Saturday, 28 February 2026

SUKA MAKAN: WARM UP CAFE @ STAR VISTA




Enjoy Thai food? This is where the Chang family just celebrated the 24th birthday of Shan Ming, on the very day itself. Warm Up Cafe is our favourite Thai restaurant, an informal eatery where come for that tonegue-tingling treats. Having visited Thailand on multiple vacations, Thai food has become almost a second cuisine for us, whose palates have become accustomed to a level of spiciness that would deter most. 



There is both indoor and outdoor dining, and we prefer outdoor option because the loud live music often prevents conversations from taking place. The MRT zooms past the al fresco section, and even that is softer than the live performances. Here is what we sunk our teeth into as a family. 

Appetiser: Thai fish cake with sweet sauce.

Noodle dishes: #1 Phad Thai
#2 Maggi Noodle seafood

#3 Beef boat noodles

#4 River prawn glass vermicelli

Creamy crab omelette

Chicken dishes: #1 Roast chicken

#2 Chicken green curry

Tom yam soups: #1 Clear soup

#2 Red cloudy soup

Desserts: Mango with sticky rice & Red Ruby



All smiles for a memorable birthday!

WARM UP CAFE STAR VISTA
1 Vista Exchange Green
#02-10/11, The Star Vista
Singapore 138617
Tel: 8028-7323


Thursday, 26 February 2026

EVERYONE LOVES SOIREES: THE CNY EDITION @ HEYANG'S TAMPINES HUT


The first soiree of the year 2026 as well as the Chinese Lunar New Year. The honour fell to the indefatigable Zhang Heyang, music journalist of Lianhe Zaobao, whose hospitality can never be over-emphasised. This time, he assembled at his Tampines hut more violinists, pianists than ever, and even a singer and a guitarist to grace the occasion. Technically speaking, it's still Chinese New Year as Chap Goh Mei (the fifteenth night) as yet to arrive, so everyone was still greeting each other with Gong Xi Fa Cai (May You Be Prosperous). And there was more music than we've ever had!


The Two Zhangs' welcome piece
is Fritz Kreisler's Liebesleid
followed by Erich Korngold's Ohne Dich
from Die Stumme Serenade.

Heyang accompanies soprano Alison Wong
in Carl Orff's In Trutina from Carmina Burana.


Ever the hospitable host.


Back to music: Goh Ching Lee joins
in Bach's Wachet Auf! for four hands.

Ching Lee goes solo in a piece by
Wang Jianzhong, totally appropriate for CNY.

Huang Ying accompanies Heyang and Luo Wei
in J.S.Bach's Concerto for two violins
in D minor (BWV.1043)

The Two Weis:
Ang Seow Wei joins Luo Wei
in the second movement.

Heyang returns for the final movement.

All ears and eyes for the music.

Beethoven's Romance No.2 in F major Op.50.

Han Yong Mei brings out her new toy,
a stringless electronic guitar.

The Teresa Teng classic
The Moon Represents My Heart.

Ching Lee tries out the "toy",
with John looking on with interest.

Shostakovich's Waltz from Jazz Suite No.2

Alison and Ying in two movements
from Schumann's Liederkreis Op.24.

The Mongolian song Ulanbataar Nights.

Vivaldi's Spring from The Four Seasons.

Shostakovich's Five Pieces for two violins.

Alison and Ching Lee
in Puccini's O Mio Babbino Caro.

Seow Wei plays the violin solo in
Richard Strauss's Morgen!
as Alison completes the lied.

Johann Strauss the Elder's
Radetzky March.

The final clap-along before hitting the road.

That's all folks. Till the next one!

