Dithyrambic Singers

Dithyrambic Singers

‪A Decade of Excellence‬ Concert Series

Our ‪A Decade of Excellence‬ Concert Series has just started! Fret not if you have missed the first concert in the series - We will be having 3 more concerts next weekend at the Damansara Performing Arts Centre! Join us and be immersed in the beautiful world of choral music!

For more information, do not hesitate to contact:
DPAC (03-40650001/2)
Eunice Ling (016-6511775)
Esther How (012-7435128)

Dithyrambic Singers 10th Anniversary Concert Trailer 2.0
Our #ADecadeofExcellence Concert Series has just started! Fret not if you have missed the first concert in the series - We will be having 3 more concerts next weekend at the Damansara Performing Arts Centre! Join us and be immersed in the beautiful world of choral music! For more information, do not hesitate to contact: DPAC (03-40650001/2)Eunice Ling (016-6511775) Esther How (012-7435128)
Posted by Dithyrambic Singers on Saturday, October 10, 2015

A Decade of Excellence


Since its inception, the Dithyrambic Singers has dedicated unceasing energies to cultivate the seeds of love for music; nurturing vibrant and radiant voices which will definitely ignite the musical sense of its audience. Echoing the very theme of this concert, the Dithyrambic Singers is eager to share its passion for choral music through its wide range of repertoire. Join these singers as they relive their journey of choral exploration while creating an enriching and kaleidoscopic musical experience with you.

 PERFORMANCE DATES 

 1. Venue : The Chinese Assembly Hall 
 Date : 9 October 2015 (Friday) 
 Time : 8pm 

 2. Venue : Theatre, DPAC- Damansara Performing Art Centre (DPAC)
17 October 2015 (Saturday) -8pm 
18 October 2015 (Sunday) – 3pm & 8pm


For more information, please contact
DPAC (03-40650001 /2), Ms Eunice Ling (016-6511775), Ms Esther How (012-7435128)

Boston Philharmonic conductor Benjamin Zander encourages expression from his orchestra by The Star Newspaper

