Max Pavilion @ Singapore Expo
Last Saturday
Whoever put Hong Kong crooners Ronald Cheng and William So together certainly has a wry sense of humour.
After all, what links the two men is the stain of scandal. They were among the top male vocalists in the late 1990s but their careers were derailed by different instances of men behaving badly. Cheng went on a drunken rampage on a flight in February 2000 while So was busted for taking the drug Ecstasy in June 2002.
They are now firmly on board the comeback train and while their voices were a little rough around the edges, particularly at the beginning of the concert, they also showed that they could still belt it out and put on an entertaining show. After trading snatches of each other’s songs in a playful start, So, 42, took the stage first.
There is a light sprinkle of jazz in his songs and it suits his mellifluous voice.
His Mandarin numbers, though, tend towards the maudlin and the mawkish, such as Men Should Not Let Women Cry. Thankfully, there is less of that cloying quality in his Cantonese hits Don’t Want To Be Happy Alone and Feeling Sadder With Each Kiss.
So also proved to be a canny performer, endearing himself to the audience of 5,500 early on by walking off the stage and into their midst. He was quickly swallowed by a throng of ardent fans and, for brief spells, could neither be seen on stage nor on screen.
Before he launched into Old Love Is Still The Most Beautiful, he was careful to say it did not reflect his current state of mind. The divorced singer is dating someone in the fashion industry.
Unlike So, Cheng fared better in the Mandarin numbers, reflecting the fact that the 37-year-old had first found success in Taiwan.
His sensitively wrought hits Don’t Say! Love You and Don’t Love Me were warmly received and the crowd sang along at peak volume. While the Cantonese number Rascal is one of his signature songs, he pointed out that far fewer people sang along to it.
It was a good thing that both singers could deliver vocally as the bare staging and ho-hum lighting afforded little distraction. The piddly, half-hearted effects – brief flowering of flares and a slight shower of paper confetti – did not help either.
The two performers also took on songs by other singers during the two-hour concert. In a rousing finale, they fired things up with a couple of fast-paced Cantonese classics such as Anita Mui’s Dream Partner and Leslie Cheung’s Stand Up.
In the end, Cheng and So proved their pairing was not a joke but a viable combination.
(ST)