Friday, 26 June 2026

CHAMBER MUSIC RESIDENCY CONCERTS / Chamber Music & Arts Singapore / Review

 



CHAMBER MUSIC 
RESIDENCY CONCERTS
Chamber Music & Arts Singapore
Objectifs Chapel, 
155 Middle Road
Saturday (13 June 2026)
Friday (19 June 2026)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 22 June 2026 with the title "Two evenings of resonant programmes by Chamber Music and Arts at Objectifs chapel".


Befitting a premier arts organisation, Chamber Music & Arts Singapore (CMAS) founded by local violinist Tang Tee Khoon aims to promote chamber music performance at highest possible levels. To this end, its Chamber Music Residency programme saw young Singaporean musicians mentored by leading international classical artists, and performing alongside them.


Two showcase concerts of French music were fruits of their labour. On Saturday (13 June), Gabriel Faure’s Piano Quartet No.2 in G minor (Op.45) was given a rare airing. Violinist Yang Shuxiang, who is concertmaster of re:Sound, was partnered with violist Joelle Hsu, pianist Tay Shu Wen and British cellist Jamie Walton.


The historic chapel of Objectifs, formerly the Middle Road Church in the 1890s, has reverberant acoustics well-suited for chamber music. From the outset, all four instruments could be distinctly heard on their own and in ensemble. This made for a rich unified sound in the music’s passionate opening pages, sustained as the tempo was further upped in the breathless Scherzo.


The true heart laid in the elegiac slow movement, where Hsu’s viola sang its plaint, backed by Tay’s bell-like chords. This oasis of respite was the calm before the finale’s storm of rapidly surging triplets, which made for an exciting end.



Maurice Ravel’s masterly Piano Trio in A minor followed without an intermission, performed by the musical mentors themselves, violinist Tang, cellist Walton and Scottish pianist Alasdair Beatson. Despite adopting a somewhat deliberate opening tempo, the ensemble very rapidly ratcheted up the tension and volume, rising to the venue’s highest reaches.



All four movements were united by a common theme, so well-disguised as to be almost imperceptible. The second movement’s Pantoum was influenced by the metre found in the Malay pantun, its syncopations contrasted by the varied slow chants of the ensuing Passacaille (passacaglia), a set of variations on a bass theme. As in the Faure, the finale went for broke, where all caution was thrown to the wind for a rapturous close.



Friday (19 June) evening’s concert began with Faure’s La Bonne Chanson, an exquisite nine-movement song cycle with texts by French symbolist poet Paul Verlaine. Locally-based British soprano Kezia Robson was accompanied by string quartet (violinist Yang and Isabelle Ong, violist Hsu and cellist Cho Hang-oh), pianist Tay and double-bassist Kuek Jia Xin.


Over muted strings, Robson cast a spell of mystique over the opening song Une sainte en son aureole (A Saint In Her Halo), her spirits later soaring with the piano’s entry in Puisque l’aube grandit (Since Dawn Is Rising). The verses take a darker turn with fear and anxiety expressed, well captured by all aboard, before closing with the hope of love in L’hiver a cesse (Winter Has Ended).


Very different was Ernest Chausson’s Concert for violin, piano and string quartet (Op.21), a four-movement masterpiece conceived like a symphony but with the intimacy of chamber music. Violinist Tang and pianist Beatson were backed the same string foursome, but gloves were off for the most dramatic of first movements, built on an ominous three-note motif. 


A full gamut of emotions was run through a clothes wringer, the insouciant elegance of sicilienne-based second movement sharply contrasted with the moody yet intensely passionate dirge of the third movement aptly marked Grave.


The breathless and ecstatically charged finale saw the most acute of responses, with all six musicians playing as if their lives depended on it. The packed chapel erupted with vociferous praise. That is what truly moving chamber music in closed spaces elicits, and nothing less.


Thursday, 25 June 2026

SUKA MAKAN: SOUTHWEST TAVERN @ TRADEHUB 21 (JURONG)



We had been regulars at Southwest for several years, but that was at its Punggol Settlement location. Shocked to find that it had closed down earlier this year, but we found Southwest Tavern's other outlet, one nearer to home and office. The tavern is known for its western dishes and alcohol, and it's very reasonable set lunches.

There are MRT trains overhead,
but hardly anyone notices.

The location in Jurong is at Tradehub 21 on Boon Lay Way, but not within the building itself. Instead, it's directly under the MRT viaduct, much like those chic locations one finds in London and Tokyo. The MRT between Jurong East and Clementi is so quiet you barely notice it, feel it or even hear it. 

The set lunch includes
mushroom soup and garlic toast.

Fried Mushrooms
BBQ Pork Ribs
with garden greens & cole slaw
Sirloin steak 
with garden greens and corn



We got to enjoy the value set lunches which satisfied us so much in Punggol we had to come back, but now it's a shorter trip to Jurong.



