchestras, the SCO is Southeast Asia’s only representative and prides itself with a unique instrumental sound and colour. Over the years, it had been developing and specialising in what has been described as “Nanyang music”, that is music by Southeast Asian and Singaporean composers, imbued with distinct aromatic flavours, idioms, styles and characteristics of the “South Seas”. This tour was a prime opportunity to showcase this repertoire in the “father and motherland” of Chinese instrumental music. But how would the “parents” respond?

Arriving at Pudong International Airport.

Day 1 (Friday, 16 May 2014)

We arrived safely in Shanghai’s Pudong International Airport and bunk in the luxurious Huating Hotel & Tower, fresh with the anticipation of the mission at hand. The orchestra was boosted by the company of SCO Chairman Mr Patrick Lee, who had taken time off his incredibly busy schedule to provide moral support throughout the entire duration of the tour.

Composer Ho Chee Kong, cellist Qin Li-Wei
acknowledging the applause.

Day 2 (Saturday, 17 May 2014)

The Singapore Chinese Orchestra’s concert held at the Shanghai Concert Hall in People’s Square was part of the Shanghai Spring International Music Festival. This was the first time a foreign Chinese orchestra has been invited to grace the prestigious festival. True to form, SCO under Music Director Tsung Yeh performed its most serious and uncompromising programme of the tour, highlighting the music of both contemporary local and Chinese composers. Yii Kah Hoe’s Buka Panggung, a ritualistic part of the traditional wayang kulit, opened the concert. Using Malay themes and drumming, it made startling contrasts with Ho Chee Kong’s Passage, which had Shanghai-born cellist Qin Li-Wei (now residing in Singapore) in the starring solo role, itself conceived as an elaborate and discursive prequel to Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.  

Maestro Yeh Tsung in engaging
banter with the Shanghai audience.

Two Chinese composers, Ye Guo Hui and Wang Jian Min, were represented with their Late Autumn (a World Premiere) and Tribal Dance respectively. On a lighter note, Singapore-based British composer Eric Watson’s The Ceilidh (incorporating the popular folksong O Waly, Waly) and Kelly Tang’s jazz piano concerto Montage completed the ambitious show. In the latter, local jazz piano legend Jeremy Monteiro was at his most exuberant in the three-movement virtuoso vehicle. Maestro Yeh, himself a Shanghainese, also connected with his compatriots with friendly, warm-hearted banter, signing off with two encores. Old Shanghai, by Law Wai Lun, which relived the heady days and saxy nights of the 1930s. The Shanghai audience was clearly delighted and enthused.

All the Chairman's Men: (From L)
SCO Generam Manager Terence Ho, Maestro Yeh Tsung,
Chairman Mr Patrick Lee, Director Dr Ho Chee Kong,
Pianomaniac and SCO Resident Conductor Quek Ling Kiong. 
The Jade Buddha Temple (Yufoshi)

Day 3 (Sunday, 18 May 2014)

Today was a free day, with many of the players (some of whom are Shanghai natives) relaxing and visiting relatives and friends. Maestro Tsung Yeh had been staying with his 95-year-old mother who is still sprightly and active as a vocal teacher. For my part, I was invited to an authentic Shanghainese lunch by Singaporean friends residing here. More sightseeing included the Jade Buddha Temple, CD and DVD shopping, and luxuriating in the night lights of Yuyuan Bazaar, the Bund and Nanjing Road.

Colourful Pudong by night.

A BRIEF DIARY OF SINGAPORE CHINESE ORCHESTRA'S CHINA TOUR: Part 2


Tourist sightseeing boats at Nanjing's Fuzimiao.

Day 4 (Monday, 19 May 2014)

We decamped and headed north for the old Nationalist capital city of Nanjing. The bus journey took the best part of four hours, but it all seemed a breeze with Jeremy Monteiro busy autographing CDs and nostalgically reliving his days on the road, and I getting briefed by SCO Productions Manager Lee Chun Seng on the orchestra’s history and distinctiveness. As the orchestra got set up at the Zijin Grand Theatre, I visited the tourist hotspot of Fuzimiao, a most picturesque locality where the Confucius Temple meets a branch of the Grand Canal.

Ming Xiao Ling; Mausoleum and final resting place
of the first Ming emperor Zhu Yuan Zhang.

Sun Yatsen's tomb on Zijinshan.

Day 5 (Tuesday, 20 May 2014)

Time for more sightseeing for me. Thus I headed for the verdant hills of Zijinshan, site of the Ming royal tombs and Sun Yatsen mausoleum. My feet ached from all the walking, but there was still some energy left to visit the spectacular Nanjing Museum.

Part of the Porcelain Gate
at the Nanjing Museum.

Erhu virtuoso Zhu Changyao
with the Singapore Chinese Orchestra.

