OF POETRY AND MUSIC
Ding Yi Music Company
Esplanade Recital Studio
Saturday (8 November 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 10 November 2014 with the title "Reliving ancient music and poetry".
The Song and Tang dynasties represented a golden
age of the literary arts in China , which flourished until
its conquest by the warlike Mongols of the Yuan dynasty. Its poetry inspired no
less than the likes of Gustav Mahler in his autumnal lyric symphony The Song
Of The Earth. This concert by the Ding Yi Music Company conducted by Lim
Yau, with music by Zechariah Goh Toh Chai, was somewhat less ambitious while
attempting to encompass similarly epic subjects.
An added dimension to this production was the
projection of calligraphy by former Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts President Choo
Thiam Siew, who is also CEO of the Singapore Chinese Cultural Centre. Narrator
Lee Yong Tick read the poems in Chinese as a prelude to each of the sung movements.
The first part comprised three poems, beginning
with Butterflies Over Flowers, with
hushed plucked strings (ruan, pipa, cello and bass) creating a
suitably serene atmosphere for tenor Jeremy Koh’s impassioned song and
recitation. Ladies voices from the NAFA Chamber Choir were unaccompanied in Li
Bai’s Qing Ping Diao (Pure Serene Music) and a mixed choir
incanted the word fei (Chinese for
flight) countless times in Peng, a
segment from Zhuang Zi’s Xiao Yao You
(Carefree Wondering).
Of course, such polyphony in composer Goh’s
scores were foreign and even non-existent in those times, but his intention was
not to recreate ancient music, but to relive its spirit through modern
compositional techniques. He succeeded with a combination of idiomatic choral
writing and coherence in conception, even if the choir was at times not always
spot-on in intonation.
The second part was Da Feng Ge (Song Of The
Rising Wind), conceived like a six-movement cantata on the subject of war
and ancient chivalry. Two bare-chested drummers opened the work with a
pugilistic show of belligerence, heralding tenor Koh’s Song of Gai Xia, a show of anger and indignation that had both
spoken and sung elements, accompanied by chanting male voices.
Soprano Su Yiwen provided the most glittering
display of vocal prowess in Reply to
Xiang Yu, the concubine Yuji’s song of anguish and despair. Two purely
instrumental movements set the scene for the grand finale. Kenny Chan’s sanxian led the charge in Besiege From All Sides, while the stage
was bathed in blood red light in Battle of
Gai Xia, where the strident winds and high pitched strings chillingly depicted
scenes of carnage.
The closing Song
of the Rising Wind for full choral and orchestral forces was a glorious
paean to ultimate victory, but a nuanced one where reflection stood in parity
with celebration. This half-hour long work could be considered a Singaporean
Chinese answer to Prokofiev’s war-inspired cantata Alexander Nevsky, and that is saying quite something.
Photos by courtesy of Ding Yi Music Company.
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