SSO 40TH ANNIVERSARY GALA
Esplanade Concert Hall
Friday (18 January 2019)
This review was published in The Straits Times on 21 January 2019 with the title "A fitting celebration of SSO's 40th anniversary".
Almost
40 years ago to the week, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra performed its first
concerts at Singapore Conference Hall, led by founding Music Director Choo
Hoey. The orchestra then numbered 41 musicians, but gave the 1979 audience an
inkling of what professional music-making in Singapore was to become.
The 49th Anniversary cake was cut by violinist Lynnette Seah (Orchestral Leader in 1979), Music Director Shui Lan, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, SSO Chairman Goh Yew Lin & SSO CEO Chng Hak-Peng. |
At
its 40th anniversary, present Music Director Shui Lan helmed a
programme that paid tribute to those inaugural concerts. Two works were
reprised. The first was 20th century American composer Charles Ives’
The Unanswered Question. Its inclusion by Choo was symbolic and
rhetorical, as if pondering on an uncertain future of classical music (or the
orchestra for that matter) in Singapore.
That
question has however been emphatically answered many times over. Classical
music, especially orchestral music, thrives in Singapore today. Even young
amateur groups of music makers now sound more accomplished than SSO of the
early 1980s.
The
short mysterious work nonetheless piqued the senses. Muted strings were
challenged by David Smith’s trumpet perched high up in organ loft. This
conversation of crossed purposes was interjected by the chatter of a flute
quartet, with all involved left none the wiser. Such was the intent of the
iconoclastic Ives.
More
down to earth was the second reprised work, Beethoven’s Fifth Piano Concerto,
popularly known as the “Emperor” for its sweeping grandeur. Lim Yan, the
first Singaporean to perform all five Beethoven piano concertos here as a
cycle, was the ideal soloist.
That
he got every note down pat was a given. His projection of unruffled authority,
full-blooded tone and a sheer sense of joy that radiated through its three
movements made this a most rewarding outing. Lim, representing the vanguard of
young Singaporean soloists, will most certainly erase memories of the original
1979 pianist, the late Ong Lip Tat, whom from all accounts was a bundle of
nerves.
The
concert’s opening work was also the first Singaporean work performed by the
fledgling SSO. Dayong Sampan by the late Leong Yoon Pin, considered the
“Father of Singaporean composition”, was a heady fusion of Western and Eastern
idioms. Amid a commotion of brass fanfares and buzzing strings, the emergence
of the Malay melody on solo oboe represented a quintessential Singaporean
musical moment. Like the year 1965, this 1980 composition has rightly become a
landmark and an icon.
If
the first half sounded promising, the second was even better. Shui had replaced
Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony (another symbolic choice of Choo’s) with
Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. The faster tempos he adopted were close to
perfect, as there were no moments for the music to lag. Even the 1st
movement’s slow introduction sounded swift, and the 2nd movement’s
variations unfolded with inexorable purpose.
As
if to demonstrate the orchestra’s prowess, the final two movements were taken
at a breathless pace, and the effect was thrilling. Just as the symphony
clocked in under 40 minutes, SSO’s 40 years has felt like a breeze.
The SSO acknowledges applause from the Gallery. |
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