Concert review: SSO scales majestic An Alpine Symphony, soars with Korngold Violin Concerto
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Esplanade Concert Hall
July 18, 7.30pm
The Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO) performing music with the accompaniment of projected visuals is not something novel.
Back in 2010, the orchestra under Shui Lan's direction played Claude Debussy's La Mer (The Sea) against stunning imagery of marine life provided by SSO first violinist William Tan, who is well-known as a diving photographer.
Romantic German composer Richard Strauss' tone poem Eine Alpensinfonie or An Alpine Symphony (1915), at almost 50 minutes, is double the length of Debussy. Sometimes criticised for bombast and self-indulgence, the work has weathered well in concerts and on record. Now add some 400 photographic stills on-screen by German photographer and film-maker Tobias Melle, himself a professional cellist, and the overall experienced is enhanced.
A resident of Munich, his views of the Bavarian Alps near Berchtesgaden, heard alongside music director Hans Graf's taut direction of the orchestra, made for a visual and aural spectacle. The hall was cloaked in darkness for the opening of this dawn-to-dusk experience in the mountains. The moon, sunlight creeping over the crags and panoramic vistas defined the transition from Night to Sunrise. This early climax matched Strauss' ambition, if not quite as memorable as the corresponding sequence in his earlier Also Sprach Zarathustra.
The music follows a group of mountaineers from their ascent, through the terrain of woods, waterfalls, meadows (with cows aplenty) and glaciers, encountering risks and doubts before reaching the summit for the work's biggest climax.
If there were a composer who could vividly illustrate all this musically, Strauss was the man. The subsequent thunderstorm, safe descent and sunset with a return to darkness was no less enthralling. The orchestra responded magnificently, with special mention going to the brass, for its overtime efforts both onstage and offstage.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore A deadly cocktail: Easy access, lax attitudes driving Kpod scourge in S'pore
Singapore 'I thought it was an April Fool's joke': Teen addicted to Kpods on news that friend died
Asia Cool photo spots, viral food videos: Malaysia plans to woo Chinese tourists via social media
Asia From propaganda to passion: N. Korean TV show mimics K-drama to fend off banned media from the South
Singapore New auto pet wash service in Buona Vista draws flak, but firm stands by its safety
Singapore 314 suicides reported in Singapore in 2024, remains leading cause of youth deaths
Asia 'Guardian angels': Taiwan's dementia-friendly village promotes ageing in place
Life US tech firm launches probe into Coldplay 'kiss cam' couple after clip goes viral
The concert's cinematic arc began much earlier with Austrian composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold's Violin Concerto (1947) which began SSO's season opener. One of the most popular 20th-century violin concertos, it was famously premiered by great Lithuania-born virtuoso Jascha Heifetz with music drawn from four of Korngold's Hollywood movie scores.
Violinist Daniel Lozakovich (left) performing the Korngold Violin Concerto with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra.
PHOTO: CHRIS P. LIM
It did not matter whether these films - Another Dawn (1937), Juarez (1939), Anthony Adverse (1936) and The Prince And The Pauper (1937) – have more or less been forgotten, as the music lives on in this masterpiece. The sumptuous melodies and lush scoring through its three movements was well realised by the orchestra and young Swedish violinist Daniel Lozakovich.
His is not a fire-breathing virtuosity which gets in your face, but one more intimate and subtle. As such, there were moments in the first and third movements where he risked being overwhelmed, despite the restrained accompaniment kept on a tight leash. There were no worries, however, in the slow movement's Romance, where his refined and sweet tone clearly shone through.
