RHAPSODIES OF SPRING 2019
Singapore Conference Hall
Saturday (19 January 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 21 January 2019 with the title "High jinks and nostalgia to usher in new year".
Like
Singapore Symphony Orchestra’s annual Christmas Concerts, Singapore Chinese
Orchestra’s Lunar New Year concerts, entitled Rhapsodies Of Spring, are
must-attend events for those who enjoy seasonal favourites delivered with
healthy doses of light-heartedness. Conducted by Yeh Tsung, this year’s
offerings were high on humour and nostalgia.
The
concert opened with Li Huan Zhi’s familiar Spring Festival Overture, an
old-fashioned rouser which sounded oh-so traditional before SCO
Composer-on-Residence Law Wai Lun’s Celebrating New Year. There was a
deliberate schlockiness to this medley which reeked of gaudy Geylang a-go-go
bars of the 1960s.
More
power to a smart parody of styles which saw Cai Shen Dao (God Of
Fortune Arrives) and Ying Chun Hua (Spring Blossoms) dressed
up as a rumba and cha cha respectively. And one has not really lived without
experiencing that ear-worm Gong Xi Gong Xi taking the form of a
ridiculously camp tango.
What
truly distinguished the evening were four World Premieres of Chinese evergreens
re-orchestrated as popular culture-influenced concertante works by four local
composers. Simon Kong’s Flight Of Bossa Nova saw Chang Le and Meng Jie
in a duel of suonas updating the woodwind classic Bai Niao Chao Feng
(Hundreds Of Birds Paying Respect To The Phoenix).
There
were many jazzy turns to erhu classic Erquan Yingyue (Moon’s
Reflection On Erquan) in Phang Kok Jun’s Erquan In Swing. Tan Man
Man’s hip-gyrating solo was the perfect foil to Ling Hock Siang’s reliving of
the legendary blind erhu exponent Abing’s soulful plaint.
In
Wang Chenwei’s Interstellar Ambush, the pipa showpiece Shi Mian Mai Fu (Ambush
From All Sides) took on the ominous strides of Darth Vader’s Imperial
March. The always spectacular Yu Jia in a multi-sequined gown did the
honours, but something was lost by not being dressed like a stormtrooper.
For
Hard Rock Fight, Eric Watson pitted two percussionists, Xu Fan on
Chinese drums (dagu and paigu) against Ngoh Keng Seng on timpanis
in a pitched battle where Long Hu Dou (Dragon Tiger Feud) was
transformed into a rock fantasy. Art or kitsch? The side-splitting in-jokes in
these four new works meant they were not to be taken too seriously.
After
the first half’s high jinks, the second half was more retrospective and sedate.
Heady Shanghai of the 1930s was relived with Fang Qiong in a selection of
songs popularised by singer-actress Zhou Xuan in Law Wai Lun’s The Wandering
Songstress Symphonic Suite. She certainly had the full measure these
numbers which included Song Of Four Seasons, Waiting For A Beloved,
May Breezes and Soaring Phoenix.
Conductor
Yeh was in his element too, reciting poetry in both Mandarin and antique
Shanghainese, performing dance steps and even downing a glass of red wine. Had
the audience been similarly stimulated, there would have been a more raucous
response to Sim Boon Yew’s Spring Suite
2019 , which closed the concert with the
customary glad tidings. Gong xi gong xi...
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