Friday, 2 January 2026

MY FAVOURITE CONCERT PHOTOS OF 2025

Artists, take a bow!

It's no secret that I keep a camera handy during concerts. Whether there is official permission to take photos or not, I quietly get some shots in. Capturing artists engaging in their passion is a particular favourite hobby of mine of mine. Being there at the concert is the real thing, but enjoying the photos can only be the next best thing. Here are some of my favourite concert photos of the past year. 

Near midnight, 31 December 2024.
TPO Conductor Lin Juan coaxes the audience to
clap along to the Radetzky March.

Piano passion.
Chinese pianists Tianyou Li and Tiankun Ma
at the Singapore International Piano Competition.

Guitarist Hunter Mah
and flautist Roberto Alvarez
(with Hunter's two daughters)

Jazzman Jeremy Monteiro's
65th birthday concert.

Baroque Brass at Yong Siew Toh Conservatory
for a Red Dot Baroque concert.

Kahchun Wong leads the 
SSO in Shostakovich.

Rach Piano Passion.
Behzod Abduraimov & Daniil Trifonov
play Rachmaninov piano concertos.

Alvin Arumugam leads Musicians' Initiative
in Richard Strauss' Also Sprach Zarathustra.

Serine de Labaume and Martin Ng
in Queens and Divas of Bel Canto.

Ignatius Wang leads the
Singapore Armed Forces Central Band.

Tang Tee Khoon and Alasdair Beatson
deep in concentration.

P Ramlee returns to life in
Tunggu Sekejap with re:mix led by Foo Say Ming.

Cellist Yoyo Wu and pianist Wu I Ling
in a tribute to Anita Mui.

Kate Liu at the
Singapore International Piano Festival.

Robert Levin makes a point
about improvisation in Mozart.

Everyone wants to meet
President Tharman Shanmugaratnam at the
Asian Cultural Symphony Orchestra concert.

Slide Monsters trombone quartet at YST.

Calefax Reed Quintet at YST. 

Robert McDuffie performs
Philip Glass' Four American Seasons.

Dick Lee makes an unscripted appearance
at the Voices of Singapore anniversary concert.

Soprano Khor Ai Ming looking thrilled
at her 55th birthday concert.

Joined at the hip, the piano duo of 
Lin Hengyue and Nattapol Tantikarn.

Tze Toh just loves to improvise while
Martha Argerich always looking sultry.

Actor Clement Yeo in Nanyang Collective's
Memoirs in Music.

More Piano Passion. Cherry Ge plays
Hamelin, Janacek, Schumann & Chopin.

Leslie Tan is the soul of the cello.

Red Dot Baroque's Christmas concert.
Whatever Alan Choo does,
Brenda Koh can do as well.

Adrian Chiang leads Ventus
and Schola Cantorum Singapore
in Borodin's Polovtsian Dances.

We've come a full circle.
Lin Juan leads The Philharmonic Orchestra
in the Radetzky March on the last evening of 2025.

Thursday, 1 January 2026

NEW YEAR'S EVE BY THE SINGAPORE RIVER

Yea, let's celebrate as
2025 closes and 2026 opens.

It's New Year's Eve, and it's a few more hours before 2025 becomes 2026. A leisurely stroll along the north side of Singapore River can only be described as one of the most pleasant experiences that one could have before attending a concert. That would be The Philharmonic Orchestra's annual New Year's Eve Concert, a Singapore institution that is our solution to Vienna Philharmonic's New Year's Day Concert. Granted it's not as glamourous (nor as expensive) but it is still proudly ours. And so are the views of our Singapore River, the lifeblood of our nation, a Thames, Seine, Danube or Moldau which we could call our own. 


The walk starts at the Elgin Bridge,
named after the Brit who stole the Greeks' marbles.

What a view of the river.

On the north side are Parliament House
and Asian Civilisations Museum.

Two of Singapore's former tallest buildings,
United Overseas Bank (UOB) and
Overseas Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC).


The restaurants and watering holes
of Boat Quay.

Thomas Woolner's statue of 
Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles 
overlooks Victoria Theatre and ACM.

Raffles seems to say to his haters,
"I told you so about that little red dot".

Fullerton Hotel used to be the General Post Office.


View of the Singapore Flyer
across the Cavenagh Bridge.



Victoria Theatre and Concert Hall.

National Gallery,
formerly Supreme Court building.

The Old Parliament House precinct.

It's 12 midnight, 1 January 2026
and here come the fireworks!


WISHING ONE AND ALL
A HAPPY AND FULFILLING 2026 AHEAD!


Tuesday, 30 December 2025

I OWE MY LOVE OF CLASSICAL MUSIC TO GARY GRAFFMANN

 

Gary Graffman making a point.
Photo taken in Hong Kong, 2016

I OWE MY LOVE OF CLASSICAL 
MUSIC TO GARY GRAFFMAN

It is with much sadness that we learn the death of American pianist Gary Graffman (1928-2025) on 27 December. He was 97 years old. Gary Graffman was the reason why I fell in love with classical music, and to him I owe a debt of gratitude.


Remember this cover?
Mine was a bootleg copy of this cassette.


