Friday, 17 January 2025

NOVELETTES / SSO Chamber Series / Review

 


NOVELETTES 
SSO Chamber Series 
Victoria Concert Hall 
Thursday (9 January 2025)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 11 January 2025 with the title "SSO's chamber series showcases East European rarities in fun, tuneful evening".

The first classical concert of the year appeared more forbidding on paper than actual listening. Part of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra’s chamber series, the intriguing programme consisted wholly of rarities from Eastern Europe performed by members of the orchestra. The Suite for Two Violins (1943) by contemporary Polish composer Grazyna Bacewicz (1909-1969) opened the evening, from violinists Zhao Tian and Zhang Si Jing. 


Its seven movements, like a neoclassical suite of ancient dances, were surprisingly accessible for its time. Although peppered with mild dissonances which resolved without fuss, these miniatures alternating between fast and slow movements were unexpectedly tuneful. Zhao and Zhang worked like hand and glove, their clear-headed and polished readings were applauded by a sizeable and enthusiastic audience after each movement. 

Despite its title, there was ironically nothing new about the Five Novelettes (Op.15) for string quartet by the Russian Alexander Glazunov (1864-1936). This music, by the arch conservative who lived well into the 20th century, is closer in idiom to older composers like Pyotr Tchaikovsky and Alexander Borodin, with influences from Russian Orthodox chant and various orientalisms as well. 


Championed by the T’ang Quartet during the 1990s, the attractive music included approximations of Spanish dance music (the first movement is titled Alla Spagnuola), a vigorous tarantella (Orientale), a prayerful slow movement (Interludium in Modo Antico), an elegant Waltz and All’Ungherese

The closing movement saw first violinist Chan Yoong-Han scale treble heights in exotic melodies of possible Hungarian gypsy provenance. He was joined by Zhao, violist Marietta Ku and cellist Yu Jing for this sentimental wallow. 

Mikhail Glinka (1804-1857) was the father of Russian nationalist music, but there was little that was Russian in his Grand Sextet in E flat major (1832), which could have come from early Western European Romantics like Johann Hummel or Felix Mendelssohn. Its instrumental combination was similar to Franz Schubert’s Trout Quintet (except for an added violin), thus accounting for its tonal warmth and mellow sonorities. 


Almost hidden from view was pianist Low Shao Ying whose flashy and fussily filigreed part brilliantly dominated the proceedings. In the expansive and unabashedly tuneful opening movement, there were also juicy melodies from cellist Guo Hao and violist Luo Biao who were unafraid to announce their presence. Violinists Jin Li and Zhao, and bassist Karen Yeo completed the well-balanced ensemble. 

The central slow movement was classic bel canto, with a mellifluous aria-like theme sung by the strings over simple accompaniment. The association with Italian opera composers Gaetano Donizetti and Vincenzo Bellini was unmistakable, as was a nocturne-like atmosphere reminiscent of pianist-composers John Field and Frederic Chopin. 


Its magical spell was uninterrupted by applause as it segued into a joyous Allegro con spirito finale which was pure and unadulterated fun. Chamber music, as they say, may be summed up as Res severa verum gaudium or Pleasure is serious business.


Thursday, 16 January 2025

SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION 2025: PRELIMINARY ROUND SESSION V

 


PRELIMINARY ROUND 
Session V (Wednesday, 15 January 2025) 

Wednesday afternoons are when I usually take a long nap at home, but this was an opportunity to catch another four pianists at the Singapore International Piano Competition, something not to be missed. And I wasn’t disappointed. 


Roman Lopatynskyi (31, Ukraine), a former runner-up at the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition, took an epic view of J.S.Bach’s slow Prelude & Fugue in C sharp minor (WTC Book 2), which had such broad tempi that one could drive a T-64 tank through. This was at the risk of losing the narrative, but the build up of the stately fugue was one worth waiting for. 

