ENCHANTED…
School of the Arts
SOTA Concert Hall
Friday (8 March 2013 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 11 March 2013 with the title "Spanning generations".
It
is a rare event when two of Singapore ’s outstanding pianists appear in the
same concert but not playing together. Almost two decades separate Christina
Tan and Lim Yan, but both bear testament to the burgeoning musical culture in Singapore over the years that made their
achievements possible.
Tan
belongs to the same generation as pianists like Shane Thio, Koh Joo Ann, Lena
Ching and Victor Khor. She came to prominence after winning the 1986 Diners
Club Pianist of the Year Competition, after a hair-raising performance of the
finale from Prokofiev’s Third Piano
Concerto with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra. Lim, then 5 years old,
would later in 2012 become the first Singapore to perform a Beethoven piano concerto
cycle here.
Tan’s
credentials as a chamber musician came to the fore in the first half of this
concert. In Philippe Gaubert’s Three
Watercolours, she lent a sensitive touch in accompanying flautist Jill Chen
and cellist So Youn Park. The gentle music was closer to the Belle Époque
spirit of Faure, although the piano’s shimmering textures regularly strayed
into the realm of impressionism. The idyllic calm of the slow movement Autumn Evening soon livened into
animated Spanish rhythms of the final Serenade.
Prokofiev’s
Flute Sonata in D major proved a
thornier proposition. Chen brought out a soothing lyrical tone in this most
congenial and non-percussive work. The perpetual motion of the tricky Presto however came close to collapse at
one point, but the duo steadied itself immediately. If the rapturous finale
sounded cautious rather than free-wheeling, it was because safety first was the
prevailing concern.
After
the intermission, Tan gave a rare solo performance of Canadian-Chinese composer
Alexina Louie’s Music for Piano. Its
four movements are a study of bell sounds and plangent tintinnabulation. An
exquisite touch and deft pedalling brought out the contrasts, with Ravel-like
sonorities in The Enchanted Bells,
minimalist loops for Changes,
fairy-tale echoes evoking nostalgia in Distant
Memories, and true fortissimo in Once
Upon A Time, when the Great Gate of
Kiev of Mussorgsky’s Pictures At An
Exhibition was recalled.
Tan
dedicated her magnificent reading to the memory of the recently departed actress-director
and theatre mentor Christina Sergeant.
Not
to be forgotten, Lim Yan performed the demanding piano part of Brahms’s Viola Sonata in E flat major (Op.120
No.2) alongside guest violist Lim Chun. An autumnal work, the viola’s mellow
utterances struck a beautiful compromise with the piano’s figurations, stoking
the smouldering embers of Romanticism. This duo, first cousins by relation, was nigh
inseparable as they expertly coaxed the passionate masterpiece to a glorious
final fruition.
That the sizeable audience, filled by mostly
students and young people, was ecstatic than merely enthusiastic, bodes well
for the future of chamber music. Good music and performers deserve nothing
less.
No comments:
Post a Comment