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HEROIC TALES OF RICHARD STRAUSS
Thu, 5 Oct 2023
BENNETT VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 4
Fri, 20 Oct 2023
DUKE VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 6
Fri, 27 Oct 2023
For the enjoyment of all patrons during the concert:
• Please switch off or silence all electronic devices.
• Please minimise noises during performance. If unavoidable, wait for a loud section in the music.
• No photography, video or audio recording is allowed when artists are performing.
• Non-flash photography is allowed only during bows and applause when no performance is taking place.
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Cover photo: Sloth Creatives
Since its founding in 1979, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO) has been Singapore’s flagship orchestra, touching lives through classical music and providing the heartbeat of the cultural scene with its 44-week calendar of events.
In addition to its subscription series concerts, the orchestra is well-loved for its outdoor and community appearances, and its significant role educating the young people of Singapore through its school programmes. The SSO has also earned an international reputation for its orchestral virtuosity, having garnered sterling reviews for its overseas tours and many successful recordings. In 2021, the SSO clinched third place in the prestigious Orchestra of the Year Award by Gramophone. In 2022, BBC Music Magazine named the SSO as one of the 21 best orchestras in the world.
In July 2022, the SSO appointed renowned Austrian conductor Hans Graf as its Music Director, the third in the orchestra’s history after Lan Shui (1997–2019) and Choo Hoey (1979–1996). Prior to this, Hans Graf served as Chief Conductor from 2020.
The orchestra performs over 60 concerts a year, and its versatile repertoire spans all-time favourites and orchestral masterpieces to exciting cutting-edge premieres. Bridging the musical traditions of East and West, Singaporean and Asian musicians and composers are regularly showcased in the concert season. The SSO makes its performing home at the 1,800-seat state-of-theart Esplanade Concert Hall. More intimate works, as well as outreach and community performances take place at the 673-seat Victoria Concert Hall, the Home of the SSO.
Beyond Singapore, the SSO has performed in Europe, Asia and the United States. In May 2016 the SSO was invited to perform at the Dresden Music Festival and the Prague Spring International Music Festival. This successful fivecity tour of Germany and Prague also included the SSO’s second performance at the Berlin Philharmonie. In 2014, the SSO’s debut at the 120th BBC Proms in London received praise in major UK newspapers The Guardian and The Telegraph. The SSO has also performed in China on multiple occasions.
The SSO has released more than 50 recordings, with over 30 on the BIS label. Recent critically acclaimed albums include Scriabin’s Poems of Ecstasy and Fire and Shostakovich’s Jazz & Variety Suites. In 2023, a Four Seasons album on Pentatone and a complete Mozart Violin Concerto cycle with Chloe Chua and Hans Graf will be released. The SSO also leads the revival and recording of significant works such as the Kozłowski Requiem, Ogerman’s Symbiosis (after Bill Evans) and concertos by Paul von Klenau.
The SSO has collaborated with such great artists as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Gustavo Dudamel, Charles Dutoit, Joe Hisaishi, Neeme Järvi, Okko Kamu, Hannu Lintu, Andrew Litton, Lorin Maazel, Martha Argerich, Ray Chen, Diana Damrau, Stephen Hough, Janine Jansen, Leonidas Kavakos, Lang Lang, Yo-Yo Ma, Gil Shaham and Krystian Zimerman.
The SSO is part of the Singapore Symphony Group, which also manages the Singapore Symphony Choruses, and the Singapore National Youth Orchestra, as well as the VCHpresents chamber music series, the Singapore International Piano Festival and the biennial National Piano & Violin Competition.
Our Story
The mission of the Group is to create memorable shared experiences with music. Through the SSO and its affiliated performing groups, we spread the love for music, nurture talent and enrich our diverse communities.
Singapore Symphony OrchestraHANS GRAF Music Director
With the distinguished Austrian conductor Hans Graf, “a brave new world of musicmaking under inspired direction” (The Straits Times) began at the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, as Chief Conductor in the 2020/21 season, and Music Director since the 2022/23 season.
Graf was formerly Music Director of the Houston Symphony, Calgary Philharmonic, Orchestre National Bordeaux Aquitaine, Basque National Orchestra and the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg. He is a frequent guest with major orchestras worldwide including the orchestras of Boston, Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Vienna, Leipzig Gewandhaus, DSO Berlin, Dresden, Royal Concertgebouw, Oslo, Hallé, London, Royal Philharmonic, Budapest Festival, St Petersburg, Russian National, Melbourne, Sydney, Seoul, Hong Kong, Malaysia, and the Bavarian, Danish and Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestras. Graf has led operas in the Vienna State Opera, Munich, Berlin, Paris, Strasbourg, Rome and Zurich. In 2014 he was awarded the Österreichischer Musiktheaterpreis for Strauss’s Die Feuersnot at the famed Vienna Volksoper, where he returned in 2021 to lead Rosenkavalier.
Hans Graf’s extensive discography includes all symphonies of Mozart and Schubert, the complete orchestral works of Dutilleux, and
the world-premiere recording of Zemlinsky’s Es war einmal. Graf’s recording of Berg’s Wozzeck with the Houston Symphony won the GRAMMY and ECHO Klassik awards for best opera recording. With the Singapore Symphony, Graf has recorded the music of Paul von Klenau, Józef Kozłowski’s Requiem and a complete Mozart Violin Concerto cycle with Singapore’s Chloe Chua.
Hans Graf (b. 1949) is Professor Emeritus for Orchestral Conducting at the Universität Mozarteum, Salzburg. For his services to music, he was awarded the Chevalier de l'Ordre de la Légion d'Honneur by the French government, and the Grand Decoration of Honour of the Republic of Austria.
NG PEI-SIAN cello / The HEAD Foundation Chair
Ng Pei-Sian was Commonwealth Musician of the Year in 2007, winner of the Gold Medal and First Prize at the 55th Royal Over-Seas League Music Competition held in London. He has performed concertos with the major Australian symphony orchestras, Singapore Symphony (SSO), Malaysian Philharmonic, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Estonian National Symphony, Oulu Symphony, Sinfonia ViVA, City of Southampton Orchestra, Philippine Philharmonic and the Orchestra of the Music Makers and performed around the world in venues including Royal Festival Hall,
Wigmore Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Purcell Room, Konzerthaus (Berlin), Lincoln Centre and Carnegie Hall.