It was 1979, and with pocket money saved up I was beginning to discover the joy of music. Those were the days of cheap $2 cassette tapes (now known as a mixed tape) that were sold at almost every street corner in Singapore. It was at one such shop in Dhoby Ghaut which also sold tropical fish (a site now occupied by the School of the Arts) that I bought a cassette titled Rachmaninoff’s Greatest Hits. The main work was his Second Piano Concerto, which may be described as the “sound of falling in love”. I was immediately smitten by the Russian Romantic composer’s bittersweet melodies and luscious orchestration, and played that tape over and over until it squeaked terminally. The performance was bold yet tender, speaking with an immediacy, voice and presence that swayed me intoxicatingly into the “dark side”. As if on drugs, I had been hooked forever. The pianist was Gary Graffman, partnered by the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein.


Another version of the album on CD,
complete with Malaysian copyright sticker.


This music followed and haunted me over the years, and I bought multiple versions of that 1964 Columbia Masterworks recording after the old $2 cassette gave up its life, including another bootleg cassette in Kuta Beach, Bali and that too soon wore itself out. Then, I got the CD version in its various guises, including the same record but with a different cover in Kuala Lumpur International Airport. By some stroke of fortune, I was gifted the LP of the greatest hits album with the original iconic artwork of the series by former Singapore Lyric Opera general manager Ng Siew Eng. Now I have many CDs, the sole LP while all the cassettes had gone kaput.


That same Rach 2 recording,
but in different CD guises.

The original vinyl recording.
Photo taken in Hong Kong on 14 October 2009,
Gary Graffman's 81st birthday.

My wish of seeing Gary Graffman perform with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra never came to fruition, as he developed focal dystonia of the right hand that disrupted his career during the early 1980s. Then he transitioned into a career of teaching the piano (at Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute), also becoming a serious collector of Asian art. Among his many students whom I was fortunate to see perform were Lydia Artimiw and the young Chinese triumvirate of Lang Lang, Yuja Wang and Haochen Zhang. He was always proud of his students, and would never be fazed by any criticism of them. To every adverse comment on LL, he would just add, “And he’s so much more than that”.

Notice that Lang Lang's autograph
is far bigger than Gary Graffman's.
The Gary Graffmann Sony Classical box-set.
GG with Yuja Wang

GG with Haochen Zhang

GG with the young Tengku Irfan (Malaysia)
and Aristo Sham (Hong Kong) in 2009,
after hearing the youngsters improvise.


I finally got to meet my musical idol in 2005, at the 1st Hong Kong International Piano Competition where he was a jury member (alongside other piano luminaries like Leon Fleisher, Vladimir Ashkenazy and Vladimir Krainev). He was a regular presence at the Chopin Society of Hong Kong’s festivals and events. In 2006, I finally got to see him perform a recital of left hand solo repertoire and Erich Korngold’s Suite for piano quartet at the HK Cultural Centre. 

GG (extreme right) and the jury of the 2008
Hong Kong International Piano Competition
headed by Vladimir Ashkenazy.


He also gave an illuminating talk about his life in music at the Society’s breakfast meeting, the proceedings which have been described here:


At the same event, he also autographed my copy of his autobiography I Really Should Be Practising, a candid, witty and self-deprecatory account of his life till the early 1980s. Its title alone could easily describe the state of all of us would-be piano players.



Sometime in 2009, I was asked to accompany him in a taxi from the Peninsula Hotel to City Hall Concert Hall where a concert of The Joy of Music Festival was to take place. That was, for me, the greatest honour thought possible, and within that 20 short minutes, I went on to regale him on how his Rachmaninoff recording had changed my life forever. He sat there quietly, probably wondering how many times he had heard all of this before. After finding out I was from Singapore, he warmly recounted a former Singaporean student of his who had invited him to a concert she was conducting. He had to decline since he was now in Hong Kong. That Singaporean was the conductor Wang Ya-Hui, who is presently based in Taiwan.


A left hand piano recital in The Joy of Music Festival 2009 was covered by yours truly here:



Years later, I was asked to write a blurb to promote Singaporean violinist and Curtis alumna Siow Lee-Chin’s autobiography From Clementi to Carnegie. I was most honoured to find my musings placed in the same page and below that of Gary Graffman’s.

Also notice how great artists
get their message across in far fewer words.

About piano concertos, I finally got to see Graffman perform and these concerts were also in Hong Kong. These included Prokofiev’s Fourth Piano Concerto (in 2008) and Ravel’s Left Hand Piano Concerto (2011), both conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy. Needless to say, those were unforgettable musical events for me.

Gary Graffman after Ravel's Left Hand Concerto
with Vladimir Ashkenazy in 2011.
Andrew Haveron is the young concertmaster.




I own many recordings of Gary Graffman of varied repertoire – solo, chamber and concertos – including 20th century composers like Schnittke, Rorem and Skrowaczewski, and these continue to be an inspiration for me. For Graffman, music always came first, and his role as a servant of the great composers and their music will always be a constant reminder to all of us who profess to love music.



GG with Liang Liang,
our last selfie, in 2016.

Ultimate memorabilia:
the only Gary Graffman Rachmaninoff
drinking mug in the world.