HAPPY CHINESE
NEW YEAR CONCERT 2019
NEW YEAR CONCERT 2019
Ding Yi Music Company
Chinese Cultural Centre Theatre
Sunday (17 February 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 19 February 2019 with the title "Pleasing paean to the Year of the Pig".
Its
been 13 days into the first month of the lunar calendar, but the celebrations
of Chinese New Year carry on till Chap Goh Mei or the 15th night.
One simply cannot escape the various shades of crimson that formed the backdrop
to Ding Yi Music Company’s annual CNY concert, the chamber counterpart to
Singapore Chinese Orchestra’s musical festivities.
Young
conductor Dedric Wong Deli led the raucous but pleasing proceedings, with works
which could be subdivided into three genres: festive music coloured with local,
popular or modern influences, spectacular concertante works and gaudily
orchestrated pop songs.
The
first group needs some getting used to. For example, the ubiquitous Xi Yang
Yang hardly gains any traction in the guise of bossa nova despite some fine playing from the suona
family. Similarly, Da Di Hui Chun becomes a parody when Malay and Indian
drumming dominates the rhythms.
The
exception was Yu Le Fu’s adaptation of Cantonese tune Yu Le Shen Ping (Joyous
Celebration), with Chin Yen Choong and Fred Chan on the rarely-heard zhutiqin
and erxian respectively, which provided a rousing prelude. Here, even
the pop drum-set injecting a more contemporary feel did not get in the way of
its fulsome felicitations.
More
satisfying were the concertante pieces featuring Ding Yi’s own members as
soloists. Chua Yew Kok on pipa in Jiang Ying’s Limitless was a slow
boil, building up from its ethnic tribal flavoured opening, full of calm and
contemplation, to a rugged and spirited close.
Not
to be outdone, Jacky Ng’s suona soared in Phang Kok Jun’s arrangement of
the familiar classic Hundreds Of Birds Paying Homage To The Phoenix.
When one thought heights of virtuosity could not be further scaled, the
improvisatory reed hit stratospheric reaches with eardrum-piercing volumes to
match.
Coming
back to earth, guzheng exponent Yvonne Tay was just as excellent in Liu Chang’s
Rippling Brook Capriccio, a fantasy on the popular Yunnan love song Xiao He Tang Shui. All this did not seem
the least bit surprising, as the audience were witnessing some of the nation’s
best young soloists.
The
third and final genre was the realm of popular songs, where Ding Yi provided
both sympathetic and classy accompaniment to two local Mando-popstars. Jarrell
Huang was a veritable livewire in Lee Wei Song’s Soaring Against The Wind,
FIR’s First Day and Sandy Lam’s Love Never Leaves, swinging and
air-strumming his microphone stand with wild abandon, while egging on the
audience to clap-along.
Somewhat
more subdued was Bonnie Loo who helmed a Jay Chou Love Suite, a medley
of songs including Rainbow, Love Confession and Starry Mood.
Then she switched to the Minnan dialect for Call My Name by Eric Moo,
which no doubt gave Hokkien speakers in the audience some smiles. The final
song, seasonal supermarket staple Bai Nian, was sung by both singers,
closing the concert on a prosperous and satisfying high.
No comments:
Post a Comment