Saturday, 14 February 2015

SPARKLING RHYTHMS / Kam Ning & Albert Tiu / Review



SPARKLING RHYTHMS
KAM NING, Violin with
ALBERT TIU, Piano
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Concert Hall
Thursday (12 February 2015)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 14 February 2015 with the title "Dazzling duo".

Here is a pub quiz question for the future: Which Singaporean violinist was the first to win a major prize in a major international violin competition?  The answer would be Kam Ning, who was awarded 2nd prize at the 2001 Queen Elisabeth Violin Competition in Brussels. After all these years, she showed in a duo recital here what it takes to become a world-beater. 

Sparkling Rhythms was a showcase of playing at spellbinding speeds, but there was much more to that than a mere fireworks display. In Mendelssohn's Sonata in F major, the first movement was set alight with a nice blend of Beethovenian brio and Mozartian lightness. Her tone was always warm and reassuring, with a cantabile that delicately graced the slow movement before the prestissimo counterpoint of the ebullient finale.

Pianist Albert Tiu was in the thick of hyperactivity, supporting her in every turn with lightning reflexes and accuracy to match. A different kind of virtuosity was called for in Ravel's Sonata in G major, where a variegated touch and subtlety in pedalling provided a sotto voce backing to the violin's musings.


The famous Blues movement was milked for all its jazzy glory, with slides and slurs galore and its punchy rhythmic staccatos timed with heady perfection. Could serious classical music ever sound sexy? Here was the evidence. The finale's Perpetuum Mobile was also a blast, conducted with a hip-swaying verve that almost disguised its immense technical pitfalls.

This duo has the ability to make difficult things sound easy. John Novacek's Four Rags was pure homespun Americana updated to the 21st century. Forget Scott Joplin's languid foursquare dances on honkytonk, these numbers were for high octane fiddling, with three fast numbers titled Intoxication, Cockles and Full Stride Ahead counterbalanced by the slower and somewhat tipsy swagger of 4th Street Rag.

Saint-Saens' Sonata No.1 in D minor is notorious for its extremes in dynamics, putting ferocious demands on both performers. Yet its four parts telescoped into two movements were taken in their stride. A state of high tension presided over the first movement but the music was allowed to breathe in moments of calm contemplation, but soon the screws were turned.


The second movement opened with what sounded like exercises, but its “scherzo” feel made it sound anything but labourious. This was the launching pad to a most breathless finale likened to a 100 meters dash with hurdles thrown in for good measure. Kam and Tiu were unerring at this rarefied pace which saw a photo finish greeted with tumultuous applause.

Does this duo play anything slow? As if reading this listener's mind, they obliged as an encore Charlie Chaplin's Smile (from the movie Modern Times) in Claus Ogerman's bluesy arrangement. Here they took their time, lingering and luxuriating in the music's sentimental yet sensuous asides. This was a sublime way to end a truly dazzling show.

Ning and Albert's quite pleased that their work's
done for the day. Next concert: Tomorrow!

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