As if to make up for an earlier reticence, his generous and no-holds-barred encore of Johann Sebastian Bach's Fugue from the unaccompanied Violin Sonata No.1 in G minor (BWV.1001) showed where his sympathies truly lay.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
4 days ago
- Straits Times
Concert review: SSO scales majestic An Alpine Symphony, soars with Korngold Violin Concerto
An Alpine Symphony In Images + Korngold Violin Concerto Singapore Symphony Orchestra Esplanade Concert Hall July 18, 7.30pm The Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO) performing music with the accompaniment of projected visuals is not something novel. Back in 2010, the orchestra under Shui Lan's direction played Claude Debussy's La Mer (The Sea) against stunning imagery of marine life provided by SSO first violinist William Tan, who is well-known as a diving photographer. Romantic German composer Richard Strauss' tone poem Eine Alpensinfonie or An Alpine Symphony (1915), at almost 50 minutes, is double the length of Debussy. Sometimes criticised for bombast and self-indulgence, the work has weathered well in concerts and on record. Now add some 400 photographic stills on-screen by German photographer and film-maker Tobias Melle, himself a professional cellist, and the overall experienced is enhanced. A resident of Munich, his views of the Bavarian Alps near Berchtesgaden, heard alongside music director Hans Graf's taut direction of the orchestra, made for a visual and aural spectacle. The hall was cloaked in darkness for the opening of this dawn-to-dusk experience in the mountains. The moon, sunlight creeping over the crags and panoramic vistas defined the transition from Night to Sunrise. This early climax matched Strauss' ambition, if not quite as memorable as the corresponding sequence in his earlier Also Sprach Zarathustra. The music follows a group of mountaineers from their ascent, through the terrain of woods, waterfalls, meadows (with cows aplenty) and glaciers, encountering risks and doubts before reaching the summit for the work's biggest climax. If there were a composer who could vividly illustrate all this musically, Strauss was the man. The subsequent thunderstorm, safe descent and sunset with a return to darkness was no less enthralling. The orchestra responded magnificently, with special mention going to the brass, for its overtime efforts both onstage and offstage. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore A deadly cocktail: Easy access, lax attitudes driving Kpod scourge in S'pore Singapore 'I thought it was an April Fool's joke': Teen addicted to Kpods on news that friend died Asia Cool photo spots, viral food videos: Malaysia plans to woo Chinese tourists via social media Asia From propaganda to passion: N. Korean TV show mimics K-drama to fend off banned media from the South Singapore New auto pet wash service in Buona Vista draws flak, but firm stands by its safety Singapore 314 suicides reported in Singapore in 2024, remains leading cause of youth deaths Asia 'Guardian angels': Taiwan's dementia-friendly village promotes ageing in place Life US tech firm launches probe into Coldplay 'kiss cam' couple after clip goes viral The concert's cinematic arc began much earlier with Austrian composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold's Violin Concerto (1947) which began SSO's season opener. One of the most popular 20th-century violin concertos, it was famously premiered by great Lithuania-born virtuoso Jascha Heifetz with music drawn from four of Korngold's Hollywood movie scores. Violinist Daniel Lozakovich (left) performing the Korngold Violin Concerto with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra. PHOTO: CHRIS P. LIM It did not matter whether these films - Another Dawn (1937), Juarez (1939), Anthony Adverse (1936) and The Prince And The Pauper (1937) – have more or less been forgotten, as the music lives on in this masterpiece. The sumptuous melodies and lush scoring through its three movements was well realised by the orchestra and young Swedish violinist Daniel Lozakovich. His is not a fire-breathing virtuosity which gets in your face, but one more intimate and subtle. As such, there were moments in the first and third movements where he risked being overwhelmed, despite the restrained accompaniment kept on a tight leash. There were no worries, however, in the slow movement's Romance, where his refined and sweet tone clearly shone through. As if to make up for an earlier reticence, his generous and no-holds-barred encore of Johann Sebastian Bach's Fugue from the unaccompanied Violin Sonata No.1 in G minor (BWV.1001) showed where his sympathies truly lay.

