MASAAKI SUZUKI & J.S.BACH
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra
Conservatory Concert Hall
Saturday (2 February 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 4 February 2019 with the title "An evening of joyful Bach music".
The
baroque music revolution in Singapore is well and truly underway. Recent concerts by Red Dot
Baroque, re:Sound and J.S.Bach’s The Art Of Fugue have established a
definite trend. Another all-Bach concert with the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory
Orchestra conducted by renowned baroque specialist Masaaki Suzuki, founder of
Bach Collegium Japan , was the icing on a well-baked cake.
Instrumental
concertos and choral music, a motet and a cantata, were on this well-conceived
programme. Opening was Keyboard Concerto in D minor (BWV.1052), Bach’s
longest, with young harpsichordist Mervyn Lee helming the demanding solo. His
was a confident reading, weaving between being an ensemble member and exerting
himself in solo passages.
The
string accompaniment led by guest concertmaster Ryo Terakado, numbering only 12
players, ensured a light and transparent texture throughout. Thus Lee’s ornate
figurations in the slow movement and the finale’s virtuosic flourishes came
through very well.
The
other concertante work was the Concerto in C minor for Violin and Oboe
(BWV.1060a), where Terakado and guest oboist Masamitsu San’nomiya, both
permament members of the Bach Collegium Japan and highly experienced soloists, held sway. The interplay
between both players, intricate and intimate, was excellent throughout.
Both
choral works performed were sacred in inspiration and content. The religious
message in the motet Jesu, Meine Freud (Jesus, My Joy BWV.227)
was unmistakeable: the Saviour protects, vanquishes death and ultimately sparks
joy. The 16-member chorus from the Conservatory, with four singers a part
including tenor Alan Bennett (head of voice studies), sung like they meant
every word.
Chorales
were delivered with conviction, while the fugue Ihr Aber Seid Night
Fleischlich (But Ye Are Not In The Flesh) delighted in its busy
counterpoint. In the brief trios Denn Das Gesetz Des Geistes (For The
Spirit Of The Law) and So Aber Christus In Euch Ist (And Of
Christ Be In You), the soloists were somewhat exposed but did the best to
hold their own.
In
the cantata Mit Fried Und Freude Ich Fahr Dahin (With Peace And Joy I
Depart, BWV.125), the feeling of accomplishment was even greater. In this
journey from contrition to deliverance, obliggato parts from oboist
San’nomiya and guest flautist Liliko Maeda were a delight, while a trio of
young vocalists had the opportunity to shine.
Alto
Lu Pei-Yun radiated true gravitas in the aria Ich Will Auch Mit Gebrochnen
Augen (Even With Broken Eyes), a prayer of submission, while
baritone Lim Jing Jie reaffirmed that one need not fear death in O Wunder,
Dass Ein Herz (How Wondrous That A Heart). In the duet Ein
Unbegreiflich Licht (An Unfathomable Light), Lim and tenor Jong Woo
were well matched in their utterance that “He who believes shall be blessed”.
The
final chorus Er Ist Das Heil (He Is The Salvation) came all too
soon but Suzuki and his charges totally
justified the cantata’s exhortation, sending an appreciative audience home in
peace and joy.
Bach-maniacs come together! |
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