THE PURSUIT OF BEAUTY
IN THREE CONCERTS
Why do people still go to concerts? Is it to be entertained, educated, enlightened or provoked? Art engages us in many ways – literally, visually and aurally – whenever we read books, visit museums and art galleries, and attend artistic events. In concerts, we seek beauty in sound, in all its infinite and glorious varieties.
Over the last two weeks, I count myself fortunate to have attended three very different concerts from three very different musical cultures. I was not reviewing for The Straits Times, just soaking in the sound and trying to appreciate what I have heard. I cannot pretend to understand everything on show, but cannot help but admire the sheer artistry and virtuosity witnessed. I was moved and touched in different ways. That is what excellent concerts by excellent artists do.
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| Photo: Siong Leng Musical Association |
TRANQUILITY . TEMPEST
Siong Leng Music Association
Drama Centre Black Box
Friday (15 August 2025)
Nanyin is the music of China’s southern provinces, its chamber music comprising a woman’s voice accompanied by a few instruments, including pipa, erxian, sanxian and xiao. This is the intimate world of Siong Leng, one of Singapore’s oldest existing music groups dating from the 1940s but now inherited by a young generation of musicians. The singing of Lim Ming Yi in the Minnan dialect is haunting and of a melancholic quality, the accompanying musicians supporting her rather than seeking attention for themselves. Now throw in Indian tabla player Nawaz Mirajkar’s group SwaRhythm with singer Aditi Gopinathan (completely different but just as alluring) accompanied by veena, we have music from a completely different sphere.
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| Photo: Siong Leng Musical Association |
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| Photo: Siong Leng Musical Association |
Coming from diverse cultures, one would have expected a clash or sonorities. But no, the sequence of alternating voices and instruments was seamlessly held together in this production. One did not need to know what they were singing, nor the contexts, to enjoy their work. In fact, it was easier to close one’s eyes and be immersed in their respective sound worlds. When the two musics coalesced in composer Ng Kang Kee’s sensitive arrangements, it did not matter which was Chinese or which was Indian. They simply became one in soul and spirit. If only politicians and soldiers could resolve their differences in this manner.
THE END OF THE LINE
Chroma
Armenian Church
Sunday (24 August 2025)
The ten-person vocal concert Chroma led by UK-based chorusmaster Gerard Lim celebrated the respective birth and death anniversaries of Giovanni Palestrina (1525-1594) and Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625), two great composers of the late-Renaissance period. This was the efflorescence of polyphony, where independent vocal lines converge with concordance and resonance. The discovery and development of polyphony has to be one of the glories of Western civilisation when rest of the world still relied on monophony and heterophony. And nothing is more expressive than the human voice.
Whether it was sacred music or secular madrigals, the joy of polyphony filled the ears and fulfilled the senses. The Armenian Church of St Gregory the Illuminator has to be one of Singapore’s best kept secrets, its close to perfect acoustics is ideal for choral and chamber music, with performers placed almost directly under its rotunda. Palestrina’s music was written for the Vatican and performed at its Sistine Chapel. One does not need to travel to Rome to imagine what Chroma was achieving in its survey of his music. Whether one knew the Latin or old English words was immaterial when faced with music and sound of such exquisite beauty.
SIMPLY STRINGS
STRING ORCHESTRAL MUSIC
BY KELLY TANG
SOTA Concert Hall
Thursday (28 August 2025)
When it comes to string music, there are few composers / arrangers as skilled as Cultural Medallion recipient Kelly Tang. In a private benefit concert for Eagles Communications, popular oldies were dressed in such sumptuous string finery that was hard to dislike. Most of the pieces on show such as Those Green Eyes, Perhaps and Love Me Tender were written for Foo Say Ming’s string ensemble re:mix. Kelly’s own T’angology for string quartet was commissioned by the T’ang Quartet. All of these sound just as beautiful played by a younger next generation ensemble led by violinist Bobur Eshpulatov.
Tang has a keen understanding of string sonority and a strong grasp of nostalgia, which was what tugged at the heart-strings. When the Teresa Teng classics The Moon Represents My Heart (月亮代表我的心) is dressed up like a Mahlerian Adagio or when Tian Mi Mi (甜蜜蜜) is Dayong Sampan meets The Simpsons and Pizzicato Polka, something special is going on. And who could resist a fugal treatment of the hymn All Things Bright and Beautiful (the original and non-Rutter version)? Kelly Tang is a national treasure whose music and arrangements should never be forgotten.
Good concerts of good music abound in Singapore today, and it does not take a great deal of effort to discover them. The pursuit of beauty continues and one will be more than amply rewarded.





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