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WEN-BIN
composer, cellist,
arranger, string coach,
professional night owl,
rock bassist, professor,
walking encyclopedia,
master of parody.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009



Three days ago, I got scolded by my mum

Two days ago, I got scolded by my dad

Yesterday, I got scolded by my teacher.

I hate my life.

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Why do I have to go through so much pain and torture just to get my application in?

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And why am I the only one to go through it?

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The cello vs. composition debate has come up at least once a semester, but each time I have told Dr. the same thing: that I don't want to change. This time, however, he took matters into his own hands and said that I should go to VH for a reference since I'm changing major. When I told him I decided not to change major, he said he needed to think about giving me a reference.

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On hindsight, it is very true that my attitude has been bad this whole academic year, and I have let him down badly, and I understand why he doesn't want to teach me anymore. I have also made NAFA history by being the first student to be scolded for practising too much. However, it isn't true that I'm not interested in composition, else I wouldn't have applied in the first place. The truth is probably that I don't have the mental endurance to sit down and keep writing, writing, writing.

I don't want to have a large output which is mostly crap.

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In any case, this caused my application to be late (read: unsubmitted) because the aforementioned event was in end-April, and the exam was on 12 May, and I had no intention of repeating year 3 as Long Haired Dude's classmate. (Not that I don't like him or anything.) Thus, exams first.

It was only after the exams that I managed to find the time to have a good talk with most of the lecturers: Dr., EW, and VH. EW was ok with taking me for PS if I decided to take composition.

After that, I went to look for RA, who slotted me in for the interview anyway. During the interview, the lecturers were ok with me taking either, and supported my decision to take a year off to practise and then reaudition for cello if I so desired.

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Fast forward a few days. I talked to my mum about the possibility of taking a year off to audition for cello, and got scolded by her. I'm frankly quite disappointed in her. Call herself a piano teacher, yet she has the mentality of a non-musician. She just wanted me to get the degree over and done with as fast as possible.

Isn't this what Dr. termed as a 'typical Singaporean parent'?

I tried to explain to her that since I skipped first year, the year off would even it out, but she would have none of it.

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The next day, I talked to my dad about the issue, and got scolded by him. He was, if it was possible, even more unreasonable than mum, and gave an even longer lecture. He even raised his voice at me. Basically it boiled down to the same thing: get the degree over and done with as fast as possible.

He said, 'If you are going to fail fourth year, even if you take a year off, you will still fail!' Can't blame him though, since he's the only music idiot in the family.

I tried to explain to him that since I skipped first year, the year off would even it out, but he would have none of it.

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So, why did I skip first year, against Dr.'s wishes? T'was the wish of the 'typical Singaporean parents', it was... And now they just take the year 'earned' and refuse to concede any of it, even when I really need it.

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The next day, I went to school to look for RA. My final decision: to submit a double application for both composition and cello. Yes, to brave it all and smash my way to a cello degree in one year flat. Sounds exciting, huh?

Next big event of the day? Got scolded by Dr., when I asked him to refer me. It seems that he was unhappy with me using composition as a safety net.

But what can I do? Tis not my wish...

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Anyway, with a bit of difficulty, he agreed to write my reference.

My audition recital is on July 13, 2009.

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That night, I had a rather unusual turn of events which landed me in school at about 9pm to practise. As I practised, I felt myself fall into a deep, deep depression. I was really aware, then, of the insurmountability of the task at hand:

- One year of recital, crammed into one and a half months.
- Four years of Carl Flesch, crammed into half a year.
- Four years of orchestral excerpts, crammed into one year.

Not to mention, of course, etudes at the half-year mark and a 45-minute recital at the one-year mark.

What the hell have I gotten myself into???

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Fight, or quit? If I can do it, I will truly be Best Graduate.

I really, really hate my life.



The Prof :: 10:34 AM

Monday, May 25, 2009

...any fool...

I used to think any fool can play the piano. After all, it's as simple as pressing the keys, right? My girlfriend proved me wrong.

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I used to think any fool can sing. I did not join the choir, claiming it to be a waste of my talents (in cello). I'm right, of course, but definitely not because singing is for noobs, or anything like that.

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I used to think any fool can play percussion. An encounter with the triangle proved me wrong.

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I used to think any fool can play guitar. After all, some guys learn the guitar for no better reason than to woo girls, and how good are they, really? It wasn't until I joined Volker Hartung's Swing Orchestra that I realized that it wasn't as simple as all that. (I syncopate very well by the way.)

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Some people think any fool can play the bass. Real bassists know that a fool with a bass does not a bassist make.

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Some people think any fool can compose. After all, it's as simple as sitting down and writing, right? We know who are the true fools in the end.

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Moral of the story - don't be a fool, else you won't have a job.

The Prof :: 1:19 PM

Sunday, May 3, 2009

The Top Three Composers Who Wrote Crap Concertos

I've always been fascinated with the concerto. The concerto is to me the ultimate musical genre, as it blends elements of solo, chamber and full orchestra writing.

The greatest composer of the concerto is of course Mendelssohn, who was able to write idiomatically for not only the piano, but the violin as well. His most well-known work, the Violin Concerto op. 64, isn't his finest though, as it suffers from over-orchestration and balance problems. Instead, his two piano concertos are exciting to play and listen to, and are deservedly mainstays of the concerto repertoire.

Best Pick: Piano Concerto no. 1 in G minor, op 25

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And now for the top three composers who wrote the worst concertos:

#3: Schumann

Schumann's Piano Concerto is a favourite with audiences and performers today, but his Cello Concerto is one of the most unidiomatic cello concertos in the repertoire, and his Violin Concerto, written after he went mad, is so boring that it is out of the standard repertoire, and rightly so. Some violinists don't even know Schumann wrote a Violin Concerto. Incidentally, it was written around the same time as the Brahms Violin Concerto and dedicated to the same person, Joachim, who promoted the Brahms concerto and suppressed the Schumann. Shocking.

Best Pick: Piano Concerto in A minor op 54

#2: Tchaikovsky

Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto earns notoriety for the worst mishandling of a beautiful main theme in the history of music. The soaring first theme never reappears during the twenty or so minutes of the first movement, despite being the most memorable one. And whatever happened to his Second? Out of the repertoire, it seems, for being not exactly very well-written, or interesting, as near the end of the first movement there is a five-minute solo cadenza for the piano. Zzz. His Violin Concerto, though structurally sound and quite well-written, contains some truly awful solo writing, and has been described as 'the violin is no longer played, it is being beaten black and blue...'

Best Pick: Variations on a Rococo Theme op. 33

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#1: Mozart

Mozart was a musical genius who wrote masterpieces in every genre except the piano concerto. Vast majority of them have a nice orchestral opening and show great potential, but when the piano comes in, the momentum stops dead in its tracks and it suddenly becomes tedious.

There is a reason why Mozart piano concertos are frequently played, but no one ever plays them for major competitions (and wins). There is also a reason why no one stays awake during a Mozart piano concerto. Even the orchestra. Come to think of it, the soloist is probably the only one who can stay awake.

That being said, some of Mozart's instrumental concertos are hot stuff, but then again they are of mixed quality: his Oboe Concerto K. 314 was transcribed (by his own hand) into the Flute Concerto K. 314a to fulfil a commission, and he ended up not being paid for it because it was based off an existing work.

Best Pick: Violin Concerto no. 3 in G major, K. 216

The Prof :: 6:17 AM

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