I first succumbed to 
                flautist Sharon Bezaly’s spell on BIS’s 
                Seascapes disc, where she plays 
                Zhou Long’s The Deep, Deep Sea 
                (review). 
                I was struck then by her technique 
                and the generosity and warmth of her 
                playing. And she seems willing to take 
                on the most demanding pieces; at the 
                2008 Proms she tackled Nigel Osborne’s 
                fiendishly difficult Flute Concerto 
                which, despite her best efforts, was 
                less than memorable. 
              
 
              
The good news is that 
                Bezaly is in fine form on this disc, 
                which contains flute pieces dedicated 
                to her. The first, a concerto by the 
                Kalevi Aho, is an intensely personal 
                piece. Written in 2002, when the composer 
                was coming to terms with the death of 
                his father and the long illness of a 
                much-loved spaniel, the work begins 
                with the gentlest of entries for harp 
                and flute. It’s quiet, reflective and, 
                as so often with Aho, it’s direct and 
                unpretentious. 
              
 
              
More than that the 
                first movement – marked Misterioso, 
                adagio – is a lovely, tender piece of 
                writing, with little of the dynamic 
                swings we hear in his other concertos 
                – the ‘monumental’ Cello Concerto 
                comes to mind. These two works couldn’t 
                be more different in their mood and 
                manner. That said, at 6:38 there is 
                grief and turmoil, but the soloist soon 
                restores the air of quiet solitude. 
                Bezaly’s tone is warm and songful throughout, 
                but then this is the kind of music she 
                does best. 
              
 
              
Aho admits he had been 
                reading the works of Swedish poet Tomas 
                Tranströmer and intended to write 
                a set of orchestral songs before deciding 
                on a purely orchestral piece. As with 
                the Chinese Songs and the Dayflies 
                music of the Symphonic Dances, 
                this concerto has a wonderful evanescent 
                quality that is carried through to the 
                Presto, leggiero. Bezaly’s limpid tone 
                is entirely apt here, just before an 
                orchestral crescendo gives way to music 
                of exuberance and vitality. Throughout 
                the composer maintains a marvellous 
                sense of scale, never losing sight of 
                the score’s more intimate, human dimension. 
              
 
              
Osmo Vänskä 
                and his Lahti orchestra, the mainstays 
                of BIS’s Aho cycle, don’t disappoint 
                either. The now familiar Sibelius Hall 
                has a most grateful acoustic and the 
                engineers certainly achieve a warm, 
                natural balance that highlights the 
                ‘hear through’ quality of Aho’s writing. 
                Even in the slow-burning crescendo that 
                begins at around 7:46 – now this is 
                the composer we know from the symphonies, 
                impassioned, powerful – Vänskä 
                remains in control of the music’s dynamics. 
                As the second movement slips seamlessly 
                into the Epilogue Bezaly enchants, her 
                long, singing lines simply spellbinding. 
                This is lovely playing and Aho gives 
                the soloist plenty to work with. As 
                so often with this composer the final 
                pages are surprisingly muted; in this 
                case they’re poignant, too. 
              
 
              
The Icelandic composer 
                Haukur Tómasson is new to me, 
                and I see from the liner-notes that 
                he has won a number of prestigious music 
                awards at home. His Flute Concerto 
                No. 2 is cast in five interrelated 
                movements, the first of which is marked 
                Calmo. It’s a very different sound world 
                from Aho’s, although it shares the latter’s 
                economy of style and his penchant for 
                unusual sonorities. That said, Tómasson 
                seems to focus much more on specific, 
                repeated timbres and rhythmic cells, 
                the flute just one of several melodic 
                strands. 
              
 
              
The second movement, 
                Scorrevole (flowing), has some very 
                striking rhythmic and percussive elements, 
                garlanded by bright, agile figures on 
                the flute. Perhaps this is music that 
                delights the ear rather than engages 
                the emotions but it’s none the worse 
                for that. In fact, when it’s as well 
                structured and essayed as this it’s 
                very compelling indeed. 
              
 
              
There is a hypnotic 
                calm to the third movement, with its 
                mix of sustained passages and repeated 
                rhythmic patterns. And for the first 
                time the soloist is given more to do, 
                underpinned by simple, even stark, instrumental 
                interjections. Given the work’s provenance 
                one might be tempted to think of fire 
                and ice, such is the music’s mix of 
                hard and soft edges. The Iceland Symphony 
                play with real flair – as indeed they 
                do in the recent Chandos disc of d’Indy 
                pieces (see review). 
                In both cases they are very well served 
                by the recording engineers. 
              
 
              
The final movements 
                – Scintellante and Ardente – are self- 
                explanatory, the former pointillist 
                in its drops of instrumental colour. 
                This really is an alluring soundscape, 
                full of unusual sounds and rhythmic 
                events. Even more appealing is that 
                this music, like much of Aho’s, is presented 
                in a refreshing, non-didactic way. The 
                ease and agility of Bezaly’s playing 
                makes a strong impression throughout. 
              
 
              
As for Christian Lindberg 
                I have only encountered him as a performer 
                – he is the soloist in Aho’s Symphony 
                No. 9 for trombone and orchestra 
                – so I was curious to hear what he is 
                like as both composer and conductor. 
                The invented subtitle of this concerto, 
                The World of Montuagretta, is 
                loosely based on a documentary about 
                the so-called travesti (cross-dressers) 
                of Brazil, harrowing images from which 
                had a profound effect on the composer. 
                It’s not as grim or unrelenting as it 
                first seems, for as Lindberg explains 
                in his liner-notes the real story is 
                that of the young travesti’s 
                persistent humanity in the face of terrible 
                adversity. 
              
 
              
The five movements 
                are given imaginary titles – Lindberg 
                is at pains to distance himself from 
                the tale, yet he has to remain involved 
                enough to tell it. It’s a highly unusual 
                conceit – and potentially a very awkward 
                one – but I’m pleased to report it works 
                rather well. The pure tones of the flute 
                – sounding suitably transcendent – rise 
                above the rough rhythms of the streets 
                and the sudden bass drum interjections. 
                There is much animation and high spirits 
                too, Lindberg and the Swedish Chamber 
                Orchestra articulating those Latin rhythms 
                with style. 
              
 
              
It’s a strange juxtaposition 
                of real and imagined images but it does 
                add up to a convincing musical whole. 
                There are some wonderfully poignant 
                moments – just listen to the haunting 
                third movement, the flute dancing above 
                a sustained and muted bass line. I was 
                alternately moved and impressed by these 
                conflicting moods, all achieved with 
                an economy of style, all the more telling 
                for being so simply done. The end of 
                the third movement is particularly memorable 
                in this respect. 
              
 
              
But even without this 
                subtext the concerto has much to delight 
                the ear. Certainly Bezaly despatches 
                the trills of the fifth movement with 
                consummate ease, before the final movement 
                starts with a burst of Latin heat and 
                light. The percussion is well caught 
                here and the amount of audible instrumental 
                detail is astonishing. The work then 
                moves into another of those haunted 
                phases halfway through the final movement, 
                with some ethereal passages before the 
                bass drum brings it all back to earth. 
              
 
              
My main interest was 
                the Aho concerto but I’m delighted to 
                have discovered the Tómasson 
                and Lindberg pieces along the way. They 
                are all rather intimate works that suit 
                Bezaly’s expressive playing. Not major 
                works, perhaps, but highly individual 
                ones that should be more widely heard. 
              
 
              
Dan Morgan 
              
see also review 
                by Jonathan Woolf RECORDING 
                OF THE MONTH August 2005 
              
The 
                Music of Kalevi Aho by Dan Morgan