Saturday, 7 February 2026

RAFAL BLECHACZ PIANO RECITAL / Review


RAFAL BLECHACZ Piano Recital
Esplanade Concert Hall
Thursday (5 February 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 7 February 2026 with the title "Polish pianist Rafal Blechacz brings passion and rapture to Singapore debut".


Every first prizewinner of the prestigious International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition since 2000 has performed in Singapore with the exception of Polish pianist Rafal Blechacz. That anomaly was righted with the Singapore debut of the 2005 “Chopin Champion”, the informal title bestowed on Blechacz by Finger Waltz Music Productions, which presented his solo recital.


Opening with Ludwig van Beethoven’s popular Piano Sonata No.14 in C sharp minor (Op.27 No.2), also known as the “Moonlight Sonata”, he conjured a dreamy atmosphere for its famous first movement. Once poetically described as “the moon viewed over Lake Lucerne”, his deft use of the sustaining pedal accounted for its nocturnal and echo-ey feel, without overdoing it.


Then the gloves came off for the folk-like dance of the second movement, and the tempest-tossed finale which rumbled unapologetically to a tumultuous close. Beethoven had left the constraints of the Classical era well behind to fearlessly enter the Romantic era, which he shared with the Viennese Franz Schubert.


For Schubert’s Four Impromptus Op.90 (D.899), the earlier of two sets, Blechacz sensitively brought out revealed both Classical restraint and Romantic ardour. Very clean lines tinged with melancholy defined the first and longest Impromptu (in C minor) while a dextrous right hand surmounted the vertiginous etude-like second E flat major piece.


Poetry came to the fore in the G flat major Impromptu, one possessed with a seamless singing tone and possibly Schubert’s most beloved piano melody, Finally, feather-light filigree and more lyricism defined the fourth and final A flat major piece. One could only take issue with the programme booklet which had all the keys wrong, but not the pianist.


A second half of Chopin’s music was what the well-filled house was waiting for, and Blechacz did not disappoint. Dispelling the notion that the Polish pianist-composer’s music was sickly or effete. one could feel the temperature rise in the Barcarolle in F sharp major (Op.60) as the gondolier’s love song built up to a rapturous climax. Similarly, in the Third Ballade in A flat major (Op.47), passion was never sacrificed for the sake of mere prettiness.


In the Three Mazurkas (Op.50), Blechacz’s instinctive feel for three-quarter time dance rhythms, with well-placed accents dotting the landscape stood him out as quintessentially Polish. In these seemingly simple folk-like pieces, the true spirit of his homeland came through most vividly.


The recital proper was completed with the Third Scherzo in C sharp minor (Op.39), fraught with tricky octave passages and more cascading filigree. These contrasting devices are what distinguished Chopin’s Scherzi (Italian term for joke), which were anything but slapstick or comedic. Blechacz had completely grasped the implicit and subtle humour.


Given the ovation, he could not have left without playing an encore or two. Thus he obliged with Chopin’s Waltz in C sharp minor (Op.64 No.2), pure elegance personified, and the playful Scherzo from Beethoven’s early Sonata in A major (Op.2 No.2). Rising abruptly from the keyboard, Blechacz drew even more cheers. The season for piano recitals has just begun.






Photography by Mu Bai & PianoManiac. 

The review on www.straitstimes.com:


Friday, 6 February 2026

THE GRAND FINALISTS OF SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL VIOLIN COMPETITION 2026 HAVE BEEN NAMED!


The Grand Finalists of Singapore International Violin Competition 2026 have been named. 


They are ZOU MENG (China), GEORGII MOROZ (Ukraine) and MICHAEL GERMER (Denmark). They will perform a concerto each with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra conducted by Joshua Tan in the Grand Final on Saturday 7 February 2026 at Esplanade Concert Hall. 


Note that the time of the concert is 5 pm, and not later!



The programme as follows:


Three 20th century violin concertos
for the first time ever!

