Monday, 24 March 2025
JEREMY MONTEIRO AT 65: THE STATE OF MY ART / Review
Saturday, 22 March 2025
HAPPY 340TH BIRTHDAY, J.S.BACH! / Soiree at Ying's with Red Dot Baroque
Happy Birthday, Papa Johann Sebastian Bach! 340 years ago, he was born in Eisenach, Thuringia on 21 March 1685, long before anyone had heard of Deutschland. What better way to celebrate his birthday than to organise a party bash with Singapore's foremost baroque group, Red Dot Baroque?
That was the idea of Huang Ying, Head of Culture, Press and Public Diplomacy at the German Embassy in Singapore, when she invited her Singapore and German friends to her lovely home in Katong for a Bach und Freunde soiree. Here are the photos from a most gemutlich evening through possible.
Ying introduces Red Dot Baroque and violinist Alan Choo to her guests. |
The musical evening opened with J.S.Bach's Sonata No.4 in C minor (BWV.1017) |
The opening movement uses the same melody as Erbarme dich from the St Matthew Passion. |
From the living room to the dining area, Leslie Tan introduces the baroque cello. |
Leslie performs a work by Italian composer Joseph Dell'Abaco. |
Christopher Clarke on theorbo offers a Toccata by Alessando Piccinini. |
Brenda Koh performs Fantasia No.9 by Bach's best buddy Georg Philipp Telemann. |
To close the concert was a dance work by Giovanni Fontana. |
Red Dot Baroque doing what they do best, having musical fun. |
Singapore Writers Festival director Yong Shu Hoong meets the Meyers. |
Alan Choo chats with Singapore Symphony Orchestra CEO Kenneth Kwok |
Germans and Singaporeans meet. |
Lianhe Zaobao's Zhang Heyang with Kenneth Kwok and soprano Alison Wong. |
Red Dot Baroque's harpsichordist Gerald Lim cuts the JSB birthday cake. |
Informal music-making, with Alan and Heyang playing J.S.Bach's Double Violin Concerto in D minor (BWV.1043) |
They finally got a real keyboardist to complete the concerto. |
Alison served as the page-turner for the 21st century tablet. 17th century tech at work. |
The Air and Gavotte from J.S.Bach's Suite No.3 in D major as arranged by Max Reger. |
That bag's not going anywhere near Berlin Brandenberg Airport. |
We had a great time, didn't you? |
Wednesday, 19 March 2025
BRAWL IN THE HALL / Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Chamber Music Week
BRAWL IN THE HALL
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory
Chamber Music Week
YST Orchestral Hall
Monday (17 March 2025), 6 pm
Rumble in the Jungle, Thrilla in Manila, Brawl in the Hall. All these rhyming titles have an element of combat in them, the first two been associated with Muhammad Ali's heavyweight title bouts. The last was the title veteran cellist Leslie Tan gave to this chamber concert featuring his gang and string students of the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory whom he tutors.
The programme was a highly unusual one, typical of the edginess that has come to define Tan's music making over the years and what the Conservatory hopes to achieve, that is to make its students think out of the box. And how to box - fly like a butterfly, and sting like a bee - bringing chamber music to the next level. Here are some photos from the concert, a record of what young people do in Conservatory these days.
The concert opened with a rare performance of Beethoven's Grosse Fuge (Op.134), rare in Singapore that is. This is classical music's equivalent of heavy metal, the truly hardcore stuff. Gone is the congeniality and niceties associated with chamber music. What we have instead is chromaticism and dissonance dressed up in extreme counterpoint. And what a gritty performance that was, gripping the listener at the lapels and refusing to let go.
Note also that the performers, violinist Yang Shuxiang and Brenda Koh, Martin Peh and cellist Leslie Tan, have been members of Singapore's chamber music vanguard. The T'ang Quartet, Concordia Quartet, Bards of Neverland and Red Dot Baroque are all represented in this foursome.
The Brawl Quartet, for want of a better name, were joined by five Conservatory students in Argentine composer Osvaldo Golijov's Last Round (1996), another boxing reference, a tribute to the great nuevo tango-meister Astor Piazzolla. Its two movements, titled Macho, Cool and Dangerous and Death of Angels say it all, a tango to end all tangos and a tango funeral march. Also notice how close the audience got to the performers, literally ringside seats.