Sunday, 7 June 2026

A PIANO RECITAL NOT TO MISS: ANNA GENIUSHENE on 14 June 2026



Here is a piano recital not to miss! Presented by Altenburg Arts, Lithuanian pianist Anna Geniushene makes a welcome return to perform a recital of works by Fryderyk Chopin and Johannes Brahms. Silver medallist in the 2022 Van Cliburn International Competition, she brings with her a wealth of virtuosity and musicality in her interpretations. Her debut recital here in 2023 received a rapturous review in The Straits Times.

Programme:

CHOPIN Rondo in C major, Op.1
CHOPIN Mazurkas, Op.50
CHOPIN Waltzes, Op.34
CHOPIN Ballade No.2, Op.38
CHOPIN Tarantella, Op.43
BRAHMS Scherzo, Op.4
BRAHMS-CORTOT Lullaby
BRAHMS Sonata No.1 in C major, Op.1

ANNA GENIUSHENE Piano Recital
Victoria Concert Hall
Sunday 14 June 2026, 5 pm

Tickets available at SISTIC:



ANNA GENIUSHENE
is presented by Altenburg Arts


Saturday, 6 June 2026

RON MAXIM Piano Recital / Review



RON MAXIM Piano Recital
Victoria Concert Hall
Friday (29 May 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 1 June 2026 with the title "Prize-winning pianist Ron Maxim Huang's deep takes on Chopin and Brahms betray an old soul".


By presenting young German pianist Ron Maxim Huang in recital, Bechstein Music World cast its C.Bechstein concert grands in best possible light. Huang, of Chinese and Russian parentage, is a prizewinner of multiple international piano competitions (including Ettlingen and Xiamen) and possesses a casual charisma and disarming stage presence that is hard to dislike.


Opening with music by Fryderyk Chopin, his view of the Third Ballade in A flat major (Op.47) was distinguished by a clarity of articulation and judicious pacing. There was never a cause for extreme rubato or stretching of tempos for its own sake, and the music’s narrative unfolded as naturally as breathing.


It got even better in the Third Sonata in B minor (Op.58), a highly personal account so darkly shaded one might expect from an artist much older than his 25 years. For him, the music represented tragedy, its martial opening bars starkly differentiated from the lyrical second subject. The development was thrilling as he was leading the listener into some kind of personal nightmare.


While the Scherzo flew like one of Chopin’s early Etudes, the slow movement mirrored the first movement’s high drama. Instead of the nocturnal serenity of most other readings, this became a well of sorrows, the depth of which would only be realised by the triumphant finale. Here was a redemption arc the listener was looking for, and Huang delivered with a devastating finality.


Johannes Brahms’ Six Pieces (Op.118) come from his autumnal years. Huang’s response was one of a younger person getting to grips with ageing. The opening C major Intermezzo yielded a rich and beefy tone contrasted with the serenity of the second A major Intermezzo. While the stormy Ballade in G minor had a few dropped notes, the agitato element in the F minor Intermezzo was perfectly captured.


The calming effect of the Romance in F major was brought into sharp focus by the final Intermezzo in E flat minor, a portrait of doom and despair, where a last glimmering ray of hope is extinguished before the descent into a deep abyss. Huang is indeed an old soul in the young body.


Without allowing the audience to applaud, he continued directly into Franz Liszt’s Totentanz (Dance of Death), virtuoso variations on the Dies Irae theme, where gloves came off for a final onslaught. Better known in the version for piano and orchestra, Huang’s very busy role combined both parts in a no-holds-barred battle which lifted the roof of the hall. Absolutely gripping stuff.


With the formal part of the recital over, young German pianist-composer Levi Schechtmann’s Intermezzo for the Moon was a laid-back bluesy prelude to two of Nikolai Kapustin’s more frenetic Etudes from his Op.40 set. The Pastoral and Prelude exulted in jazzy high jinks which brought out the cheers.


Huang’s encore saw him going back to his Chinese roots with Wang Jianzhong’s idiomatic transcription of Ren Guang’s Cai Yun Zhui Yue (Colourful Clouds Chasing The Moon). Just lovely, and cue the longest line for a meet and greet since Lang Lang’s concert in 2010.



Concert photography by Guan Ziwen, 
by courtesy of Bechstein Music World

Friday, 5 June 2026

SINGAPORE'S HIPSTER PRECINCTS: HAJI LANE @ KAMPONG GLAM



Is Haji Lane in the Kampong Glam district of Singapore its hippest hangout? While having dinner at the Prince Coffee Shop on Beach Road, I took a short diversion into what is possibly Singapore's narrowest street, Haji Lane. It's so narrow that no cars could possibly pass through, only foot traffic. Lined by speciality shops, restaurants, bars, cafes, boutiques, it is also Singapore's most colourful street, a sort of mini-Harajuku.


It's a Tuesday evening,
which is why it looks quiet tonight.


There are murals lining the buildings, notably around the Mexican restaurant at its southern end. And there are lights from the many shops, that it almost reminds me of old Bugis Street of the 1970s, but without the vice and sleaze. 



The shops are varied too, F&B and watering holes mostly (on the southern side), but also cutesy boutiques, photo booths for selfies (a fad for the young), souvenir shops for the indefatigable tourist, a vinyl shop and even a second life for digital cameras. If this were Bangkok, this would be filled with weed "clinics". All you need is time, to wonder this short but interesting commercial alley-way, and you have not even seen Arab Street, Bussorah Street and Kandahar Street.



