SINGAPORE INTERNATIONAL
VIOLIN COMPETITION:
Final Round
Victoria Concert Hall
Sunday & Monday
(18 & 19 January 2015)
This review was published in The Straits Times on 21 January 2015 with the title "Taiwanese violinists sweep into finals".
Over
the past ten days, the inaugural Singapore International Violin Competition,
organised by the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music, became a showcase of the
best young violinists of the world. By the final round, held ever two evenings
at Victoria Concert Hall, the 35 selected competitors had been narrowed down to
just six.
Accompanied
by the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra conducted by Jason Lai, each
finalist performed a violin concerto by Mozart. While the digital prowess of
the players in the earlier rounds had been of a spectacularly high standard,
the final was to be a stern test of musicality, the ability to listen and make
intimate chamber music with a small ensemble.
Mozart's
violin concertos were early works, composed in his late teens, near the end of
his years as performing child prodigy. Their quaint proportions, sleek and
elegant lines which shun ostentatious display are the antithesis of the
arch-virtuoso, yet it takes nothing less than a virtuoso to do them justice.
Interestingly, four of the six finalists were Asians, three of Taiwanese
lineage.
There
were three performances of Mozart's Fifth Violin Concerto in A major
(K.219), two of the Fourth Concerto in D major (K.218) and one of the Third
Concerto in G major (K.216). The first evening was opened by Fedor Rudin
(France) whose cool but stylish approach to K.219 was that of a keen chamber
musician. His was a sweet, sensitive and self-contained sound which never
sought to impose itself, but had an interesting run of cadenzas, which included
a short quote from Mozart's piano Rondo Alla Turca in the
Turkish-flavoured interlude of the finale.
By
contrast, the two ladies that followed exuded an outsized tone that easily
filled the nearly-packed concert hall. Whether that is appropriate for chamber
music is one for musicologists and historians to decide, but its certainly
captured the audience's attention. Sirena Huang (USA) was grace and poise
personified in K.216, the dreamy central Adagio being an epitome of classical era beauty. When she pressed
forward in the outer movements, there was never an unforced or unnatural sound.
Members
of the audience had been heard discussing what constitutes a “competition
performance”, which can be equated to playing to the stands, in an unabashed
showy display. After Huang, Alexandra Conunova (Moldova) provided more of those
qualities in K.218, yet her reading never felt less than well-proportioned, an
immaculate view with the fervour to match. Again, artistry had been allied with
an equal proportion of sinew and guts.
On
the second evening, the artists continued to shine and make music. Yu-Chien
Tseng (Taiwan) in K.219 provided refined and cultured playing, armed with an
extrovert edge. His biggish cadenzas and vigourous rendition of the Turkish
episode made for exciting listening. Equipped with a similar statuesque
deportment and demeanour was Richard Lin (Taiwan) in K.218, whose animated and
heroic stance sometimes seemed at odds with the intimate music. His cadenzas
were large-scaled and Romantically inclined, elements that would not look out
of place in the Brahms concerto.
Finally,
Hyun Jae Lim (South Korea) delivered the most muscular and brawny of the three
K.219 performances. She projected a
bright and luminous tone that was unafraid to exert itself beyond the
orchestra's decibel limit. It seemed that this concerto had over two evenings
metamorphosed from a soft-focussed and stately diversion to a virtuoso
showpiece infused with steroids and fuelled by the mere idea of
competition.
This
reviewer could have happily lived with all three women making the Grand Finals,
but the jury of nine international artists chaired by Qian Zhou, Head of
Strings at the Conservatory, elected Huang, Tseng and Lin to proceed to the
Grand Finals at Esplanade Concert Hall on Wednesday evening. A Taiwanese sweep
of the top three prizes may come as a surprise to some, but the fact that none
of the grand finalists were students of the judges is perhaps the most
remarkable aspect of this competition.
The
concertos accompanied by the Singapore Symphony Orchestra conducted by Vladimir
Verbitsky will include those by Tchaikovsky (to be performed by Huang),
Sibelius (Tseng) and Brahms (Lin). An extravaganza of musical passion and
violin fireworks awaits.
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