Stringing together a message of love

REVIEW / CONCERT

TRANSFIGURED NIGHT

Nafa Project Strings

Lee Foundation Theatre

Thursday

The subject of a man's love for a woman superimposed on a canvas of late Austro-Germanic Romanticism was the theme for this all-strings concert.

It was also a showcase of the impressive Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts' Project Strings, formed and led by Singapore Symphony Orchestra first violinist Foo Say Ming since 2012.

The music had previously been heard in separate concerts by Foo's elite string band re:mix.

However, this evening's coupling of Mahler and Schoenberg's music had a strong synergy because of their shared compositional idioms and estranged relationships with their respective spouses, all set in fin de siecle Vienna.

This was highlighted in helpful programme notes written by students.

Narrator Angel Cortez set the tone by reading a love letter and the strings took off with Adagietto, the fourth movement from Mahler's Fifth Symphony.

One of his most serene creations, it began with the gentlest of whispers and a hint of rhythm provided by Tan Li Shan's harp.

This finesse of control, hushed voices and tender caresses spoke volumes of Foo's charges, as the music wound its way to a yearning passionate climax before ebbing into silence.

This movement was merely a third of the length of the next work, Schoenberg's Verklarte Nacht, or Transfigured Night.

Originally scored for string sextet (two each of violins, violas and cellos), its amplification for string orchestra is the modernist composer's most performed work.

Youthful and tonally based, it far outstrips all of his atonal compositions in terms of popularity by a long chalk.

It was inspired by Richard Dehmel's poem in German about a couple who take an evening walk. She reveals that she is with child, but not by him. Instead of rejection, he offers love and warmth, with the promise he will regard the unborn infant as his own.

The work is thus a rollercoaster of emotion, from tension and uncertainty to overwhelming feelings and finally love and acceptance.

English transliterations were projected on a screen above as the music unfolded, with gentle violas making the first statement.

Foo's leadership was one of directness and honesty, never one for histrionics or superficial effect for its own sake.

He coaxed a rich homogeneous sonority from his 35 players, who moved as one through its half-hour duration.

The music mirrored the poem's narrative, moving from darkness to illumination and encompassing a whole spectrum of shadows and half-lights.

There were occasional episodes of thinness in string sound, but these were merely transitional.

The frenzied development, tension-laden and angst-filled, provided some of this performance's most gripping moments.

The final denouement, amounting to a lengthy musical sigh of relief, returned the massed strings to the calm of perfect equanimity.

Expect more from this dynamic group of string players and the many future orchestras they will populate in years to come.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on March 05, 2016, with the headline Stringing together a message of love. Subscribe