Monday, 15 June 2026

OBJECTIFS: A PEEK AT SOME OLD BUILDINGS ON MIDDLE ROAD



During the mid-1970s, when I was studying at Catholic High School (Primary section) on Queen's Street, I would often pass what I considered the grottiest corner of Middle Road. There was an old dirty yellow building housing the greasiest looking motor workshop, and turning the corner of Waterloo Street, what has to be the seediest hotel in all of Singapore. That was the Tai Loke Hotel, home to hippy backpackers and short-time trysts. 

The Way We Were
Old photos by Ronni Pinsler, Lee Kip Lin
and National Heritage Board.

Singapore's answer
to the Bates Motel?

Old photos still exist of these buildings, but what greeted me this Saturday evening was two totally spruced-up edifices. That is what gentrification is about - thrown out the decrepit old tenants, find a willing buyer and rebuild anew. Not a hair is out of place in the new premises which now houses Objectifs - Centre for Photography and Film. This complex was previously called Sculpture Square. 


This is part of the National Arts Council's arts housing project, which utilises the preserved old buildings on Waterloo Street, Middle Road and Queen's Street, giving them a new life with their occupation by the best of Singapore's arts organisations.  


The yellow building, formerly the Middle Road Church dating from the 1890s, is now an exhibition hall and sometime concert venue. The tarted-up old Tai Loke Hotel has two storeys of exhibits, with no tarts or exhibitionists in sight. 


It's great to see old historical buildings
getting a new lease of life.

Sunday, 14 June 2026

SUKA MAKAN: BURRATA JOY BY GARIBALDI @ CROWN CENTRE, BUKIT TIMAH ROAD



My wife does such good homemade pasta and pizza that I have seldom voluntarily gone to an Italian restaurant in recent years. However, I have made it an exception on this occasion when hosting my financial adviser Bryan Lim Hong Jun. Thanks to him, my finances are not such in a parlous state, such that multiple entries of Suka Makan have been possible over the past year. My choice is the relatively new Burrata Joy By Garibaldi at Bukit Timah Road's Crown Centre, which has taken over the space vacated by Crown Bakery.




The restaurant's speciality is burrata, a cow's milk cheese which is non-salty and has the semi-solid consistency of thick cream. It goes well with salads and hams, where relative saltiness is tampered with a sinful richness. This is not a time to watch the cholesterol or caloric count, but we had quite a feast. Prosciutto (Parma ham) and rocket salad with one big dollop of burrata was the first order, followed by our respective pastas, and a funghi pizza to finish. Despite our big appetites, there was still enough pizza to take home. 

Burrata with prosciutto & salad
Pink crab meat linguini

Beef ragu Arabbiata penne

My wife enjoyed her slice of pizza at home so much she wanted to learn where it came from. So, I have promised her a return to Burrata Joy in the very near future.

Pizza con funghi




BURRATA JOY 
& GUSTAVO LAPASTA
BY GARIBALDI
557 Bukit Timah Road, #01-03
Crown Centre
Singapore 269694


SINGAPORE COMPOSERS FESTIVAL 2026 / Morse Percussion & SYC Ensemble Singers

 



SINGAPORE COMPOSERS FESTIVAL 2026
Morse Percussion &
SYC Ensemble Singers
The Theatre Practice, 54 Waterloo Street
Sunday (7 June 2026)
11.30 am & 4.30 pm

This review was published in The Straits Times on 9 June 2026 with the title "Singaporean and South Korean talents on display".


Only in its second edition, the Singapore Composers Festival 2026 organised by Composers Society of Singapore (CSS) was an eight-hour affair that included two public roundtable chats and two concerts of contemporary music.

Singaporean and South Korean composers
with members of Morse Percussion.

The opening concert was a showcase for CSS and South Korean composer collective Space For Sound, with eight works performed by Morse Percussion, comprising Derek Koh, Joachim Lim, Cheong Kah Yiong and Yuru Lee. Those who regard music for percussion as just “banging on cans” will be surprised by the variety of sounds generated.

Photo: Amos Poh

Toh Yan Ee’s Atlas opened the show with timpani skins being scraped before proceeding to intricate rhythms on pitched percussion (marimba and xylophone) resembling gamelan, and drumming that extolled the majesty of the eponymous star constellation. Varying the sound palette completely, Won Jung Lee’s The Glittering Diamond Water delighted in extreme high registers. Minimalist textures emanating from marimba, slung gongs and bowed vibraphone keys, created a beautifully ethereal effect that bears repeated listening.

