Japanese Association of Singapore Auditorium
Sunday (24 February 2013 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 26 February 2013 with the title "Sweet finish for Japanese cello recital".
The Japanese community in Singapore , much like their
compatriots back home, have a strong tradition of supporting Western classical
music. The small auditorium of the Japanese Association of Singapore at Adam Road was filled close to
capacity for the recital by Mari Fujiwara, one of Japan ’s most respected
cellists.
A top prize-winner of the Tchaikovsky
International Cello Competition, and student of Hideo Saito, Mstislav
Rostropovich and Pierre Fournier, Fujiwara’s playing reflected her illustrious
pedigree. The recital began with not one but two performances of the Prelude from J.S.Bach’s Cello Suite No.1 in G major.
The difference was that the second time was
accomplished without the cello resting on its end-pin or spike. Held nearer the
body and played in a slightly crouched position, she was demonstrating a style closer
to the baroque tradition. With this, she produced a more intimate sound from
her prized Guarnerius del Gesu, which sung with a distinctly mellow timbre.
Presumably because this was a more difficult
stance to maintain, she performed Bach’s Suite
No.2 in D minor in the usual posture. No matter, it was equally beautiful
in that she let the music in its six movements speak for itself. Hers was an
unforced virtuosity, never mannered nor striving for effect, with the seeming
effortlessness of breathing. Minimal vibrato was employed, which was in the
spirit of the times.
The element of dance was keenly felt, the tempo
quickening for the Allemande and Courante, while broadening for the slow long-breathed
Sarabande. The Minuets could have been more playful, but the rhythmic pulse of the
final Gigue closed the sublime work
on a spiritual high.
The disproportionately shorter second half
comprised four considerably lighter works. In Saint-Saëns’s The Swan and Fauré’s Sicilienne (from Pelleas et Melisande), sensitively accompanied by Malaysian pianist
Loo Bang Hean, a gorgeous vibrato came to the fore.
Her view of Kreisler’s Liebesleid, taken rather briskly, with several more shades of
gaiety than sorrow, and the concert proper closed with Simon Nicholls’s Cakewalk, polished off in an insouciant
ragtime rhythm. The duo offered two encores, a Japanese song transcription and
Elgar’s evergreen Salut d’amour.
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