Thursday, 19 February 2026

TIFFANY QIU PIANO RECITAL / Review

 


TIFFANY QIU Piano Recital
Esplanade Recital Studio
Wednesday (11 February 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 13 February 2026 with the title "Pianist Tiffany Qiu plays with extremes of dynamics in eclectic programme".


With Polish pianist Rafal Blechacz’s concert last week, the Singapore piano recital season has begun in earnest. This week saw the local debut of Ireland-born Chinese pianist Tiffany Qiu, whose eclectic recital built upon two Romantic era sonatas played to a small but discerning house.


To follow Blechacz in Frederic Chopin’s music was a tall order, but Qiu’s sense of rhythm and feeling for nostalgia had much to recommend in the Pole’s Five Mazurkas (Op.7). The first, in B flat major is the most familiar, being regularly played by children. She imbued it with a robust sonority, not least in the rustic drones of its central section.


She also found the requisite melancholy and sprightly spirit that occupied these short peasant dances in three-quarter time, where Chopin’s yearning patriotism was worn on the sleeve. Robert Schumann described his Mazurkas as “cannons buried in flowers”, where seemingly innocent dances concealed a burning nationalism.


All this set the stage for Chopin's Sonata No.2 in B flat minor (Op.35), better known as the “Funeral MarchSonata, which Schumann referred to as “four of Chopin’s wildest children under the same roof”. Extremes of dynamics inhabited Qiu’s view, with vehemence and violence sitting comfortably alongside lyricism and poetry.


This was most apparent in the Scherzo, which rumbled and raged, but tempered by the song-like central section. Similarly the eponymous Funeral March built up a head of steam before being tamed by some of Chopin’s most tender music. The relentless but mercifully brief Finale, redolent of cold wind sweeping over a graveyard, brought the first half to a tumultuous close.


Sergei Prokofiev’s Prelude in C major (Op.12 No.7), delighted in rippling arpeggios and glissandi. Its apparent innocence heralded the Asian premiere of Singaporean composer Elliot Teo’s Intervening Moments (2023), a suite in six movements.

Tiffany spoke about Elliot's work
and how it was far from easy to perform.

A significant addition to the small canon of Singaporean piano repertoire, it headily relived the atonalism of Arnold Schoenberg’s Sechs Kleine Klavierstucke (Op.19), except there was nothing kleine (little) about these pieces.


Bell sounds, dance rhythms and resounding chords a la French composer Olivier Messiaen occupied its pages, and there were even hints of jazz and funk colouring a score that was constantly shifting and never allowing interest to wane. The fifth movement’s passacaglia were perhaps the most memorable, a droll right hand theme (which could have become a fugue in Dmitri Shostakovich’s pen) being assailed by left hand interjections but still having the final word.

Both Tiffany and Elliot receive applause.


Qiu’s dedicated and trenchant advocacy of her husband’s new work was both moving and touching. That same passion continued into Ludwig van Beethoven’s Sonata in D minor (Op.31 No.2), or Tempest Sonata, a performance that both full-blooded and riveting. She brooded in the Sturm und Drang (storm and stress) of the opening, then articulated the slow movement with utmost clarity, before unleashing a perpetual motion that consumed the finale till its quiet end.


Reliving more bell sounds, Qiu’s encore of Franz Liszt’s La Campanella was most apt, and eagerly received by the audience.


The local community of composers and artists
came to support, including Toh Yan Ee,
Hoh Chung Shih, Jonathan Shin and Samuel Phua.

With family and friends.

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

CHINESE NEW YEAR IS THE TIME FOR FEASTING & FAMILY

The Chang family at CNY.

Its Chinese New Year, and that's the time for family to come together, and the time to feast. The surest way to gain weight is to observe a seafood diet, what you see, you eat. The temptation is too great, so enormous that self-restraint can never win. Why exercise abstinence for two days a year, when you can do it for 363 before and after? Three meals, and the damage is done, and here is the photographic proof. Wishing one and all Happy Chinese Year!

Monday evening (16 Feb, New Year's Eve):

This year's yusheng looks more like a salad!


Two "treasure pots" with
the usual seafood goodies.

My share of the loot.

Dessert time:
Almond jelly with longan & Sichuan pancake.

My brothers Yuen & Chuang,
with sis-in-law Kyra.

Shan Ming with cousin Justine.

Bagel the poodle.

Tuesday lunch 
(17 February, New Year's Day 1):

The extended Chang family congregate,
all four generations of them.

It's Indian and Muslim food today.

Satay man busy at work.

Satay is something I simply cannot resist.

The prata man is an artist.

Proud of our milk prata!

With my father's eldest surviving sister,
Auntie Ruth aka Er Gu.

Tuesday evening 
(17 February, still Day 1):

Steamboat at the Gouw family.





More food to come!

GABOR TAKACS-NAGY & POLINA OSETINSKAYA / BACH AND SCHUMANN / Singapore Symphony Orchestra / Review




GABOR TAKACS-NAGY &
POLINA OSETINSKAYA /
BACH AND SCHUMANN
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Victoria Concert Hall
Friday (13 February 2026) 

This review was published in Bachtrack.com on 17 February 2026 with the title "Gábor Takács-Nagy's Schumann trumps Bach at the Singapore Symphony".


The perennial question whether Johann Sebastian Bach should be played on the piano surfaced when the Singapore Symphony Orchestra performed two keyboard concertos led by the Hungarian conductor Gábor Takács-Nagy. Old Bach’s instrument was the harpsichord, part of the continuo, but the keyboard role soon grew in prominence, with his Brandenburg Concerto No.5 (1721) being acknowledged as the first harpsichord concerto. By the time he crafted his solo keyboard concertos (c.1738), the instrument used was still the harpsichord, not the upstart pianoforte invented by the Italian Bartolomeo Cristofori. How should one thus begin to approach the two concertos performed by Russian pianist Polina Osetinskaya on a modern Steinway grand?

