RECORDING OF THE MONTH
Seppo POHJOLA (b. 1965)
Symphony No. 1 (2002) [30:51]
Symphony No. 2 (2006) [29:38]
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra/Sakari Oramo
rec. 30 August-1 September 2010 (No. 1), 14-15 April 2011 (No. 2), Kulttuuritalo,
Helsinki, Finland. A DSD recording; stereo and multi-channel 5.0. SACD
ALBA ABCD 339 [60:49]
Kalevi Aho’s endlessly fascinating œuvre has given me great
pleasure and spurred my interest in Finnish music. Einojuhani Rautavaara is
another find, albeit one in its early stages, and I’ve come to admire
the organ works of Oskar Merikanto and others of his ilk via Kalevi Kiviniemi’s
superb Fuga recordings. As far as ensembles go, the Lahti and Finnish Radio
orchestras and the YLE and Tapiola choirs are all first-class groups that need
no introduction. The Finns also have two top-notch recording companies - Fuga
and Alba - who produce the best SACDs in the business.
If the only Pohjola you know is the one in the Sibelius tone poem, then prepare
to add another to your list. Seppo, who comes from a most distinguished musical
family - his late father Erkki founded the Tapiola Choir, and the conductor
Sakari Oramo is his uncle - started musical life as a horn player, becoming
a freelance composer in 1995. Tragically he lost his older siblings, cellist
Matti and flautist Olli, to whom the first symphony is dedicated. He has since
composed two more, the second in 2006 and the third in 2011. Pohjola’s
also written a number of works in other genres; I notice Rob Barnett welcomed
an Alba disc of his chamber pieces back in 2004 (review).
In a musical landscape overshadowed by the towering, granitic presence of Sibelius
attempting one’s maiden symphony must be quite a challenge. Happily Pohjola
has come up with a work of remarkable freshness and vitality. Given the sad
context of this music - that long, muted introduction is surely a lament of
sorts - one might expect a more sombre piece. Instead, what we get is music
of sinew and spirit, lit by sudden flares of energy and spurred on by tight
and varied rhythms. The latter seem to combine the propulsive qualities of Shostakovich
- sans the hysterical edge - with the loose-limbed exhilaration of Bernstein
at his best.
Despite such broad comparisons - offered as a rough idea of character, nothing
more - this is writing of quality and purpose; it’s also very well played
and recorded. There are heartfelt moments of quietude that are simply gorgeous,
and in the first movement listeners will easily pick up on the Ode to Joy
quotation from Beethoven’s Ninth. I daresay there are other references,
but that doesn’t make this a faltering or derivative work. I particularly
admire Pohjola’s use of unusual colours and textures, and his deft handling
of those almost Ivesian cross-rhythms in the fourth movement; the latter are
thrillingly caught in this recording, which combines fine detail with spectacular
range and bite.
After all those high jinks - what a glorious and triumphant tribute this is
- the muted start to the Second Symphony might signal a change of mood. I was
struck first by the variety and confidence of Pohjola’s writing - that
growing, animated twitter over a grumbling bass - and second by the ravishing,
harp-led passages that follow. There’s also a glitter and clarity here
- hints of Ravel, perhaps - but it’s the sophisticated rhythms in the
second movement that really tweak one’s ear. As for the orchestra, they
play with a potent mix of gusto and precision; despite the atavistic thrills
on display - goodness, that tam-tam and bass deum - Oramo stops it all from
sliding into a bacchanalian frenzy.
There’s humour and a surprising lightness of touch as well; just sample
the laid-back, almost jaunty, tunes that perk up the second movement. Then the
music descends, almost imperceptibly, into the cinematic things-that-go-bump-in-the-night
weirdness of the third. It’s back to big and very bold in the fourth -
just listen to the delicious rasp of lower brass and that ferocious, Nielsen-like
fusillade on the timps at the very end. It’s high-octane stuff, best played
at high volume when the neighbours - and those of a nervous disposition - aren’t
in earshot.
These are extremely accomplished and engaging symphonies that, being broadly
tonal, will appeal to those who might otherwise feel intimidated by contemporary
orchestral pieces. Moreover there’s a Puckish glee in much of Pohjola’s
writing that really appeals to me; it’s certainly whetted my appetite
for his other works, some of which have the most intriguing titles. I daresay
Alba - buoyed by what I hope will be universally positive responses to this
disc - will give us more. Lots more.
Cracking pieces, superbly played; a demonstration disc too.
Dan Morgan
http://twitter.com/mahlerei
Cracking pieces, superbly played; a demonstration disc too.