MAESTRO CHOO HOEY
Esplanade Concert Hall
Thursday (18 April 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 20 April 2019 with the title "Maestro Choo Hoey charms at SSO's 40th anniversary bash".
The
Singapore Symphony Orchestra’s 40th anniversary celebrations
continued with a concert led by founding Music Director Choo Hoey, also the
orchestra’s Conductor Emeritus. 40 years ago, the Sumatra-born,
Singapore-raised and London-trained conductor helmed the orchestra’s inaugural
concerts in an air of anticipation but uncertainty with regards to its long
term viability.
SSO’s
existence is no now longer in doubt. This was largely due to Choo’s pioneering
work and hard graft, and this concert was a microcosm of his musical
convictions and philosophies. A specialist of 20th century music, he
fearlessly championed composers like Stravinsky, Bartok and Shostakovich, then
considered esoteric to local ears. He also introduced to Singapore young talents including the likes of Lang Lang, Jin Li and
Di Wu when they were mere teenagers.
Stravinsky’s
symphonic poem Song Of The Nightingale from 1919, inspired by Hans
Christian Andersen’s tale, ushered the evening to strains of full-blown
Chinoiserie. The unrelenting busyness and apparent chaos of its opening, full
of biting dissonances and complicated by snarling cross-rhythms, were well handled.
The
punchy incisiveness of each beat in this ballet-like score were matched by
excellent solos from flute, oboe, violin and trumpet, each representing
characters in the story, including live and mechanical songbirds. Choo’s
sprightly leadership, a rebuke to his 85 years, was key to the music’s
inexorable sense of direction.
He
was also more than quadruple the age of the soloist for Mozart’s Violin
Concerto No.4, 19-year-old Chinese prodigy He Ziyu, a student at the
Salzburg Mozarteum. That the pared-down orchestra was sympathetic partner to
the youngster was a given. Without mollycoddling soloists, Choo and his charges
provided light and transparent accompaniment for He’s confident and bright tone
to shine through.
His
playing was tasteful, notwithstanding the somewhat romanticised cadenzas, and
the crystalline beauty came through best in the graceful slow movement. The
finale was a portrait of restraint and good teaching, with further virtuosity
unveiled in his encore, Ruggiero Ricci’s quiet but freakishly difficult
transcription of Tarrega’s guitar classic Memories of the Alhambra.
Bartok’s
early Orchestral Suite No.1 of 1905 will not be classed as a
quintessential work by the Hungarian modernist composer. Although derivative in
content and inspiration, its five movements nevertheless require a firm hand in
guiding and shaping its Wagner-Straussian agenda.
The
1st movement’s opening march was rousing and rowdy, coloured by
Hungarian folk influences. Darker in mood was the 2nd movement,
characterised by a fine cor anglais solo and impassioned string playing. Also
making a mark were the clarinet in the 4th movement and violin solos
by Co-Concertmaster Lynnette Seah, the orchestra’s first-ever leader in those
heady 1979 evenings at Singapore Conference Hall. Rolling back the years,
nostalgia and the poignancy engendered were not hard to fathom.
More
importantly, Choo got the orchestra to do what he desired, projecting a clarity
and vividness that made the trite music sound relevant, even vital. That is the
true measure of a maestro.
The maestro with leader Lynnette Seah, just like in the old days. |
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