It was with great shock and sadness that we learn of the passing of Singaporean violist LIONEL TAN. He was a founding member of T'ang quartet, Singapore's first professional chamber group, formed in 1992. He leaves behind his partner Marcia, elder brother cellist Leslie, a younger brother Leroy and his parents. He was diagnosed to have oesophageal cancer in early 2025, and fought a good fight until his ultimate passing on 31 May 2026.
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| Playing for Jiri Heger |
Lionel was the first viola student of the late Czech violist Jiri Heger (1946-2023) who was then the Principal violist of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO). Lionel was a member of the Singapore Youth Orchestra, who later pursued his studies in London's Royal College of Music as a SSO scholar. I remember Lionel as a student of from the south wing of Raffles Institution who was regularly seen attending SSO concerts. Little did I know then the role he would play in Singapore's classical music scene as one of its greatest violists.
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| A more informal session with Jiri Heger |
| T'ang Quartet poster with a retro design |
It was as a violist in the SSO when he teamed up with brother Leslie, and violinists Ng Yu Ying and Ang Chek Meng to form the T'ang Quartet. All four members left the SSO and pursued further studies in Houston's Rice University and won prizes at the Joseph Joachim Chamber Music Competition in Weimar. Thus began T'ang Quartet's international performing career.
I was fortunate to have been asked to write programme notes for the quartet's concerts and early international tours, and also for its first two commercial CD releases - The Art of War (Pavel Haas and Erwin Schulhoff quartets) and Made in America (Dvorak String Quartet and Quintet). I also did the editorial work for and appeared in a cameo in their four-part documentary No Strings Attached.
Many people have the misconception that musicians without a solo career end up performing in chamber music groups. That is a fallacy. The truth is you have to first be a top-notch soloist in order to master chamber music. And Lionel was a top violist, and a string player of the highest order.
In 1988, at the finals of the Diners Club String Player of the Year Competition, three of Singapore's top young musicians vied for the award performing concertos with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra. The final three happened to later become founding members of T'ang Quartet. There was Ng Yu Ying performing Bruch's Violin Concerto No.1, Leslie Tan in Saint-Saens' Cello Concerto No.1 and Lionel Tan in Hungarian composer Gyula David's Viola Concerto.
Exhibiting a beautifully rich and dusky tone, and displaying a virtuosity that defied all viola jokes, Lionel was awarded the first prize. No one would look at the viola and violists the same way again.
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| Mentoring and inspiring the next generation of chamber musicians. |
Lionel Tan leaves behind a memorable career in performing chamber music, and a rich legacy of teaching as a faculty member of the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory. His students have gone on to enrich our musical scene in Singapore. Lionel is well-loved and will be sorely missed.
| Lionel Tan with Jiri Heger and Noriko Ogawa. |
Lionel Tan, founding T'ang Quartet violist, dies at 60 | The Straits Times



























