Review: Concert
DEBUSSY 100: LA MER
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (3 November 2018 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 November 2018 with the title "Masterful Debussy interpretations".
The
countdown to Shui Lan’s final concerts as Music Director of the Singapore
Symphony Orchestra has begun. This was his last concert of 2018, one which
showcased two of the orchestra’s strongest suits during his 22-year tenure: SSO
as champion of contemporary Chinese orchestral music and Debussy interpreter
par excellence.
The
concert opened with Edvard Grieg’s Peer Gynt Suite No.1, the lightest
music of the evening. The familiar Morning Mood saw lovely solos from
flautist Evgueni Brokmiller and oboist Hu Qiuzi, while homogeneous strings
yielded a chilling hush for Ase’s Death which rose to a passionate
climax. Anitra’s Dance skipped ever so seductively while Liu Chang’s
bassoon provided the insistent beat to ravings from The Hall Of The Mountain
King.
Receiving
a Singapore premiere was Chinese composer Ye Xiaogang’s Mount E’mei
(2016), a concerto for violin and
percussion inspired by the scenery of Sichuan ’s famous highland landmark. The unusual instrumentation
reflected a dichotomy of the mountain’s spirituality (represented by Lu Wei’s
violin) and rugged physical geography (in Hu Shengnan’s percussion tour de
force).
Opening
with a soft vibraphone solo, this soon gave way to the violin’s ethereal entry.
Apart from early exchanges, both soloists operated within different and
separate spheres, allowing each to be savoured on their own terms. Lu’s part
had reminiscences of Szymanowski’s otherwordly feel and Vaughan Williams’
pastoral character (The Lark Ascending readily comes to mind), thus
providing the music’s more dreamy episodes.
Hu’s
role was far more extrovert, and her pants totally suited the need to negotiate
long distances between the vast array of instruments, pitched and unpitched.
This culminated in an outlandish cadenza involving drums, slung gongs, Tibetan
bowls and hanging bells. The work ended on a surprisingly quiet and
contemplative mood, which was a sublime touch.
The
second half comprised two major works by Claude Debussy (1862-1918), whose
death centenary was being observed. Conductor Shui reckoned that the ballet Jeux
(1913) was unfamiliar to audiences and thus gave a preamble, introducing its
main themes with the orchestra and raising
mirth when discussing the music’s homoerotic content with double
entendres.
Euphemisms
were probably apt as the music’s cues were elusive for most part. However one
knew a game of dance and coy flirtation (besides the purported tennis game) was
taking place, even if eroticism remained
deeper in the subconscious.
Needing
no introduction was La Mer (1905), perhaps Debussy’s most famous
impressionist orchestral work. SSO and Shui are old hands with this favourite
calling card, which was conducted completely from memory. As with SSO’s
excellent recordings on BIS, the performance was vividly coloured and shaded
with the orchestra mastering its various nuances and subtleties with absolute
aplomb. The thrilling build up to its final splash was as memorable as anything
the orchestra has offered this year.
On
a more sombre note, this concert was dedicated to the memory of SSO first
violinist Sui Jing Jing, who passed away last week, having served the orchestra
for 32 years.
Concertgoers were invited to sign in a greeting book to remember long-serving SSO violinist Sui Jing Jing. |
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