Brahms’ late Four Pieces (Op.119) are also his most modern piano works, particularly the first two which look ahead to Schoenberg’s unstable harmonic world. Again, very deliberate tempi and unusually placed accents distinguished the B minor Intermezzo, the tonality of which kept one guessing for a while. Similarly ambiguous was the E minor number that followed, but the glorious central melody in E major was well brought out. The C major Intermezzo could have done with more lightness and charm but no arguments against the E flat major Rhapsody which had the right heft and bluster to close. 


And who wasn’t waiting for the burly Ukrainian to deliver Stravinsky’s Three Movements from Petrushka with true Slavic intensity? Although a tad slapdash in the Danse Russe, his view of Chez Petrouchka was to bring out as many jarring dissonances as possible, and it worked. The bustling Shrovetide Fair was a high decibel event, which despite some missed notes was fully characterised. The octave leaps at the end were just stunning and the thunderous close was pretty much what was expected. 



The choice of Elia Cecino (23, Italy) to juxtapose the contrapuntal prowess of Shostakovich’s Prelude & Fugue No.21 in B flat major (Op.87) with J.S.Bach’s Toccata in G minor was a touch of genius. Both have breathless fugues which make for absorbing listening, and the two centuries that separate the Soviet and the German seem much narrower now. He also proves a supreme colourist in two of Ravel’s Miroirs. Alborada del Gracioso, with its clacking castanets and sweeping glissandi, sparkled ever so brilliantly but even better to come was his aromatic and bell-filled visage of the Orient in La vallee des cloches


A more gripping performance of Scriabin’s Sonata No.3 in F sharp minor would be hard to find. He stamped his authority on the main theme and the struggle of the “states of the soul” was at hand. The second movement’s imperious romp was well contrasted with the slow movement’s dreamily reflective state, the latter I have never heard more clearly or persuasively rendered. The first movement’s emphatic theme would come back one last time before the finale’s relentless rush of adrenaline to complete this unusually creative recital on a high. 



The repertoire choices of Yi-Teng Huang (26, Taiwan) were puzzling for this level of competition. Mozart’s “easy” Fantasia in D minor (K.397) followed by J.S.Bach’s Toccata in E minor seemed odd, both opening with recitatives which could have been freely improvisatory but instead came out as heavy-handed. Maybe he wanted these to sound like coming from a pipe organ. The happy conclusion to the Mozart and the fugal climax of the Bach were fine heard on their own, but were less than the sum of the parts. Schubert’s Impromptu in F minor (Op.90 No.1) is not often heard in isolation from its siblings, but Huang made as much possible from its slim musical content. 


I am beginning to wonder if Stravinsky’s Three Movements from Petrushka, heard for the second time this afternoon, is becoming competition-weary. Everybody plays it, almost becoming a cliche for loud and unapologetic barnstorming. It is business as usual in Huang’s reading, slightly more accurate and conventional but less characterful than Lopatynskyi’s. I think that’s enough Stravinsky for this competition. 



The preliminary recital programme of Tianyou Li (20, China) was centred wholly in the key of C minor. That was a risk unless he could make the music sound special, and he more than accomplished that. J.S.Bach’s French Suite No.2 and its short dances were ripe his ornamentations, which were interesting and ear-catching, almost improvisatory in nature. This is crisp Bach-playing that is hard to dislike. 


His tour de force came in Schubert’s mighty Sonata No.19 (D.958) from the great final trilogy. This is a young person’s reading, full of rhythmic vitality and a lust for life. When one considered that Schubert died soon after this was premiered at 31, he was still very much a young man. 

The tragedy was well captured with the opening chords, confidently punched out, and the harrowing development section of the first movement. The hymn-like slow movement was beautifully sung, and the tension was raised for the third movement’s Menuet and Trio. The finale’s tarantella rhythm had a fatalistic finality to it, and even though there were two more sonatas to come, Schubert knew his time was up. Li’s eventful Schubert and Cecino’s Scriabin were the two transcendent performances of the afternoon.





JUDGES' VERDICT

The six pianists chosen by the jury to proceed to the Semi-Finals are:

Tiankun Ma (China)
Leyu Xu (China)
Jiyoung Kim (South Korea)
Philipp Lynov (Russia)
Elia Cecino (Italy) and
Tianyou Li (China)

The Semi-Finals take place on Thursday and Friday (16 & 17 January 2025) at the SOTA Concert Hall.