The concert in Nanjing has a more folksy appeal than the contemporary offerings in the Shanghai gig. Appropriately, The Voyage from Law Wai Lun’s Admiral of the Seven Seas opens the evening. It was from the ancient capital of Nanjing that explorer Zheng He set on his maritime expeditions under the auspices of the Ming emperor Yong Le. Nanjing’s esteemed erhu exponent Zhu Changyao, Director of the Jiangsu Arts Centre, was the soloist in his own composition Midnight At The Maple Bridge. His tone and mastery was awe-inspiring in this mellow number, and he was joined by four SCO erhu players Zhu Lin, Zhou Ruo Yu, Shen Qin and Tao Kai Li (all Nanjing natives) in the medley Melodies of Yangzhou for a happy homecoming.    

SCO's guan principal Han Lei
in Zhao Jiping's Silk Road Fantasia.

Jeremy Monteiro and bassist Lee Khiang
in Kelly Tang's jazz piano concerto Montage.

Guan virtuoso Han Lei took centrestage in Zhao Jiping’s Silk Road Fantasia Suite, the three movements sounding ever more exotic in an already exotic evening of Chinese music. To round off, Jeremy Monteiro, bassist Lee Khiang and drummer Tama Goh returned for Kelly Tang’s Montage, which had a more liberated and free-wheeling quality this evening. Buoyed by the vociferous applause, the jazzman threw in his Soliloquy as an encore. Maestro Yeh’s two further encores were also big hit for the excitable and somewhat undisciplined audience. A few of its members were caught blatantly videotaping the concert. Talk about unabashed and unbridled enthusiasm!

Another video for Youtube!
Its legal if you don't get arrested!

A SHORT DIARY OF SINGAPORE CHINESE ORCHESTRA'S CHINA TOUR: Part 3


Suzhou's latest skyscraper located in the
Industrial Park looks like a pair of jeans!

Day 6 (Wednesday, 21 May 2014)

Suzhou here we come! The orchestra has two concerts here in the modernistic Suzhou Arts and Cultural Centre beautifully set on the northeast edge of the Jinjihu Lake in the Suzhou Industrial Park. As a generous gesture of goodwill and friendship, Chairman Patrick Lee hosted the entire orchestra to a sumptuous ten-course dinner at the Grand Ballroom of the Howard Johnson All Suites Hotel. There is no better encouragement than an uplifted spirit and a full stomach.

A Singapore Chinese Orchestra family photo.

A bridge over a canal in the
river town of Tong Li.

Day 7 (Thursday, 22 May 2014)

Another free day for me but I did not feel guilty making that trip to the river town of Tong Li, a venture well worth the time to experience what it is life in the “Venice of the East”. The city of Suzhou and its neighbouring villages have taken on that title, and it is well deserved. My evening is spent in the famous Master of the Nets Garden, in the company of Suzhou’s fabled musical arts, with performances of kunqu opera, pingtan, instrumental solos and ensembles by talented students and wizened veterans.  

Suzhou pingtan performance
at the Master of the Nets Garden.

Day 8 (Friday, 23 May 2014)

SCO’s concert in Suzhou was in celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Suzhou Singapore Industrial Park and how this venture in investment brought the two nations together. This was held at the modernistic Suzhou Arts and Culture Centre, the impressive horseshoe-shaped edifice of glass, chrome and steel. This is Suzou’s Esplanade, only bigger and arguably grander. 

The concert hall foyer at
Suzhou Arts and Cultural Centre.

The programme conducted by Yeh Tsung began with Law Wai Lun’s The Voyage and Yii Kah Hoe’s Buka Panggung, and included a segment of kunqu opera, from the epic Peony Pavilion, called Broken Dream. The two singers, Shen Fengying and Yu Jiulin, who earlier sang in Singapore were now dressed in the traditional finery of costume and make-up. They looked and sounded magnificent, and the performance the added dimension of surtitles in both Chinese and English. One would blush at the risqué words, R-rated for certain, but how artfully these were concealed by their formidable but discreet thespian skills!

Masters of Suzhou kunqu opera.
Concertmaster Li Baoshun earns the plaudits.

SCO Concertmaster Li Baoshun starred in Liu Xijin’s Legend of the Merlion, a gaohu concerto with a surfeit of fine melodies. He is a true virtuoso, one belying an unassuming and undemonstrative surface, and how his instrument sings. In closing, Monteiro and Company ruled the house in Kelly Tang’s Montage, and how this performance varied from the last. Now it took on a more leisurely air in the slower bits but a greater swagger in the furiously-paced finale. There have been three performances of the concerto on the tour, and this one was unequivocally the best. The audience agreed whole-heartedly and were rewarded with three encores.  

Jazz legend Jeremy Monteiro gets to close the show.