Monday, 18 May 2026

THE THREE CHEF SOIREE @ YING'S



A German, an American and a Chinese enter a kitchen. No, this isn't the start of a joke. Neither is this the start of World War Three. Instead, it is a cook-out that all of us will remember for a long time to come. 





Held at the Joo Chiat residence of German culture chief Huang Ying, the leader is food scientist Stefan Klade who had put in years as a top chef in Bavarian hotels. Assisting his food / flute professor Eric Lamb of the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory and music / culture journalist Zhang Heyang from Lianhe Zaobao, and the results were enjoyed by a hungry and appreciative audience from Singapore, Germany and Lithuania. 



Ying, ever the great host,
made sure all were plied with wine.

You can call this a Three Chef Soiree and United Nations of foodies, and what a wonderful time we had. The evidence is in the photos. 

Here are the starters.
With lots of vegetables,
it was a very healthy meal. 


Deborah and Andrius

Eric and Stefan do the serving.


What tucking in looks like.

Here is the meat!

You cannot have a more healthy
or delicious meal as this!

Let's not forget the tiramisu.


After a hearty meal, here comes the music. The subject was springtime, and the pieces - picked on the spot - were an expression of renewal and making of new friends.

Gluck's Melodie from Orpheus
followed by the slow movement
from Mozart's Flute Concerto No.2

Francis Poulenc's Flute Sonata
with the first two movements.

At least the third movement 
of the Poulenc began and ended together!

Beethoven's Spring Sonata,
just the first movement.
We'll learn the rest later!

Vielen dank, Ying,
for having all of us over.
We'll never forget this!

Sunday, 17 May 2026

THE WONDER CHAMBER / Red Dot Baroque / Review

 



THE WONDER CHAMBER
Red Dot Baroque
Chamber @ The Arts House
Saturday (9 May 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 11 May 2026 with the title "Red Dot Baroque revives 17th century rarities in delightful concert".


A wonder chamber (Wunderkammer in German) is a collection of curiosities and oddities assembled in wealthy households, where novelty and rarity become virtues. This concert of 17th century works by Singapore’s leading early music ensemble Red Dot Baroque (RDB), curated and led by French-Canadian guest director and harpsichordist Olivier Fortin, was full of such surprises.



Fortin waxed lyrical about “stylus fantasticus”, a style in the baroque which broke from traditional forms and focussed on free expression and improvisation, like an early precursor of jazz. Opening the concert was Sonata “Tausend Gulden” by Habsburg court composer Antonio Bertali (1605-1669), so nicknamed A Thousand Guilders as it was highly prized by its patrons.


The Italian term sonata, or “sounding out”, did not have the same meaning as it does today. The music was a delightful succession of dances, alternating between fast and slow, before closing on a sublime quiet.


Thanks to RDB founder Alan Choo’s proselytising, the name of Bohemian virtuoso violinist Heinrich Biber (1644-1704) is no longer obscure in Singapore. Two of Biber’s Sonatae Tam Aris Quam Aulis Servientes (Sonatas Suitable for Altar and Court) got an airing, featuring the sonorous baroque trumpet of Danny Teong. Sonata X in G minor had the plaintive quality of a lament, contrasted with the celebratory tone of Sonata IV in C major.


From the Augustinian priest Romanus Weichlein (1652-1706) was the Sonata in B minor (Op.1 No.11) from Encaenia Musices (Musical Enchantments). Here, violinists Brenda Koh and Placida Ho, in conversation with the viola da gambas of Leslie Tan and Mervyn Lee, presented a series of increasingly syncopated variations.


Intimate dialogue and timbral contrasts between Ho’s animated violin and Lee’s elegiac gamba were the focus in the Sonata in D major by Hamburg native Dietrich Becker (1623-1679). Soaring over Christopher Clarke’s theorbo and Fortin’s harpsichord continuo, a playful sense of improvisation soon became apparent.


In Sonata II in G minor from Armonico Tributo (Harmonic Tribute) by the well-travelled Georg Muffat (1653-1704), student of Jean-Baptiste Lully and Arcangelo Corelli, a fusion of French, Italian and German styles emerged. Alternating slow and fast movements, solemnity, seriousness, humour and jocularity all became part of a heady mix of moods and emotions.


The ill-fated Italian Alessandro Stradella (1643-1682), stabbed to death for his serial philandering, displayed far more temperance in his Sinfonia in D minor for violin, cello and continuo. Violinist Koh and cellist Zoi Tzu-Jou Yeh had virtuoso roles, trading cuts and thrusts in an exhibition of control and exuberance.


The 75-minute concert closed with the full ensemble in Biber’s Sonata Jucunda (Joyous Sonata), juxtaposing high art with popular culture, the latter being the music of commoners – tipsy dances, drunken slurs, fiddle flourishes and unison passages resembling Turkish music, as opposed to celestial harmonies. This musical joke, representing a happy democratisation, makes the world go round. Whoever thought Biber was a socialist?



The Wonder Chamber by Red Dot Baroque was part of the Voilah! French-Singapore festival. 

Saturday, 16 May 2026

A NIGHT IN VIENNA / SINGAPORE SYMPHONY BALL 2026



One of the prestige high society events of the year, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra Ball, was held at the Grand Ballroom of the Ritz Carlton on Saturday evening 16 May 2026. I was a guest of musical philanthropist and music lover Kris Tan, and was seated among the most musically gifted of the land. To enjoy an evening of Viennese gemutlichkeit, with an Austrian menu and Johann Strauss music performed by the SSO and its Austrian music director Hans Graf. It is not often the MD of SSO gets to conduct at the fundraising gala dinner, and all who attended had that privilege.

Look, Two-Set Violin were invited too!

Who just escaped from the set of Amadeus?

Mugging with the rich, famous and gifted.
With Choo Chiau Beng, Prof & Mrs Bernard Tan
& YST Head of Winds, Brass
& Percussion Eric Lamb

Former SSO Co-Leader Lynnette Seah
and her elder son Maurice.

Enough of babble, here are the photos of food, music, dance and hobnobbing with the celebrities.

Two Zhangs,
SSO Principal violist Zhang Manchin
and Zaobao journo Zhang Heyang
I was fortunate to be seated with
concert pianist and musical scholar See Ning Hui


SSO Chairman Goh Yew Lin
gives the State of the Orchestra address

Host with the most, Kris Tan and her
daughter Lim Kang Ning get acknowledged


That tasted better than it looked



SSO musicians preparing to go on stage

The musical menu


And the waltzing begins, with SSO CEO
Kenneth Kwok and Anna Graf leading the way

Kris Tan takes on Brett of Two-Set Violin

To close, the encore of Perpetuum Mobile,
und so weiter...


More hobnobbing, with DBS CEO Tan Su Shan
and her mother Mrs Rosie Tan (Auntie Rosie)

Violinist David Loke, Heyang
and Ding Yi conductor Dedric Wong

SSO Artistic Planning chief Christopher Cheong,
SAF Central Band Director Ignatius Wang
and SSO Dy. CEO Kok Tse Wei 

Three-Set Zhang
(Zhang, Cheong & Chang)