SOUTHWEST TAVERN
Tradehub 21
8 Boon Lay Way #01-31
Singapore 609964

 


SIX PIANO RECITALS NOT TO MISS: 32ND SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL PIANO FESTIVAL

 


32ND SINGAPORE
INTERNATIONAL PIANO FESTIVAL
2-5 July 2026


Under the visionary curation of new Artistic Director Albert Tiu, the Singapore International Piano Festival receives a new lease of life. The overriding theme of this year’s festival is the pianist as composer, transcriber and improviser. These disparate qualities of a piano virtuoso have long been forgotten, as one needs to go far back into history to encounter personalities like Frederic Chopin, Franz Liszt, Ferruccio Busoni, Sergei Rachmaninov and Percy Grainger to realise what modern day performers have lost.


Yes, we do have pianists like Marc-Andre Hamelin, Stephen Hough and Gabriela Montero with us, but Albert Tiu has unearthed six pianists (including two Singaporeans) who live with this ethos, a throwback to the “Golden Age of piano playing”. Four full-length recitals at Victoria Concert Hall and two late night recitals at the Play Den of The Arts House beckon, a chance to listen to repertoire spanning the baroque to modern day, and illuminating piano-playing with new ears.


Here are the recitals and some highlights


Thursday 2 June 2026, 7.30 pm
Emigres and Friends
CONRAD TAO

includes original compositions, Ravel Sonatine, Schoenberg Klavierstucke Op.33, Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue


Thursday 2 June 2026, 10 pm
Echoes and Refractions
CHUREN LI

includes original compositions, Ravel Ondine & Mendelssohn-Liszt On Wings of Song


Friday 3 June 2026, 7.30 pm
Dreams and Nightmares
HYUNG-KI JOO

includes original compositions, Ravel Gaspard de la nuit & La Valse, J.S.Bach Partita No.1


Friday 3 June 2026, 10 pm
Restless Natures
JONATHAN SHIN

includes original compositions, Mozart Fantasy in D minor, Lili Boulanger Deux Morceaux


Sunday 5 June 2026, 3pm
Music and Magic
SEAN CHEN

includes original compositions, Rameau Gavotte, Dukas-Chen The Sorceror’s Apprentice, Liszt Italie from Annees de pelerinage


Sunday 5 June 2026, 7.30 pm
Structure and Spontaneity
JON KIMURA PARKER

includes original compositions, Mozart Sonata K.311, Beethoven Appassionata Sonata, Ravel Jeux d’eau, John Adams China Gates


Tickets available at SISTIC:

Wednesday, 24 June 2026

SUKA MAKAN: SIAM SQUARE MOOKATA @ BUKIT BATOK WEST



We were heart-broken when Siam Square Mookata at Havelock Road Food Centre closed for good sometime last year. However, we found another outlet at Bukit Batok West, stumbling across it by accident when around the vicinity. So, this qualifies to be a Random Heartland Eats entry, but since we live to eat, we call it for Suka Makan as well.

It's located at the far end of a
very big and very busy food court.
Siam Square Mookata
has the most sauces to choose from.

Siam Square Mookata is very consistent wherever it is located, and so this outlet did not disappoint. The main difference is you need order the items via an app rather than using pen and paper - which is to my distinct disadvantage. Thank goodness that Janet is around and handy with her handy. So here are the food pictures for a leisurely Monday evening!  

Just a sample of dishes we ordered.

Kindly excuse the food porn.
The soup at the end of dinner
was simply delicious!

Our guest for the evening was
Phan Ming Ruey, arts director
of Thye Seng 105 in Kampar, Perak

SIAM SQUARE MOOKATA
Block 155 Bukit Batok Street 11
Singapore 650155

PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION: POSTCARDS FROM MY DARLING LOVE by RIPPLE ROOT



Another afternoon wandering around Objectifs at 155 Middle Road and this was a most colourful and cheerful exhibition of art pieces I have encountered in a long while. Ripple Root is the nom de plume of Estella Ng (Ripple) and Liew Liquan (Root), a painting duo which has been in existence in the last 11 years. It's my loss not to have noticed their work previously; they can be found in hotels and various organisations.





Ripple Root's present exhibition is inspired by a 1965 black-and-white Malay movie called Cinta Kasih Sayang (My Darling Love), and their paintings are reimagined and idealised scenes from this film. It's a riot of colour that pleases my eyes, possibly inspired by paintings by French artists Henri Matisse and Andre Derain, and more recently Australia's Ken Done.



Meeting the duo in person was also a pleasant surprise. I suppose both of them have unified ideas of viewing things and painting techniques, which ensures a seamless uniformity in their modus operandi. Interestingly enough, they are not even a couple, as they have separate but hopefully understanding partners.






After this encounter, I'm certain to spot their work far more often now. That's called the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon.


POSTCARDS FROM MY DARLING LOVE
by RIPPLE ROOT
Objectifs
This exhibits runs till 28 June 2026

Postcards From My Darling Love - Objectifs

rippleroot