Review: Concert
MEMORIES OF 2055
TO Ensemble
Esplanade Recital Studio
Esplanade Recital Studio
Friday (12 April 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 16 April 2019 with the title "Rapturous sax-playing conjures memories of bygone age".
The
year is sometime in a dystopian future. An artificial intelligence
consciousness called HAL 2055 presents memories of Earth that transpired before
the 2045 cataclysmic event referred to as the Singularity. As end-of-days plots
beloved by TO Ensemble go, this one had to be the least convoluted.
Local
composer and jazz pianist Tze Toh’s latest conception does away with jaded
personalities, decrepit cities, digitally-created audio films and sob stories
of past concerts, focusing instead on pure music.
Even
his ensemble has been pared down to just five players, a far cry from the more
ambitious days of Tze N Looking Glass Orchestra, the ensemble’s former guise.
Then, the group had a body of strings, winds, percussion and even Chinese
instruments. Now, it is just founding members Toh, Carnatic violinist Lazar
T.Sebastine and saxophonist Teo Boon Chye, augmented by soprano Izumi Sado and
newcomer violinist Loh Jun Hong of More Than Music fame.
This
economy of forces worked well through the concert’s seven movements, titled and
untitled. In its opening Awaken / Descend, there was a Debussyan touch
when Toh’s piano mused on a series of whole tones, a short prelude before
Sebastine’s violin entered with melodies inflected by portamenti (slides).
This gave the music an exotic quality going beyond its Indian tuning system.
Loh’s
Western violin had a more conventional and supporting role but he soon got into
the spirit of things. Sado’s wordless melismata was haunting and siren-like,
floating effortlessly over rhythmic ostinatos by piano and computer-generated
loops. The star of the show had to be Teo’s improvisations on both alto and
tenor sax, conjuring reminiscences of a bygone age. This was the rapturous kind
of jazz typically inhabiting smoky parlours and joints, rather than spiffy
concert halls.
Eschewing
the dark-edged and pessimistic tone of TO Ensemble’s previous efforts, the
music projected a sense of hope, if anything by recycling nostalgic thoughts.
Hence the prominence of memories in the concert’s title. In the movement
entitled Memories, a vigorous minimalistic rhythm and frenetic pace
dominated, signalling the awakening of myriad senses.
In
Child, the Western violin ushered in the Indian violin, forwarding the
idea that different children lived separate lives and hence had different
memories. For Machine Sunrise, tenor sax and tape provided a dream-like
state where the pervasive mood of melancholy ironically drew the loudest
applause from the small but clearly-enthralled audience.
Performing
for about 55 minutes without an interval, the movements shifted from the darker
key of B minor to the sunny G major. With that, the mood also became palpably
upbeat. The final two movements played out like a glorious update of the
baroque chaconne, an antique dance formed by short variations built over a
steady ground bass.
With
time to spare, the quintet offered an extended encore – improvised on the spot
- clueing the listeners into the finer points of jazz.
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