OMM PROM 2013: ALL AMERICAN
Orchestra of the Music
Makers
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (26 January 2013 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 28 January 2013 with the title "Music Makers reach out with pops concert".
The Orchestra of the Music Makers (OMM) has made
its name by performing the larger works of the classical repertoire in subscription
concerts. When the young volunteer orchestra chooses to perform shorter pieces
and popular classics, it does so in an outreach event called the OMM Prom, its
name derived from the BBC Proms. As the Singapore Symphony Orchestra has ceased
its Familiar Favourites series, the OMM Prom has become the de facto pops concert of the masses.
A very large audience greeted the latest OMM
Prom which was an enjoyable salute to American music. The heady spirit of the
Boston Pops was immediately relived with the opener, George Gershwin’s Girl Crazy Overture, with popular
melodies like Embraceable You, I Got Rhythm and But Not For Me flowing out with the slickness that these Broadway musicals
demand.
Rhapsody
in Blue
was next, and clarinettist Vincent Goh’s slinky opening solo set the tone for a
totally commanding performance by young pianist Clarence Lee. Not only does he
have the physical heft to project above the orchestra, he also gave the score
an improvisatory feel by dictating the pace, slowing at will and then upping
the ante when it mattered. The orchestra’s razor-sharp reflexes served the
music’s rhythmic intricacies to a tee, with woodwinds and brass in splendid
form.
Conductor Chan Tze Law then touched upon how 20th
century American music and popular culture was closely linked, and the next
three works were proof of that. Philip Glass’s Heroes Symphony (inspired by David Bowie) provided seven minutes of
repetitive tedium in its fourth movement despite some fine solo trumpet and
clarinet playing. This was offset by film music from John Williams and Alan
Menken, Star Wars and Enchanted respectively, which brought
out the loudest applause.
The second concertante work was the slow
movement of Samuel Barber’s Violin
Concerto, with Edward Tan the stylish and sensitive soloist. His beautiful
tone, rising to impassioned high, provided the evening’s most reflective moment.
Then it was back to the bluster of brass and percussion in Aaron Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man, that
familiar standard now subsumed as the final movement of his Third Symphony. Busy counterpoint and
development on the theme brought the concert to a rousing close.
For its obligatory encore, OMM surprised with
that old chestnut, Old McDonald Had A
Farm in Leroy Anderson’s uproarious orchestration, complete with barnyard
sound effects from five percussionists. The downside to that programming pique
was this: it is now almost impossible to rid that melody from the mind!
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