WHEN WILL YOU RETURN
Chinese and other Asian Evergreens
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Choo Hoey (Conductor)
Marco Polo 8.225815
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| The Chinese and English titles do not match! |
SELLING LAND FOR THE BRIDE-PRICE
More Chinese Evergreens
THE BEST CHINESE EVERGREENS
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Choo Hoey (Conductor)
Hong Kong Records 8.240216
Marco Polo 8.223917
When the Singapore Symphony Orchestra under music director Choo Hoey started its recording relationship with the Hong Kong Records label (founded by Klaus Heymann) during the early 1980s, one of the objectives was to record performances of popular Chinese and Asian tunes in lush “high class” orchestrations. There was a market for such arrangements in those days, and the SSO was ripe for the task as a young newly-founded professional orchestra to fulfil that niche.
The first album, When Will You Return, was recorded in 1984 and issued as a LP, which sold ten thousand copies in its first run. A sequel, Selling Land For The Bride-Price, came one year later. Listening to these recordings, long available on CD on Heymann’s Marco Polo label, was an exercise in nostalgia. These were songs our parents and grandparents knew and loved, and there is no reason why later generations cannot enjoy them too. Simple melodies that linger in the mind, much like those heavily-marketed British or American light music favourites, are the reason for their appeal.
When Will You Return is the more comprehensive album. Besides Chinese standards like Ye Lai Xiang (Midnight Fragrance) and Without You, it also includes popular songs from Indonesia (Bengawan Solo), Philippines (Dahil Sayo), Taiwan (Maidens of Alishan, Ti Or Or, which makes its English translation Dark Clouds in the Sky sound clumsy). The orchestrations of 15 tracks, by Japanese arrangers including T.Suzuki, T.Suzuki, K.Ogokubo and A.Yasuraoka, were very well done, highlighting SSO strings to the full. This possibly the closest one can get to reliving the Mantovani effect.
Its sequel is much less effective. Besides having one fewer track, and playing for just 44 minutes, the orchestrations (uncredited) are mostly anodyne. There are duplications of two songs, Midnight Fragrance and When Will You Return, which are shorter and in poorer orchestrations. To add insult to injury, 8.223917 (presumably for Western distribution), has neither Chinese translations of titles nor programme notes. So why bother having a Part Two without repeating the high standards of the former? The choice is clear, get the earlier album and that would be good enough.



























