OUR
PEOPLE, OUR MUSIC 2014
National Stadium , Singapore Sports Hub
Saturday (28 June 2014 )
An edited version of this review was published in The Straits Times on 30 June 2014 with the title "Mega night to remember".
For the years to come, this concert by the
Singapore Chinese Orchestra to celebrate the opening of the newly completed
National Stadium and Sports Hub will be popularly referred to as the
“Mega-Concert”. In terms of numbers involved in performing live music and sheer
magnitude, there have been few equals.
In 1978, a choir of 4000 sang under the direction
of the late Paul Abisheganaden at the Billy Graham Crusade, while a combined
chorus of over a thousand from Singapore , Australia and Scandinavia performed Handel’s Messiah with the Singapore Symphony
Orchestra in 1988.
Both events were held in the old National
Stadium, scene of Singapore ’s football triumphs and
home of the Kallang Roar, a venue where the nation also greeted Pope John Paul
II and pop icon Michael Jackson. Fond old memories of those escapades and the
ubiquitous “drinks, keropoh and kwa-chee” linger, but the new National Stadium
with the world’s largest domed roof is a sight to behold. A first concert there
had to be equally memorable.
The Singapore Chinese Orchestra is no stranger
to mass participation concerts having previously staged a mega-concert of a
smaller scale with 2400 performers at the Singapore Indoor Stadium in 2004.
This evening’s numbers would healthily surpass that as it involved no less than
128 school and community Chinese ensembles and choirs, including several groups
from Johore and Sabah .
The SCO’s commitment to audience outreach also
mandated that this evening’s fare was popular and approachable. Prime Minister
Lee Hsien Loong’s baton provided the down-beat for the opening fanfare to
Richard Strauss’s Also Sprach Zarathustra
adapted for Chinese instruments by Tan Kah Yong, and the amplified sound of the
augmented orchestra was close to deafening.
Each work programmed and conducted by SCO Music
Director Yeh Tsung for the concert reflected some facet of the nation’s psyche,
hopes and aspirations. Nostalgia was represented by Blue Memories, a medley of Teresa Teng hits arranged by Kuan Nai
Chung which had to include that evergreen Yue
Liang Dai Biao Wo Di Xin (The Moon
Represents My Heart).
In reality, most of the works were a celebration
of youth, somewhat ironic as the nation is inching inexorably into middle age.
SG 50 was only mentioned once during the course of events, but staying young or
young at heart was the key to true happiness, it seemed. A martial arts display
by Singapore ’s world wushu champion Vincent Ng, accompanied
by music to the Jet Li movie Once Upon In
China, provided the adrenaline rush.
More fast music included the popular number Horse Racing, which saw SCO Young Assistant
Conductor Moses Gay lead massed erhus
in a headlong charge assisted by Clarence Lee providing the beat and
vertiginous cadenzas on an electronic piano. 10-year-old pipa virtuosa Chen
Xinyu, winner in the 2012 National Chinese Music Competition, was the star in
Wu Si Man Jiang’s Spring At Tianshan,
a rhapsody on Silk
Road
melodies.
SCO Resident Conductor Quek Ling Kiong then
flexed his ample biceps on the dagu (large
bass drum) in Power Singapura!, the
work for drums of all sizes co-written with Phang Kok Jun. As auditors from the
Guinness World Records hurried to crunch the numbers, a Mexican wave rippled
through the ranks and files of the ensemble as well as in the lively audience.
Composer-in-residence designate Phoon Yew Tien’s
Variations On Singapura was a
departure from the usual compositional form. It assiduously worked through
motifs and fragments of the popular National Day Parade song, revealing bit by
bit in short pithy phrases before its full glory was unfurled a single and
definitive time.
There was a hush of anticipation as two Guinness
World Records were established and awarded to the nation. An orchestra of 3345
Chinese instrumentalists set a new global landmark, while 4557 was the number
to better when it came to amassing a Chinese drum ensemble. A pat on the back
was due for all the students and aspirants who participated.
The evening closed on a sentimental note when
veteran musical-meister Dick Lee was
invited to sing what is arguably his most popular song, Home. Its memorable lyrics and poignant melody will always resound
in the hearts of many as to what it means to be a Singaporean.
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