Monday, 14 August 2017

A CELEBRATION OF DREAMS: JOHN WILLIAMS. THE MUSIC MAKERS / Orchestra of the Music Makers / Review


Front cover of programme booklet

A CELEBRATION OF DREAMS
JOHN WILLIAMS. THE MUSIC MAKERS
Orchestra of the Music Makers
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (12 August 2017)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 14 August 2017 with the title "Music makers carry on dreaming their dreams".

“We are the music-makers / And we are the dreamers of dreams,” are the first and final two lines of Arthur O'Shaughnessy's Ode (1873), which became the inspiration of the Orchestra of the Music Makers (OMM). Founded nine years ago, the orchestra of youths and students led by conductor and university don Chan Tze Law have become the “movers and shakers” of Singapore's orchestral scene.


The phrase itself, which is synonymous with the cutting edge of progress and revolution, made its first appearance in that poem. It was thus appropriate that The Music Makers, its 1912 musical setting by Edward Elgar was given the Singapore premiere by OMM. Joined by 200 singers from the International Festival Chorus, Taipei Philharmonic Chorus and Ahmad Ibrahim Secondary School Chorus, it was another extravaganza that one has come to expect from this group.

The orchestral introduction, stormy and tumultuous but subtly built up, gave a clue to the maturity and prowess of the players which sustained the cantata's 40 minutes. The choir's entry was also excellent, their words enunciated with intent and purpose. Multiple quotes from earlier works including Enigma Variations and both symphonies formed a salute to creators and artists, essentially dreamers, and their sacrifices.

  
The qualities that make Elgar's music memorable, lyrical themes filled with nobilmente (nobility and grandeur), pomp and pageantry, and spine-tingling climaxes, were vividly brought out. The contribution of Australian mezzo-soprano Fiona Campbell in “They had no vision amazing / Of the goodly house they are raising” provided that extra dimension of poignancy. Although it closed with a quiet and sublime equanimity, there was a strong sense that the players and singers were affirming their credo to “carry on dreaming”.


The concert's second half was devoted to the music of American film composer John Williams, who turned 85 this year. The choir was not done yet, shouting out the Olympic Games motto “Citius, Altius, Fortius” (Faster, Higher, Stronger) in Call Of The Champions, the anthem of the 2002 Winter Games. Williams' emotionally charged and life-affirming brand of scoring continued into excerpts from the movies Hook and Close Encounters Of The Third Kind.


The latter opened with a morass of atonalism before unravelling into its familiar 5-note motto theme, which musically corresponds to the word “hello”. The subject of interstellar travel dominated with seven movements from the Star Wars movie franchise. The ominous Imperial March was contrasted with the gentle Annakin's Theme, which included a motif from which the former was derived.


The choir was called again for the gripping Duel Of The Fates, and it was a eventful musical journey which closed cannily with the Elgarian strains of Throne Room & End Title. The tender encore of Luke & Leia showcased an excellent French horn solo, while Elgar had the last word in his indefatigable Pomp & Circumstance March No.1 (Land of Hope and Glory), with orchestra and choir in full blast.

Back cover of programme

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