The maestro will be helming the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra with Gustav Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony.
MOVIE character Terence Fletcher is a terrible chap. If there was a word to describe him, it would undeniably be monstrous.
In the movie Whiplash, Fletcher is the intimidating jazz instructor at New York’s Shaffer Conservatory. He abuses his students at every opportunity.
All Fletcher is concerned about is perfection.
Teacher-conductor: Zander says classical music speaks to the most elevated part of our spirit and soul. Photo: BRIAN MOH/THE STAR
Teacher-conductor: Benjamin Zander says classical music speaks to the most elevated part of our spirit and soul. Photo: BRIAN MOH/THE STAR
Real life maestro Benjamin Zander is the total opposite of American actor J.K. Simmons’ character from the Oscar-winning movie Whiplash.
The British-born conductor of the Boston Philharmonic is in Kuala Lumpur to helm the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra (MPO) for Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No.2 happening tomorrow and Sunday (for ticket bookings, call 03-2051 7007 or visit www.mpo.com.my).
The 76-year-old, who began composing music at the age of nine, tells us that he abhors a person like Fletcher.
“Everything about him was inauthentic. He never would have gotten the results doing what he did. It’s the exact opposite of what I believe in,” says the co-author of The Art of Possibility during a recent interview at Dewan Filharmonik Petronas (DFP).
Zander, who is based in Boston, the United States, wrote the self-improvement book together with his former second wife, psychotherapist Rosamund Stone Zander, in 2000.
“Music is the expression of the human soul and if you close it down by violence, rudeness or sarcasm, you are closing down all the sources of expression. Our job as conductors is to bring them out,” he adds enthusiastically.
Zander, who studied under orchestral luminaries such as English composers Benjamin Britten and Imogen Holst, and Spanish cellist Gaspar Cassado, believes that in any and every situation, one can create possibilities and he practices that in his own work as an orchestra conductor.
He says ordinarily, an orchestra reacts with resistance, doubt and cynicism when a new conductor comes in.
“But I say a cynical person is a passionate person who doesn’t want to be disappointed again. Now, instead of having 100 cynical people, I have 100 passionate people and immediately, I have turned it around and I can relate to them as passionate and not cynical people,” says Zander.
Zander is also a sought-after speaker around the world for leadership conferences.
Oozing with an infectious passion, the veteran, with his wispy white hair and wrinkled face, does not seem to be slowing down.
He kicked off his visit here with an Art Of Possibility demonstration at the DFP last Sunday to a packed hall. What was interesting about it was that both the orchestra and the audience had no clue what would be taking place.
Throughout the event, the orchestra played Beethoven’s thrilling Coriolan overture andOde To Joy, Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet overture and for every piece of music, Zander stopped the orchestra and gave small and effective suggestions to unlock the possibilities in them and in the scores.
Aga Mikolaj will assume the role of the soprano in Mahlers Symphony No.2
Aga Mikolaj will assume the role of the soprano in Mahler's Symphony No.2.
Of course, the highlight of Zander’s visit to KL is Mahler’s Symphony No.2, also called the Resurrection Symphony. Written between 1888 and 1894, the symphony consists of five movements, progressing from a funeral march to a time of joyful remembrance, a cry of despair and a struggle with an angel.
A group photo of Dithyrambic Singers before the premiere of Mahler's Symphony No. 2.
Dithyrambic Singers, UCSI University Chorale with Maestro Benjamin Zander after the final show on 22nd of March 2015, together shouting "how fascinating". 
Zander calls it the pinnacle of the classical orchestra repertoire, together with Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. “The piece is all about the great issues like life and death. It goes deep and has some of the loudest music but also some of the most intimate notes,” he explains. The MPO orchestra this weekend will be accompanied by Polish soprano Aga Mikolaj, English contralto Claudia Huckle, the KL-based choirs The Dithyrambic Singers and the UCSI Chorale.
On March 24, Zander will give a masterclass called The Art Of Interpretation at the DFP (for details, visit www.mpo.com.my).
“Classical music is not arbitrary. It’s not subjective. The composers were very clear about what they wanted and how to realise their music. And I can actually teach that and I have done that for 45 years at the New England Conservatory at Boston.
“It’s a chance to go a little deeper into the musical interpretation, tempo, phrasing, musical character and the whole way music is built,” shares Zander.
Finally, Zander will lead the Malaysian Philharmonic Youth Orchestra on March 25 with Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante In E Flat and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No.5 at the DFP. This is part of DFP’s effort to train and build the young musicians under the tutelage of visiting conductors.
It is not always that you get to witness such a passionate conductor helming an orchestra. And it is not always that you get to immerse yourself with music that speaks of high emotions. You might have avoided classical music once but what Zander says next could not be closer to the truth.
“Classical music speaks to the most elevated part of our spirit and soul and lifts us up and that’s what it is designed for,” the maestro concludes.