Photo: Amos Poh

The next two works were the most violent. Somin Lee’s Death of First-Borns was some orgy of militarist might, dominated by snare-drum, cymbals, triangles and xylophone employed strictly for beats not melody. The wanton biblical slaughter of Egyptians was its depiction. Hoh Chung Shih’s Rounding Round celebrated round objects, recurrent subjects as in a rondo (round dance) and three players rotating positions around a central axis of instruments. This later erupted into a free-for-all with mallets hurled in all directions.

Photo: Amos Poh

This concert was clearly a playground for exploring new sounds and techniques. Seung-ki Hong’s Resonant Ritual continued in its vein, tinkling on metal, tribal-drumming and walking in circles, now in a counter-clockwise direction. Hye-Jeong Hwang Lee’s Percussion Sanjo was a modern-day update of the traditional Korean sanjo instrumental essay with hints of melody emerging from a marimba, amid more drumming. All four works by Korean composers were world premieres

Photo: Amos Poh

Two local composers closed the matinee, with Emily Koh’s emoyo describing the emotional yo-yo involved in getting an American green card. Judging by the lack of angst, it was probably not such an ordeal. Tan Yuting’s Kotekan revelled in the repeated harmonic patterns found in gamelan, realised with mini-cymbals, temple blocks and a drum-set.

Photo: Amos Poh

The festival’s closing concert was the CSS Young Composer Forum, where budding composers were mentored by established practitioners in the creating music for choir. The 22-member SYC Ensemble Singers led by Jennifer Tham did the honours for seven works by mentee and mentor.

Photo: Amos Poh

Anvay Mathur’s Anahata, Sanskrit word for “unstruck sound”, relied on long-held syllables, vocal drones and sliding between pitches. Thomas Kai-ren Rettig’s Greenland used his friend Elliot Chew’s poem to eloquently describe a distant and unattainable goal, unrelated to Donald Trump’s territorial designs.

Photo: Amos Poh

The very dry acoustic in the venue’s black box theatre, while excellent for percussion, was far less conducive for voices. Despite the choir’s spotless diction, the first word of Bae Jun Soo’s Luminate, bi-cheul (빛을 or light), sounded like “bitch”, an unintended consequence. The next two works, Ding Jian Han’s Silenc(E)mpty? and Estene Cheong’s Why, had long stretches of spoken words, with the voices suspended in some form of sprechgesang (speech-song), a favourite technique of polytonalists.

Photo: Amos Poh

Alicia De Silva’s Quando La Rota used words from Dante’s Divine Comedy, closing in a devotional tone with visions of paradise within sight. To close, Danny Imson’s Ama Namin or The Lord’s Prayer in Tagalog opened with a very even unison. A mixed tape was slowly unreeled linking all the performers, before they walked off stage in a procession as the music dissipated into nothingness.


Both concerts at the Singapore Composers Festival were a veritable showcase of local creative talent, and long may that continue.


Saturday, 13 June 2026

A JAZZ PIANO RECITAL NOT TO MISS: UMWELTEN BY TZE TOH on 20 June 2026

 



A JAZZ PIANO RECITAL NOT TO MISS:
UMWELTEN 
BY TZE TOH on 20 June 2026


For the first time, local jazz pianist Tze Toh of TO Ensemble will perform a solo recital. Usually sharing the stage with artists like jazz saxophonist Teo Boon Chye and Carnatic violinist Lazar T.Sebastine, Tse has the floor to his own this time. At Esplanade’s Black Room on Saturday 20 June, his solo recital titled Umwelten is inspired by the life of simple organisms and how they adapt to the environments on our planet.



Streifzuge durch die Umwelten von Tieren und Menschen or A Foray into the Worlds of Animals and Humans by Baltic German biologist Johann Jakob von Uexkull (1864-1944) is the book that brought Tze into this deep dive manifested in the compositions of his recital. Motifs that are explored in his pieces are regarded like single-cell organisms, which develop a life of their own, divide by mitosis and become multi-cellular. These motifs are the building blocks of music, like cells which are the basic constitution of any living thing.




In a preview at the recording studio in Bukit Batok, Tze demonstrated how his pieces opened and developed into stand-alone works. These carry titles like Anemone, A Star Is Born, Sentio, Here With Me, Time, Machines That Fly and 12 Dimensions on Strings in Theory. These are varied, interesting and at times, thought provoking. There are themes and variations, passacaglias, and simple prayer-like meditations. Tze’s influences are many, including the works of J.S.Bach, Ryuichi Sakamoto, New Age minimalism, Carnatic and gospel music just to name a few. Curious to explore more?


UMWELTEN
TZE TOH, Solo piano
Esplanade Black Room
Saturday 20 June 2026, 8 pm

Tickets available at: