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Kaija SAARIAHO (b. 1952)
Clarinet Concerto “D’OM LE VRAI SENS” (2010) [31:01]
Laterna Magica (2008) [23:40]
Leino Songs (2007) [12:24]
Kari Kriikku (clarinet); Anu Komsi (soprano)
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra/Sakari Oramo
rec. 7 January 2010, Sello Hall, Espoo (Leino Songs); 31 May-1 June 2010, Finlandia Hall, Helsinki (Laterna Magica); 18-20 April 2010, Kulttuuritalo, Helsinki (Clarinet Concerto)
ONDINE ODE 1173-2 [67:28]
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Susanna Välimäki’s booklet notes sum up the music
of Kaija Saariaho remarkably succinctly: “Saariaho may be regarded
as a philosophical composer of mysteries … her music seems to
suggest an invisible yet tangible ‘other world’ that can be
sensed in the translucent sonorities, echoes, overtones, harmonics,
shadow tones and reflections of her music ... [It] conjures
up a sense of infinite space and multimodality.” The colours
of the orchestration in a work like the Clarinet Concerto
are almost as elusive as the tonalities and harmonic language
used, but at the same time the ear is granted access into a
world which is infinitely fascinating - subsumed at times with
an icy northern chill, but also irrigated by the magnetic shifting
patterns of an aurora borealis.
As the subtitle suggests, the Clarinet Concerto “D’OM LE
VRAI SENS” refers to the human senses, each inspired by
the panels of a medieval tapestry called The Lady and the
Unicorn. These physical aspects are suggested with instrumental
symbolism and meditations rather than literal descriptive elements
easily divined by an audience, but the atmosphere of mystic
other-worldliness brings us into a state of wonder which can
perhaps be interpreted as comparable with that of the medieval
lay person confronted by inexplicable worlds beyond experience,
expressed by an almost equally inexplicable miracle of craftsmanship
in the tapestries. Kari Kriikku’s remarkable clarinet playing
is a real treat in this work, sometimes imitating animal sounds,
at times sounding like declamatory speech, and always filled
with drama and intensity which equals that conjured by the entire
orchestra.
Laterna Magica is titled after the memoirs of film director
Ingmar Bergman, and refers to the earliest of image projectors,
the magic lantern. This transfers into music in a series of
‘mirages in sound‘, creating spaces into which the imagination
can project its own images. This again is more than a merely
literal conjuring and teasing of our pictorial senses, and the
mystic symbolism of passing time and the universal questions
of existence are powerful elements in the score. Machine-like
noises and quasi-spoken whisperings express the intangibility
of images which seem real, and challenge perceptions of permanency
and reality.
The Leino Songs use poems by Eino Leino, considered one
of the most important of all Finnish poets. Reading the texts
in the booklet, and it is immediately apparent as to why these
texts would appeal to Saariaho, as their themes and content
can easily be interpreted as expressing the very essence of
her compositions. Beautifully sung by Anu Komsi, each song is
compact, the words used directly and without distortion of the
original poem. Each song creates its own world, reflecting the
themes of love and violence, fragrant serenity and death.
This is a superbly produced recording from the Ondine label,
which has been championing Saariaho’s music for some time now.
Justly celebrated as one of the leading composers of our time,
this varied and deeply fascinating programme is as good a place
as any to become acquainted with her remarkable universe of
expressive sonority and mystical depth. This isn’t Bach or Beethoven
of course, but neither is it work which will turn you off with
impenetrable intellectual challenges. The deeper you look the
more you can reveal, but what you find is more often one or
other revelation about yourself as much as an understanding
of music which is of its very nature a kind of tuning fork held
up to the harmonies and dissonances of existence.
Dominy Clements
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