The TENG Company

The TENG Company is a Singaporean non-profit arts company centred around a Chinese chamber music ensemble, The TENG Ensemble. Established in 2004,[1] it became a charity in 2015 and an Institution of a Public Character in 2017.[2] It currently comprises three divisions: performances, music education, and research. In his 2015 National Day Rally speech, Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong mentioned that TENG performers "inject new elements into traditional culture, and created something uniquely Singapore".[3]

The TENG Ensemble
Chinese chamber music ensemble
Native name鼟乐团
Founded2004 (2004)
LocationSingapore
Websitethetengcompany.com

History

The TENG Company traces its roots to 2004, when the TENG Chinese Chamber Ensemble participated in that year's National Chinese Music Competition, a biennial music competition organised by the National Arts Council. Following the competition, in which the ensemble emerged first in the Ensemble Category,[4] several of its members including Dr Samuel Wong and Yang Ji Wei founded the TENG Company.

After the competition, a few of The TENG Ensemble's members formed The TENG Company to create and develop projects pertaining to Chinese music. In 2005, it took over the Anglo-Chinese School (Barker Road) Chinese Orchestra, and led it from bronze to gold at that year's Singapore Youth Festival Central Judging.[5] It also advanced the Catholic High School (Primary) Chinese Orchestra from silver to gold with honours between 2010 and 2012.[5] It continues to coach the Chinese orchestras of Raffles Institution, Catholic High School (Primary) and Elias Park Primary School, which attained distinctions at the 2016 and 2017 Singapore Youth Festival Arts Presentations.[6][7]

Additionally, The TENG Company's premiere project was to commission the book QI: An Instrumental Guide to the Chinese Orchestra, authored by artistic director Dr Samuel Wong, in 2005.

In 2009, The TENG Company staged a tour titled ‘Liu Xing’ (or ‘Popular’) which featured a series of classical Chinese pieces juxtaposed with contemporised Chinese folk songs. In the same year, it was invited to perform at the National Museum of Singapore's Night Festival. As an attempt to create a performance that would resonate better with the younger generation, TENG incorporated electronics in their pieces. Their effort proved to be successful as evident in the great reception from the audience.[8]

Since 2015, the company has been registered as a charity.[2] In the same year, the company received the patronage of Temasek Holdings[9] and the National Arts Council's seed grant.[10]

Structure

The TENG Company currently comprises three divisions: performances, music education and research.

Performances

The TENG Company has two ensembles: the TENG Ensemble, its central ensemble, as well as the QI Ensemble.

The TENG Ensemble

The TENG Ensemble was formed in 2009. It currently comprises eight members: cello, countertenor, keyboards, erhu, guitar, guzheng, pipa and sheng.

In 2009, the TENG Company began providing chamber music performances through its TENG Ensemble.[11] The ensemble then had six members who play a mix of Chinese and Western instruments, including the pipa, sheng, guitar and cello.[12] The ensemble debuted at the 2009 Singapore Night Festival.[13] Since then, it has also performed at the 2010 Youth Olympic Games,[14] the 2010 Shanghai World Expo,[14] the 2016 Star Awards,[15] the 2017 Singapore Heritage Festival[16] and the President's Star Charity 2017.[17]

Its music draws upon a myriad of music genres, ranging from Singaporean folk songs such as "Chan Mali Chan" and "Munnaeru Vaalibaa",[18] to Western popular influences such as the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and Frozen themes.[19] From 2016, the TENG Ensemble released a series of "Evolution" music videos,[20] drawing on Chinese historical drama[21] and Disney themes,[22] and Adele[23] and Teresa Teng's songs.[24]

The ensemble has released two albums, Eight (2013) and Stories from an Island City (2016). Both were rated 4.5 out of 5 stars by The Straits Times, which described the former as "high class easy listening which does not dumb down"[25] and the latter, "a very enjoyable exercise in nostalgia".[26]

The ensemble's debut concert in 2010 was described as "a laudable addition to [the Western and Chinese musical] crossover phenomenon".[27]

The QI Ensemble

Also in 2013, the TENG Company founded The QI Ensemble, a quartet comprising a mix of Chinese and Western instruments including the pipa, dizi, keyboard and guitar.[28]

