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Written in Sand
Poul RUDERS (b.1949)
Variations for solo violin (1989) [9:51]
Hafliði HALLGRÍMSSON (b.1941)
Offerto (in Memoriam Karl Kvaran) for solo violin, op.13 (1991)
[20:03]
Poemi, for violin and strings, op.7 (1984) [19:07]
Esa-Pekka SALONEN (b.1958)
Lachen Verlernt, for solo violin (2002) [10:13]
Sølve Sigerland (violin)
Risør Festival Strings/Per Kristian Skalstad
rec. Uranienborg Church, Oslo, 28-29 June and 6 July 2008; Church
of the Holy Spirit, Risør, Norway, 26 June 2004 [Poemi]. DDD
SIMAX CLASSICS PSC1301 [59:14]
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This disc is essentially intended as a showcase for the undoubted
talent of Sølve Sigerland, perhaps better known as violinist
for the Grieg Trio since its foundation in 1987. His name appears
in lettering twice the size of that of the three featured composers
on the front and back covers. He also gets an attractive full-page
colour photo and full-page biography to the single paragraph
for composers, conductor and orchestra.
An equally valid way of considering it, however, is as forty
minutes of music by Iceland's most important composer, Hafliði
Hallgrímsson. This is supplemented with an all-too rare opportunity
to hear Esa-Pekka Salonen as composer rather than conductor,
and a highly approachable piece from the stylistically unpredictable
catalogue of Poul Ruders.
Ruders is now widely considered one of Denmark's leading living
composers - according to the booklet notes, his works are the
most frequently performed of any Danish composer, either in
Denmark or abroad. But this reputation owes little to his works
from the 1970s and 1980s, where he took stylistic pluralism
to often tasteless extremes of pastiche. Happily, by the time
Ruders composed Variations for solo violin, he had lost
interest in crude popular experimentalism, and the Variations
mark a turn to lyrically expressive music.
For those who know Salonen only as a conductor, Lachen Verlernt
may come as a very pleasant surprise. Salonen's first compositions
date back to the end of the 1970s. Although his corpus is fairly
small - hardly surprising, given his conducting commitments
- his works are highly original. Lachen Verlernt is no
exception. It is a lyrical, passionate, chaconne-like piece,
the title taken from a poem by Albert Guiraud; also set by Schoenberg
in his Pierrot Lunaire. The violinist is cast, in Salonen's
words, as "a serious clown trying to help the audience
to connect with emotions they have lost, or believe they have
lost." The work builds to a dramatic, frenetic neo-Vivaldian
climax.
Edinburgh-based Hallgrímsson was something of a late starter
as a composer. He was almost thirty by the time he published
his op.1 in 1970, and twelve years later he had still only reached
op.6! But in 1983 he took up composition full time, retiring
as principal cellist to the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, and
since then has been catching up, with the result that he now
has a considerable body of works under his belt, particularly
for strings, and especially for his own instrument. His first
work published as full-time composer was the Poemi op.7,
for solo violin and string orchestra. On a CD ostensibly devoted
to the solo violin, this orchestral work is perhaps a trifle
conspicuous. It is also the only work on the disc listed as
a live recording, presumably meaning recorded in one go before
an audience - though any audience present keeps very quiet.
There are a few extra-musical squeaks and shuffles, but these
serve to give the work an extra frisson.
Not that it needs extra frisson, particularly in the dark, dramatic
second and third movements, 'The Sacrifice of Isaac' and 'Jacob
in Combat with the Angel'. The first movement is entitled 'The
Dream of Jacob', another Biblical title, but all three actually
come from allegorical paintings by Marc Chagall. Poemi
is both a violin concerto and a dramatic representation of Chagall's
pictures. This is a powerful, virtuosic work - a modern masterpiece,
in fact - certainly spikily contemporary in sound, but still
fundamentally tonal and with plenty of melody, if not exactly
melodious.
Hallgrímsson's other work on this disc is the Offerto
for solo violin, an elegy in memory of his friend, the Icelandic
artist Karl Kvaran. The titles of the four sections are after
Kvaran's paintings, the first of which, 'Written in Sand' gives
the CD its title. In the three slower movements, the bow action
may be thought of as imitative of the artist's brush-strokes.
The third section, 'The Flight of Time', is a Paganinian frenzy
of almost outrageous virtuosity, in which Sigerland often seems
to be accompanying himself on a second violin. It’s another
work of substantial originality.
Sigerland himself does not play quite faultlessly from beginning
to end, but this is a very demanding programme for any performer.
He deserves plaudits for helping to bring this otherwise sadly
neglected music to the public's attention - his first solo disc
for Simax (PSC1229) showcased the music of radical Norwegian
composer Bjarne Brustad. Nonetheless, it is a shame that the
CD is relatively short. If there were no other suitable works
by these composers for Sigerland, there are plenty of other
Scandinavians, Finns especially, in desperate need of wider
audiences.
Still, for its 59 minutes, the booklet is neat, detailed, glossy;
the quality of sound is very good in general, though there is
occasional passing traffic and the odd electrical hum just audible.
The church acoustics are a little too resonant to be considered
ideal for solo violin - this is most noticeable in the quiet
opening to Offerto, in which the sound quality is less
pleasing generally.
In sum, most violin lovers interested in the more tonal end
of the late 20th century music spectrum should find this a very
satisfying acquisition.
Byzantion
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