Born in Sydney in 1984, he began studies in Adelaide with Barbara Yelland and later with Janis Laurs at the Elder Conservatorium of Music before winning the prestigious Elder Overseas Scholarship to study at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester. Pei-Sian completed his studies under Ralph Kirshbaum during which he was awarded the RNCM Gold Medal, the highest prize given by the college.
Pei-Sian has had appearances in important music festivals including the Brighton, Edinburgh, Manchester International Cello Festival, Kronberg Academy, MecklenburgVorpormmern Festival and Adelaide International Cello Festival. He performed Tan Dun’s Crouching Tiger Cello Concerto with The Festival Orchestra under the baton of the Academy Award-winning composer and also performed with Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, Cho-Liang Lin and Renaud Capuçon.
Pei-Sian is currently Principal Cellist of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra and a faculty member at the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music, Singapore. He performs on a 1764 Giovanni Antonio Marchi cello, Bologna.
MANCHIN ZHANG viola
Born in Hunan, China, Manchin Zhang started learning violin at the age of five and had her early training at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. At the age of 17, she participated as a violist and won in the Portsmouth International String Quartet Competition. Since then, she became a violist and was awarded full scholarship to further her studies under viola master Emanuel Vardi at the Manhattan School of Music.
In 1994, Manchin became the youngest and first Asian member in the history of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra (DSO) and was appointed as Assistant Principal Viola by Music Director Neeme Järvi. In 2005, Manchin joined the Singapore Symphony Orchestra as Principal Viola and has since toured with the orchestra to perform in places like Europe and the United States. Manchin has combined her very active performance career with a passion for teaching and playing chamber music. She has been the Head of Viola Studies at the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music since 2005.
ANDREW LITTON conductor
Andrew Litton is Music Director of the New York City Ballet, former Principal Guest Conductor of the Singapore Symphony, Conductor Laureate of Britain’s Bournemouth Symphony and Music Director Laureate of Norway’s Bergen Philharmonic. Under Litton’s leadership the Bergen Philharmonic gained international recognition through extensive recording and touring. Norway’s King Harald V knighted Litton with the Norwegian Royal Order of Merit. Other honours include Yale’s Sanford Medal, the Elgar Society Medal, and an honorary Doctorate from the University of Bournemouth.
Litton was Principal Conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony from 1988–1994. As Music Director of the Dallas Symphony from 1994–2006, he led the orchestra on three major European tours, and appeared four times at Carnegie Hall. His discography boasts over 135 recordings.
Recent and forthcoming highlights include his debut with the Royal Ballet at Covent Garden and performances with a range of international orchestras, including the Singapore Symphony, Bergen Philharmonic, BBC Symphony, Dallas Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Orquesta Sinfonica de Galicia, Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony and cycles of the piano concertos and symphonies of Rachmaninoff with the Adelaide Symphony.
An avid opera conductor with a keen theatrical sense, Litton has led major opera companies such as the Metropolitan Opera, The Royal Opera Covent Garden, Opera Australia and Deutsche Oper Berlin. In Norway, he was key to founding the Bergen National Opera, where he led numerous acclaimed performances.
An accomplished pianist, Litton performs as a soloist, conducting from the keyboard. He is also an acknowledged expert on and performer of Gershwin’s music and serves as Advisor to the University of Michigan Gershwin Archives.
CHLOË HANSLIP violin
Prodigiously talented, Chloë Hanslip (b. 1987) made her BBC Proms debut at 14 and her US concerto debut at 15 and has performed at major venues in the UK and Europe as well as Carnegie Hall, Metropolitan Arts Space in Tokyo and the Seoul Arts Centre.
Hanslip’s wide-ranging repertoire spans concertos by Britten, Prokofiev, Beethoven, Brahms, Korngold, Shostakovich, Barber, Bernstein, Delius, Mendelssohn, Bruch, Elgar, Tchaikovsky, Walton and Sibelius. With a particular passion for contemporary repertoire, she has championed works by Adams, Glass, Corigliano, Nyman, Huw Watkins, Michael Berkeley, Peter Maxwell Davies and Brett Dean. A committed chamber musician, she is a regular participant at festivals across Europe. Alongside her performing career, Chloë is a Visiting Professor at The Royal Academy of Music, in London and an ambassador for the charity Future Talent.
Recent and forthcoming highlights include concerto engagement with the London Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic, Singapore Symphony, Gävle Symphony and Czech National Symphony Orchestras. She will also perform an extensive UK tour with the Czech National Symphony, and returns twice to the Wigmore Hall alongside Danny Driver including a BBC Radio 3 Live Broadcast Concert.
Hanslip’s extensive discography includes albums on Warner Classics and Hyperion, as well as Rubicon Classics, where she released the complete Beethoven Violin Sonatas in three volumes with Danny Driver.
Hanslip studied for ten years with the Russian pedagogue Zakhar Bron and has also worked with Christian Tetzlaff, Robert Masters, Ida Haendel, Salvatore Accardo, and Gerhard Schulz. She plays a Nicolo Amati violin kindly loaned to her through the Beare’s International Violin Society by a generous sponsor.