Wednesday, 15 January 2025

SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION 2025: PRELIMINARY ROUND SESSION III

 


SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL 
PIANO COMPETITION 2025 
PRELIMINARY ROUND Session III 
(Tuesday, 14 January 2025) 

As I am still working, I was only able to catch the piano competition live in the evening. There were just two pianists when I had expected three, but the playing standard was so high that there were simply no complaints from me! I was able to catch the earlier sessions via YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/@amadeustv), and was immediately blown away by the musicianship and virtuosity of the pianists. This was to be no ordinary piano competition, and by far the highest standards of playing I have ever witnessed on this island. 

Attending live is so much better than watching videos, and so I headed down to the School of The Arts to join the few dozen other people to watch the performances in person. 


Leyu Xu (16, China) is a child prodigy whom I first encountered in 2019 playing Carl Vine’s First Sonata (second movement) and am pleased that she continues to progress. Although she did not observe repeats, her view of J.S.Bach’s Partita No.5 in G major was one radiating the joy and vitality of youth. The crispness and clarity of articulation through the dance movements impressed, and she kept the narrative flowing. In Haydn’s Sonata in D major (Hob.XVI:32), she captured both gravitas and wit to the right degree, and if Chopin’s Third Ballade in A flat major (Op.47) came across as somewhat prosaic despite its finesse, its probably tainted by over-familiarity. 


Finally the gloves came off for the celestial violence of Messiaen’s Regard de l’Esprit de joie from Vingt regards sur l‘enfant Jesus. Despite her slight frame (being the tiniest of twenty pianists), she delivered in heaps, completely unfazed by its physical and technical demands. Her pluck, passion and poetry are reminiscent of a great Chinese pianist who decades ago equally impressed at that age – Chen Sa. 




Jeyu Lee (26, South Korea) did observe all the repeats in J.S.Bach’s French Suite No.5 in G major, and for the second time round each dance, the added ornamentations were ear-catching, stylish and unobtrusive. His Gavotte and Gigue, often rushed off by over-eager keyboard technicians, were more measured responses which still had the lightness and sparkle. Although the programme leaflet had listed Chopin’s 24 Preludes (Op.28), what came instead was the 12 Etudes (Op.25), which proved the final treat of the evening. 


Like Yunchan Lim in his Decca recording, Lee brought out hidden voices never previously encountered in several of these, most pointedly in the F minor (No.2) study. His technique was mostly beyond reproach, and even the running thirds of the G sharp minor (No.6) held no terrors for him. His resistance to barnstorm was a credit, and he delivered the famous slow “Cello” Etude in C sharp minor (No.7) most beautifully. The blazing fire, snow and tsunami of the three final studies (Nos.10-12) were not so much a show of virtuosity but intense musicianship. A few missed notes in the dozen meant little in the scheme of things.


Tuesday, 14 January 2025

PIANISTS OF THE SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION 2025 & THE ORDER OF PERFORMANCES

 

PIANISTS OF THE 
SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL 
PIANO COMPETITION 2025 
AND THE ORDER OF PERFORMANCES 

In a brief and no-fuss ceremony at the Hotel Mi Rochor, the 19 young pianists taking part in the Singapore International Piano Competition 2025 drew lots to determine the order which they will perform in the Preliminary Round which begins on Tuesday 14 January 2024. 

Competition Administrative Director Poon Chuifun
explains the draw and the order of performances.

Here are the photos of the 19 pianists and their “lucky” numbers in the order they were drawn. May the best pianists and musicians prevail! 


Alphabetically the first,
Adam Balogh gets the first draw.
Elia Cecino draws next.
Yi-Teng Huang gets a later number.
Qifan Jiang is Yong Siew Toh Conservatory's
only representative in the competition.
Alon Kariv comes from both Israel & USA.
Jiyoung Kim from South Korea.
Jeyu Lee gets to play in the middle.
Kwanfook Lee is the one 
who will be heard last.
Luwangzi Li won't be playing
Prokofiev but Chopin.
Tianyou Li will play Prokofiev No.2
when he gets to the Final.

