GALA
CONCERT
Esplanade
Concert Hall
Saturday (22 August 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 25 August 2014 with the title "Two Asian gems unveiled".
The
Singapore Lyric Opera has made it a point over the years to engage Asian
singers in its major productions. Many vocal gems have been unveiled to the Singapore public as a result. Now meet two more as
Sri Lankan-British soprano Kishani Jayasinghe and Filipino-American tenor Arthur
Espiritu made their spectacular debuts here.
Jayasinghe,
who helms the title role of Franz Lehar’s The
Merry Widow later in October, immediately made an impact in Hanna Glawari’s
hit-song Vilja-Lied. Singing in
English, her pure and radiant voice with the sweetness of nectar, easily reached
the topmost spots without straining or stretching. Her cultured enunciation and
immaculate articulation also served well in the coloratura favourite Gounod’s Jewel Song from Faust, now sung in the original French.
No
less impressive was Espiritu, who opened with Donizetti’s Una furtiva lagrima from Elisir
d’amore, revealing a passionate bleeding-heart sensibility in the mould of
The Three Tenors. His clear ringing tone showcased the popular Neapolitan song Torno a Sorriento (Come Back To Sorrento), which conductor-cum-emcee Joshua Kangming
Tan humorously explained as a plea for a new sewage system to be built in the
Italian town. So much for the romance.
Local
SLO regulars mezzosoprano Anna Koor and baritone William Lim were limited to
one aria each. Koor sported a gigantic rose on her gown and flirtatiously made
eyes at the audience in Bizet’s Habañera
from Carmen, while Lim was his usual
dependable and lyrical self in Wolfram’s Ode
to the Evening Star from Wagner’s
Tannhäuser.
The
SLO Orchestra supported the singing sensitively and with much subtlety, never
overwhelming the voices at any point. Conductor Tan also led the ensemble in
two substantial overtures, from Rossini’s The
Barber of Seville and Wagner’s Tannhäuser,
both highlighting fine solos and cohesive ensemble playing.
The
voices multiplied as the evening developed, the first duet being The Presentation of the Rose from
Richard Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier.
Koor’s Octavian (a famous cross-dressing role) and Jayasinghe’s Sophie blended
well in this declaration of secret love between two young protagonists.
Even
better was the substantial chunk of Act One in Puccini’s La Boheme when Espiritu’s Rodolfo encounters Jayasinghe’s Mimi and
their hands meet. The former’s Che gelida
manina (Your Tiny Hand Is Frozen)
and the latter’s Si, mi chiamano Mimi
(Yes, They Call Me Mimi) truly
touched and hit the audience’s simpatico
buttons. Spontaneous clapping and cheers followed each aria, no doubt
encouraged by conductor Tan’s (right) permission to applaud ad libitum.
The
magical evening closed with the Quartet
from Verdi’s Rigoletto, led by
Espiritu’s opening gambit Bella figlia dell’amore
(Lovely Daughter of Love) as his
lecherous Duke of Mantua seeks yet another amorous conquest. The four voices
came as one in this rapturous outpouring that brought the house down. What
could follow after this ovation? Yet another performance of the beloved Quartet beckoned. The performers really
understood the meaning of the exclamation “encore!”.
Concert photo by the kind courtesy of Sarah Grace Ng (with permission from Singapore Lyric Opera).
Concert photo by the kind courtesy of Sarah Grace Ng (with permission from Singapore Lyric Opera).
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