When Brubeck met the Chinese orchestra

Review Concert

GALA - RETURN OF THE BRUBECK

Singapore Chinese Orchestra with the Brubeck Brothers Quartet

Singapore Conference Hall/Last Friday

It is a curious fact here that when one wants to hear symphonic jazz and crossover music, the Singapore Chinese Orchestra are the go-to people.

In the past year, the orchestra has presented an all-Gershwin concert, collaborated with country fiddler Mark O'Connor and brought back Chris Brubeck, the ever-versatile jazzman son of legend Dave Brubeck. His third appearance here came in the Singapore debut of the Brubeck Brothers Quartet.

Alongside Chris was his brother drummer Dan, guitarist Mike DeMicco and pianist Chuck Lamb, who dominated centrestage, discreetly supported by the orchestra conducted by music director Yeh Tsung.

It is the very nature of crossover symphonic concerts that the special guests were the main draw, and the quartet performing mostly original music by Dave Brubeck did not disappoint.

Chris was the main spokesman, regaling the audience with anecdotes about each piece and their inspirations. Then he comfortably alternated between electric bass guitar, trombone and later even crooning, exuding that intense yet nonchalant air that only jazz people know how.

In My One Bad Habit Is Falling In Love, the title from a quote by Ella Fitzgerald, his trombone poured out the moody blues, contrasted by the heady procession of tunes in The Basie Band Is Back In Town.

Mr Broadway was written for a 1960s television detective series starring Craig Stevens (of Peter Gunn fame), a highly rhythmic and catchy number that should have caught more fame except that the show was canned after one season.

More classically inclined was Brandenburg Gate Revisited, a theme and variations piece based on a Bachian aria with the orchestra serving the concertino role of the baroque concerto grosso while the quartet improvised.

The only non-Brubeck numbers included an uncharacteristically tepid account of Gershwin's Strike Up The Band, Eric Watson's unusually jazzy Mahjong Kakis based on the quintessentially Chinese game for four - a far better account - and Leroy Anderson's Jazz Pizzicato, where the winds unwittingly upstaged the plucked strings.

The popular standards were reserved for the latter part of the 21/2-hour concert. Dan Brubeck's drums were afforded a prolonged solo in Jazzanias, while pianist Lamb commanded the keys in In Your Own Sweet Way.

Paul Desmond's ubiquitous Take Five, the Brubeck signature tune, got the audience all excited, not least with four orchestra musicians improvising over the world's most immediately recognisable 5/4 rhythm.

Tan Man Man's erhu, Zhong Zhi Yue's sheng, Yu Jia's pipa and Han Lei's guanzi took turns in wowing the audience and the quartet members themselves, with the longest and loudest applause reserved for Han's stunning acrobatics and long-held final note.

It was the non-standard time signatures and beats that made these numbers memorable: the invigorating 9/8 in Blue Rondo A La Turk and quirkingly off-centre 7/4 for Unsquare Dance.

It is not often that the audience at a Singapore Chinese Orchestra concert gets this worked up and vocal, but the intoxicating combination of jazz and Chinese instruments did the trick.

Two encores - Brubeck's Marian McPartland by the quartet unaccompanied and a reprise of the end of Blue Rondo - brought the evening's show to a rowdily memorable close.


This article was first published on August 18, 2014.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.