The Orchestra
HANS GRAF
Music Director
RODOLFO BARRÁEZ
Associate Conductor
CHOO HOEY
Conductor Emeritus
LAN SHUI
Conductor Laureate
EUDENICE PALARUAN
Choral Director
WONG LAI FOON
Choirmaster
FIRST VIOLIN
(Position vacant) Concertmaster,
GK Goh Chair
Kong Zhao Hui1
Associate Concertmaster
Chan Yoong-Han2
Fixed Chair
Cao Can*
Chen Da Wei
Duan Yu Ling
Foo Say Ming
Jin Li
Kong Xianlong
Cindy Lee
Karen Tan
William Tan
Wei Zhe
Ye Lin*
Zhang Si Jing*
SECOND VIOLIN
Tseng Chieh-An Principal
Michael Loh Associate Principal
Nikolai Koval*
Sayuri Kuru
Hai-Won Kwok
Chikako Sasaki*
Margit Saur
Shao Tao Tao
Wu Man Yun*
Xu Jueyi*
Yeo Teow Meng
Yin Shu Zhan*
Zhao Tian
VIOLA
Manchin Zhang Principal
Guan Qi Associate Principal
Gu Bing Jie* Fixed Chair
Joyce Huang
Marietta Ku
Luo Biao
Julia Park
Shui Bing
Janice Tsai
Dandan Wang
Yang Shi Li
CELLO
Ng Pei-Sian Principal, The HEAD Foundation Chair
Yu Jing Associate Principal
Guo Hao Fixed Chair
Chan Wei Shing
Jamshid Saydikarimov
Song Woon Teng
Wang Yan
Wu Dai Dai
Zhao Yu Er
DOUBLE BASS
Yang Zheng Yi Associate Principal
Karen Yeo Fixed Chair
Olga Alexandrova
Jacek Mirucki
Guennadi Mouzyka
Wang Xu
FLUTE
Jin Ta Principal, Stephen Riady Chair
Evgueni Brokmiller Associate Principal
Roberto Alvarez
Miao Shanshan
PICCOLO
Roberto Alvarez Assistant Principal
OBOE
Rachel Walker Principal
Pan Yun Associate Principal
Carolyn Hollier
Elaine Yeo
COR ANGLAIS
Elaine Yeo Associate Principal
CLARINET
Ma Yue Principal
Li Xin Associate Principal
Liu Yoko
Tang Xiao Ping
BASS CLARINET
Tang Xiao Ping Assistant Principal
BASSOON
Marcelo Padilla^ Principal
Liu Chang Associate Principal
Christoph Wichert
Zhao Ying Xue
CONTRABASSOON
Zhao Ying Xue Assistant Principal
HORN
Austin Larson Principal
Gao Jian Associate Principal
Jamie Hersch Associate Principal
Marc-Antoine Robillard Associate Principal
Bryan Chong^
Hoang Van Hoc
TRUMPET
Jon Paul Dante Principal
David Smith Associate Principal
Lau Wen Rong
Nuttakamon Supattranont
TROMBONE
Allen Meek Principal
Damian Patti Associate Principal
Samuel Armstrong
BASS TROMBONE
Wang Wei Assistant Principal
TUBA
Tomoki Natsume Principal
TIMPANI
Christian Schiøler Principal
Mario Choo
PERCUSSION
Jonathan Fox Principal
Mark Suter Associate Principal
Mario Choo
Lim Meng Keh
HARP
Gulnara Mashurova Principal
With deep appreciation to the Rin Collection for their generous loan of string instruments. Musician on temporary contract
Kong Zhao Hui performs on a J.B. Guadagnini of Milan, c. 1750, donated by the National Arts Council, Singapore, with the support of Far East Organization and Lee Foundation.
Chan Yoong-Han performs on a David Tecchler, Fecit Roma An. D. 1700, courtesy of Mr G K Goh. Musicians listed alphabetically by family name rotate their seats on a per programme basis.
Guest Musicians
HEROIC TALES OF RICHARD STRAUSS | 5 OCT 2023
FIRST VIOLIN
Markus Tomasi Guest Concertmaster
Lim Shue Churn
SECOND VIOLIN
Yew Shan
VIOLA
Yeo Jan Wea
CELLO
Chris Mui
James Ng
DOUBLE BASS
Joan Perarnau Garriga Guest Principal
Ma Li Ming
HORN
Cindy Liu
EUPHONIUM
Hidenori Arai
BENNETT VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 4 | 20 OCT 2023
FIRST VIOLIN
Markus Gundermann Guest Concertmaster
Lim Shue Churn
Yew Shan
SECOND VIOLIN
Wilford Goh
Martin Peh
VIOLA
Erlene Koh
CELLO
Chris Mui
DOUBLE BASS
Damien Eckersley Guest Principal
Julian Li
PERCUSSION
Michael Tan
DUKE VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 6 | 27 OCT 2023
FIRST VIOLIN
Markus Gundermann Guest Concertmaster
Lim Shue Churn
Yew Shan
SECOND VIOLIN
Wilford Goh
Martin Peh
VIOLA
Erlene Koh
CELLO
Chris Mui
DOUBLE BASS
Damien Eckersley Guest Principal
Julian Li
CELESTA
Beatrice Lin
HEROIC TALES OF RICHARD STRAUSS
HEROIC TALES OF RICHARD STRAUSS DESTINY AND FORTUNE
Thu, 5 Oct 2023
Esplanade Concert Hall
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Hans Graf Music Director
Ng Pei-Sian cello*
Manchin Zhang viola*
Serenade in E-flat major, Op. 7
Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, Op. 28
Intermission
Don Quixote, Op. 35*
10 mins
15 mins
20 mins
38 mins
Concert Duration: approximately 1 hr 40 mins (including 20 mins intermission)
CHECK-IN TO TONIGHT'S CONCERT
Scan this QR code with the Singapore Symphony Mobile App.
R. STRAUSSRICHARD STRAUSS (1864–1949)
Serenade in E-flat major, Op. 7 (1881)
A person’s teenage years are a period of exploration, growth, development, and occasionally rebellion. Artists are no exception, and Richard Strauss at the age of 17 was still ‘finding himself’, so to speak. The father of the young Richard was Franz Strauss, who held the post of Principal Horn in the Bavarian court opera orchestra in Munich for 49 years, so it was natural for Richard to be surrounded by music and many strong artistic influences.
Franz Strauss loathed ‘modern music’, detested Wagner as a person and all that Wagner represented as the poster boy of what was then avant-garde music. Numerous anecdotes survive of Strauss Senior clashing with Wagner, whose music utilises the horn extensively both as a solo instrument and for ensemble colour. Nevertheless, his professionalism ensured that he played Wagner’s solos with such heart-tugging beauty even while detesting them, executing them so well that Wagner himself admitted that it was impossible to stay cross with him when he played. So it was that the young Richard’s compositional style was influenced by his father’s preference for music of the classical and early Romantic eras—the later rebellion in which Strauss Junior leaned heavily in a Wagnerian direction was yet to come.
Richard Strauss wrote the Serenade in E-flat major, Op. 7 in 1881 at the age of 17, for a wind ensemble of paired flutes, oboes, clarinets, and bassoons, as well as a contrabassoon and four horns. He had often observed his father at rehearsals, both for the opera orchestra and another amateur
ensemble that played in a tavern, so he would have been familiar with the inner workings of the orchestra, and was himself to join the latter as a violin player for a few years.