Photo: Yoricko Liu

The SSO is not a period instrument ensemble, and seldom performs with harpsichord except at baroque concerts. It nevertheless did its best to tone down vibrato and volume all through the dainty Keyboard Concerto No.5 in F minor (BWV.1056), where the piano traipsed around gingerly as if it were a harpsichord. The best moments were in the central Largo where the piano’s elegance accompanied by just pizzicato strings outshone just about everything else.




In the more extended Keyboard Concerto No.1 in D minor (BWV.1052), the piano drifted in and out of the accompaniment, unsure of whether it was still part of the general ensemble or a soloist breaking out. Other than short cadenza-like flourishes, the former status prevailed but Osetinskaya made sure she projected well without being drowned out. The central Adagio sang like an aria, but one is left wondering whether a violin or oboe would have been more persuasive. All stops were pulled for the finale, which went full-virtuoso mode with the piano striving to break out of its strait-jacket but ultimately pre-destined to fall short. No fault of the pianist, who showed what she could do all on her own, in Egon Petri’s polyphonic transcription of Sheep May Safely Graze (from the Birthday Cantata) as lovely encore.


In a short preamble, GTN promises
his direction is better than his speech. 


Schumann’s Second Symphony in C major completed the concert with Takács-Nagy conducted from the floor and without baton. This apparent closeness to a slightly larger than chamber-sized forces yielded a performance that was taut, swift and lean without an ounce of fat. This most Beethovenian of Schumann’s four symphonies was not going linger around and smell the roses, yet there were moments that hinted of expansiveness. The measured pace of the opening and the slow movement which unfolded majestically were cases in point.

Photo: Yoricko Liu


The second movement’s Scherzo saw very accurate string prestidigitation which brought a very wide smile from Takács-Nagy at its close. The very busy finale breezed through with purpose and there was time to ensure that the quote of Beethoven’s An die ferne Geliebte (To the Distant Beloved), a declaration of Robert’s love for Clara, was not being underplayed. Schumann had trumped Bach on this very evening.




Star Rating: ****


The original review on Bachtrack.com can be read here:


Tuesday, 17 February 2026

SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL VIOLIN COMPETITION 2026: GRAND FINALS / Review

 


SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL 
VIOLIN COMPETITION 2026
GRAND FINALS
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (7 February 2026)

This review was published by The Straits Times on 10 February 2026 with the title "Ukraine's Georgii Moroz wins Singapore International Violin Competition 2026".


The Grand Finals of the Singapore International Violin Competition (SIVC) 2026 was a culmination of two weeks of intense violin virtuosity. Arguably the best final concert in four editions, three 20th century violin concertos were performed in partnership with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra conducted by Joshua Tan.


Organised by Yong Siew Toh Conservatory and judged by an international panel of ten violin pedagogues and performing artists, it was fortuitous that two of three grand finalists were either past or present students of the Conservatory. One can only conclude that good teaching here is a catalyst for great artistry and superior results.


Zou Meng (China), presently residing here, performed Finnish composer Jean Sibelius’ Violin Concerto in D minor (Op.47, from 1904-05), literally a re-run of his triumph at the 2023 National Piano & Violin Competition. If anything, he has progressed. 


Sculpting a robust and gritty tone for this granite-hard score, intonation was never an issue. A wider palette of colours enabled him to generate warmth in the central slow movement and later focus with laser-intensity in the thrilling and rhythmic finale.



Georgii Moroz (Ukraine), who graduated here in 2023 and now based in Berlin, upped the ante several notches for Bela Bartok’s Violin Concerto No.2 (1937-38). Influenced by Hungarian folk music, Moroz had the full measure of its lusty and gutteral voice. Also completely natural with its dissonant idiom, he mastered and overcame the accompaniment’s thorny textures with aplomb.

Photo: Jellal Koay

In the slow movement’s theme and variations, Moroz conjured a sense of fantasy and mystery despite its elusiveness. Nothing was ever routine, and in the rambunctious finale, he raced away with orchestra in tandem and never glanced back.



Michael Germer (Denmark) looked to dominate in Dmitri Shostakovich’s Violin Concerto No.1 (Op.99, 1947-48), now a staple of competitions worldwide but like the Bartok, heard for the first time here. Its very wide dynamic range suited Germer to a tee, brooding in bitterness for the opening Nocturne, and then furiously duelling with the winds in the Scherzo.

Photo: Jellal Koay

The third movement’s Passacaglia was a tour de force of building an arch-like edifice before climaxing in a cruelly-taxing cadenza. The Klezmer-influenced finale was a wild race to the edge of a precipice, with neither soloist nor orchestra yielding a step till its brilliant and breathless close. Cue an outburst of applause.


Fine margins separated Moroz and Germer, who were awarded first and second respectively, a fair decision, with Zou bagging third place. Fourth, fifth and sixth places were awarded to Karisa Chiu (USA), SongHa Choi (South Korea) and Qingshu Weng (China). The special prizes, for performances of J.S.Bach, Eugene Ysaye, chamber music, violin and piano recital and the commissioned set piece, David Loke’s Soliloquy, were shared by the top three.

Michael Germer and Georgii Moroz
find out their fates.

This might have been the most impressive finale in the competition’s short 12-year history but a question hangs over the SIVC’s future. Will it survive in this form? Only time will tell.