In 2016, the QI Ensemble produced a music video, A Tribute to SG Mandopop, a medley of local hits including Mavis Hee's "Iron Window", Kit Chan's "Heartache", Stefanie Sun's "Begin to Understand", Tanya Chua's "Beautiful Love" and JJ Lin's "Cao Cao".[29] It has also performed at the Huayi – Chinese Festival of Arts and Resorts World Sentosa's Chinese New Year festivities.[28]

Education

The TENG Company's education efforts are housed under the TENG Academy, which provides training, resources and exchanges.[30]

The TENG Academy provides training through administering Chinese music instrumental grading examinations and facilitating the Mapletree-TENG Academy Scholarship. The Chinese music instrumental grading examinations, validated by Nanyang Technological University's Confucius Institute, offers Grades 1 to 8 and a Certificate in Professional Performance.[31] Additionally, in 2018, The TENG Academy and Mapletree Investments launched a scholarship programme, which provides youth with financial assistance for a Chinese music education.

The TENG Academy also provides English-language resources for Chinese music learning. It commissioned textbooks from Singapore musicians, on Chinese and Western instruments in English, to bridge the gap for non-Mandarin speaking learners of Chinese instruments.

The TENG Academy facilitates exchanges between musicians and/or other communities. TENG Gives Back is a series of performances for underserved communities. Under the TENG Mentorship & Volunteer Programme, amateur musicians perform for the community. In the After-School Talent Development Programme, musicians teach students in specialised schools such as Spectra Secondary School.

Research

In 2005, the TENG Company published QI: An Instrumental Guide to the Chinese Orchestra, authored by Samuel Wong, to create an English language resource for Chinese instrumental music. In 2007, it reprinted the book to serve an international readership. It remains a reference book for the Singapore-Cambridge GCE A-level H2 Music syllabus.[32]

In 2014, the TENG Company debuted the electro-acoustic pipa, which it had invented.[33]

Etymology

The Chinese character tēng is an ancient word for the sound made by a drum.[34] It is the most complex character in the modern Chinese dictionary.[35]

Members

Board of directors

Elaine Teo Chairman
Dr Daniel Seah Treasurer
Gerald Teo
Dr Lee Kwok Cheong
Rachel Teo
Dr Samuel Wong
Tham Chee Soon
Wong Su-Yen
Yang Ji Wei

The TENG Ensemble

Dr Samuel Wong Pipa
Yang Ji Wei Sheng
Gerald Teo Cello
Phua Ee Kia Countertenor
Joel Chua Keyboardist
Darrel Xin Erhu
Johnny Chia Guzheng

Accolades

The TENG Chinese Chamber Ensemble, whose several members founded the TENG Company, won first place in the ensemble section of the National Arts Council's 2004 National Chinese Music Competition.[4]

The Straits Times named the TENG Ensemble as a group "breathing new life into music played with traditional instruments",[12] and Lianhe Zaobao described that the ensemble's music "stirs the heart of the listener, making them yearn for more".[36] Hong Kong's Apple Daily has called the ensemble "a formidable Singaporean group",[37] while Malaysia's Oriental Daily News reported that the ensemble's performance "stunned the audience".[38]

The TENG Ensemble was mentioned by Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his 2015 National Day Rally speech, who remarked in Mandarin that its performers "inject new elements into traditional culture, and created something uniquely Singapore".[3] Lee has also described the ensemble's music video as "beautiful"[39] and its performance as "delightful".[40]

Discography

The TENG Ensemble

  • Eight (2013)
  • Stories from an Island City (2016)

Publications

  • Wong, Samuel (2003), Impressions of a pipa player: profiles of the world's most premier. Ngee Ann Polytechnic and Beaumont Publications. ISBN 9789810484644
  • Wong, Samuel (2005), 器 QI: An Instrumental Guide to the Chinese Orchestra. TENG. ISBN 981-05-4012-4