In a single sonata-form Andante movement, the music reflects Strauss’s influences—Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, and Mendelssohn—seen through a filter wherein his own gift for lyrical lines may be seen. The creative use of winds and horns for colour was to see fuller development later in his career, and the work may be considered a tribute to the musical education he received from his father, who must have glowed with pride as the work was premiered the next year in 1882 under the baton of Franz Wüllner who conducted the Munich premieres of Wagner’s Das Rheingold and Die Walküre
Instrumentation
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns
World Premiere
27 Nov 1882, Dresden
First performed by SSO
19 Mar 2006
RICHARD STRAUSS
Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, Op. 28 (1895)
A genre Richard Strauss loved was the tone poem, in which a single continuous movement evokes the content of a poem, short story, painting, landscape, or character, sometimes with specific sections referring to aspects or events, but in a rather more abstract way, without the minute-byminute narration that one finds in music such as Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture. In 1894–1895, Strauss took inspiration from a character in late mediaeval German folklore, giving us the tone poem Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, Op. 28, but who was Till Eulenspiegel?
Till Eulenspiegel first appears in German popular printed material around 1510, and is a German wandering prankster of low birth with various adventures and misadventures travelling around the Holy Roman Empire of the 1300s, playing practical jokes (often scatological) on all and sundry, revealing vices and social problems (a gentle moralising lesson is never absent), and eventually dying of the plague in 1350. Scholars have not yet settled the issue of whether Eulenspiegel was based on a real person, but the tale continued to be popular in German and Dutch lands in the early modern period, with several English and French translations. As a literary character, he may be compared with Don Quixote, Tom Bunyan, Casanova, Don Juan, and similar larger-than-life figures.
Why did Richard Strauss choose Till Eulenspiegel? It is hard to say. His first tone poem at the age of 24 was based on the literary character Don Juan, so there was precedent, and it is possible
that Eulenspiegel—a wild, uncontrollable but lovable rogue—appealed to Strauss, whose first opera Guntram was a flop in his hometown.
The music begins gently but the prankster pops up soon enough—note the horn theme! The horn call represents Eulenspiegel and appears repeatedly in endless variations of pitch and rhythm. As Strauss discouraged overly literal interpretations of his tone poems, it should suffice to see (hear?) in the music broad representations of the merry prankster, a fiercely independent figure who takes cheeky potshots at social norms, reminding us of hard truths by
holding up a mirror to society, making fun of pompous authorities, all with a large dose of scatological humour. Strauss makes an exception to his rule toward the end, depicting in excruciating detail Eulenspiegel’s trial for blasphemy and execution by hanging, with a clarinet representing the death fall, an abrupt string pizzicato representing the end of the noose and the snapping of Eulenspiegel’s neck. Nevertheless, Strauss brings back the initial humour, as if to remind us that it is all but a humorous tale.
The horn call represents Eulenspiegel and appears repeatedly in endless variations of pitch and rhythm.
Eulenspiegel and bear perform before the king and townspeople by Klimsch
Later in life, he was asked if he had meant to make a profound commentary on humour, but his reply was that he had merely wanted to give the people in the concert hall a good laugh for once. Was he in earnest? It is hard to say, but Strauss was a master of subterfuge. He cultivated his public image of a vain, superficial, lazy artist who spent his time counting money and playing cards yet in truth he was a deep thinker immersed in philosophy. Perhaps like his own personality, the surface levity and irreverence were but a mask, while the deeper intent and meaning was only meant for those with sufficient perception to appreciate.
Instrumentation
3 flutes, piccolo, 3 oboes, cor anglais, 2 clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, cymbals, ratchet, snare drum, triangle, strings
World Premiere
5 Nov 1895, Cologne
First performed by SSO
1 Oct 1982
RICHARD STRAUSS
Don Quixote, Op. 35 (1897)
Strauss’s tone poem Don Quixote bears the German subtitle Phantastische Variationen über ein Thema ritterlichen Charakters (“Fantastic Variations on a Theme of Knightly Character”). The knightly character in question is the title character of Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes’s 17th century novel Don Quixote de La Mancha, in which Alonso Quixano, a member of the lowest nobility, reads so many tales of knightly chivalry that he becomes mentally unbalanced and takes it on himself to become a knight-errant (a sort of wandering hero), calling himself Don Quixote.
Don Quixote fights imaginary enemies and does great acts of heroic chivalry (in his mind) over a series of episodes, blurring the lines between fantasy and reality. A sort of anti-hero, the audience often knows not whether to laugh at his folly, admire his determination, or feel sorry at his capability for self-deception. Towards the end of the novel, he regains his sanity and becomes once again Alonso Quixano.
When initially asked to provide a guide to the music, Strauss insisted that no explanatory notes were needed, but later relented and wrote an analysis citing no fewer than 53 themes or motifs. Nevertheless, there is no need for the listener to have a long checklist of things to listen out for, as but a few elements to keep in mind are all one needs. The knight is represented by the solo cello, and the knight’s theme is a noble one. The theme of the knight’s faithful squire, his servant Sancho Panza, is introduced by bass clarinet and tenor tuba, eventually being
taken over by a solo viola. The imaginary maiden Dulcinea, object of Quixote’s love, is represented by a solo oboe. Muted instruments indicate mental confusion.
In its final form, the work consists of an introduction, ten variations (episodes from the knight’s adventures) and an epilogue. For the listener’s imagination, it should suffice to give a brief explanation of the events in each section.
After the introduction of the Don and his squire, in Variation I we have the Don’s unattainable love Dulcinea and a fight with evil giants (actually windmills) ending Quixote’s fall from a horse.
Variation II gives us a fight with the ‘Great Emperor Alifanfaron’s army’ (actually a flock of sheep). The Don rebukes his squire for lack of chivalry in Variation III.
The Don mistakes a religious procession in Variation IV for a band of robbers trying to abduct a statue of the Virgin Mary and fights them, eventually losing. He consoles himself in Variation V by imagining a vision of Dulcinea.
In Variation VI, Sancho tricks his master into believing that a trashy tambourineplaying stable girl is Dulcinea but enchanted by an evil wizard. Variation VII gives us the pair riding through the air on a flying horse (actually hobby horse toys), and Strauss was notable for using the new sound effects of the wind machine.
In Variation VIII the pair ride an oarless boat and capsize but manage to save themselves and they give thanks. Two monks discussing theology in Variation IX are taken by the Don to be evil magicians keeping Dulcinea from him and he scares them away.
A townsman of the Don, Sansón Carasco, disguising himself as ‘The Knight of the White Moon’, challenges the Don to combat and defeats him in Variation X, leading him back to sanity, with the Don dying peacefully and sane in the Epilogue.
