ALAN CHOO
Violin Recital
with LIM
YAN, Piano
The Living
Room @ The Art House
Sunday (10 August 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 12 August 2014 with the title "Skilful and delightful violin show".
Goh
Soon Tioe (1911-1982) is remembered as one of the great Singaporean musical
pioneers, a renaissance man among musicians. He was a violinist, conductor,
pedagogue, luthier and impresario, the likes of whom will never be encountered
again in our present age of specialisation. The annual award in memory of his
name identifies outstanding young Singaporean string players who embody the
aspirations in his life’s work.
The
2014 and third recipient of the Goh Soon Tioe Centenary Award is Alan Choo Su
Ho, 1st prizewinner in the 2011 National Violin Competition, and the first Singapore-born violinist to garner that accolade since 2003. Presently
a student at Baltimore ’s Peabody Institute, he is one of few
local violinists to pursue baroque violin performance.
Appropriately
his recital began with Telemann’s Fantasia
in F major, performed on a baroque violin. Playing on gut strings and using
the shorter baroque bow, he produced a deep and mellow sonority in its four
short and varied parts. Coloured with a life of its own, the dance-like spirit
of each part movement leapt tantalisingly to the fore.
With
the appetite for this sound world whetted, the balance of the 75-minute
programme was however played on a modern violin and partnered by Lim Yan on the
piano. Choo’s versatility was immediately apparent as 20th century
German composer Paul Hindemith’s Sonata
in E called for a different kind of approach.
Armed
with near-perfect intonation, he brought an unusual lyricism to its astringent
themes, with long-held phrases alternating with short bristling dissonances
that characterised this spiky two-movement work. The neoclassicism of
Hindemith’s “Back to Bach” movement was to find a totally satisfying modern
resonance here.
Romantic
in spirit was Spaniard Sarasate’s Caprice
Basque, a virtuoso showpiece that highlighted awkward syncopations in its
first half, and a hair-raising set of variations in the second. Choo’s ability
to marry melody in the bowing right hand with plucked accompaniment in the left
hand was one of the many tricks that delighted the audience.
Cesar
Franck’s Sonata in A major was to
complete the evening’s fare. Both violinist and pianist were to take an epic
view of the classic. While big gestures and crashing climaxes distinguished its
course, it was the softer and more tender moments that made the contrasts stand
out. And when the coruscating second movement came to its brilliant conclusion,
premature applause was smartly averted when pianist Lim launched immediately
into the third movement.
The
familiar finale’s canon was a demonstration of fine balance, with the violin
following the piano’s lead through the entire movement without getting into
each other’s path. The tension was firmly maintained but with a song-like
sensibility throughout. The resultant applause was rewarded with an encore, a
fast movement from one of French baroque composer Francoeur’s sonatas. It is
hoped that Alan Choo’s next recital would be an all-baroque affair, another
first for the Singapore music scene.
Alan gets a giant cheque of $6800 from the Goh Soon Tioe family. |
With his conservatory violin teacher former SSO Concertmaster Alexander Souptel. |
With former school orchestra conductor Chan Yoong Han. |
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