'...my seventh symphony, Sinfonia Romantica, a name which I chose
	out of irritation with the antic- romantics..." as Atterberg described it,
	was composed in 1941-42 and revised in 1972. At an informal meeting of three
	contributors to this site the spontaneous response was "doesn't this sound
	like Bax!". Indeed, admirers of the English composer will probably have no
	difficulty in relating to the red-blooded romanticism and rich harmonies
	and orchestration of this work (and to the other symphonies of Atterberg).
	This is the première recording of this symphony.
	
	The Seventh Symphony opens with a rather dour fanfare that would seem to
	herald some tragic drama but the mood soon lightens and the tempo quickens
	to embrace the sort of heroic music one associates with Errol Flynn
	swashbucklers. There is also some opulent and languid romantic material and
	a few wry comic figures. The second Semplice Andante movement is
	ravishingly beautiful. I am reminded of the remarks of a commentator who
	described Bax's Second Symphony as one long love song; that description might
	be applied here but the music might also suggest a still and serene, lush
	landscape bathed, at the climax, in brilliant sunshine. The third movement,
	marked Feroce. Allegro, returns to bombast and, at first, it seems
	as though we are in Korngold's Sherwood Forest, but this is a wild melting
	pot of a movement, orgiastic with heroic/chivalric film score-like music
	plus march and dance-like material including a bucolic clog dance. At certain
	points, the music sounds quite Scottish and Irish and very Baxian. Interestingly,
	Atterberg's own words dominate the CD notes for this album and he relates
	how the basis of this symphony was his opera Fanal and how he wrestled
	with a fourth movement which he eventually discarded so that it could become
	a separate work in its own right - Op. 58 Vittorioso - yet he leaves
	it up to conductors' own discretion whether to use this music as a fourth
	movement. (It can also be tacked onto the composer's Three Nocturnes from
	Fanal). Maestro Jurowski choses to include only the first three movements.
	
	Atterberg's Eighth Symphony (1944-45) receives its first CD recording on
	this album. It is based on Swedish folk motifs but the listener will notice
	a very close similarity to English folk material and indeed, the music reminds
	one strongly of Ralph Vaughan Williams in the jolly rollicking scherzo. Of
	this Symphony, Atterberg commented, 'When you happen to be encumbered with
	an uncontrollable urge to compose symphonic music, you cannot help it if
	your imagination runs away with you, and takes a melancholy little tune as
	the framework for a great symphony...This beautiful melody came alive in
	my imagination: sometimes it was sorrowful and rose red; sometimes - in its
	major key version - playful; and sometimes it was full of pathos.' - which
	nicely sums up the work except to say that the usual Atterberg heroic figures
	are also included and the finale is an exciting orchestral tour de force.
	Atterberg gives full details, in these fascinating CD booklet notes, about
	all the tunes he uses and how he incorporated them into this symphony. Jurowski
	propels the music strongly forward and reveals all the beauty of the more
	introspective and romantic sections. Strongly recommended.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Ian Lace
	
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