It may be useful to see Strauss’s work in conjunction with his 1897–1898 Ein Heldenleben, composed at the same time, in which he portrays himself as the hero. Did Strauss see himself here as a sort of anti-hero? In addition, at the time of composition, his mother Josephine was experiencing period bouts of insanity (induced by fear of Strauss’s horn player father)—perhaps this gave him a unique perspective into mental health problems. We may never know, but it is fascinating to speculate, since the composer references work on multiple levels and he enjoyed having layers of meaning.
Programme notes by Edward C. Yong
Instrumentation
2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, cor anglais, 2 clarinets (1 doubling on E-flat clarinet), bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, contrabassoon, 6 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, euphonium, tuba, timpani, cymbals, triangle, snare drum, tambourine, bass drum, glockenspiel, wind machine, harp, strings
World Premiere
8 Mar 1898, Cologne
First performed by SSO
12 Jan 1990
BENNETT VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 4
MELODY AND MELODRAMA
Fri, 20 Oct 2023
Esplanade Concert Hall
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Andrew Litton conductor
Chloë Hanslip violin*
ROBERT RUSSELL BENNETT TCHAIKOVSKY
Violin Concerto in A major* (Asian Premiere)
Intermission Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36
23 mins
20 mins
44 mins
Concert Duration: approximately 1 hr 45 mins (including 20 mins intermission)
CHECK-IN TO TONIGHT'S CONCERT
Scan this QR code with the Singapore Symphony Mobile App.
ROBERT RUSSELL BENNETT (1894–1981)
Violin Concerto in A major (1941) Asian Premiere
I II III IV
Allegro moderato Andante moderato
Vivace
Allegro marziale
Robert Russell Bennett belongs to that class of composers who elevated the melodies of his colleagues to their fullest form. As one of America’s leading arrangers, he was responsible for scoring and orchestrating the scores of nearly a hundred musicals. From the 1920s to the 1970s, the list of composers and scores Bennett worked with is the very definition of the American Broadway sound - Richard Rodgers, George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Frederick Loewe... The Sound of Music, Show Boat, Kiss Me, Kate, Oklahoma!, South Pacific, The King and I, My Fair Lady, Victory At Sea and so on.
teacher. His musical talent was discovered from an early age – he was frequently called upon by his father to fill in any instrumental role in his band. His talent for melodic and harmonic structure served him well as an orchestrator – he was known to write out parts directly in ink, and in score order.
Besides his work on Broadway, Bennett’s prolific output as a “serious” composer is perhaps even more astounding. More than seven symphonies, concertos for violin, viola, harp, piano, harmonica; operas, incidental music for ballet and theatre, a large oeuvre of chamber music and many more for wind band.
The Violin Concerto in A major from 1941 is a four-movement work.
A light-hearted jaunt through a lively Broadway streetscape with occasional skyscraping solos, the opening Allegro moderato is the longest, taking up more than a third of the concerto’s 23-minute duration.
Bennett was born in 1894, the year when Brahms was 61, Mahler completed his Symphony No. 2 and Debussy's Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune was premiered in Paris. His father George was a violinist at the Kansas City Symphony Orchestra and trumpeter at the Grand Opera House, while his mother May worked as a pianist and
The Andante moderato is a sentimental nocturne with the violin yearning in song, set against a moonlit orchestral backdrop. A moment of drama interrupts this reverie as the soloist perks up for a side of cheekiness, before gradually slipping into the gentle night.
“ I give (Bennett the credit) without undue modesty, for making my music sound better than it was.”
- Richard Rogers
A frantic and capricious Vivace serves as a brief showcase before the raucous finale, a colourful Allegro marziale (“martial”) of a parade. Various themes from the earlier movements, the jolly and the nostalgic, make a brief reappearance before the curtain-closing coda.
Bennett wrote his Violin Concerto for the American violinist Louis Kaufmann (1905–1994). Aside from the fact that he played frequently with legendary contemporaries from Casals to Heifetz, Kaufmann also made a name for himself playing in the soundtracks of Hollywood films, including such classics as Casablanca and Gone with the Wind. As a classical violinist, he premiered the works of Copland, Milhaud and starred in the premiere recordings of the Barber and Bennett violin concertos. The latter, a live radio recording from 1956 conducted by Bernard Herrmann and the London Symphony, is the only existing recording of this concerto.
Tonight’s performance by violinist Chloë Hanslip, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra and conductor Andrew Litton is presented in conjunction with our recording sessions. The Bennett Violin Concerto will be recorded for the first time with modern equipment in a studio setting. This will be released in an album paired with the Violin Concerto by Vernon Duke, being performed by the same artists in concert on 27 Oct.
Instrumentation
2 flutes (1 doubling on piccolo), 2 oboes (1 doubling on cor anglais), 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, tambourine, snare drum, suspended cymbal, bass drum, cymbals, xylophone, vibraphone, harp, strings
PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840–1893)
Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36 (1877)
Andante sostenuto
Andantino in modo di canzona
Scherzo. Pizzicato ostinato
Finale. Allegro con fuoco
Shortly after the premiere of the Fourth Symphony in February 1878, Tchaikovsky revealed in a letter to his former student, the composer Sergei Tanayev, “There is not a single bar in this Fourth Symphony of mine which I have not truly felt, and which is not an echo of my most intimate spiritual life.”
Tchaikovsky worked on his Fourth Symphony throughout 1877, a turbulent and eventful year for the 37-year-old composer. Two extraordinary relationships with two very different women would result in crucial consequences for his personal and artistic life.
Around May 1877, Tchaikovsky received a declaration of love from Antonina Milyukova, a former Moscow Conservatory student. She was obsessively infatuated with him, but he could not remember meeting her before and did not reciprocate her affection. Nevertheless, he married her in July. He viewed the marriage as a means of achieving social stability, hoping that it would suppress the swirling gossip, and his own tormented feelings, about his sexual orientation. By September, this fiasco of a marriage was over. Tchaikovsky, in his own words, “fled” from his bride and suffered a nervous breakdown.
That same year, Tchaikovsky began corresponding with Nadezhda von Meck, a wealthy widow who became a close friend and patron. The two never met in person,
but exchanged volumes of letters for 14 years, freely sharing their most personal thoughts and feelings. Von Meck was an invaluable source of emotional support for Tchaikovsky and her generous monthly stipend gave him the means to devote himself to composing. He dedicated the Fourth Symphony to her as his “best friend” and referred to the Symphony in their letters as “our Symphony”.
