Thursday 2 January 2020

NEW YEAR'S EVE COUNTDOWN CONCERT 2020 / The Philharmonic Orchestra / Review




NEW YEAR’S EVE 
COUNTDOWN CONCERT 2020
The Philharmonic Orchestra
Victoria Concert Hall
Tuesday (31 December 2019)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 2 January 2020 with the title "New Year's Eve concert offers reflection and hope".

The last concert of every year now belongs to The Philharmonic Orchestra, its New Year’s Eve Countdown Concert being a Singaporean fixture and institution in its own right. Now in its ninth edition, the baton usually held by veteran conductor Lim Yau has been literally passed down to the next generation of maestros. On the podium this concert was Lin Juan and Edward Tan.


The evening opened with the familiar strains of Bernstein’s Candide Overture, led by Lin. The comedic elements of the operetta, based on Voltaire’s satirical novella, were unleashed with the fizz of uncorked champagne, and no little glitter or gaiety. Tan conducted the rest of the first half, beginning with Verdi’s Nabucco Overture.


Brass was on excellent form with its chorales and before long, the well-known melody Va, Pensiero (as in the Chorus of Hebrew Slaves) was heard on the woodwinds. The rousing end was balanced by Vaughan Williams’ First Norfolk Rhapsody. The serene and pastoral nature of this music was very apt for the yuletide season, cut from the same musical fabric as the English composer’s much better-known The Lark Ascending.


Instead of the violin, the more throaty viola was heard, lovingly voiced by Janice Tsai. There was also a busy fugue on a modal theme, but the lovely work ended with solace and calm. Skocna, a fast dance from Smetana’s opera The Bartered Bride closed the first half with a lively spring in one’s step.


One notable absentee of the concert was its usual master of ceremonies William Ledbetter. In his place was the younger and less self-restrained presence of Jasmine Blundell, whose entreaties and exhortations to the sedate audience (which had not imbibed enough champagne apparently) were over the top, to say the least.


The shorter second half, conducted by Lin, began with Dance of the Hours, the jolly ballet from  Ponchielli’s otherwise grim opera La Gioconda. If its melodies ring several bells, that is because this same music accompanies prancing ostriches and hippopotami in the Disney animated classic Fantasia.


As before, it was time again to reflect on personalities in music and the arts who passed in 2019. Sibelius’ hauntingly beautiful Valse Triste was the soundtrack as a succession of images flashed on screen, among them actor Aloysius Pang, conductors Andre Previn, Mariss Jansons and Stephen Cleobury, and octogenarian pianist Elaine Wu Yili. It was poignant to remember that Wu had collapsed while attending a concert in this very same venue in April.


The sound of fireworks from Marina Bay could be heard with increasing volume through Victoria Concert Hall’s rather porous walls, but there was one last piece to go – Saint-Saëns’ Bacchanale from Samson et Dalila. Its faux-Oriental feints and Middle Eastern dervishes were masterly negotiated, and the concert closed with a cascade of balloons and poppers. The hope of a better year in 2020 arrived just minutes later.     

No comments: