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| NUS Office of Student Affairs, Centre for the Arts |
Share in the musings and memories of Chang Tou Liang, possibly Singapore's most rabid pianophile and pianomaniac.
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| NUS Office of Student Affairs, Centre for the Arts |
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| The once mighty HMV flagship on Oxford Street / Oxford Circus which shrunk and shrunk until it disappeared. |
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| Super-budget supermarket label, retailing at GBP 2.99, even cheaper than Naxos. Later found out the performance was by William Boughton, not Sir Adrian Boult! |
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| Bought at Wigmore Hall for GBP 11 at a Sunday morning concert. Autographed by Leslie Howard. |
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| Bought at Wigmore Hall at GBP 11 before a Domus concert. Autographed by all four members of Domus. |
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| A rarity from the now-defunct American Arabesque label, GBP 11.99 at HMV Oxford Circus. Later autographed by Ian Hobson. |
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| A bargain at GBP 4.99 at HMV Oxford Circus. Later autographed by Martin Jones. |
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| A 2-CD box at GBP 19.99 in HMV Oxford Circus, the most expensive item bought on this trip. Autographed by Esa-Pekka Salonen after a concert by The Philharmonia Orchestra. |
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| My first piano concerto disc! And it had to be Martha Argerich in two popular concertos where she is next to peerless. Later autographed by Charles Dutoit. |
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| My first violin concerto disc! Absolutely great value for money with two great violin concertos which used to occupy a single LP each. |
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| My first orchestral disc! Wanted to hear loud and scary music blasted over the hi fi. |
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| This one was an outlier, as I wanted to hear the great piano romantic in three Liszt concertante works. Malediction for piano and strings is still a rarity. Later autographed by Ivan Fischer. |
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| The only recording of Ravel's Gaspard de la nuit that was available on disc then. From Ravel's own student, I have yet to hear a better Pavane pour une infante defunte. |
Here is some modern art one can relate to. The Esplanade Tunnel's latest exhibit titled Rotan Rattan: Meditations by Yanyun Chen and Dave Lim is about a reminiscence of past times - corporal punishment meted to errant children or otherwise. People of a certain age will remember strict parents who keep their children (ie. us) in check by wielding the cane.
| The frayed end of a rattan, which means it's been used more than once. |
Spare the rod and spoil the child, they say. "This is for your own good." Taste the lash or you'll be on the road to perdition. "You'll thank me later on when you're older." We are not raising juvenile delinquents. "We love you, that is why you are getting this." Yet more cliches on child-rearing. "This is hurting me more than it hurts you."
| What pain can be dispensed with the use of a hand. |
I cannot remember how many times I got caned. Has it made me a better person? The last one from parents came at ten, after scoring 85/100 in a science test. The last one from teachers came at eleven, after spelling the night in "Saturday night" with a capital. You tend never to forget these things. You learn to be more kaisu. You become better at scoring marks, and more careful in spelling. And you learn to hate and resent. Are these at all positive traits?
On the other hand, I had a teacher from a so-called elite school in despair from being verbally abused by students. No use to complain to the Head of Department, nor the Principal, he said, for nothing gets done, and the students get more insolent, disrespectful and rebellious by the day. Now here's an opportunity where corporal punishment may have a positive effect, but counselling is, of course, more effective, so they say. Who's right in the end? Is the best yet to be? Also cannot say.
| "All because of you" / "Taste the cane". |
| "To bear the pain" / Whack "Damn kids" / "No fear" |
| "To strike is to care" / "To scold is to love" quoting Leong Yoon Pin |
| Untranslatable, the closest being "Serves you right!" |
| San bei ji (Claypot chicken cooked in wine). The basil adds a piquant touch. |