Although the Symphony was presented without a programme or accompanying storyline, Tchaikovsky shared a detailed description of the work with von Meck. In the aftermath of his impulsive, ill-suited marriage, it is perhaps inevitable that he would reflect on his Symphony through the lens of fate and man’s desire for happiness and relief.
Tchaikovsky wrote to von Meck that the opening fanfare was the key to the entire symphony and was a symbol for fate, an “invincible force which ever prevents our pursuit of happiness from reaching its goal”. This fanfare serves as a sonic signpost throughout the first movement, marking out important structural moments. This was Tchaikovsky’s subtle tribute to the famous opening motif in Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, which was also said to represent fate. The first movement explores various melodic ideas, including a wistful waltz-like second theme for the clarinet, and harmonic destinations, drifting through
“fleeting dreams of happiness”. However, the movement ends with the triumph of fate and despair.
The second movement begins with a mournful oboe solo, which is followed by a more hopeful response in the strings, building to an impassioned climax. For Tchaikovsky, this movement captures the sense of loss and regret brought to mind by past memories and the weariness of everyday existence. The string section plays pizzicato, plucking their strings instead of using their bows, for the entire third movement creating a light and somewhat bewilderingly playful soundworld. Tchaikovsky likened this movement to the random thoughts, sounds and images floating through the mind of an inebriated man. It is “neither joyful nor sad” but divorced from reality, “wild, strange and bizarre”.
In the fourth movement, the curtain opens on a scene of rustic celebration. The Russian folk song, The Little Birch Tree, features prominently in this movement, as the music marches forward with exuberant cymbal crashes. Determined to be happy, Tchaikovsky has now resolved to “be glad in others’ gladness”. However, the fanfare from the first movement reasserts itself towards the end of the movement, an ominous reminder that none of us can escape from fate. The symphony concludes with a frenzied, headlong rush of sound, as if trying to drown out fate with a spectacle of festivity.
Programme notes by Abigail Sin
Instrumentation
2 flutes, piccolo, 4 oboes, 4 clarinets, 4 bassoons, 4 horns, 4 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, triangle, bass drum, cymbals, strings
World Premiere
22 Feb 1878, Moscow
First performed by SSO
3 Sep 1982
DUKE VIOLIN CONCERTO AND TCHAIKOVSKY 6
THRILL AND PASSION
Fri, 27 Oct 2023
Esplanade Concert Hall
Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Andrew Litton conductor
Chloë Hanslip violin*
VERNON DUKE
Violin Concerto* (Asian Premiere)
TCHAIKOVSKY
Intermission Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 “Pathétique”
30 mins
20 mins
46 mins
Concert Duration: approximately 1 hr 50 mins (including 20 mins intermission)
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VERNON DUKE (1903–1969)
Violin Concerto (1943) Asian Premiere
Tema con variazioni e coda
“Superior melodies, very well designed, harmonically beautiful” – so said Prokofiev of the music of Vernon Duke. This gives you one idea of how this half-hour-long violin concerto from 1943 sounds like. Duke’s music has also been compared to the likes of Shostakovich and Stravinsky, so it may come as no surprise to know that he is in fact Russian-born, entering the Kyiv Conservatory – the present-day Ukrainian National Tchaikovsky Academy of Music –at age 11, and studied composition under Reinhold Glière.
He was born Vladimir Dukelsky in 1903. His family escaped the Russian Revolution, arriving in America in 1921. Here, another famous composer, Jacob Gershowitz – whom you know as George Gershwin –befriended him and was also the source of the advice to Americanize his name.
In America, Vernon Duke gained fame and remains renowned as a legendary songwriter and composer for Broadway and Hollywood. Classics such as “Taking a Chance on Love”, “April in Paris” and “I Can’t Get Started” are often praised alongside celebrated singers who made them famous, such as Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra.
Duke also continued to write music of the “serious” vein, including three symphonies, chamber works, choral works, a piano concerto, cello concerto and ballet – his Zephy and Flora was commissioned by
Diaghilev and performed by the Ballets Russes in 1925.
While it is never the fairest way to describe a work in terms of another composer’s style, invoking the name of Prokofiev in this case gives one a good idea the tonal colours and stylistic gestures to expect. Vernon Duke’s Violin Concerto otherwise stands completely on its own.
The first movement begins with a pensive, mysterious introduction by two flutes, quickly gathering the entire orchestra before the solo violin enters in deceptively good spirits. In true Prokofievian fashion, the inviting melody veers into a mixture of urgent anxiety and pungent lyricism. Halfway through, the pace slows as horns and a solo trumpet jazzily clear the stage for the disquiet cadenza, ending with a pizzicato chord. The orchestra returns with an Allegro giusto section characterised by the soloist’s breathless dance in frenetic dotted and triplet figures. The movement slows to an Adagietto, as a nocturnal whiff of Broadway, sweet and sultry, complete with the tinkling of celesta, unveils the glowing final bars.
The second movement is a 5-minute Valse. The modern flavour of this waltz is immediately evident from the onset as the soloist tip-toes onto a dance floor painted in dark hues by winds, then strings. An uneasy, haunting atmosphere pervades the movement until the middle, when the soloist
launches into a brief, virtuosic passage on her own. The waltz theme returns, as the movement begins to wind down. The opening pizzicati is heard again, as if the soloist is now making her way slowly out the hall – and ends, not quietly, but with a bang of three loud chords, like a final glare and a slam of the door.
You'll feel as if you’ve just stepped into a busy street (complete with car-like horns) as the “theme with variations” finale begins, stating the main theme prominently three times before the solo violin enters with the first Variation – a hectic, skittering score punctuated by isolated murmurs from various instruments.
Variation 2 is a sentimental poco lamentoso with more than a tinge of angst.
Variation 3 is moderately paced section, with the solo violin wandering in dizzying fashion between the moods of “misterioso” and “giocoso”, with emphasis on the latter’s playful dimension.
Variation 4 is a short, 52-bar offering, marked “Sostenuto pesante” — you’ll hear music of a sustained, heavy character, with lower brass and timpani lending their weight.
The equally brief Variation 5 is an Andantino, returning to music of pensive disquiet.
