VOICE OF
CELLO &
CHAMBER MUSIC NIGHT
International Music Festival
The
Chamber @ The Arts House
Wednesday
(20 August
2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 22 August 2014 with the title "Upbeat end to cello, chamber gig".
The inaugural Singapore Raffles International
Music Festival brought together talented young musicians and teachers from Asia in four days of
competition, masterclasses and concerts at The Arts House. The third evening’s
concert was a showcase in two parts, the first half highlighting ensemble cello
playing, followed by chamber music.
Opening the evening was a guest performance by
9-year-old cellist Li Zi Yi who gave an adroit and confident account of the 1st
movement from Saint-Saens’s First Cello
Concerto. How unusual it is for a musician to be so technically strong yet
at a loss of words on being interviewed. When asked what piece he was to
perform, all he could muster was, “I forgot!” much to the amusement of the
audience.
The cello ensembles that followed were spared
the blushes of awkwardness. The Malaysian Cello Quartet had fun with three
Malay songs and dances in excellent arrangements by Leonard Yeap, which the ronggeng took on the warmth and
sultriness of Latin American tangos. The Natasha Liu Studio Ensemble (below) of eight
coaxed a rich and fulsome sound in the central section of David Popper’s Concert Polonaise, with their leader-mentor
Liu impressively helming the solo cadenzas.
The young SOTA Cello Ensemble (above) was boosted with
one more player, but was over-rushed in Schubert’s First Military March, with a reading that lacked nuance or
subtlety. When four teachers - Liu, So Youn Park, Song Woon Teng and Linda
Kollati (below) - came together in an arrangement Albinoni’s famous Adagio in G minor, they showed how
things were done, with much feeling and tenderness.
The chamber music half began with the 1st
movement of Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet
from the MusicPro Camerata Kuala Lumpur (above). Standing out was clarinettist Chen
Ya-Ching whose tone was full-bodied and phrasing amply articulated, well
supported by her string colleagues even if they briefly grappled with
intonation issues.
Much welcome was a performance of Italian
baroque composer Giuseppe Brescianello’s Sonata
in G minor on period instruments (above). Leading on baroque violin was none other than
Alan Choo, who shared the melodic lines with Trevor Sze on baroque bassoon. The
accompaniment was provided by Shawn Tan’s baroque cello and Shane Thio whose
harpsichord notes were simulated on electronic keyboard. The sound in its three
movements, mellow yet incisive, was a breath of fresh air.
The concert closed with the dynamic duo of
flautist Roberto Alvarez and harpist Katryna Tan. Young Singaporean Chen
Zhangyi’s Five Constellations were
short and varied numbers with maximum mileage yielded from both instruments. In
the final two pieces, flowing lyricism in Coma
Berenices was well contrasted with the jazzy flourishes of Eridanus. The infectious Spanish rhythms
of Jacques Ibert’s Entr’acte gave a
suitably animated and upbeat note to close the proceedings.
The Natasha Liu Studio Ensemble with Singapore's "First Lady of the Cello" Mrs Herminia Ilano. |
The Malaysian Cello Quartet with Natasha Liu (extreme L) and Mrs Herminia Ilano. |
All photos by the kind permission of the Singapore Raffles International Music Festival.
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