Here are some photos, with a promise of coming back in the near future. Got to check out those old digital cameras sometime...


No hipster district is complete
without a vinyl shop. Here it is.

Absolutely no classical. So sad.


Smartphones have made
digital cameras so retro!





Guess who I met at Haji Lane?
SSO Associate Principal piccolo player
Roberto Alvarez, Elena and friends.


So is Haji Lane Singapore's 
hippest hotspot? 
Gotta get there first!

Thursday, 4 June 2026

SSO'S FORGOTTEN RECORDINGS: BALAKIREV ORCHESTRAL WORKS on Marco Polo




BALAKIREV Chopin Suite / Overtures
Singapore Symphony Orchestra 
Choo Hoey (Conductor)
Marco Polo 8.220324


This is the young Singapore Symphony Orchestra’s second recording of Russian music, recorded in June 1985, following the good notices garnered by its earlier Ippolitov-Ivanov album (pianomania: CD Reviews (The Straits Times, August 2015)). By this time, Choo Hoey’s young orchestra had shown much enthusiasm and flair in Russian music, its ranks populated by a sizeable body of Eastern European and mainland Chinese musicians.



Mily Balakirev (1837-1910) was the founder and autocratic leader of the Russian nationalist composers called “The Mighty Handful” (Moguchaya Kuchka) or simply “The Russian Five”. They espoused the use of Russian folk music in their works with Mikhail Glinka as their pioneering demigod. They rejected Western compositional models, as practised by establishment composers such as Anton Rubinstein, and to a certain extent, Piotr Tchaikovsky.


Of the overtures on this disc, In Bohemia (sometimes called In Czechia, published 1906) is perhaps the least obscure. Based on an earlier Overture on Czech Themes (1867), it is a fantasy on three Czech folk melodies. This is a rather enjoyable piece, very typically Russian in style and orchestration (think Borodin or Rimsky-Korsakov rather than Dvorak or Smetana), not unlike Rachmaninov’s similarly-inspired Capriccio Bohemien of 1892-94. Also Russian in feel is the Overture to King Lear (1859), the only completed part of a proposed set of incidental music written for the Shakespearean play. High drama and tragedy are well captured in this substantial work, which SSO performs with much verve and fervour.


The opening of Overture on a Spanish March Theme (1886) with a piccolo solo has an Oriental flavour, based on a Moorish theme, but is soon dominated by a march (La Marcha Real, adopted in 1761 but dating from the 16th century) which football fans will recognise as the wordless Spanish national anthem still heard today in World Cup matches. Composed for a play that commemorated the expulsion of Muslims from Spain, the march riding on a wave of jingoism gets more than pride of place in this fantasy.


Balakirev was a great fan of Fryderyk Chopin’s music. His Chopin Suite comprises orchestrations of four Chopin piano pieces but in different keys from the original pieces. These include Preambule (Etude) in D minor, based on the E flat minor Etude (Op.10 No.6), Mazurka in B flat major (based on Op.41 No.3 in A flat major), Intermezzo (Nocturne) based on Op.15 No.3 in the same key of G minor, and Finale in D minor, based on Scherzo No.3 in C sharp minor (Op.39). These will be familiar to pianists, who will be slightly disorientated by their orchestrations. These served as the inspiration for Balakirev student Alexander Glazunov’s Chopiniana, which later formed the foundation for the Mikhail Fokine ballet Les Sylphides.


For some reason, this recording has not been reissued on the budget-priced Naxos label. SSO’s recording is still more than serviceable, and an enjoyable means to discover some curious byways of the Russian orchestral repertoire.

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

END OF AN ERA / SINGAPORE'S VINTAGE EATING PLACES: PRINCE COFFEE HOUSE on BEACH ROAD



It has been out in the news for a while: Prince Coffee House will be closing in mid-July. This well-known and loved Hainanese Western restaurant first opened its doors in the 1970s in the now-demolished Shaw Tower on Beach Road, the building where Jade and Prince Theatres were located. It got its name from the cinema run by the Shaw Brothers film distributors. I remembered having a meal there as a teenager. It later moved to Coronation Plaza before returning to the Beach Road area, near the entry to Arab Street.



You cannot call the establishment retro, simply because it looked much like what it was some 50 years ago, unchanged and unmoved by the tide of time. Old photographs and posters line its walls, and the age becomes apparent; this is an establishment from the days of disco and flared pants.



The food is typically Hainanese Western, a reminder of when Hainanese cooks served meals to British colonial masters in their black and white bungalows. Pork chops and ox-tail stew is de rigeuer, and the tenderloin steak in brown sauce is the top-priced item on its menu. The servers have long collected their CPF, and its founder "Uncle" Jimmy Lim - the friendly face of Prince - had gone home before we arrived.


Grilled pork chops

Classic stewed ox-tail 

Tenderloin steak on hot-plate

The French onion soup was 
disappointingly watered down
but the yam cake was excellent.

When its lease runs out in mid-July, Prince will close its doors for the last time. I am philosophical about its closure. Prince had its day, when fine-dining Western food was exorbitant (still is) and beyond the reach of locals, and Hainanese Western was a valid and tasty alternative. It had a good run, and it is time to say good-bye. Its tradition will be carried on by a new generation of chefs with new ideas and menus, which will surprise and delight us. Thank you for the memories.    





PRINCE COFFEE HOUSE
249 Beach Road #01-01
Singapore 189757
Tel: 6468-2088