The present CD is the first of a projected series of Kurt Atterberg’s 
            orchestral works from Chandos. All this music is new to me, in spite 
            of there being at least two other versions of the symphonies currently 
            available. My first impressions are of largely attractive music that 
            is enjoyable but not necessarily challenging. 
              
            In spite of not having heard the work I do know the famous (infamous) 
            story of the Sixth Symphony, ‘popularly’ know as the 
Dollar 
            Symphony. This work won a competition organised in 1928 by the 
            Columbia Phonograph Company. It was to celebrate the centenary of 
            Schubert’s death. The composer ‘trousered’ the (then) 
            massive sum of $10,000 (£2000). The symphony was first heard 
            at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester, with the Hallé Orchestra 
            and their conductor Sir Hamilton Harty. Percy Young has recalled a 
            review in the 
Musical Times ‘… many Manchester 
            folk, left the Free Trade Hall … saddened by the thought that 
            there had been six hundred symphonies entered for this contest, and 
            that Atterberg’s had been deemed the best.’ To make matters 
            worse, the composer later claimed that his entry was a joke and even 
            produced a pamphlet describing ‘How I fooled the World’. 
            Lewis Foreman in an extensive review of the CPO edition of this symphony 
            has noted that after the premiere this work was subject to ‘open 
            season’ for the tracing of influences. According to Foreman, 
            Strauss, Dvořák, Elgar, Brahms, Vaughan Williams, Holst, 
            Stravinsky, Tchaikovsky, Granados, César Franck, Chopin, Delius 
            and Grieg were all contenders in the attempt to say what the 
Dollar 
            Symphony sounded like. 
              
            I have two thoughts. The first is that the nature of the competition 
            was to write a piece of music that was tuneful: the idea was to find 
            out if melody could still be applied to a large-scale symphonic work. 
            So it is hardly surprising that Atterberg chose to use ‘traditional’ 
            forms, harmonies and tunes. This nod to the past was bound to throw 
            up allusions galore to earlier masters. The result is a work that 
            is ‘bright, entertaining, pleasant, jovial and energetic’. 
            Do not be misled into thinking that Atterberg was somehow writing 
            pastiche. He uses his materials, whether begged, stolen or borrowed 
            with great creativity and aplomb. 
              
            The second consideration is that I do not for one minute believe that 
            this is a great symphony, however I do think that it is a very good 
            one. The reason for my confidence in this work is that for all the 
            composer’s bluff, it is well constructed and internally consistent. 
            It deserves its place in the repertoire. 
              
            The Suite No.3 derives from incidental music written for the play 
            
Soeur Béatrice by Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949) in 
            1918. It is a plot that would hardly pass muster in today’s 
            world and would be regarded as banal. It was originally scored for 
            the rare combination of violin, viola and harmonium. Fortunately, 
            in 1921 Atterberg decided that the music was worth preserving and 
            re-scored it for string orchestra with violin and viola solo. There 
            are three movements - a ‘Prelude’, a ‘Pantomim moderato’ 
            and a concluding ‘Vision’. The programme notes are correct 
            in regarding this as ‘a small masterpiece’. In fact, it 
            became one of the composer’s most performed works and this is 
            reflected in the fact there are five recordings of this work currently 
            available. The music is beautiful and certainly does not suffer from 
            the same sentimentality that the play would appear to have had. It 
            is a delightful discovery and I hope that it gets the popularity it 
            deserves on Classic FM and elsewhere. 
              
            I was taken by 
En värmlandsrapsodi (A Värmland Rhapsody): 
            this is an attractive, if a little meandering, meditation on some 
            Swedish folk-songs. The work was composed in 1933 in a very short 
            space of time as a celebration of the 75
th birthday of 
            the Swedish novelist and winner of the Nobel Prize in literature in 
            1909, Selma Lagërlof (1858 - 1940) who was living in Värmland 
            at that time. It is gentle, reflective and introspective. In fact 
            I would suggest that it is almost melancholic: certainly there is 
            a profound sense of loneliness in this music. I enjoyed Atterberg’s 
            sensitive scoring which was well-reflected in the performance. 
              
            The Symphony No.4 also has a strange history. It resulted from an 
            informal contest with the Swedish composer Natanael Berg (1879 - 1957). 
            The basis of this competition was to compose a short piece lasting 
            no more than 20 minutes and containing a solo part for bass tuba. 
            Atterberg produced his Sinfonia piccolo - and Berg’s was his 
            
Pezzo sinfonico. The thematic basis of this work derives from 
            Swedish folk-tunes that are often in the minor mode. Atterberg did 
            not use the tunes in their original form but varied, modified and 
            transformed them to his own whim. There are four well-balanced movements. 
            The first is boisterous, the slow movement is reflective, and the 
            brief scherzo is almost Mendelssohnian in its touch. The final ‘rondo’ 
            reminds me for some reason of the last movement of York Bowen’s 
            Second Symphony. However, the overarching influence in this work appears 
            to be Sibelius and Dvořák. 
              
            The liner-notes are excellent, although there is room for a little 
            more analysis and description of the music and certainly a more fulsome 
            biography would be helpful to those who are new to Atterberg. The 
            Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under Neeme Järvi seems to give 
            a perfect account of these works. I do not know these pieces in any 
            other versions, but the performance here is ravishing and totally 
            persuasive. The two soloists make a major contribution to the Suite 
            No.3. 
              
            Kurt Atterberg’s music is something of a revelation. I was reminded 
            - and this may seem strange - of Percy Whitlock’s masterpiece, 
            the Organ Symphony. Then I recalled why. In a review of this work, 
            Rob Barnett reflected that the first movement has been shown to have 
            the ‘plunging romanticism of Louis Glass’s Fifth, Atterberg's 
            Sixth, Madetoja's Second and Peterson-Berger’s 
Journey to 
            the South. Certainly Atterberg has a depth of romanticism that 
            is striking. The composer himself stated that he was influenced by 
            Max Reger, the Russian composers and Johannes Brahms. Added to this 
            was his interest in Swedish folk-tunes. All this leads to an attractive 
            mix that is always well-wrought, sometimes downright moving and always 
            interesting. The only ‘negative’ is that the music lack 
            challenge. However, not all composers are made to break the mould. 
            In Atterberg’s case he seems to have perfected an older design. 
            
              
          
John France   
          see also review by Ian 
            Lace (March 2013 Recording of the Month)