Love and betrayal in MPO’s treatment of Carmen by The Star Newspaper

THAT night on Jan 28 at Dewan Filharmonik Petronas (DFP) in Kuala Lumpur felt like, from its onset, an evening already on the edge of calamity. The air was still, the populace went about their apportioned affairs but there was a sense of an impending end. Of course, it began, as any night would, unassumingly, filled with hope, joy, merrymaking and sinful rendezvous.
Dark, red roses were strewn across the floor in a display of passion. Nightlight candles lit the square like teardrops on a virgin’s face. It was set then ... the grand entrance for that mistress of love, the sultry creature of the night.
Echoes of “We don’t see La Carmencita!” clamoured in the streets from amongst the young men pining for her beauty.
Patricia Bardons deep musicality and ability to conjure the emotions of the songs were admirable and mesmerised the audience
Patricia Bardon's deep musicality and ability to conjure the emotions of the songs were admirable and mesmerised the audience.
And then, with an air of blithe disregard and utter indifference, Carmen, the gypsy seductress, sauntered in. Her dress was as black as the night, with a single rose crowning that seat between her bosoms.
“Love is a gypsy child, he has never heard of law. If you don’t love me, I’ll love you; if I love you, look out for yourself!” she sang with a tantalising lilt in her voice.
And for the rest of the evening, a whole three-hours, the audience at DFP were stirred and mesmerised, just like her lover Don Jose, with Carmen’s soaring voice.
Helmed by the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra’s (MPO) new principal Brazilian-born conductor Fabio Mechetti, the three-weekend Carmen festival at DFP closed yesterday with its grand finale offering of the renowned French opera.
The festival began with a ballet performance, followed by a family concert and finally the opera itself, which was performed on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday.
Love is like a gypsy child: Patricia Bardon, who plays Carmen, captivated the Dewan Filharmonik Petronas audience last week with her commanding register. Dario Solari played the bullfighter Escamillo.
Love is like a gypsy child: Patricia Bardon, who plays Carmen, captivated the Dewan Filharmonik Petronas audience last week with her commanding register. Dario Solari played the bullfighter Escamillo.
Composed by French composer Georges Bizet in 1875, Carmen tells the love story of Carmen and Don Jose, a soldier. The gypsy, however, betrays him for the love of another man, the bullfighter Escamillo. Hot with fury and jealousy, Don Jose stabs the love of his life.
Leading this abridged version of one the top operas of the world is Dublin-born Patricia Bardon. The Irish mezzo-soprano, whose repertoire includes works by Monteverdi, Handel, Glück, Rossini and Verdi, proved from the very beginning that she is a force to be reckoned with.
To begin with, her commanding register did not allow anyone to escape into the land of their imaginations. Her lyrical and dramatic colouring transported the audience through Carmen’s ups and downs and passions vis-a-vis her love affairs.
More than that, Bardon, who had played the titular role many times before, was a skilful elocutionist. Her phrasing was precise, evocative and potent, so much so that albeit this writer not being a French speaker, he was able to grasp the words and take in the intentions behind the words.
James Valenti plays the love-struck Don Jose.
Bardon was also playful in her modulation, lending the right degree of devil-may-care demeanour to her character. Of course, the opera requires its main character to do just that. But Bardon stripped it of its technicality and the rise and fall of her voice was natural and even cheeky.
This was particularly evident in the famous Habanera. One would just forget for that moment all vows to love and be incited to the threshold of frolicking. After all, theHabanera is a song about wild and untamed love. And all credit goes to Bardon for her deep musicality and ability to conjure the merriment of the song.
Playing the love-struck Don Jose is American tenor James Valenti. His towering presence and deep register was magnetic and Valenti simply exuded the Herculean charisma inherent in his character. More than that, the subtle inflections in his voice was endearing and one cannot help but pine or feel betrayed with him.


Dithyrambic Singers with James Valenti (in pink) who played Don Jose in the opera and our conductor Fabio Mechetti.
Dithyrambic Singers with Patricia Bardon as Carmen, James Valenti as Don Jose, Dario Solari as Escamillo, Mariana Ortiz as Micaela, Licio Bruno as Zuniga, and Gabriella Pace as Frasquita
If Bardon and Valenti were the heartbeat of the opera, the Dithyrambic Singers, who formed Carmen’s chorus line, were the blood that pumped the heart. Their virtuoso performance infused the opera with zest and vivacity, keeping the audience tuned in.
At the end of the three-hour performance, after Don Jose murders his beloved, the premonition present in the beginning, of a looming doom, came to be. Why should a woman die for her choice of a lover? Why must passion curdle to impetuous rage, driving a man to murder?
One may not have understood the words but one would almost definitely have the left the hall with such questions lingering in their minds. And perhaps, that’s what makesCarmen one of the best operas in the world.

Christmas Caroling 2014

Christmas is one of the loveliest festival of the revolving year. In 2014, Dithyrambic Singers was invited to perform around the Klang Valley - KLCC, Pavilion, IOI City Mall, Sunway Pyramid, The Curve, The Curve Borders, Ikea, Ikano Power Centre, The Gardens, and Viva Home.



 








Dithyrambic Singers featured in The Star newspaper



Christmas caroling featured in The Malay Mail