Showing posts with label Chong Wai Lun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chong Wai Lun. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 December 2024

BEETHOVEN'S NINTH: YOUR ORCHESTRAL EXPERIENCE / Musicians' Initiative / Review

 


BEETHOVEN’S NINTH: 
YOUR CONCERT EXPERIENCE 
Musicians’ Initiative 
SOTA Concert Hall 
Saturday (7 December 2024) 

Some cultures celebrate the Christmas season with Beethoven’s Choral Symphony. Singapore is not one of these, but it is still a welcome prospect to be greeted with the Ode To Joy. Many Beethoven 9 concerts have it as the sole item on the programme, but Musicians’ Initiative led by Alvin Arumugam preceded its concert with an unusual hour-long first half with what is likely to have been three Singapore premieres. 


The ostensible theme of the concert was a journey from darkness to light, and the world desperately needs that kind of inspiration now. The music of pioneering Japanese composer, the Berlin-schooled Kosaku Yamada (1886-1965), opened the concert. His Madara No Hana (The Spotted Flower, 1913) is a short tone poem which assimilated the influences must have had during his years of study – post-Wagnerian Tristanesque harmonies, impressionist hues and spurts of Richard Straussian lyricism. With neither whiffs of sakura nor sake, it made for a pleasant atmospheric overture. 


Alvin introduces the works
in his own passionate way.

What came next was unprecedented, two double bass concertos with the excellent Atlanta-based Korean bassist Mikyung Sung. The Asian premiere of Dark with Excessive Bright (2018) by American composer Missy Mazzoli (born 1980), inspired by John Milton’s Paradise Lost, was revelatory. 


Written in a single movement, its all-string accompaniment resembled that in a baroque concerto grosso supporting Sung’s tour de force, which spanned the full gamut of bass technique. This encompassed subterranean growls, gentle caresses to wild lashings, within an idiom that was tonal and at many parts lyrical. The tintinnabuli of Arvo Pärt’s spiritual minimalism was also in evidence. Towards the end, Sung’s touching duo with the orchestra’s bass Sanche Jagatheesan made for a sublime minute or so before a quiet and gentle close. 


Far more traditional was Italian bass-virtuoso Giovanni Bottessini’s Double Bass Concerto No.2 in B minor, which had all the early Romantic virtuoso tropes – bel canto lyricism, transcendental technique and showboating for its own sake. Sung is an understated virtuoso, whose technique is wholly in service to the music. Adapting very well to both vastly diverse idioms, her intonation was always impeccable and made the unwieldy instrument sing. When a bass in its highest registers begins to resemble a cello, one is in the presence of a true master. 




The main event was Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony in D minor (Op.125), popularly known as the Choral Symphony. The smallish orchestral forces employed by conductor Arumugam meant it was going to be lithe and light, much in the spirit of the period instrument movement. Heard on modern instruments, it was still a valid approach. Its opening, almost featherlight in its lift and very little vibrato used, would inform the tenor of the performance. The brisk speeds obligated very accurate playing and the orchestra obliged, the pinpoint pacing dictated by timpanist Christian Borres being a very dominant figure. 


The Scherzo was just as swift and emphatic, with woodwinds in tiptop and unimpeachable form. This conception, which worked very well in the first two movements, was becoming reminiscent of a famous recording in the catalogue, the London Classical Soloists under Roger Norrington. 


The Adagio was less immaculate, but unfolded in an unfussy and non-sentimental manner reaching a passionate climax before clocking in at just eleven minutes (Bernstein in Berlin ‘89 took over 20 minutes). With more rehearsal time, this would have been much better. 



And so to the much-awaited finale. Erupting with appropriate tumult, themes from earlier movements were relived before the An der Freude theme began to take shape. Just seven cellos and four basses meant the required heft was missing, a price to pay for the earlier litheness. Baritone John Lee was the perfect choice to voice the opening O Freunde, nicht diese Töne!, his stentorian presence a reassurance. Less impressive was tenor Raymond Lee who was virtually drowned out by the janissary band in the Turkish march episode. The quartet was soloists was completed by soprano Teng Xiang Ting and mezzo-soprano Cindy Honanta who were excellent. 


Pride of place had to go to the 74-strong Symphonia Choralis (Chong Wai Lun, chorusmaster) which was very well-disciplined and delivered the choral climaxes and tricky fugues with suitable aplomb. The unison Seid umschlungem, Millionen was particularly arresting, hair-raising in intensity but with no hair out of place. As everybody knows, this was Friedrich Schiller’s paean to the “Brotherhood of Man”, the unfettered joy displayed by orchestra, chorus and soloists evident to all who were fortunate to have attended. 


This was clearly the most impressive showing to date by Musicians’ Initiative under music director Alvin Arumugam. Their future concerts will be keenly anticipated.


Enjoy the concert here:

Monday, 1 April 2013

BLACK & WHITE / SYC Ensemble Singers / Review


BLACK & WHITE
SYC Ensemble Singers
Esplanade Recital Studio
Sunday (30 March 2013)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 1 April 2013 with the title "Songs profane and sacred".


Choral conductor Jennifer Tham (left) was deservedly awarded the Cultural Medallion in 2012 for a life’s work in the field of music. The fruits of her passion is the SYC Ensemble Singers (formerly the Singapore Youth Choir), which she first conducted in 1986 and has led to a long string of artistic successes. Their strengths lie in an unstinting commitment to new music, including those by Singaporean composers, and continually redefining the a cappella choral repertoire.

A sizeable audience attended this 90-minute concert with a contrasted programme that dichotomised, as its title suggested, darkness and light, despair and hope, death and life, and profane and sacred. Its first half was dedicated to music set to biblical or liturgical texts, with age-old medieval vocal traditions updated to confront present times.

Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo’s Unicornis Captivatur (right) began with plainchant, and then embraced polyphony in a madrigal-like setting which was essentially a celebration of the Easter season. Life trumps death in the Alleluia refrain, with its allegory of dying lamb and victorious lion. The choir immediately made its mark with its confidence and well-disciplined entries.

Although there were some intonation problems in Lorenzo Donati’s Lamento di Cecilia, the feel good factor continued into Mikko Heinio’s Luceat (left). Using passages from the Requiem mass, the work juxtaposed the breathy sound of exhalations with intoned words that sought the peace of eternal rest. The singing in high registers was excellent, and its heady climax showed that its emphasis was on illumination rather than the spectre of death.

The harmonic austerity of Antonio Russo’s Beati Quorum was brought in sharp contrast with Singaporean Kelly Tang’s The Angel (right), the latter a setting of William Blake’s texts. Simple and succinct, the all-women’s voices shone in this exquisitely beautiful and serene meditation about ageing.

A mark of a true leader is in grooming the next generation, and Tham provided opportunities for her two young assistants to conduct the choir. Chong Wai Lun led in Peteris Vasks’s Ziles Zina (The Tomtit’s Message, left) which harnessed disparate influences and styles, which included long portamenti (slides) and passages of aleatory or random utterances.

Choy Siew Woon ably helmed in four pieces of Suite de Lorca by Einojuhani Rautavaara and Bo Holten’s Hermit Peak (right), with its broad bold harmonies. It was Tham who had the last say, closing the concert with the Dane Holten’s First Snow, which began with a wordless sequence of cascading tones and despite its cold subject matter, later generated a good deal of warmth.

The choir’s encore, the gospel hymn-like Angel by Sarah McLachlan, showcased lovely unison singing and sent the audience home happy.