VIRTUOSOS
OF CHINESE MUSIC
Ding
Yi Music Company
Esplanade
Concert Hall
Sunday
(24 April 2016 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 26 April 2016 with the title "Shining showmanship by Chinese soloists".
Every year in its first concert of the
season, Ding Yi Music Company invites as guest soloists luminaries from the
world of Chinese instrumental music. These names may not be familiar to the
casual listener or outsider, but erhu virtuoso Xue Ke, guzheng exponent
Zhou Wang and dizi master Zhang Wei Liang are household names for
serious Chinese instrumentalists.
In this 140-minute long concert, the trio
from mainland China performed a selection
of chamber and concertante works with members of Singapore 's premier Chinese
chamber ensemble. Xue's fiery crimson gown matched the intensity of Liu Wen
Jin's Fire Maiden in a Colourful Dress for two erhus, a moto perpetuo in
duet with Ding Yi's Chin Yen Choong. There was no let up in its frenetic pace,
but Chin ably kept up with Xue by doubling the melody, harmonising in close
intervals and providing rhythmic support.
Xue's appearance in Guan Ming's Ballad
of Lan Hua Hua, a rhapsodic single-movement concerto, gave voice to the
extreme expressions of an erhu. From anguished plaints to the courageous
sacrifice of the eponymous heroine (who resisted and fled a loveless marriage
to a rich old codger), the emotive playing elicited premature applause from an
excitable audience in a short pause leading to its cadenza.
Zhou was joined by Yin Qun and Yvonne Tay
in Zhou Yan Jia's Love of Qing Bei, arranged for three guzhengs.
Playing completely from memory, nary a note or beat was dropped in this
showpiece that gradually accelerated to a brilliant conclusion with sweeping glissandi.
Zhou's concertante pieces included the
traditional Song Of Desolation from Shaanxi, a poetic portrayal of
profound sadness, markedly contrasted with Huang Zhen Yu and Zhou Wang's Western
Theme Capriccio, a vigorous dance that used Central Asian themes and motifs
from Jiangxi, China's Far West. Her command of the strummed and plucked
instrument was absolute, vividly supported by the ensemble conducted by Quek
Ling Kiong.
Zhang played on a combination of dizis
and xiao. The latter is a vertically-blown flute with a lower register, and its
mellow timbre was well-suited for the serene melody of Song dynasty classic Plum
Blossoms In The Snow, accompanied by erhu, pipa, ruan,
guzheng and percussion in Zhang's
arrangement.
The dizi's rusticity was ideal in
the Hebei operatic number Little
Shepherd, which had mellifluous exchanges between a shepherd and his love
interest. In Zhang's own Tears for Fallen Flowers, composed in memory of
his beloved late father, a Suzhou pingtan melody straddled between
light-hearted reminiscences and poignancy.
All three soloists gave short interviews,
which included encouraging budding players in the audience to discover and
embrace their artistic souls. They were united for the final work, Gu Guan
Ren's arrangement of the popular Flavours Of Jiangnan, which culminated
with virtuosic flourishes for each part. Closing on a spirited high, this concert
ushers yet another ambitious season ahead for the intrepid and industrious Ding
Yi Music Company.
Photographs by courtesy of Ding Yi Music Company.
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