A rattle of snare drums signals the final Variation, the sixth, which leads to the final coda. The jocular energy of the opening returns, as the concerto hastens to its ending, the woodwind and xylophone contributing a final flourish before the concluding chord.
score in 1941. According to Diana Burgin of the University of Massachusetts, Boston, the piece was written at the suggestion of no less than the legendary violinist Jascha Heifetz, but who ultimately declined to premiere the work. Instead, the score was passed to her mother, violinist Ruth Posselt (1911—2007). She demonstrated it at the home of another legend, the conductor Serge Koussevitzky, with the composer present. So impressed was the maestro that he programmed it in the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s 1942/43 season. While not as well-known as contemporary American concertos by Barber or Korngold, Duke’s Violin Concerto is without doubt one of many great violin concertos coming from the USA in the 20th century.
Tonight’s performance by violinist Chloë Hanslip, with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra and conductor Andrew Litton is presented in conjunction with our recording sessions. The Duke Violin Concerto will be recorded and released alongside the Violin Concerto by Robert Russell Bennett.
The concerto was completed first in piano
Instrumentation
2 flutes (1 doubling on piccolo),
2 oboes (1 doubling on cor anglais),
2 clarinets (1 doubling on bass clarinet), 2 bassoons (1 doubling on contrabassoon), 4 horns, 2 trumpets, trombone, tuba, timpani, bass drum, cymbals, snare drum, suspended cymbal, tam-tam, tambourine, triangle, wood blocks, xylophone, celesta, strings
World Premiere
18 Mar 1943, Boston
PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840–1893)
Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 “Pathétique” (1893)
I II III IV
Adagio – Allegro non troppo Allegro con grazia Allegro molto vivace Finale. Adagio lamentoso
In 1889, Tchaikovsky wrote, “I want terribly to write a somewhat grandiose symphony, which would crown my artistic career… For some time I have carried in my head an outline plan for such a symphony… I hope that I shall not die without carrying out this intention.”
With this in mind, he set to work. He was further guided by two thoughts, that it would be a large-scale symphony with “a secret programme”, and the notion that it will end not with a traditionally fast allegro, but with a slow movement.
“The ultimate essence of the symphony,” Tchaikovsky said, “is life”, encompassing all its joys and misery. He further described his thoughts for this ultimate symphony: “First movement—all passion, confidence, thirst for life. Must be short (finale death—result of collapse). Second movement—love; the third—disappointment; the fourth ends dying away (also short)”
Tchaikovsky’s initial attempts to fulfil this plan resulted in a Symphony in E-flat, which he expressed much dissatisfaction with and abandoned in 1892. This was not it, he declared, it was not the ultimate symphony that he believed will crown his career. In early 1893, his inspiration was again rekindled by the prospect of intriguing the audience with a “secret programme”. He seemed almost delighted by the idea,
writing, “such a programme that will remain an enigma to everyone—let them guess.” This, the definitive Sixth Symphony, was completed in the summer.
The form of this symphony will have much that is new, and amongst other things, the finale will not be a noisy allegro, but on the contrary, a long drawn-out adagio. You can’t imagine how blissful I feel in the conviction that my time is not yet passed, and that to work is still possible. (11 Feb, 1893)
Tchaikovsky conducted the premiere of the symphony himself on 28 October 1893. The composer Rimsky-Korsakov asked him what this work depicted. Tchaikovsky replied that there was indeed a programme, but he declined to reveal it. Nevertheless, this, alongside the mystified reactions of the audience at its first performance, prompted Tchaikovsky to rethink its name.
His brother Modest suggested “Pateticheskaya”, meaning passionate or emotional in Russian, and this made it to the published score. In French, the title is translated as Pathétique – and this is the name that has held strong in the west. The word means “filled with pathos”, especially of strong intense feelings and should not be confused with the English word “pathetic”. A closer translation would simply be “Passionate”.
The Pathétique Symphony encapsulates the length and breadth of Tchaikovsky’s musical emotions, from optimistic passion to lyrical elegance, but also anguish and despair. As he desired, its exact meaning remains a subject of musicological debate today. All qualities that would’ve been admired by the Romantic tradition stemming from Beethoven’s era.
Adagio – Allegro non troppo The first movement begins solemnly with the bassoon, leading the orchestra out of the darkness. A nervous Allegro non troppo heightens the pace, eventually revealing a theme of great lyrical tenderness. A tumultuous scene of drama takes over, and after a reprise of the lyrical theme, the movement ends quietly.
Allegro con grazia Strings usher in the serene and graceful second movement, featuring one of Tchaikovsky’s most luscious melodies. With its gentle ebb and flow, the music feels like a waltz but is in fact in 5/4 rather than triple time, earning it the moniker of “limping waltz”.
Allegro molto vivace The electrifying third movement begins with skittering strings that builds to an exuberant march, culminating in a massive orchestral whirlwind of thunder and triumph. This climactic false conclusion often draws applause from the audience, another point of contention that surrounds this symphony. Can one resist clapping after such a grandiose end? If you clap, does it not jar with what’s about to come?
Adagio lamentoso If you clapped after the third movement, the realisation that that was not the end — and now comes true finality — comes almost as a shock, a kind of emotional betrayal. If you did not clap,
if perhaps you knew what was coming, that too hardly prepares you for the emotional crumbling of the finale.
Something is happening inside me, which I don’t understand: some sort of weariness from life, a sense of disappointment. At times I’m madly homesick, but even in those depths I can look forward to a new relish for life; instead it’s something hopeless, final, and even, as finales often are, banal. (Tchaikovsky, 1890)
Unrelenting despair and resignation pervade this final movement. Its gloom and cries of angst even makes the preceding celebrations seem a little sinister. Now the symphony truly ends as its life gradually dissolves, its spirit drained layer by layer down to the bottom of the strings, fading away into darkness, pppp.
To the dismay of the public, Tchaikovsky died just nine days after the symphony’s first performance. Ignoring the threat of a cholera outbreak, the composer had apparently consumed unboiled water and ignored the resulting stomach aches. It is not surprising that many have interpreted his Sixth Symphony as fate knocking at his door or even a suicide letter. But Tchaikovsky was in fact in good spirits at the time. He even wrote to his publisher, “Never in my life have I been so content, so proud, so happy in the knowledge that I have written a good piece.” Even so, we know he wrestled with his inner demons. Perhaps in embracing the “secret programme” in his “ultimate symphony”, he had found the gold that does not glitter, and the strength that does not wither.
