SHANGHAI QUARTET
6th Singapore Chamber Music Festival
Yong Siew Toh
Conservatory Concert Hall
Wednesday (30 January 2013 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 1 February 2013 with the title "Shanghai Quartet's explosive rapturous night".
The Shanghai Quartet has been regular visitors
to Singapore , and it had the honour
of opening the 6th Singapore Chamber Music Festival with a recital
of stark contrasts. Beethoven appears in many string quartet programmes,
because his 15 quartets broke new ground on a form that began with his teacher
Haydn, and went on to define the genre.
Even if his G major Quartet (Op.18 No.2) was an early work, traces of future greatness
may be discerned. The foursome articulated its themes with crispness and
clarity, in a very cohesive performance all round. The slow movement had a
hymn-like quality, looking forward to Beethoven’s fondness for longeurs, but also showed how the
quartet coped with sudden shifts in dynamics when lingering Adagio cantabile quickened into a brisk Allegro.
If young Beethoven was adventurous and somewhat
impetuous, then mature Bartok was an outright radical who rewrote all the rules.
The Hungarian’s Fourth String Quartet
was the vanguard of modernism in 1928, and its grinding dissonances and bald
discords still sound provocative today. The Shanghai Quartet coaxed a totally
coherent reading, one that brings to mind that stupendous outing by the Tokyo
String Quartet in 1991.
Its second movement was a study of pianissimo and prestissimo, of nervous disquiet not quite dispelled by the third
movement’s spooky nocturne. As if in sympathy with things that go bump in the
night, a spotlight in the ceiling of the stage exploded with a terrific
rupture, just as the players readied themselves for the famous pizzicato fourth
movement (below). That and the rumbustious finale in a driving Bulgarian rhythm,
unerringly wrought, brought out the cheers.
Like in the evening before, the visiting main
act was joined by locals for a grand finale. Singapore ’s T’ang Quartet faced
off with their Shanghai counterparts in
Mendelssohn’s celebrated Octet Op.20.
The stunning work of genius by a 16-year-old, its symphonic pretentions were
apparent, as was the virtuoso part written for the first violinist as if in a
concerto.
For this, Weigang Li rose to the occasion with a
quiet and distinguished aplomb. Never seeking to upstage his seven associates,
his paradoxical role was that of leader and equal partner. Together, their
performance was one of intoxicating passion and camaraderie. The sheer sonority
of strings in the outer movements, despite each player having a different and distinct
part, had the homogeneity of oneness. In the popular Scherzo, a fairy-like lightness provided the music and spirits a
life-affirming lift. These fine qualities, in a nutshell, are the essence of
good chamber music.
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