Thomas Sondergård and the BBC National Orchestra of Wales 
    lit up the 2013 Proms with a fiery performance of Shostakovich’s Eleventh 
    Symphony, 
The Year 1905. They also gave a well-received account of 
    Sibelius's Fifth the following season (
review). 
    Paul Corfield Godfrey thought highly of their Sibelius First and Sixth, played 
    in Cardiff last December (
review). 
    He even suggested that Sondergård and the BBCNOW’s Sibelius, once recorded, 
    would be very competitive indeed. Brave words, given the quality of the competition, 
    not least Osmo Vänskä and the Lahti Symphony’s BIS set (
review).
    
    Vänskä has since embarked on another Sibelius cycle for BIS, this time with 
    the Minnesota Orchestra. I’ve reviewed the 
First 
    and Fourth and 
Second 
    and Fifth from that series, and while there are things to admire those 
    performances don’t begin to challenge Vänskä’s earlier traversal. 
    Not surprisingly the 150th anniversary of Sibelius’s birth has given 
    rise to another set, this time from fellow Finn John Storgårds and the BBC 
    Philharmonic (Chandos CHAN 10809). This is very likely to be the prelude to 
    a Nielsen cycle which, if the live broadcasts are anything to go by, should 
    be well worth hearing.
    
    As we’re dealing with high-res downloads here I’ve chosen to cherry-pick 
    the Second and Seventh symphonies from the Storgårds set and audition them 
    alongside Sondergård’s accounts. Purely in terms of value for money 
    that doesn’t make a lot of sense – the comparatively high price 
    of individual tracks means my selection cost more than £20 – but musically 
    it promises to be an intriguing exercise.
    
    Sondergård’s Sibelius 2 starts off well enough, although that surging 
    tune isn’t quite as arresting as it can be; what follows is well played 
    but rather episodic, which is probably why those trademark tuttis don’t 
    feel as inevitable or as imposing as usual. Storgårds, weightier and more 
    analytically recorded, isn’t ideal here either; at least he sounds cumulative/purposeful. 
    At this early stage both conductors are just too hesitant in music that needs 
    to be shaped and projected more confidently than this. Storgårds has the better 
    sound, especially in the bass; the Linn recording is surprisingly unfocused 
    at the lower end, and the climaxes are somewhat brazen at times.
    
    Hitting his stride at last Storgårds gives us a suitably emphatic second movement 
    – what vigorous 
pizzicati – and that puts him firmly 
    out in front. There’s urgency and drama aplenty, which in turn creates 
    a very compelling narrative. Also, the BBC Philharmonic - at their unanimous 
    best - deliver a big, well-blended 'Sibelius sound'. Alas, the BBCNOW don't 
    have the same weight or presence and Sondergård doesn'to pace or shape the 
    music nearly so well; indeed, there’s a curious, rather fitful quality 
    to the latter's reading that I find most distracting. His 
Vivacissimo 
    offers more of the same, with a mix of wild lunges and more successful descents 
    into inwardness and lyricism. Any flashes of insight – as welcome as 
    they are – merely underline how much tension and incident is missing 
    from Sondergård’s performance thus far.
    
    Gaining in confidence as he goes Storgårds does a splendid job with the last 
    two movements of Sibelius 2. It's impossible not to be caught up in the tumult; 
    as for the BBC Phil they play with enormous passion and bite in the big moments 
    and with melting tenderness in the quieter ones. There’s a volatility 
    here that seems entirely apt, and Storgårds punctuates his big, bold paragraphs 
    with a clarity and confidence that Sondergård simply cannot match. Storgårds’ 
    
Finale – now grand, now quirky – is superbly paced and 
    scaled; not only that, he builds up to those perorations with an implacability 
    that’s sorely lacking with Sondergård. And goodness, the BBC Phil brass 
    at the close are just magnificent, crowning a very fine performance indeed.
    
    What does Sondergård make of Sibelius’s last completed symphony? He 
    zeroes in on its darker elements, its swirls and eddies, and there’s 
    a liberating sense of continuity and character that you won’t find in 
    his account of the Second. The Welsh strings are eloquent and there’s 
    a spaciousness to the reading that’s most appealing. Now this is more 
    like it; there’s nobility and breadth, ardour and inwardness, and that 
    helps to forge a landscape of great variety and imagination. Sondergård also 
    emphasises the symphony’s skittish qualities, and his players seem rather 
    more at ease with this symphony than the last.
    
    Now Storgårds is the one who’s found wanting, for while his is a gentler 
    and more reflective Seventh it doesn’t have the grip and stoicism that 
    one gets with Sondergård. In making amends for his lacklustre Second Sondergård 
    demonstrates that he 
does have something worthwhile to say about 
    this composer. Indeed, his fine Seventh has renewed my desire to hear more 
    Sibelius from this source. Sonically, though, Linn must yield to Chandos, 
    whose recording has greater depth, finesse and a more subtle colour palette. 
    Besides, the all-important timps and tuttis are far more visceral here than 
    they are for Linn.
    
    Sondergård compensates for a tentative Second with a vital, strongly characterised 
    Seventh; Linn’s recording is surprisingly variable, though.
    
    
Dan Morgan
     twitter.com/mahlerei