HUAYI FESTIVAL 2013
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (23 February 2013 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 25 February 2013 with the title "Rainbow of poetry in motion".
The
Singapore Chinese Orchestra’s contribution to this year’s Huayi Chinese
Festival of Arts was a unique concert uniting poetry and music. Whether ancient
verse, dating over a millennium to the Tang and Song dynasties, sat easily with
the far more contemporary art form of symphonic music was not even a doubt once
the performances got underway.
The
juxtaposition worked so well one wondered why this had not been attempted more
often. This was a first-time collaboration with the National Theatre of China
(NTC, above), whose thespians recited the verses with an air of authority and
authenticity that could hardly be bettered.
The
selection of poetry and music, overseen by conductor Yeh Tsung and NTC Director
Tian Qinxin, was both eclectic and wide-ranging. First to be heard were Su
Dongbo’s Nian Nu Jiao (Reminiscing at Red Cliff) and Li Bai’s Invitation to Wine, both well-known
classics, accompanied by Liu Wen Jin’s Great
Wall Capriccio and Zhao Ji Ping’s dedicated musical setting respectively.
Zhao
Jian Hua’s evocative erhu solo was
the perfect foil for stage veteran Han Tongshen’s highly dramatic recitation of
Red Cliff, complete with the “evil”
laughter often caricatured in movies. Wang Nan’s take on the pleasures of
alcohol (below) was to be no less gripping.
The
romantic notion of poetry reading by moonlight and soft atmospheric music was
exemplified in Tang dynasty poet Zhang Ruo Xu’s Spring Blossoms on a Moonlit Night. Actress Fan Zhibo appeared like
some celestial being dressed in pale blue, her soothing mezzo tones accompanied
by just two instruments, Yu Jia’s pipa
and Xu Hui’s guzheng. The sheer
intimacy of the moment was a highlight for this moonstruck listener.
The
concert’s nod to Singapore took the form of Wu Yin’s Legend of the Merlion, aptly helmed by
two younger actors Dong Chang and Jin Ge, who were sassy and upbeat to the
Nanyang-flavoured music of Rambutan
from Simon Kong’s suite Izpirazione II.
The
connection between Chinese and English music came in Xu Zhi Mo’s 1928 poem Farewell Cambridge (above), read by Tao Hong and
accompanied by Eric Watson’s Midsummer
Common, its melody Lady Joan is
familiar for those who know Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia on Greensleeves. Interestingly, Watson’s Tapestries I – Time Dances also provided
uncannily excellent counterpoint to Gu Cheng’s I’m A Wilful Child, a confessional read with great conviction by
Zhao Xiaosu.
The
masterpiece of the concert was Bai Ju Yi’s famous Chang Hen Ge (Song of
Everlasting Sorrow), an epic inspired by the suicide of Tang imperial
concubine Yang Guifei. The tandem of Wang Weiguo and Li Yunjie (below) was poignantly mirrored
by two huqins of Zhou Ruo Yu and Wu
Ke Fei in Yang Chun Lin’s music.
Barely had this sober music ended when the incongruous sight of the heavily-tattooed Chinese rapper MC J-Fever leapt centre-stage to lead the entire cast for Spring.Summer.Autumn.Winter, a medley of poems set to symphonic rap music by SCO Composer-In-Residence Law Wai Lun. Purists might baulk at its inclusion, but it was very well-received by the audience. Here is evidence that Chinese poetry and music need not be moth-balled like museum pieces and consigned to antiquity.
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