It has now been established that the Master's Lounge of Residential College 4 of National University of Singapore is a place for music, and not just for steak. All thanks to Professor Peter Pang of Mathematics who got the ball rolling after receiving a Yamaha grand piano from the Centre for the Arts, and add a Schimmel upright piano, this has become a venue for music making.
It was a pleasure and privilege to be asked to play something for the latest soiree, and I followed a line of esteemed professors whose love for music was expressed and shared with all who attended. There was a good house of students, staff and residents for an evening of mostly Austro-German music (this much suggested by the title of the event). None of us are professional musicians, but most are professors of non-musical subjects who care for music, while I can only profess to enjoy music and play a little.
Here is the damning evidence, all visual and no aural, although there might be a few videos captured by handphone circulating around and ready to use for blackmail.
| Peter gives a short address, and by the looks of it, suggests something light-hearted. |
| Yap Von Bing, aka Yap Von Beethoven, Professor of Statistics, plays the Aria from J.S.Bach's Goldberg Variations. |
| Winston Seah Kar Heng, Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering, added Variations 3, 18 & 30 (Quodlibet), before Von Bing reprises the Aria da capo. |
| Peter Pang now proposes something serious. |
| Peter performs the Bach-Kempff Siciliano in G minor |
| Young Emma Ng, cellist in the MacPherson Philharmonic Orchestra, is a final year Mechanical Engineering student. |
| Here, she performs the Bach-Gounod Ave Maria accompanied on the piano by her mother Vivian Ng, Professor of Electronic Engineering. |
| The piece de resistance of the evening was Peter playing Mozart's Fantasy in C minor (K.475). |
| Yours truly playing the much easier Mozart Fantasy in D minor (K.397), preceded by Scriabin's Etude (Op.2 No.1) |
| The encore came from Kar Heng, and now for something very different, a Cantopop song by Sam Hui. |
| It wasn't exactly the Singapore International Piano Festival, but I think everyone had a good time. |
| The performers gather for one last applause. |


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