UNPARALLELED CHARM
Singapore Conference Hall
Saturday (30 March 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 1 April 2019 with the title "Pondering nature and universe in aural feast".
In
this concert led by its Resident Conductor Quek Ling Kiong, the Singapore
Chinese Orchestra performed six works, including two world premieres and two Singapore premieres. All conceived for Chinese instruments, there
were neither arrangements nor transcriptions in sight, making for an aural
spectacular greater than the sum of its parts.
Taiwanese
composer Liu Wei-Chih’s The Calling From The Distant Hills opened with
an evocative paean to nature, based on
simple Hakka melodies sung across the countryside. An erhu solo was the
call of the wild. With Bartok’s mysterious world of night music relived, this
built to a colourful and raucous climax.
Sabahan
Simon Kong Su Leong’s Nocturnal Bamboo (World Premiere) used solo dizi
as a lyrical and virtuosic vehicle through its musical “night safari”. A
true work of Nanyang music, Indo-Malayan motifs and rhythms dominated. While there
were moments when Lim Sin Yeo’s dizi was nearly submerged by dense
orchestral textures, its inexorable procession was hard to resist.
Chinese
composer Kong Zhi Xuan’s Trace Of Singapore’s Brilliance (World
Premiere) was commissioned in 2018 as part of The Stories Of Singapore,
works accompanying moving images also featuring pieces by Eric Watson and Law Wai
Lun. This 7-minute piece was a witty natural history documentary,
sympathetically capturing the flora and fauna of Sungei Buloh and Bukit Timah
nature reserves.
If
the preceding four works were planted on terra firma, the concluding two pieces
pondered on the universal and metaphysical. Chinese composer Wang Yun Fei’s Infinite
Nothingness (Singapore Premiere) could be viewed as a high point of the concert, inspired by Chinese Taoist philosophy
encompassing everything and nothing simultaneously.
Erhu exponent Duan Aiai was obliged to traverse extremes of
dynamics, from serenity to hyperactivity, and from beatific to chaotic. The
work unfolded like an epic, culminating like a dance of celestial bodies.
Coming back to earth, Duan and earlier soloist Lim performed an encore: a
popular Jiangnan shizhu melody, harmoniously blending silk and
bamboo.
SCO
Composer-in-Residence Law Wai Lun’s often-performed The Celestial Web completed
the programme. In this purely orchestral version, all narration and chorus were
eschewed, enabling listeners to focus wholly on the music.
Its
opening was a knowing tribute to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. Instead of
the vigorous Ode To Joy, Law’s big melody was a gentler and more subdued
one, with the essence of Schiller’s ode to the brotherhood of man retained. The
incorporation of the bianzhong (bronze chime bells) at its climax was a
quintessentially Chinese touch, but possessing a universal message nonetheless.
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