Founder of Singapore Symphony Orchestra Choo Hoey dies at 90
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[SINGAPORE] The founder of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra (SSO), conductor Choo Hoey, died aged 90 on Aug 11.
His son, Dr Yen Choo – an associate professor at Nanyang Technological University’s Lee Kong Chian School Of Medicine – said the maestro died at his summer house in Greece with his wife Alexandra by his side. Dr Choo told The Straits Times: “It was a peaceful death due to old age.”
Recalling his father’s life, Dr Choo says: “I have wonderful memories of him – but of course he was very busy when we were children. I’ve always wondered why it was that he never steered us towards music. When I asked my mother, she said it was because he had spent so much time in his youth playing the violin that he felt he had squandered his childhood years and that he wanted us to live.”
Former co-leader of the SSO and Cultural Medallion recipient Lynnette Seah told ST she was saddened by the news: “He was strict but also kind towards me especially, appointing me as acting leader for a year and a half. He placed SSO on the classical world map.”
ST’s veteran classical music reviewer Dr Chang Tou Liang noted that Choo was responsible for the SSO’s wide repertoire: “He knew that not all programmes will be popular with audiences, but the orchestra needed them in order to grow.