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      Kalevi AHO (b. 1949) 
Quasi una fantasia for horn and organ (2011) [17:15] 
Epilogue for trombone and organ (1998) [4:26] 
Contrapunctus XIV from J. S. Bach’s ‘Die Kunst der Fuge’ (2011) [15:41] 
Häämarssi I (Wedding March I) (1973) [1:49] 
Häämarssi II (Wedding March II) (1976) [1:49] 
Hääsoitto (Wedding Music) (1999) [3:30] 
Ludus solemnis (1978) [6:04] 
In memoriam (1980) [5:13] 
Laulu maasta (Song of the Earth) for violin, oboe and organ (2002) [4:41] 
Petri Komulainen (horn); Jussi Vuorinen (trombone); Kaija Saarikettu (violin); Anna-Kaisa Pippuri (oboe); Jan Lehtola (organ) 
rec. May 2013, St Paul’s Church, Helsinki, Finland (Quasi una fantasia, Epilogue, Laulu maasta); May 2013, Kotka Church, Finland (Contrapunctus XIV); October 2010, St Johannes kyrka, Malmö, Sweden (Häämarssi I & II, Hääsoitto, Ludus solemnis, In memoriam) 
Reviewed as 24/96 download 
Pdf booklet and cover art included 
        BIS BIS-SACD-1966 [62:08] 
         
          It’s good to see that BIS are staying with the Aho project. 
            This new release comes just a few months after their recording of 
            the Fifteenth Symphony, Double-Bass Concerto and Minea (review) 
            and, in 2012, the Three Interludes and Symphony for Organ (review). 
            The latter featured Jan Lehtola, one of Finland’s finest – 
            and most versatile – organists. I’ve reviewed his SACDs 
            of Mendelssohn 
            sonatas and Symphonies 3 and 8 by Widor, 
            both of which impressed me greatly; indeed, the latter was one of 
            my Recordings of the Year for 2013. This time Lehtola is teamed up 
            with some equally fine soloists in a programme that mixes the old 
            and the new, not to mention the sounds of three superb organs. 
              
            The first of these is the main organ of St Paul’s Church in 
            Helsinki, which creates a darkly thrilling backdrop to Petri Komulainen’s 
            virtuosic horn solo in the Quasi una fantasia. Written for 
            these two performers, who premiered it in 2012, the piece contrasts 
            the organ’s warm wash of colour with the horn’s bracing 
            tones. The element of fantasy is there, and Komulainen’s lyrical, 
            finely shaded performance – which embraces quarter-tone scales 
            – is at once shimmering strange and reassuringly familiar. This 
            work is a prime example of Aho’s clear, unfussy style; the music’s 
            also devoid of clichés, which is another of this composer’s 
            core strengths. 
              
            At about the same time Aho completed Contrapunctus XIV, the 
            unfinished fugue from J S Bach’s mighty masterpiece, Die 
            Kunst der Fuge. Appropriately Lehtola plays this ‘modern’ 
            realisation on the 1998 Porthan organ of Kotka Church, Finland. It’s 
            a weighty, almost forbidding piece whose sheer density rather than 
            its detail is emphasised by this splendid recording. Contrapunctus 
            XIV has more than a whiff of the pedagogue about it, but I suspect 
            Bach fanciers will find much to enjoy here; that said, I prefer Aho 
            when he’s not confined by such formal strictures. 
              
            Epilogue and Song of the Earth, for organ and instrumentalists, 
            find him in a much more inventive and engaging frame of mind. Epilogue, 
            which followed his Ninth 
            Symphony – also scored for trombone and organ – has 
            all the warmth and spontaneity I expect from this composer at his 
            best. Balancing such forces must be tough, yet the sound of Jussi 
            Vuorinen’s mellifluous, full-toned trombone segues beautifully 
            with Lehtola’s subtle accompaniment. Aho wrote his Song 
            of the Earth, with its nod towards Mahler, for the funeral 
            of his father in 2002. It’s a wistful eulogy whose gently ascending 
            figures - the violin's especially - speak so movingly of mortal release. 
            Once again I was sorely amazed by the simple, direct nature of Aho’s 
            writing, which communicates with such ease and lack of artifice. 
              
            Respectively Ludus solemnis and In memoriam are 
            the most outward and interior works here. The first, written for the 
            inauguration of the new organ in Forssa Church, has some strangely 
            elliptical moments - as if the composer had walked through the looking 
            glass - only to build to a firm but stirring finale. As for In 
            memoriam, penned for the funeral of author Juha Mannerkorpi, 
            it surprises with its sinew and shape. The organ’s Stygian reaches 
            – what quiet desolation – are keenly felt; indeed, the 
            1907/2008 Åkerman & Lund instrument of St Johannes kyrka, 
            Malmö, is a splendid choice for this dark, grief-weighted work. 
              
            After all that focus on last things the wedding music celebrates new 
            beginnings; all three have a certain gravitas that’s more about 
            the sanctity of these occasions than their bright trappings. As always 
            Aho is plain-spoken, and Lehtola follows suit with straight, no-nonsense 
            performances of these slight but very endearing miniatures. The recordings 
            in all three venues are very good indeed, although they’re not 
            up to the enviable standards of Mika Koivusalo’s class-leading 
            discs for Alba and Fuga. In keeping with the spirit of this enterprise 
            the composer’s liner-notes strike a good balance between biographical 
            snippets and musical detail. 
              
            Small but beautifully turned; Aho’s Song of the Earth 
            is a real find. 
              
            Dan Morgan 
            http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
 
       
        
 
   
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