Monday, 23 February 2026

RESOUNDING / SEE NING HUI Piano Recital / Review

 

RESOUNDING
SEE NING HUI Piano Recital
Esplanade Recital Studio
Sunday (22 February 2026)


Piano recitals are often conceived on themes of form or programme, such as sonatas or stories and histories, thus it was refreshing to encounter young pianist See Ning Hui’s recital built upon resonances and sound textures. The lecturer at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts has a knack of programme building, and her recital entitled ReSounding exploited a myriad of sounds by the drawing of pairs: a pair of Debussy Preludes, a pair of women composers, a pair of Singaporean composers, a pair of sonata forms... all these coalescing into a very satisfying whole.


The recital opened with voluminous sound, as Debussy’s Ce q’ua vu le vent d’ouest (What The West Wind Saw) from Preludes Book One generated torrents of gail-force proportions. Easily the Frenchman’s most violent number, the wide wash of sonorities sweeping the entire extent of the keyboard was awe-inspiring, later settling down for Singaporean composer Ng Yu Hng’s The Memory Mansion at the End of Time (2021).


A dreamy soundscape was conjured by mostly occupying the upper half registers of the grand piano. Bell sounds emanate from the right hand while left hand ostinatos are gently obscured by generous pedalling generating a misty mystique. Time moved leisurely, expanding broadly instead of working itself into a frenzy. Senses are assailed in the politest way possible, and Ning Hui’s persuasive manner convinces one that the memory of all that is only temporal. An ephemeral experience and was gone.


The major work of the recital was Fanny Hensel’s Ostersonate (Easter Sonata), composed in 1828 but unperformed till 1972, and assumed to be by her illustrious and more famous brother Felix Mendelssohn. Ning Hui recounted the first UK performance (rightfully under her name) in 2017 by Sofya Gulyak, and her performance left one wondering how it could have been mistaken to be Felix’s all these years. The opening movement displayed a harmonic daring and adventurousness that far outstripped the prim and proper Herr Mendelssohn himself.


The spirituality of Bach imbued the slow movement’s lament, and with the ensuing fugue one began to imagine the scores of Cesar Franck from decades later. Only in the Scherzo third movement’s lightness and fleetness did the Mendelssohn siblings find some shared parity. The tumultuous finale saw Fanny possessed, with rumblings which agitate with the passion of Robert Schumann’s sonatas. Lil’ bro Felix was being left behind, and when A minor suddenly turned to A major, a Bachian chorale rang out a la Franz Liszt for the sonata to close on a quiet but sublime and elevated high. Fanny was a Romantic pioneer and visionary of sorts, and Ning Hui’s convincing reading made that clear for one and all.


Opening the second half with Debussy’s Les Collines d’Anacapri (Hills of Anacapri), its tarantella rhythm and penchant for song came into the fore. This paved the way for Chopin’s Fantasy in F minor (Op.49), where the accents were focused on its Polishness, the nationalism manifested in its march rhythm and that central chorale. Its sonata form had became secondary to the sound created.



Birdsong filled the air in the world premiere of Toh Yan Ee’s Within A Cage of Echoes. Her inspiration were the bird-singing communities of Singapore’s heartland neighbourhoods. Like the earlier local work, the right hand playing in the keyboard’s treble registers dominated, with a counterpoint provided by other captive songsters. With the dissonances, repeated notes and echoes of long held harmonies, one was reminded of Messiaen (inevitably) but also the Oriental sound worlds of Takemitsu and Peter Sculthorpe. Both these local works deserve to be heard again and soon as well.



The formal programme closed with the African-American vernacular of Florence Price’s Fantasie Negre No.2, a Singapore premiere. Why have we not heard such soulful music before? Where the world of Negro spirituals (I won’t avoid the “n” word here) meets with the gospel idiom, we have another sound world that felt comforting and at home. Here, Ning Hui’s masterly programme had brought the disparate sound worlds of musical impressionism, foreign and local cultures, birdsong and spirituality together in a sonorously unforgettable whole.


Her sublime encore of three selections from Robert Schumann’s Etudes in Variation Form on a theme of Beethoven (the second movement of his Seventh Symphony) felt otherworldly. We were no longer thinking of Beethoven or Schumann, but looking and hearing somewhere far into the future.