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Music from Estonia
CD 1 [78:37] Rudolf TOBIAS (1873-1918) Julius Caesar Overture (1896) [10:13] Artur LEMBA (1885-1963) Symphony in C sharp minor (1908) [40:20] Heino ELLER (1887-1970) Videvik (Twilight) Tone Poem (1917) [6:02]; Koit
(Dawn) Tone Poem (1918) [8:12]; Elegia for Harp
and Strings (1931) 13:07
CD 2 [71:18] Kaljo RAID (1922-2005) Symphony No. 1 in C minor (1944) [37:41] Heino ELLER
Five Pieces for String Orchestra (1953) [15:36] Veljo TORMIS (b. 1930)
Overture No. 2 (1959) [11:11] Arvo PART (b. 1935) Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten for String Orchestra
and Bell (1977) [6:17] John Digney
(solo oboe) (Dawn); Eluned Pierce (solo harp) (Elegia)
Royal Scottish National Orchestra/Neeme Järvi
rec. SNO Centre, Glasgow, August 1986 (Koit, Elegia,
Symphony No. 1, Five Pieces)
Henry Wood Hall, Glasgow; 8 August 1987 (Julius Caesar) and
13 May 1988 (Symphony in C sharp minor), Caird Hall, Dundee, 23-24
August (Videvik, Overture No. 2, Cantus in memoriam Benjamin
Britten) CHANDOS CHAN241-26 [78:37 + 71:18]
Thirty years of Chandos Records seems a good excuse to sift through
their back catalogue. It’s all the more needful when the torrent
of new releases serves to eclipse issues released before MusicWeb
International came into being in its present form in 1998. This
single width twin CD release casts light into a corner occupied
by two CDs first issued in 1987 and 1989: CHAN 8656 and CHAN 8525.
Some mixing and matching has been done to ring the changes on
the original couplings.
Tobias’s
lusty overture Julius Caesar is Tchaikovskian and should
please any listener already appreciative of Hamlet or
The Tempest. It lacks the masterly compelling quality
of Romeo or Francesca but has sternly romantic
attractions. If the Tobias work is the first Estonian symphonic
piece then the Lembais the first Estonian symphony. It is in four big movements.
It lacks nationalist character but has sturdy charms of a Brahmsian
caste. It may well appeal to you if you appreciated the symphonies
of Stanford, Dunhill, Chadwick or Wetz. The writing is skilled
and the ideas are affectionately shaped. The whole is performed
with exuberance and real fire. Try the turbulent finale – it
could hardly blaze with more power. Eller
puts in an appearance on both discs. With him a real national
identity begins to emerge. However in the case of the sweetly
crafted Twilight the language still carries a Tchaikovskian
inflection. The result is not far removed from Sibelius’s Valse
Triste. Dawn yearns with romantic feeling (1:30)
and carries the impress of early Sibelius in its elastic pulses
and nature-impressions. It is no coincidence that in 1915 the
Estonian Republic was inaugurated. Elegia from fourteen
years later is more subtle still – even expressionist. It hums
with power from a massed string orchestra but this is contrasted
with instrumental dialogues for solo viola, violin and harp.
Those wanted a break from Barber’s Adagio and perhaps
already sympathetic to Bridge’s Lament and Atterberg’s
Third Suite will find this a very congenial discovery.
His luminously imagined Five Pieces for strings is in
much the same scene and mood but having an even stronger nationalist
profile. It’s a yieldingly lovely piece well attuned to the
Baltic twilight yet not without a thrumming power and saturated
in poetic sensibility. If you enjoy Rakastava and the
Elgar, Wiren and Tchaikovsky serenades for strings you will
love this. Kaljo Raid, like Eduard Tubin became an exile
from Estonia when the Russians invaded in 1944. He lived in
Sweden, the United States and finally Canada where between 1954
his avocation was as a Baptist minister. When Eller died in
1970 Raid wrote a Lacrimosa for violin and cello in memory
of his teacher. He had been studying with Eller until 1944.
The three movement First Symphony dates from that year. It is
a fine work rich in nature impressionism and commandingly dramatic
writing. The symphonies of E.J. Moeran and George Lloyd (4-7)
and the Fourth Symphony of Eduard Tubin can be thought of as
brothers under the skin. The finale evinces some Sibelian influence
as well as glancing back in the raw fanfares to Tchaikovsky.
If you have a taste for the epic mood and the grand manner then
this is for you. For more about Raid do have a look at Lance
Nixon’s excellent review
of the music of Raid and Eller. We know Veljo Tormis from
his choral writing which seems woven into the culture and landscape
of his homeland. Uno Soomers assures us that his Overture No.
2 – despite its grey title – the best of his few orchestral
works. It was written after Tormis had heard the Tubin Fifth
Symphony. The overture is volatile, dramatic – almost exhausting
but at 3:05 the grand turbulence decays away into an almost
untroubled repose – almost because the mood and sound recalls
the troubled world of early William Alwyn. Finally Arvo Pärt
is represented by his undemonstrative yet deeply affecting Cantus
with its tolling bell and minimalist-devotional strings. Few
works seem to hold back the passage of time; this is one of
that select company.
This is a very satisfying anthology which you
could aptly supplement with a much more recent Chandos
collection of orchestral music by three members of the Estonian
Kapp family and by Arthur Kapp’s Hiob on Eres.
The programme notes are by Robert Layton and
Uno Soomere. They complement each other. The essay by Soomere
makes me want to hear the symphonies 3 (1966) and 4 (1967) of
Anti Marguste (b. 1931) and those by Jan Koha (1929-1993) 1
(1960), Ester Mägi (b. 1922) Symphony (1968), Heino Jürisalu
(1930-1991) 1 (1970), Heimar Ilves (1914-2002) 1 (1959), 2 (1964)
and 5 (1970-71). Would that we had further volumes to cover
this repertoire from Järvi and the SNO (as they then were) in
their joint glory days.
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