ZOU MENG performs

SIBELIUS Violin Concerto in D minor (Op.47)


GEORGII MOROZ performs

BARTOK Violin Concerto No.2 in B minor


MICHAEL GERMER performs

SHOSTAKOVICH 

Violin Concerto No.1 in A minor (Op.99)


Here to get your tickets:

Singapore International Violin Competition: Grand Finals

Just $20, better than a steal!




Thursday, 5 February 2026

FINALS OF SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL VIOLIN COMPETITION 2026 HAS BEGUN!



The Finals of the Singapore International Violin Competition 2026 has begun, with the completion of the first evening. In two concerts, the six finalists become first violinists of a string quartet to perform either of two quartets from Joseph Haydn's Op.77 set. Working with three members of the world-renowned Shanghai Quartet (violinist Angelo Xiang Yu, violist Honggang Li and cellist Sihao He), each performs as the leader of the quartet, an underrated skill demanded of all great violinists who are also great musicians. 

In a way, this is a subtle and astute test of musical leadership and interpretation that is quite different from the outwardly virtuosic person of a soloist in a concerto performance. 


This evening, the performances of both Haydn string quartets were a total delight. These two quartets, composed in 1802, represent his most mature works and final utterances in this medium which he popularised. The first violinist's role is a virtuoso one, not just having to play the melodic lines, master the most difficult passages, but also to keep the ensemble together. In this respect, all the three finalists this evening shone, their outings showed that live performances best any recording to be had. I am certain that the small audience, not exceeding 50 people at the most in Victoria Concert Hall were truly enthralled.

A small audience attended the concert,
with the jury sitting in the circle seats.

SongHa Choi (South Korea) was the leader
in Haydn's Quartet in G major, Op.77 No.1

Zou Meng (China) was the local favourite,
presently a student at the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory.
He led in the Quartet in F major, Op.77 No.2

Georgii Moroz (Ukraine) is a Yong Siew Toh alumnus.
He starred in the evening's second performance of
Haydn's Quartet in F major, Op.77 No.2

Thursday (5 February), the second session of the Finals features Michael Germer (Denmark), Karisa Chiu (USA) and Qingshu Weng (China). All three will perform Haydn's Quartet in G major, Op.77 No.1 with members of the Shanghai Quartet.

Tickets are available here:

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

A PIANO RECITAL NOT TO MISS: RAFAL BLECHACZ ON 5 FEBRUARY @ ESPLANADE CONCERT HALL


Here is a piano recital not to be missed. Polish pianist Rafał Blechacz makes his Singapore debut on Thursday 5 February 2026 at Esplanade Concert Hall. 1st prizewinner of the 2005 Chopin International Piano Competition, Rafał Blechacz also won all the special prizes including best performances of piano concerto, Polonaise and Mazurka. Chopin's music figures large in his piano recital here, which also includes other favourites of the piano repertoire.

His recital programme as follows:

Beethoven Piano Sonata No.14 
  in C sharp minor (Op.27 No.2) "Moonlight"
Schubert Four Impromptus, Op.90 (D.899)
Chopin Barcarolle in F sharp major, Op.60
Chopin Ballade No.3 in A flat major, Op.47
Chopin Three Mazurkas, Op.50
Chopin Scherzo No.3 in C sharp major, Op.39

Thursday 5 February 2026
Esplanade Concert Hall at 7.30 pm

Get your tickets here:


Watch this video:

Chopin Barcarolle, Op.60

Chopin Piano Concerto No.1


Rafał Blechacz's piano recital is presented by
Finger Waltz Music Productions

Tuesday, 3 February 2026

PICTURES AT THE EXHIBITION / BERTRAND CHAMAYOU & PIERRE BLEUSE / Singapore Symphony Orchestra / Review




PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION /
BERTRAND CHAMAYOU 
& PIERRE BLEUSE
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Esplanade Concert Hall
Friday (30 January 2026)

This review was first published on Bachtrack.com on 2 February 2026 with the title "Pierre Bleuse and Singapore Symphony raise the roof with Prokofiev and Mussorgsky".


