Friday, 8 October 2021

SCO 25: OUR SHARED MEMORIES / THE SCO YESTERYEAR / Review




SCO 25: OUR SHARED MEMORIES

THE SCO YESTERYEAR

Singapore Chinese Orchestra

Singapore Conference Hall

Saturday (2 October 2021)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 October 2021 with the title "Singapore Chinese Orchestra's walk down memory lane".


It is hard to believe that the Singapore Chinese Orchestra (SCO) is now twenty-five years old. Its history however goes further back to 1974 when the People’s Association Chinese Orchestra (PACO) was established as the first professional ensemble of traditional Chinese instruments outside China. Several musicians from that original outfit still perform in the SCO.



 

This 90-minute concert was a fond reminiscence of SCO’s forebears and a tribute to pioneers who showed the way. The first part entitled The Melodies We Used To Play showcased chamber music performed without conductor. The Beautiful Zhuang Brocade arranged by Wu Houyuan, premiered by PACO forty years ago at this same venue, was a soothing serenade with a lively dance-like end to close.



 

Equally animated was Pan Yunchong & Zhu Xiaogu’s The Bustling Docks, a 1970s paean to  progress in Communist China, which could easily have symbolised Singapore’s rise as a shipping hub during the same period. Renowned Chinese percussionist Li Minxiong’s Striving For A Bumper Harvest mined the same vein with young percussionist Benjamin Boo impressively leading the ensemble from his set of drums. As a point of interest, Boo was following in the footsteps of his percussion teacher Quek Ling Kiong (himself a student of Li), who gave its first Singapore performances decades ago.  




 

The second part, Those Classic Concertos We Grew Up With, featured two substantial concertante works. Liu Bin’s Haw Par Villa Myths, conducted by Associate Conductor Moses Gay, saw PACO veteran Lim Sin Yeo mastering four different wind instruments. These included the paixiao (panpipes), dadi (long flute), taoxun (ocarina) and xiaodi (piccolo) in a colourful four-movement suite that curiously united Chinese mysticism with modernist styles recalling sci-fi movie scores of Bernard Herrmann.



 

Liu Wenjin’s The Great Wall Capriccio was arguably the evening’s most familiar music. This four-movement erhu concerto, worthy counterpart of the Yellow River and Butterfly Lovers concertos, was premiered by the late erhu virtuoso Min Huifen in 1981. Her student SCO erhu principal Zhao Jianhua relived the demanding solo part with SCO Resident Conductor Quek Ling Kiong at the helm.

 

As expected, epic landscapes, heroism, sacrifice and commemoration were all encompassed, with its most poignant moments in the slow third movement Memorial For The Patriots. Here, Xu Zhong’s cello solo and Zhao crafted an elegy that left an indelible impression.   



 

SCO Music Director Yeh Tsung conducted the final work, three movements from late-lamented SCO musician and composer Yeo Puay Hian’s Torrent (1992). Inspired by tales of rivers and the sea, the work paid tribute to hard work, sweat and toil, aptly accompanied by black-and-white photographs of pioneering SCO members in their youth. Its final movement, Pass On The Light, also featured pre-recorded voices of  the Vocal Associates Chamber Choir, with the message that if we do not remember the past, we might as well forget about the future.


 

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