Programme notes by Chia Han-Leon
Instrumentation
3 flutes (1 doubling on piccolo),
3 oboes,
3 clarinets (1 doubling on bass clarinet),
3 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets,
3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, cymbals, tam-tam, strings
World Premiere
28 Oct 1893, St. Petersburg
First performed by SSO
6 Nov 1981
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Far East Organization
United Overseas Bank Ltd
Bloomberg Singapore Pte Ltd
Holywell Foundation
Kris Foundation
IN-KIND SPONSORS
Raffles Hotel Singapore
SMRT Corporation
Singapore Airlines
Conrad Centennial Singapore
Symphony 924
Packages start at $10,000 and can be tailored to your company’s branding needs.
PARTNERSHIP
We partner with various corporates through tailored in-kind sponsorship and exchange of services. Current and recent partnerships include Official Hotel, Official Airline, and we offer other exciting titles.
For more details, please write to Chelsea Zhao at chelsea.zhao@sso.org.sg.
GAO JIAN ASSOCIATE PRINCIPAL HORNOfficial Merchandise
BOARD OF DIRECTORS & COMMITTEES
CHAIR
Goh Yew Lin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Yong Ying-I (Deputy Chair)
Chang Chee Pey
Chng Kai Fong
Prof Arnoud De Meyer
Warren Fernandez
Kenneth Kwok
Liew Wei Li
Sanjiv Misra
Lynette Pang
Prof Qin Li-Wei
Geoffrey Wong
Yasmin Zahid
Yee Chen Fah
Andrew Yeo Khirn Hin
NOMINATING AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Goh Yew Lin (Chair)
Prof Arnoud De Meyer (Treasurer)
Geoffrey Wong
Yong Ying-I
HUMAN RESOURCES COMMITTEE
Yong Ying-I (Chair)
Chng Kai Fong
Prof Arnoud De Meyer
Heinrich Grafe
Doris Sohmen-Pao
INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
Geoffrey Wong (Chair)
Sanjiv Misra
David Goh
Alex Lee
AUDIT COMMITTEE
Yee Chen Fah (Chair)
Warren Fernandez
Lim Mei Jovi Seet
SNYO COMMITTEE
Liew Wei Li (Chair)
Prof Qin Li-Wei
Benjamin Goh
Vivien Goh
Dr Kee Kirk Chin
Clara Lim-Tan
SSO MUSICIANS’ COMMITTEE
Mario Choo
David Smith
Wang Xu
Christoph Wichert
Yang Zheng Yi
Elaine Yeo
Zhao Tian
SSO COUNCIL
Alan Chan (Chair)
Odile Benjamin
Prof Chan Heng Chee
Choo Chiau Beng
Dr Geh Min
Heinrich Grafe
Khoo Boon Hui
Lim Mei
JY Pillay
Dr Stephen Riady
Priscylla Shaw
Prof Gralf Sieghold
Andreas Sohmen-Pao
Prof Bernard Tan
Dr Tan Chin Nam
Tan Choo Leng
Tan Soo Nan
Wee Ee Cheong
SINGAPORE SYMPHONY GROUP ADMINISTRATION
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Kenneth Kwok
CEO OFFICE
Shirin Foo
Musriah Bte Md Salleh
ARTISTIC PLANNING
Hans Sørensen (Head)
Artistic Administration
Jodie Chiang
Jocelyn Cheng
Michelle Yeo
Lynnette Chng
OPERATIONS
Ernest Khoo (Head)
Library
Lim Lip Hua
Avik Chari
Wong Yi Wen
Orchestra Management
Chia Jit Min (Head)
Peck Xin Hui
Kelvin Chua
Production Management
Noraihan Bte Nordin
Nazem Redzuan
Leong Shan Yi
Asyiq Iqmal
Ramayah Elango
Khairi Edzhairee
Khairul Nizam
COMMUNITY IMPACT
Kok Tse Wei (Head)
Community Engagement
Kua Li Leng (Head)
Erin Tan
Whitney Tan
Samantha Lim
Terrence Wong
Choral Programmes
Kua Li Leng (Head)
Regina Lee
Chang Hai Wen
Singapore National Youth Orchestra
Tang Ya Yun
Tan Sing Yee
Ridha Ridza
ABRSM
Patricia Yee
Lai Li-Yng
Joong Siow Chong
Freddie Loh
May Looi
William Teo
PATRONS
Development
Chelsea Zhao (Head)
Nikki Chuang
Sarah Wee
Sharmilah Banu
Eunice Salanga
Digital and Marketing Communications
Cindy Lim (Head)
Chia Han-Leon
Calista Lee
Myrtle Lee
Hong Shu Hui
Jana Loh
Sherilyn Lim
Elizabeth Low
Corporate Communications
Anderlin Yeo
Elliot Lim
Customer Experience
Randy Teo
Dacia Cheang
Joy Tagore
CORPORATE SERVICES
Finance, IT & Facilities
Rick Ong (Head)
Alan Ong
Goh Hoey Fen
Loh Chin Huat
Md Zailani Bin Md Said
Human Resources & Administration
Valeria Tan (Head)
Janice Yeo
Fionn Tan
Netty Diyanah Bte Osman
Organisation Development
Lillian Yin
A chamber music series by the Singapore Symphony
UPCOMING CONCERTS CHAMBER
LEONIDAS K AVAKOS IN RECITAL
Sun 15 Oct, 4pm
Leonidas Kavakos violin
Enrico Pace piano
A HAUNTED HALLOWEEN HYMN
Sat 28 Oct, 7.30pm
Sun 29 Oct, 4pm
Singapore Symphony Chorus
Eudenice Palaruan Choral Director
Loraine Muthiah organ
BAROQUE FESTIVAL BACH’S BRANDENBURG OS PART I & II
Thu 2 Nov, 7.30pm , 7.30pm
Singapore Symphony Orchestra harpsichord/conductor
CHAMBER
MOONLIGHT, PATHÉTIQUE AND APPASSIONATA
Sun 10 Dec, 4pm
Rudolf Buchbinder piano
Tickets from $5, 15% off 2-concert bundle available for selected concerts.
To find out more, please visit www.sso.org.sg
The mission of the Singapore Symphony Group is to create memorable shared experiences with music. Through the SSO and its affiliated per forming groups, we spread the love for music, nur ture talent and enrich our diverse communities. The Singapore Symphony Orchestra is a charity and not-for-profit organisation. You can suppor t us by donating at www.sso.org.sg/donate.