References

  1. "Profile: The Teng Ensemble". The A List Singapore. 2 August 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  2. "Organisation Profile". Charity Portal. Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth.
  3. "National Day Rally Speech 2015 (Chinese)". Prime Minister's Office Singapore. Prime Minister's Office. 23 August 2015.
  4. "Winners of 2004 National Chinese Music Competition". NAC. National Arts Council. 15 December 2004.
  5. Wee, Lea (13 March 2016). "Coach, help us get gold". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  6. "Singapore Youth Festival 2017 Arts Presentation for Chinese Orchestra (Full Orchestra) (Junior College/Centralised Institute Level) Results" (PDF). Singapore Youth Festival. Ministry of Education. 2017.
  7. "Singapore Youth Festival 2016 Arts Presentation for Chinese Orchestra (Full Orchestra and Mixed Ensemble Category) (Primary School Level) Results" (PDF). Singapore Youth Festival. Ministry of Education. 2016.
  8. "Bloom School of Music and Arts: Exclusive Interview with Dr Samuel from The Teng Ensemble". www.bloom.com.sg. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  9. Ang, Vivien (22 May 2017). "Giving to the community through the arts". The Business Times. Singapore.
  10. "FY2017 Seed Grant Recipients". NAC. National Arts Council.
  11. "Group 'created something uniquely S'pore'". The Straits Times. Singapore. 24 August 2015.
  12. Nabilah Said (4 July 2017). "Contemporary ethnic music groups woo young audiences". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  13. Yuen, Sin (13 September 2013). "Chinese tunes mixed with Japanese anime music, electronica". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  14. Yap, Sarah (12 August 2016). "Q&A: The TENG Ensemble talks heritage and concerts". Lifestyle Asia. Singapore.
  15. Star Awards 2016 Part 1 红星大奖2016 颁奖典礼 上半场 – EP6. Toggle.sg. Mediacorp. 17 April 2016.
  16. "Explore the Unexplored at the Singapore Heritage Festival 2017". Nookmag. Singapore. 28 April 2017.
  17. "Public can get more involved in President's Star Charity 2017". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  18. Wen, J D. "The TENG Ensemble". Weekend Notes.
  19. Tan, Jeanette (6 March 2017). "S'porean band TENG Ensemble does awesome medley of 12 Disney songs". Mothership.sg. Singapore.
  20. "Q&A: The TENG Ensemble talks heritage and concerts – Lifestyle Asia Singapore". Lifestyle Asia. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
  21. The TENG Ensemble (31 January 2016), 古裝時代 Evolution of the Chinese Period Theme Song
  22. The TENG Ensemble (13 May 2017), Evolution of Disney Princesses (East-West Instrumental Cover)
  23. The TENG Ensemble (17 July 2016), The Evolution of Adele: 2007 – 2015 (East-West Instrumental Cover)
  24. The TENG Ensemble (4 December 2017), 流芳百世 鄧麗君 The Evolution of Teresa Teng: 1968–2015
  25. Chang, Tou Liang (6 February 2014). "Eight: The Teng Ensemble". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  26. Chang, Tou Liang (2 November 2016). "Stories from an Island City: The Teng Ensemble". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  27. Chang, Tou Liang (9 March 2010). "Teng Ensemble in Concert". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  28. "QI Ensemble pays tribute to Singapore's Mandopop in a musical medley". Nookmag. Singapore. 25 August 2016.
  29. The QI Ensemble (8 August 2016), A Tribute to SG Mandopop 新加坡串烧中文歌曲, retrieved 7 March 2018
  30. ""The TENG Academy"". "The TENG Academy". "The TENG Company".
  31. "Chinese Instrumental Grading Examinations". ci.ntu.edu.sg. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
  32. "9753 Music H2 Level for 2017" (PDF). SEAB. Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board. 2015.
  33. Lin, Albert (24 August 2014). "Concert Review: The Pipa Quartet's confused concert". The Straits Times. Singapore.
  34. 鼟的解释 [Definition of tēng]. zdic.net (in Chinese). 2015.
  35. Lovett, Lyra (6 August 2011). "Unconventional Pipa and English resources". Pipa-club Blog.
  36. Zhou, Yanbing (周雁冰) (1 March 2012). 玩酷华族乐器 (PDF). Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese). Singapore.
  37. 臧諾 (1 July 2016). 【好去處】新加坡樂團獻技 電子+搖滾唱傳統民歌. Apple Daily (in Chinese). Hong Kong.
  38. 刘思敏 (14 November 2016). 出路虽多,只选所要 黄圣苗音缘命定. Oriental Daily News (in Chinese).
  39. Lee, Hsien Loong. (4 December 2015). Did you know that the popular folk song ‘The Little White Boat’ (小白船) actually originated from Korea? [Facebook post]. Retrieved from https://www.facebook.com/leehsienloong/posts/1009670149095691.
  40. Lee, Hsien Loong. (28 November 2013). Was treated to delightful music at yesterday's Business China Awards by Chinese instrumentalists from the TENG Ensemble. [Instagram post]. Retrieved from https://www.instagram.com/p/hPhPIXGJ87/.
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