In his exhaustive liner-notes Oskar Ekberg touches upon several 
                  aspects of Roman’s keyboard suites. Are they keyboard 
                  compositions or not? When were they written? Are they suites 
                  or sonatas? Should they be played on a modern piano? What about 
                  repeats, tempi and other expression marks - in manuscript 14 
                  of the 53 movements have no tempo indications at all. To go 
                  into all these details in this review would, I believe, be of 
                  little interest, unless one wants to buy the discs and then 
                  one gets the full comments anyway. What I want to do is to convey 
                  some impressions from my listening. 
                    
                  Roman is known as ‘the father of Swedish music’ 
                  and even though there had been some fairly important composers 
                  in Sweden before his time they were all foreigners, mostly from 
                  German-speaking countries. Roman was born in Stockholm as son 
                  of a member of the Royal Orchestra. He learnt to play the violin 
                  very early, became a member of the orchestra when he was 17 
                  and at the age of 22 was granted a scholarship to study in London, 
                  where he played in the King’s Theatre Orchestra under 
                  Handel. When he returned to Sweden he was the first to arrange 
                  public concerts. First and foremost he was a composer and though 
                  every music-lover in Sweden knows his Drottningholm Music 
                  he wrote so much else that gradually has been unearthed. Scholars 
                  still don’t have a full overview of his total oeuvre. 
                  
                    
                  The keyboard suites have not been possible to date accurately 
                  but they must be from the later part of his life. Probably written 
                  for his own pleasure he had no obligation to adjust them to 
                  current taste, which he had to do when he had commissions. Technically 
                  these suites are no virtuoso pieces - Roman was primarily a 
                  violinist - and most of the movements are fairly brief. They 
                  are both rhythmically thrilling and melodically attractive. 
                  The opening Allegro of the first suite is nicely syncopated 
                  and is followed by a meditative Adagio, while the concluding 
                  Vivace is elegant. Among my notes I find comments like: 
                  ‘The presto finale [of suite II] should win many a cheer 
                  at a live performance’; ‘Wholly delightful!’ 
                  [Suite III]; ‘The Andante [suite VI] is a relaxed 
                  promenade through an autumnal landscape with water dripping 
                  from wet leaves’ and ‘The vivace finale is 
                  ‘a rollicking, rushing calf, tail in the air’. 
                    
                  Suite V in G Minor is possibly the bravest. The short vivace 
                  sounds to be from a much later period, and it is followed by 
                  a lento that is decidedly romantic in its melody. The 
                  concluding andante, on the other hand, is as noble as 
                  anything from Das wohltemperierte Klavier. 
                    
                  The longest of the twelve suites is the fourth with seven movements. 
                  It opens with a meditative Lento, followed by an explosive 
                  Carillon. This is a real showpiece! A calm and beautiful 
                  adagio cools down the temperature before the fourth movement 
                  - with no tempo marking - enlivens the atmosphere in what the 
                  next generation might have labelled a scherzo. An allegretto 
                  and an energetic presto take us to the beautiful and 
                  rather melancholy Villanella, with a short recurring 
                  phrase reminiscent of Don’t Cry for me, Argentina. 
                  
                    
                  I could go on with similar comments on all the remaining suites 
                  but it’s fully enough to summarize my listening experience 
                  in three words: ‘full of surprises’. I wonder though 
                  what they would have sounded like when played on a harpsichord. 
                  A couple of decades ago pianos were almost banned in baroque 
                  repertoire, but today we tend to be much more liberal. I often 
                  prefer Bach on a concert grand. Played with such lightness of 
                  touch as Oskar Ekberg plays them on a Steinway D, these twelve 
                  suites become luminous little gems. The recording is spotless. 
                  
                    
                  Göran Forsling  
                Track listing
                  CD 1 [74:42] 
                  Suite I in E flat Major, BeRI 225 
                  1. Allegro [3:11] 
                  2. Adagio [0:55] 
                  3. Non tanto [0:46] 
                  4. Vivace [3:26] 
                  Suite II in D Major, BeRI 226 
                  5. * [3:35] 
                  6. Lento non troppo [1:44] 
                  7. Allegro moderato [4:00] 
                  8. Non troppo allegro [2:09] 
                  9. Presto [0:53] 
                  Suite III in G Major, BeRI 227 
                  10. Largo [4:30] 
                  11. * [2:31] 
                  12. Allegretto [1:14] 
                  13. Allegro assai [1:51] 
                  14. Menuet [2:18] 
                  Suite IV in D Major, BeRI 228 
                  15. Lento [2:57] 
                  16. Carillon Allegro [3:23] 
                  17. Non troppo adagio [2:45] 
                  18. * [1:52] 
                  19. Allegretto [1:17] 
                  20. Presto [1:10] 
                  21. Villanella [3:27] 
                  Suite V in G minor, BeRI 229 
                  22. Con spirito [1:58] 
                  23. * [2:46] 
                  24. Lento [2:40] 
                  25. Vivace [0:41] 
                  26. Lento [2:15] 
                  27. Andante [3:48] 
                  Suite VI in B flat Major, BeRI 230 
                  28. * [3:30] 
                  29. Andante [3:20] 
                  30. Vivace [1:27] 
                  
                  CD 2 [54:06] 
                  Suite VII in F Major, BeRI 231 
                  1. Moderato [3:22] 
                  2. Vivace [1:25] 
                  3. Allegro [2:31] 
                  Suite VIII in A Major, BeRI 232 
                  4. Commodo [3:57] 
                  5. Lento [3:19] 
                  6. Vivace [2:03] 
                  7. Scozzese Vivace [0:16] 
                  Suite IX in D Minor, BeRI 233 
                  8. * [2:34] 
                  9. Adagio [1:47] 
                  10. * [2:35] 
                  11. Lento [1:45] 
                  Suite X in B Minor, BeRI 234 
                  12. Adagio [3:30] 
                  13. Come Alla breve [2:56] 
                  14. * [0:47] 
                  15. * [2:01] 
                  16. Tempo di Minuetto [2:31] 
                  Suite XI in F Minor, BeRI 235 
                  17. * [1:19] 
                  18. * [2:58] 
                  19. Lento poco [1:55] 
                  20. * [2:26] 
                  Suite XII in E Minor, BeRI 236 
                  21. Allegro [2:50] 
                  22. * [1:31] 
                  23. * [3:19] 
                  * No tempo marking