This release has been reviewed 
                  by Dan Morgan, and I am very happy to agree with him in his 
                  positive reception of this as a very fine disc indeed. The recording 
                  is stunning and the performances equally so.
                   
                  Music hits people in different ways at different times, and 
                  my first hearing of the opening movement of the Symphony 
                  No. 1 was that there was a very great deal of not very 
                  much happening for a very long time. This was rather an unfair 
                  audition through my car stereo, which has to battle against 
                  all kinds of other ambient noises even when standing still in 
                  a traffic jam, but even at home with all SACD channels going 
                  I struggle to find much connection with the music. It moves 
                  on nicely, builds in a post-Shostakovich way and throwing in 
                  many of his tricks of orchestration, but it doesn’t do much 
                  for me at all. The second movement is a single atmosphere, and 
                  a very beautiful one. A warm bed of dense sustained string chords 
                  support elegiac wind solos, an unsettling feeling of underlying 
                  darkness suggested by quiet percussion interjections, some of 
                  the bell effects in which are quite magical. The wind solos 
                  take over in a transition to more muscle-playing from the orchestra. 
                  This is all very grand and functions as a fine musical hair-dryer, 
                  but again, what purpose is served – where is the emotional heart 
                  which transports us into new worlds of discovery?
                   
                  I must be missing something here. Such finely crafted music 
                  played with such commitment and panache should stir something 
                  somewhere, but try as I might I find it hard to get worked up 
                  about the Symphony No. 1. The ‘loud bits’ are busy 
                  without being involving, the central movement of suspended repose 
                  remarkable, but for my palette it takes me not much further 
                  than so may pre-existing generic orchestral stereotypes.
                   
                  Hope springs eternal, and the moody opening of the Symphony 
                  No. 2 draws the listener into worlds where the imagination 
                  can take hold and create its own narratives and associations. 
                  Like the central movement of the first symphony, sustained strings 
                  are contrasted with more active wind parts, in this case engaging 
                  in Lutoslawski style dialogues – perhaps with a touch of the 
                  Charles Ives Unanswered Question but without that piece’s 
                  uncompromising sense of identity and character. There is a massive 
                  build-up to about 5:30, from under which the rug is pulled rather 
                  brutally. I would have preferred a more logical consequence 
                  – a heartrending cataclysm born from the materials laid out 
                  earlier. As it is, we find ourselves bumping around inside padded 
                  cell walls wondering if the composer will be able to find a 
                  way out. I don’t feel he does though, and we end up the movement 
                  playing with the corpses of dead insects on the floor.
                   
                  Oh dear, I’m not being very positive, and I don’t want to be 
                  mean and unsupportive. The trouble is, every time I come back 
                  to this music the word ‘clever’ hits me between the eyes, yes, 
                  like a cleaver. The reasons are not technical, as all of the 
                  important boxes are ticked: sense of craft and tradition, superb 
                  orchestration, clarity of idiom and style, bags of event, contrast, 
                  development, sense of shape and tension and climax and, and, 
                  and… I don’t demand big tunes and won’t criticise these pieces 
                  for not having them, and I am full of admiration for the aura 
                  of high quality pumping out of every aspect of this production. 
                  These symphonies are ‘good’ in every way, and all of my remarks 
                  should be taken as entirely subjective – what doesn’t float 
                  my boat may have yours surfing all the way to Nirvana. I think 
                  part of the problem may be that there are lots and lots and 
                  lots and lots of ideas, but frequently too many per minute to 
                  allow any one of them to make any kind of point, and too many 
                  questions about their point in the first place.
                   
                  These symphonies by no means offer the kind of complexity which 
                  you would associate with the late lamented Elliott Carter, and 
                  this music isn’t difficult in that way. Putting on my professorial 
                  hat and asking the tough questions I have to find reasons, so 
                  here’s my analysis. Take any one distinct musical idea – from 
                  all of the denser passages and most of the other ones as well, 
                  and examine it under a really big magnifying glass. What does 
                  it do – in and of itself? Would you be able to expand and make 
                  something marvellous from it? Then, if you took it away would 
                  it make a difference? Take any moment, go on… there – now see 
                  what I mean?
                   
                  Like numerous radio stations and a certain pop song, I just 
                  can’t find what I’m looking for, not here, sorry.
                   
                  Dominy Clements
                   
                
see also review by Dan 
                  Morgan (Recording of the Month)
                   
                  Chamber 
                  music review. There’s also a CD of Pohjola’s string quartets 
                  1-4 ALBA ABCD 334. 
                  
                
                   
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