French conductor Pierre Bleuse returned to lead the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, and the decibel limit was again lifted. In 2024, Esplanade Concert Hall rocked with the racket that was Respighi’s Feste Romane, followed by Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique last year. The ear-quake offered early in 2026 came in Prokofiev’s Scythian Suite, recycling music from the aborted ballet Ala et Lolli which had been rejected out of hand by Serge Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes. Inspired by Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring, its primal violence was channelled through violent and clangourous ostinatos, reinforced by a battery of nine percussionists.


This is classical music’s heavy metal, foundary-forged without apology by Russian music’s enfant terrible before his escape from a collapsing Tsarist Russia to the West. Despite the dissonance, the music was never dodecaphonic, instead founded on established tonal centres which even possessed a modicum of hummability. This discord was highlighted with moments of tonal sensuality, muted strings floating over woodwind melodies and entreaties from both harps. Prokofiev was a Romantic at heart, but one covered from head to toe with spikes. Inducing the audience to applaud prematurely after the sonic orgy of The Evil God and Dance of Pagan Monsters, he was to influence modern film music more than given credit for.



The orchestra responded with a heightened trenchancy, which continued into Liszt’s First Piano Concerto in E flat major, in support of French pianist Pierre Chamayou. Launching with octave salvoes and blitzing the opening cadenza, Chamayou’s mastery was without doubt. His seemingly effortless pianism made one better appreciate Liszt’s genius in thematic metamorphoses and transformation. Like his Second Piano Concerto (which Chamayou performed here in 2016) or Sonata in B minor, simple motifs are developed which begin to seamlessly assume a life of their own. 

Photo: Yoricko Liu

Piano trills leading to the third movement soon became one with Jonathan Fox’s solo triangle, a part so prominent that led critics to call it Liszt’s “triangle concerto”. The concerto’s breathlessly virtuosic close was driven with such elan and scintillation that Chamayou had to calm things down in his encore, Ravel’s Pavane pour une infante defunte delivered with crystalline beauty.




That itself was a knowing nod to the concert’s second half, with Ravel’s popular orchestration of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. For many, the original suite for piano suffers from monochromatic writing, something which Ravel gloriously transformed into a concerto for orchestra of sorts. Jon Paul Dante’s solo trumpet led in the opening Promenade, answered by the brass in full voice. 

Photo: Yoricko Liu

Orchestral effects abounded, such as mysterious string glissandi in the awkwardly angular Gnomus, but none came as poetic as the scoring of Samuel Phua’s alto saxophone in The Old Castle. Tomoki Natsume’s tuba had its work cut out in the lumbering ox-cart Bydlo, but it was Dante who starred again in Schmuyle, the second of the Two Polish Jews, with his repeated-note bleatings.


In a work with many highlights, the chirpy Ballet of Unhatched Chicks and frenetic Marketplace in Limoges stood out, but it was the concluding Baba Yaga’s Hut and Great Gate of Kiev, with chiming tubular bells, which closed the evening on an ear-shattering high. With this very loud and sonorous close, conductor Bleuse and company blew away the audience yet again, which reciprocated with an equally voluminous and raucous response.

Principal trumpet Jon Paul Dante
gets his plaudits.


Star Rating: ****  

The original review was published in Bachtrack.com here:


Monday, 2 February 2026

HERE ARE THE 6 FINALISTS OF SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL VIOLIN COMPETITION 2026


The six finalists of the Singapore International Violin Competition 2026 have been named. On Wednesday and Thursday (4 & 5 February), each artist will perform in the Finals as the first violinist in string quartet by Joseph Haydn with members of the Shanghai Quartet. Their choice of repertoire is limited to Haydn's String Quartet Op.77 No.1 or No.2

They are:

SongHa Choi (South Korea) *
Zou Meng (China) **
Georgii Moroz (Ukraine) **
   performing Wednesday (4 February 2026)


Michael Germer (Denmark) *
Karisa Chiu (USA) *
Qingzhu Weng (China) *
  performing Thursday (5 February 2026)

  * String Quartet in G major, Op.77 No.1
** String Quartet in F major, Op.77 No.2
 

Tickets for the Finals at Victoria Concert Hall on sale here:

Singapore International Violin Competition: Finals