OMM
PROM: JAZZ!
Orchestra
of the Music Makers
Esplanade
Concert Hall
Saturday (7 March 2015 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 9 March 2015 with the title "Monteiro makes the most of Montage".
The OMM Prom is an annual themed concert
by the Orchestra of the Music Makers (OMM) in which shorter and popular pieces
of music are performed for audiences possibly encountering symphonic classical
music for the first time. Its Saturday afternoon slot is family friendly and
low ticket prices ensure that most Proms are sold out by the time the music
starts.
This year's edition conducted by Chan Tze
Law celebrated the legacy of symphonic jazz, a term which may be loosely
referred to Afro-American styled popular music often employing the blues idiom
written by serious composers. Consistent with the SG50 celebrations, Singaporean
composer and Cultural Medallion recipient Kelly Tang's jazz piano concerto
received its first performance in a version for western orchestra.
Tang's Montage was composed for jazz piano legend Jeremy Monteiro in 2010,
but its original orchestration was for Chinese orchestra. The work and its 2014
revision was ecstatically received in the Singapore Chinese Orchestra's concert
tour of China , and this version
cements its place in the local canon of concertante works. Unlike Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue and Concerto in F, which are fully scored
for piano and orchestra, Montage is a jazz concerto in the truest sense,
because the soloist is given the latitude to improvise as he pleases for a
large part of the work.
Although Monteiro was seen shifting reams
of paper as he played, much of these are blank sheets, opportune moments for
him to weave a spell on his keyboard. This reviewer has heard this work on
multiple occasions, and every performance has been different, mostly because
the master had chosen to vary his tact on the occasion, either by
ornamentation, dynamics or whatever caught his fancy.
This freedom also applied to his trio
partners, bassist Christy Smith and drummer Tamagoh, who had their own spiels
under the spotlight. The first movement was in sonata form, contrasted by the
slow movement's interlude, with Samuel Phua's sensuous soprano saxophone solo
replacing the original erhu. The finale's Caribbean-flavoured dance was an
infectious and irrepressible expression of pure joy. Thus Montage may be viewed as three different portraits of Monteiro -
the academic, the romancer and the raver.
The Monteiro trio played an encore of their own: I've Never Been In Love Before from Guys and Dolls. |
The concert opened with the suite from
John Kander's musical Chicago , distinguished by
Kenneth Lun's highly evocative trumpet solos and nifty moves with the wah-wah
mute. Of a similar inspiration was Shostakovich's Suite for Variety Orchestra, a selection of dances from the
Russian's movie music recycled as “jazz”, culminating with the saxy strains of
the Waltz (from The First Echelon), which graced Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut.
The young orchestra was clearly enjoying
itself in these light-hearted trifles, but it got serious again in George
Gershwin's An American In Paris, the
closest thing he wrote to a symphonic poem. This was taken at a slick and
goodly pace which contributed to the hustle and bustle of this masterpiece.
Despite the tricky cross rhythms and frequent abrupt shifts in dynamics, the
orchestra more than coped and when have the taxi-horns sounded more in tune
than this?
The vociferous applause was rewarded with
the drums of Tamagoh and the big band in Louis Prima's Sing, Sing, Sing (With A
Swing), popularised by Benny Goodman. One will not get more jazzy than
this.
Composer and interpreter: Kelly Tang with Jeremy Monteiro. |
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