The Swedish composer Bo Linde was a 
                student of Lars Erik Larsson in Stockholm. 
                His energies were poured into the production 
                of music for orchestra, chamber ensemble 
                and voice. He was no adherent of serial 
                technique or dodecaphony. 
              
 
              
Linde is as much a 
                songster as Walton. Indeed this Violin 
                Concerto at many points echoes with 
                the aspirational romance and the jagged 
                drama of the Walton concerto. This is 
                a work in which the soloist is in incessant 
                action - never marking time, always 
                purposefully pressing forward. Perhaps 
                that is a weakness of the work; namely 
                that there is insufficient variation 
                between its two big movements although 
                the lovely cradle-rocking lento that 
                ends the work redeems all. There are 
                no discords here and plenty of evidence 
                of the composer’s proud claim that ‘I 
                write in very beautiful triads’. I associate 
                neo-classicism, which the notes claim 
                for Linde, with terse desiccation. There 
                is none of that here. Textures are clean 
                but this is an overwhelmingly romantic 
                work with more echoes of the violin 
                concertos of Prokofiev, Miaskovsky and 
                Barber than of Stravinsky. A lovely 
                work and one which has captivated me 
                since I taped Karl Ove-Mannberg’s performance 
                with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra 
                conducted by Stig Westerberg in July 
                1977. 
              
 
              
The Cello Concerto 
                was written for Guido Vecchi who 
                also recorded the Frederick Jacobi concerto 
                - a very different work. Vecchi, who 
                was principal cellist of the Gothenburg 
                Symphony Orchestra had his performance 
                of the Nystroem Sinfonia Concertante 
                issued in a Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra 
                centenary box by Bis. Kliegel gives 
                a gutsy performance recalling the sort 
                of soulful tone we get from Arto Noras 
                and while this work is more edgy and 
                angular than the Violin Concerto Kliegel 
                finds and expounds the work’s lyric 
                strata. The surrounding punctuation 
                is stormy and gritty. This time there 
                is plenty of contrast across the three 
                movements. This is well illustrated 
                by the mood-change between the ethereal 
                end of the first movement and the convulsive 
                Portsmouth Point activity of 
                the start of the central movement. The 
                finale manages to be both lyrically 
                saturated and mistily valedictory. 
              
 
              
The Linde scene is 
                set rather well by Ulf Jönsson 
                although I wish he could have volunteered 
                more dates and a longer list of works. 
                Also I don’t for one moment buy the 
                suggestion that Linde was a neo-classicist. 
              
 
              
A cracking disc with 
                the technical side splendidly managed 
                and two romantic-dramatic concertos 
                full of explosive action and searing 
                and sunny lyricism. Not to be missed. 
              
Rob Barnett