Singapore-based British composer Eric Watson's Inner Landscapes a delightful East-West blend

Spectrum - Landscapes

Conservatory New Music Ensemble

Esplanade Recital Studio/Sunday

There was a hidden message in all of this. While the audience was told that the four works performed were connected by the concept of changing perceptions, they were not told that all four composers had established their true musical styles and achieved international recognition only after they had left their countries of birth and gone into self-imposed exile. What message does that send to aspiring Singaporean composers?

Arvo Part left his native Estonia in 1980, settled in Vienna and evolved a musical style which quickly attracted an almost cult following. The Conservatory New Music Ensemble performed his personal take on Psalm 137, By The Waters Of Babylon, not in its familiar version for organ and singers, but in one for nine instrumentalists.

The trombone (eloquently played by Pradch Limvorant) evoked a priest intoning the psalm while the other players, dotted around the room, acted as the voices of supplicants. Part's tendency to ponder long and lovingly over one note before moving on to the next did not always find sympathy with these performers, who generally seemed more concerned with counting the beats than savouring the notes themselves.

Chen Yi and Bright Sheng are among a group of composers who, unsettled by the Cultural Revolution, took the first opportunity to leave China and settle permanently in the United States, where they celebrate their Chinese musical heritage in styles infused with the idioms of the West.

Chen Yi's two-movement Wu Yu concerns itself with the confrontation of these conflicting cultural elements. But despite the best efforts of percussionist Chaiyaphat Prempree, the performance was too reserved and constricted to create the cacophonous riot of musical colour which breaks out towards the end.

In contrast, Bright Sheng's Deep Red came wonderfully alive in a truly virtuoso performance. Mizuki Morimoto managed the demanding solo part with such grace and fluency that she effectively disproved the composer's comment that the marimba is affected by "a limited range of timbre" - he could surely never have heard Ms Morimoto's array of subtle colours and nuances of tone.

The premiere of conductor Eric Watson's own Inner Landscapes closed the programme. In 1991 he, too, went into voluntary exile from his native United Kingdom settling permanently in Singapore, since then establishing himself as a most accomplished composer. Effortlessly integrating Asian and European elements, this was an utterly delightful work and a fitting end to a programme of music which, albeit secretly, showed how productive self-imposed exile can be to a creative artist.

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