THE STORY OF SINGAPORE
Singapore Conference Hall
Saturday (15 September 2018 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 17 September 2018 with the title "Music that tells the Singapore story".
What
is Singaporean music? That question begged to be answered again at this
Singapore Chinese Orchestra (SCO) concert conducted by Yeh Tsung, commemorating
the 95th anniversary of Chinese newspapers in Singapore with the founding of Nanyang Siang Pau in 1923.
Opening
the evening was Wang Chen Wei’s The Sisters’ Islands, which has become a
classic example of Nanyang music. Employing the pelog scale, the
sumptuously orchestrated symphonic poem based on an old Malay legend was highly
narrative, with significant solos for dizi, zhonghu and at its
climax, the blast of a giant conch shell blown as a wind instrument.
There
were two world premieres from SCO’s two most recent composers-in-residence.
Both were played to projected montages of Singapore history from Singapore Press Holdings’ vast photograph
archive. Eric Watson’s As The River Flows mused on the history of the
Singapore River, from idyllic beginnings to pollution and grime, its clean-up
and eventual gentrification. The music followed that trajectory as visuals
transformed from black and white to brilliant colour.
Law
Wai Lun’s The Stories Of Singapore – Singapore’s Press History delved on
Chinese headline news, including the Japanese Occupation, independence from Malaysia , the SARS outbreak, to swimmer Joseph Schooling and
violinist Chloe Chua’s world-beating triumphs. Dramatic music gave way to a
gliding waltz before a valedictory march closed the proceedings.
To
lighten things up, there were two medleys of Xinyao (Singaporean
mandopop) by Chen Jiaming, orchestrated by Phang Kok Jun, and sung very
idiomatically by Chriz Tong and Allan Moo. The projected accompanying lyrics
gave the feeling of the audience eavesdropping on some high class karaoke
session with songs like Like A Swallow, Moonlight In The City, Gone
Too Far and Foolish Hearts.
The
evening’s big work was Law’s Ode To Singapore, a choral symphony composed
for the SG50 celebration in 2015. Featuring the Singapore Press Holdings
Chinese Choir and SOKA Chorus, it was more eclectic than its Beethovenian title
suggested. Following an stirring a cappella choral Prelude, Fight And
Strive sounded like a highly dramatic confluence of the Yellow River
Cantata, Carmina Burana and Lord Of The Rings music, sung in
Chinese.
The
Song Of Singapore that followed was a happy hymn with a big melody,
extolling the nation’s inexorably progress into the First World . However
the lyrics by Pan Cheng Lui, despite their honest intention, were banal and
laughable in its English translation. Take for example, “HDB dwellings
beckoning us home / NEWater offering peace of mind / The aroma of Kopi warms
the hearts / Raise our cups to peace and prosperity for one and all,” and
one gets the drift.
The
finale was a sung recitation of the National Pledge, concluding with a
rousing, “Sing , Singapore ! / Majulah Singapura / Sing to our brighter tomorrow!” So lusty and proud was the performance by the choirs and
orchestra that it was hard to doubt their graft and commitment. Good or bad,
inspired or indifferent, Singaporean music needs to be heard.
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