Sunday 14 May 2023

IMPOSSIBLE THINGS / Wayfarer Sinfonietta / Review



IMPOSSIBLE THINGS

Wayfarer Sinfonietta

Esplanade Annexe Studio

Thursday (11 May 2023)


This review was published in The Straits Times on 13 May 2023 with the title "Wayfarer Sinfonietta plays contemporary fare with flair."

 

Established in 2021, Wayfarer Sinfonietta is a professional chamber group that specialises in performing contemporary music and accompanying singers, led by prize-winning young conductor Lien Boon Hua, who is also the director of Yong Siew Toh Conservatory’s new music ensemble OpusNovus. Its latest concert for string ensemble was as uncompromisingly edgy as it was original, putting a marker on future programmes to come.


Photo: Moonrise Studio

 

Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s Illumine (2016) exploited all possibilities of string playing, opening the evening with literally a chill. Its skilful use of tremolos, harmonics, slides and explosive pizzicatos generated an unnerving atmosphere. Although one of calm and stasis, it however radiated a strange warmth. The sonorities generated in the blackbox theatre was not unlike the sun casting rays on a frigid Arctic landscape.   


Photo: Moonrise Studio
 

What followed was far more tonal, with American composer Nico Muhly’s three-part song cycle Impossible Things (2009), a setting of six poems by Egypt-born Greek poet Constantine Cavafy (or C.P.Cavafy), translated into English and scored for voice, solo violin and strings. Tenor David Charles Tay was the protagonist, opening with I Believe In The Hereafter. This and each of the subsequent verses translocated the listener to some distinct time and place.



 

His clear diction was complemented by Chan Yoong-Han’s virtuosic violin, serving as partner in commentary as well as conflicting voice. The final part, dated at precisely 27 June 1906,  2 p.m., could not have more diverse subjects, the brutal execution of a teenager followed by the eponymous Impossible Things. Accompanied by repetitious patterns favoured by minimalists, the words “The loveliest music is the one that cannot be played... the best life is the one that cannot be lived.” had a ringing resonance.


Photo: Moonrise Studio

 

After Tay trooped offstage, Chan continued without a break into Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s Nocturne (1994) for solo violin with its grinding dissonances and fiendishly tricky passages. This was a brief return to the desolate and wintry climes that opened the concert, before massed strings erupted into perhaps the programme’s only remotely familiar work, American minimalist John Adams’ Shaker Loops (1978).



If there were any preconceptions that this ensemble was merely a pick-up group of free-lancers, this performance shattered all such illusions. A work demanding such immense precision and incisiveness, playing at neck-breaking pace, could only be accomplished by the best in the land. Scanning faces and names of the players, one found Singapore Symphony Orchestra musicians and competition award-winners among them, and why not?


Look who's playing?
Ng Pei-Sian, Joelle Hsu,
Olivia Chuang & Wang Dandan (from L)
Photo: Moonrise Studio
 
What minimalism looks like,
a view of violinist Chikako Sasaki's score.

The challenge of playing difficult music and surmounting all kinds of odds are what sets true professionals apart. There was a visceral thrill in witnessing the incessant buzz, rapidly shifting rhythms and tonalities of the opening movement Shaking And Trembling. The  middle movements were an epiphany of control and restrain, with no less attention paid to finer details. Closing with more dynamism in A Final Shaking and a surprisingly quiet final bar, the 70-minute-long concert was greeted by nothing less than tumultuous applause.



No comments: