INTERSECTIONS
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra
Esplanade Concert Hall
Tuesday (9 April 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 11 April 2019 with the title "Ethereal beauty meets harmony".
There
are good reasons why Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music in the National
University of Singapore is known as “Asia ’s International Conservatory”. Its students and staff are a
good representation of the world’s diverse cultures, and despite being an
educational institution of Western classical music, projects the feel of “East meets West” in its pursuits.
The
Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra’s pre-tour concert, led by its British
Principal Conductor Jason Lai, also proudly paraded that internationalism. As
if commemorating the bicentenary of Raffles’ acquisition of Singapore as a Crown Colony of the British Empire ,
the programme was for a large part English but showcased significant homegrown
talent.
Ralph
Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia On A Theme By Thomas Tallis, written for
only strings, opened the concert on an ethereal high. The ensemble was
subdivided into three “choirs”, each with separate parts, but together they
coalesced with a vast cathedral-like sonority that belied its relatively modest
size. With one voice, this string chorus radiated waves of warmth and burnished
beauty.
Standing
out were the quartet of soloists, led by violist Wei Jun-Ting and violinist
Kong Xianlong, which formed a concertino group as if playing in a baroque
concerto grosso. This concept of stand-alone voices backed by a larger body of
musicians also extended into young Singaporean composer Chen Zhangyi’s Concerto
For Erhu, Zhongruan, Percussion and Ensemble, which received its world
premiere.
This
quasi-impressionist work harnessed woodwinds and brass, hitherto unused in this
concert, as backing for three soloists playing Chinese instruments. Likie Low (erhu),
Sulwyn Lok (zhongruan) and Yuru Lee (Chinese drums and marimba) were all
conservatory students, majoring in
composition, audio arts and sciences and percussion respectively. This
could have been a recipe for balance disasters, but Chen’s deft scoring ensured
each instrument maintained its own voice amid spirited accompaniment, besides
coming together for precious brief moments.
Despite
the work not sounding overtly Chinese in idiom, the Confucian principle of “San ren xing”, or journey of three
persons, was applied. Here, each traveller benefits from the wisdom of the
others, and to these ears, the unusual combo of erhu and marimba seemed
to effect the greatest harmony.
After
the intermission, William Walton’s Violin Concerto was given a rare
airing with Qian Zhou, the Conservatory’s Head of Strings, as impressive
soloist. Written for Jascha Heifetz, the 1939 work fused technical
dare-devilry, unabashed Romanticism with 20th century accents.
Bittersweet melodies in the 1st movement were the perfect foil for
the witty and mercurial scherzo.
Qian
dealt these wide shifts of dynamics with much flair, besides evincing a firm,
robust tone and impeccable intonation. Just as importantly, Lai’s young charges
coped well in these capricious mood swings, alternating bracing sarcasm with
disarming sentimentality. On this form, the conservatory orchestra is set to do
the nation proud in its coming visit to South Korea .
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