AN EVENING
WITH
MoonFest
2014
Esplanade
Concert Hall
Saturday (6 September 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 8 September 2014 with the title "Orchestra's impactful outing".
There
are only a few full-sized professional Chinese orchestras in existence, and
each has its own distinctive features. The Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, making
its first appearance here in 17 years, can truly be considered distinctive. Led
by its Singaporean Principal Conductor and Cultural Medallion recipient (2001) Yan
Huichang, the orchestra made a big impact at this year’s Mid Autumn
festivities at the Esplanade.
One
would be struck by its mostly youthful-looking players, attired in sleek dark
grey one-piece gowns, and array of eco-friendly huqins, cellos and basses. Made from biodegradable materials, these
instruments eschewed the traditional python-skin trimmings yet did not
compromise on timbre and sound quality.
Their
velvety, homogeneous sound was heard to stirring effect in the ancient tune As The Moon Rises arranged by Peng
Xiuwen, and the mysterious and hushed textures in The Grazing Scene from Law Wing-Fai’s Tang Capriccio. Suppleness and subtlety was in plenteous supply,
but the range of nuances expressed in this wonderfully varied programme also
impressed.
Percussion
and a chorus of suonas (the closest
thing to brass) certainly made their presence felt in The Grand Victory from Shanxi , which opened the concert. The latter,
trumpeting impossibly long-held notes at its ending, was greeted with much
glee. There was also much prowess in individual solos, like Singaporean Choo
Boon-Chong’s evocatively tipsy bangdi
flourish in Law’s Drunken Monk’s Note,
inspired by Tang dynasty calligraphy.
Liu
Tianhua’s A Beautiful Night and the
Cantonese number In Celebration of the
Good Times provided a host of contrasts, nocturnal serenity followed by
celebratory revelry. In Zhao Jiping’s Follow
the Pagoda Tree to Trace the Roots of Our Ancestors, elegiac huqins (one cannot get enough of these)
alternated with a swifter and more percussive beat that underlined the work’s
date with nostalgia.
The
concertante works were heartily received, none more than sanxian soloist Zhao Taisheng’s tour
de force of spoken and sung narration in Sui Lijun’s Song of the Black Earth. Like the proverbial wandering minstrel, he
truly captured the lore of the land with his plaints, capped by a frenzied
improvised cadenza on the sanxian that
reminded one of Elvis on his guitar in his prime.
Conductor Yan then trained the audience in the art of the hand drum for the closing work,
Cheng Dazhao’s Yellow River Capriccio.
The work went through its obligatory tumultuous episodes that are sine qua non for “China’s Sorrow”,
featured some fine folk singing from orchestral members Mao Qinghua and Ren
Zhaoliang, before the mass participatory drumming that raised a terrific din to
close.
Conductor
Yan mused on his happiness on returning to Singapore, before launching into
three familiar encores, Colourful Clouds Chasing
The Moon, Horse Racing and the
theme from the martial arts serial Legend
of the Condor Heroes. On this showing, the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra’s
much-vaunted reputation is well-deserved.
Photographs by Jack Yam, with the courtesy of Esplanade Theatres by the Bay.
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