Hao-Wei Lin has played in
Singapore before, in 2019.
Roman Lopatynskyi represents Ukraine.
Philipp Lynov represents Russia.
Tiankun Ma has already won 1st prize
in the junior division of the competition.
Suryeon Noh from South Korea.
Jan Widlarz gets the Pole position,
and plays first!
Fellow Pole Andrzej Wiercinski
follows closely in the order of playing. 
Xu Leyu is happy to play ninth.
Yichen Yu is the last to draw
and settles to play seventh.

The number not picked was 20, and it went to Nagino Maruyama (Japan), who arrived late and was unable to attend the drawing of lots.

Here is the playing sequence and timetable for the Preliminary Round.

PRELIMINARY ROUND 
TUESDAY (14 January) 

Session I (10.00 am – 1.15 pm) 

01 Jan Widlarz (Poland) 
J.S.Bach & Chopin 

02 Qifan Jiang (China) 
J.S.Bach, Bach-Busoni, Debussy & Rachmaninov 

03 Adam Balogh (Hungary) 
J.S.Bach & Rachmaninov 

04 Tiankun Ma (China) 
J.S.Bach & Chopin 

Session II (2.30 pm – 5.45 pm) 

05 Andrzej Wiercinski (Poland) 
J.S.Bach, Bach-Busoni & Liszt 

06 Alon Kariv (Israel/USA) 
J.S.Bach, Rachmaninov, Scriabin 

07 Yichen Yu (China) 
J.S.Bach, Mozart & Rachmaninov 

08 Hao-Wei Lin (Taiwan) 
J.S.Bach, Chopin, Scriabin & Liebermann 

Session III (6.50 pm – 8.20 pm) 

09 Leyu Xu (China) 
J.S.Bach, Haydn, Chopin & Messiaen 

10 Jeyu Lee (South Korea) 
J.S.Bach & Chopin 

PRELIMINARY ROUND
WEDNESDAY (15 January) 

Session IV (10 am – 1.15 pm) 

11 Jiyoung Kim (South Korea) 
J.S.Bach & Ravel 

12 Suryeon Noh (South Korea) 
J.S.Bach, Schubert & Schumann 

13 Luwangzi Li (China) 
J.S.Bach, Chopin & Prokofiev 

14 Philipp Lynov (Russia) 
J.S.Bach, Taneyev & Barber 

Session V (2.30 pm - 5.45 pm) 

15 Roman Lopatynskyi (Ukraine) 
J.S.Bach, Brahms & Stravinsky 

16 Elia Cecino (Italy) 
Shostakovich, J.S.Bach, Ravel & Scriabin 

17 Yi-Teng Huang (Taiwan) 
J.S.Bach, Mozart, Schubert & Stravinsky 

18 Tianyou Li (China) 
J.S.Bach & Schubert 

Session IV (6.40 pm - 8.20 pm)

19 Kwanfook Lee (South Korea) 
J.S.Bach, Scriabin & Schumann 

20 Nagino Maruyama (Japan)
J.S.Bach, Chopin, Brahms, Debussy & Ravel

Entry for the Preliminary round is FREE 
by registration at SISTIC:

Alternatively, you can view on Amadeus.tv:
https://www.youtube.com/@amadeustv

Both Wiercinski & Widlarz
have chosen to play Chopin No.1 in the finals.

Qifan Jiang (18) and Leyu Xu (16) are among
the youngest pianists in the competition.
Taiwan is represented by
Yi-Teng Huang & Hao-Wei Lin.
The Europeans have arrived.
Wiercinski, Lynov, Balogh and Kariv.
Poon Chuifun and her hardworking
team behind the scenes.
All the 19 pianists of the
Singapore International Piano Competition 2025.

Entry for the Preliminary round is FREE 
by registration at SISTIC:

Also view it on:
https://www.youtube.com/@amadeustv