INSTRUMENTAL CONCERT 2018
Association of Composers (Singapore )
Recital Hall
Saturday (8 September 2018 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 10 September 2018 with the title "12 composers, a myriad of styles".
Exactly
how many composers are there in Singapore ? The true figure will perhaps never be known. This chamber
concert by the Association of Composers (Singapore ) featured 12 of them, with none of the usual suspects
patronised by the national orchestras. All belong to the Chinese-speaking
community and many hail from the pioneer generation of citizens.
All the composers were seated in the front row of the recital hall. |
The
works heard may be grouped as pieces for piano solo, erhu or violin
accompanied by piano, and string quartet. These displayed a broad spectrum of
influences, inspirations and styles, and one may surmise that there is no
singular Singaporean way of composition. At least, not yet.
The
concert opened and closed with works for erhu and piano, performed by Ng
Rui Jun and Irene Law respectively. The huqin’s voice ensured a Chinese
feel about them, while the accompanying piano sounded somewhat incongruent with
Western harmonies and timbres. A guzheng or yangqin might have
made more sense.
Lee
Ngoh Wah’s My True Love was a short lyrical romance while Lee Chee
Kung’s Erhu Capriccio was the most authentically Chinese-sounding work
of the evening. Quek Yong Siu’s Garden Under The Morning Sun was an
extended fantasy with the mimicry of birdsong, providing the original meaning
to tweeting or twittering. The 3rd movement of Toh Heng Guan’s First
Erhu Concerto luxuriated in unusual harmonies and a virtuosic cadenza.
For
violin and piano, violinist Siew Yi Li performed his brother Xiao Chun Yuan’s Homeland,
which alternated between major and minor keys while engendering a sense of
patriotism and nostalgia. Chiew Keng Hoon’s Little Creature delighted in
dissonances and jagged rhythms, simulating some flitting stinging insect, while
his Fantasy was a true study in the atonal idiom of the Second Viennese School.
Lian
Sek Lin’s Moonlight Song had the hint of bel canto but with offbeat
harmonies to unsettle and create tension. Lin Ah Leck’s A Wandering Life
was a rhapsodic fantasy in the Chinese idiom culminating in a striding march.
Tan Chan Boon’s Ostinatissimo was surprisingly gentle as he employed a
slow chordal bass over which the violin fashioned a masterly passacaglia.
Pianist
Nicholas Loh, who accompanied Siew, went solo in Xiao’s Tensions, built on an
obstinate idee fixe, and hammered out Lian’s Hibiscus Variations, based
ironically on a march theme, played fortissimo throughout with a Satiesque sense
of irony.
The
violin and piano duo of Mac Chang and Elaine Xu contributed Lee Yuk Chuan’s Remembrance
and Rondo, contrasting sentimental lyricism with vigorous dance
rhythms. Both works conjured the aroma of Central Asia , and the
violinist was commended for spicing up the Rondo with Paganinian
touches.
Two
works played by the Melody String Quartet completed the programme. Lee Khiok
Hua’s Autumn Scene was a Chinese-styled dance with alternating fast and
slow sections, while Frederick Ng Eng Thong’s Dance In Harmony a heady
mix of Malay motifs, minimalism, syncopation and counterpoint. Reliving a rowdy
Chingay procession, this was arguably the most interesting work, a veritable
rojak one might consider quintessentially Singaporean.
All the composers and some of the performers. |
Composer Tan Chan Boon with his students, the next generation of Singaporean composers? |
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