Straits Times
6 days ago
- Straits Times
Arts Picks: Andreas Scholl concert, Cuturi's SG60 show and Singapore Ballet Festival
Find out what's new on ST website and app. Celebrated countertenor Andreas Scholl will perform at the Esplanade Concert Hall on July 20. Andreas Scholl with Sarah Traubel and Red Dot Baroque Music fans are in for a treat when Grammy-nominated countertenor Andreas Scholl takes to the stage on July 20. Famed for his spine-tingling high register and a velvety purity of tone, the German singer will tackle a baroque programme of both sacred and secular works. These will include Antonio Vivaldi's Sinfonia from L'Olimpiade, RV 725 and Giovanni Battista Pergolesi's Stabat Mater, P. 77. Singapore's Red Dot Baroque will play alongside Scholl, and German soprano Sarah Traubel will also be performing. The concert is part of the Esplanade's year-long 60 Connections – At Home And Afar season. It celebrates SG60 with Singapore stories and international collaborations, and marks the 60th anniversary of Singapore-Germany diplomatic relations. Before the concert, Scholl will conduct a masterclass on July 18 at 8pm, with two vocalists. This session is open to audiences and free by registration at Where: Esplanade Concert Hall, 1 Esplanade Drive MRT: Esplanade When: July 20, 5pm Admission: From $35 Info: Sixty Summers Here Elegy by Yom Bo Sung is part of Cuturi's Sixty Summers Here show. PHOTO: YOM BO SUNG Get ready for yet more SG60 art shows. Cuturi Gallery at least has a different approach. Instead of the big guns, the gallery is focusing on 10 young talent in their 20s and 30s who are currently active in the scene. They are Aisha Rosli, Anna Du Toit, Casey Tan, Faris Heizer, Joel Seow, Marla Bendini, Oneal Parbo, Shen Jiaqi, Vanessa Liem and Yom Bo Sung. While 60 is a milestone that has prompted other shows to look back, Cuturi instead opts for attention to the present, hence the focus on these practitioners. They work in various mediums, from more traditional painting to installation pieces to performance art. What unites them is their position as artists practising in Singapore. Their attention to, and responses to, this place can be seen in their works. Shen Jiaqi's The City With No Seasons is part of Cuturi's Sixty Summers Here show. PHOTO: SHEN JIAQI Shen's The City With No Seasons depicts familiar objects – a traffic light, a facade reminiscent of Central Fire Station, tropical foliage – in an unfamiliar composition, forcing a contemplation of Singapore's cityscape, as well as setting up a tension between new and old. Heizer's Take Five centres on a scene most people ignore – of foreign workers taking a break, reminding viewers of unseen labour taken for granted in this city. Yom, who has done charmingly small-scale sculptures capturing quotidian moments, presents in Elegy an intriguingly nondescript take on founding p rime minister Lee Kuan Yew in his instantly identifiable shirt and open jacket ensemble, that invites questions about myth-making. Where: Cuturi Gallery, 61 Aliwal Street MRT: Nicoll Highway When: Till Aug 8, noon to 7pm (Tuesdays to Saturdays) Admission: Free Info: Singapore Ballet Festival Goh Choo San's Double Contrasts by the Singapore Dance Theatre. PHOTO: SINGAPORE BALLET The Singapore Ballet presents a sampler of three works from its repertoire this weekend. Shadow's Edge was created for the then Singapore Dance Theatre by renowned Chinese choreographer Ma Cong in 2014. Ma, now artistic director of Richmond Ballet, said the work was created 'especially to highlight the diverse cultures and talents' of the company's dancers. Evening Voices by British choreographer Tim Rushton is set to Sergei Rachmaninov's All-Night Vigil. Last but not least is a work by late Singaporean choreographer Goh Choo San, Double Contrasts. He made the piece for the Washington Ballet when he was its first resident choreographer in the 1980s.
Business Times
7 days ago
- Business Times
Pompeii welcomes home erotic mosaic looted by Nazi officer
[ROME] An ancient Roman erotic mosaic depicting a half-naked couple has returned to Pompeii more than 80 years after it was stolen by a Nazi officer during World War Two, Italy's cultural heritage police said on Tuesday (Jul 15). The intimate artwork, featuring a man reclining in bed with his female partner standing in front of him, was handed back by Germany following a diplomatic effort, the police said in a statement. Set on a slab of travertine, the mosaic panel dates to between the late 1st century BC and the 1st century AD. It was taken from the area around Pompeii, near Naples, during the war by a German Nazi army captain assigned to military logistics in Italy. The German officer gifted the piece to a civilian, who kept it until his death. His heirs, realising its origin, contacted the Italian authorities to arrange its return. Gabriel Zuchtriegel, the German-born director of the Pompeii archaeological park, described the mosaic as part of a cultural turning point where everyday intimacy became a subject in Roman art, as opposed to the heroic myths of earlier centuries. 'Here we see a new theme, the routine of domestic love,' he said, noting that the male figure's expression 'seems almost a little bored'. The mosaic will now be put on display at Pompeii alongside the hundreds of other items and archaeological remains at the site of the ancient city destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. REUTERS