Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony 3; Earina Suite

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The main interest here is the symphony, regarded in Sweden as Peterson-Berger's orchestral masterpiece. His first two symphonies (also in this CPO Norrköping SO series) don't really convince, though there are plenty of attractive ideas in the nonetheless overblown Symphony No. 2. A counterpart to Vaughan Williams's later Sinfonia Antarctica, the third symphony (composed between 1913 and 1915) graphically depicts the wilderness of Lapland in all its seasonal moods, as outlined by Peterson-Berger in his own notes, reproduced here. Grieg was clearly an influence; maybe also Glazunov in his sunniest mood. There are plenty of memorable melodies and imaginative touches, such as the prominent use of the piano in the first movement (reminiscent at times of de Falla's Nights in the Gardens of Spain, composed at almost exactly the same time) and the incorporation of several Lapp chants, or jojks. OK, so this is a work that never set out to alter the course of 20th-century musical thinking, but so what? You won't be disappointed. The symphony's main companion here, the Earina Suite, charmingly celebrates the northern spring. Performances and sound do the works full justice. And despite any reservations about the other two symphonies, the accompanying items on the respective CDs (such as the impassioned Romance for Violin and Orchestra) are worth exploring. --Andrew Green

Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony 3; Earina Suite, Music, Wilhelm Peterson-Berger, Michail Jurowski, Norrköping Symphony Orchestra, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic, Romantic Symphony, Symphonic
Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony 3; Earina Suite
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A New Northern Light
  • An Evocation of the Northern Lights
Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony 3; Earina Suite

Manufacturer: Cpo Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

RomanticRomantic | Symphonies | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Symphonies | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 4 "Holmia"; Törnrossagan; Frösöblomster
  2. Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 5 "Solitudo"; Violin Concerto
  3. Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 1; "I Somras" Suite
  4. Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 2; Violin Romance
  5. Melartin: The Six SYMPHONIES

ASIN: B00004R8E1
Release Date: 2000-03-14

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No.3 In F Minor - Same Atnam: Allegro moderato
  2. Symphony No.3 In F Minor - Same Atnam: Moderato
  3. Symphony No.3 In F Minor - Same Atnam: Tranquillo
  4. Symphony No.3 In F Minor - Same Atnam: Moderato
  5. Earina Suite For Orchestra: Akallan (Invocation)
  6. Earina Suite For Orchestra: Blomsteroffret (The Flower Offering)
  7. Earina Suite For Orchestra: Vapenvigning (The Consecration Of Weapons)
  8. Earina Suite For Orchestra: Lyckorunor (Runes Of Fortune)
  9. Earina Suite For Orchestra: Rapsoden sjunger (The Rhapsodist Sings)
  10. Chorale & Fugue From 'Domedagsprofeterna': The Doomsday Prophets

Amazon.com

The main interest here is the symphony, regarded in Sweden as Peterson-Berger's orchestral masterpiece. His first two symphonies (also in this CPO Norrköping SO series) don't really convince, though there are plenty of attractive ideas in the nonetheless overblown Symphony No. 2. A counterpart to Vaughan Williams's later Sinfonia Antarctica, the third symphony (composed between 1913 and 1915) graphically depicts the wilderness of Lapland in all its seasonal moods, as outlined by Peterson-Berger in his own notes, reproduced here. Grieg was clearly an influence; maybe also Glazunov in his sunniest mood. There are plenty of memorable melodies and imaginative touches, such as the prominent use of the piano in the first movement (reminiscent at times of de Falla's Nights in the Gardens of Spain, composed at almost exactly the same time) and the incorporation of several Lapp chants, or jojks. OK, so this is a work that never set out to alter the course of 20th-century musical thinking, but so what? You won't be disappointed. The symphony's main companion here, the Earina Suite, charmingly celebrates the northern spring. Performances and sound do the works full justice. And despite any reservations about the other two symphonies, the accompanying items on the respective CDs (such as the impassioned Romance for Violin and Orchestra) are worth exploring. --Andrew Green

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A New Northern Light.......2002-09-06

Cast your mind back to how you felt upon first listening to any of Sibelius's more "Northern" works--En Saga or Symphony No. 4, for instance--and you'll have an idea of the wonderful sense of discovery waiting for you in Peterson-Berger's Third. This is not to say that P-B was copying Sibelius, for he has his own voice, I believe, within the late Romantic idiom, but they both share a love for the starkness of the sublime, a love they both communicate superbly through their music. The other two pieces on this disc, though overshadowed by the impact of the symphony, would by themselves make the CD worth buying. What more can one say, other than to hope that cpo continues to record the rest of P-B's works?

5 out of 5 stars An Evocation of the Northern Lights.......2000-10-23

An opera, "Arnljot," propelled Vilhelm Peterson-Berger (1867-1942) into national prominence in 1909 and holds the stage - only in Sweden, of course - to this day. Every educated Swede knows its Act I tenor aria for the eponymous hero, "Alltjämt de mäktiga fjäll sig välva" ("Eternally do the mighty mountains tower"). Peterson-Berger, a Wagnerian, a Nietzschean, a Neo-Romantic of the hyperbolic disposition, loved the rugged nature of Sweden, and celebrated it inveterately not only in his music-dramas but in his orchestral music as well, including his five symphonies. The best known of these, the Third (1915), in F-Major, explores the extreme North of Sweden, the area within the Arctic Circle populated by the Lapps and called, in the Lapp tongue, "Same Ätnam," from which stems the travelogue-title of the symphony. (The composer was born in remote Ångermanland, in the North of Sweden, the true "Land of the Midnight Sun.") The Lapps practice a tradition of improvisatory vocalise, "Joiking," and Peterson-Berger incorporates a number of "Joik" melodies in his score. American listeners will likely remain unaware of what to Swedes seems a quaint form of exoticism, the equivalent of Edwardian British interest in Hebridean folksong or of Ernest Bloch's interest in Dakota-Sioux war-chants. Which is not to chide this fine, late-Romantic symphony in distinctly Nordic accents for any faults; it is, in fact, a superb example of Peterson-Berger's considerable art. The First Movement (Allegro Moderato), called "Forntidsbilder" ("Images of the Past"), begins mysteriously over a rhythm curiously like those that turn up in Bloch's "American Indian" moments; lovely lyrical episodes follow, as well as mountainous climaxes. The Second Movement (Moderato), bears the description "Vinterkväll" ("Winter's Eve") and makes reference, via the harp and plucked strings, to the glittering of the Northern Lights; it is both a nocturne and a scherzo (note the Mahlerian horn-tune in the Trio), finely spun, delicate, and swift. The slow Third Movement (Tranquillo) takes us from one season to another, from winter to summer ("Sommarnatt" ["Summer Night"]): The form is fugal, the sense of stillness and solitude is deeply felt. To paint effective tone-pictures with academic devices, like fugue, indeed marks a superior artist. The composer dubs the Finale (Moderato) "Åkerfälten i Degerfors" ("The Farmland in Degerfors"): The human presence at last dominates, taking wild nature under the plow and forcing the staff of life, by sweat, from the stony earth. Here the ethos of folksong - not only the "Joik," but of the Swedish "folkvisa" as well - is most noticeable. No wonder that this symphony still draws audiences in Sweden! The "Earina Suite" refers (via the Greek) to spring, the most magical time for Scandinavians, after the long winter. The music is sunny and tuneful. The brief "Chorale and Fugue" comes from the opera "Domesdagprofeterna" ("The Doomsday prophets"), a comedy from 1917. Peterson-Berger is at least as good as "minor" Russians like Glazunov and Glière and deserves wider recognition than he probably currently enjoys. This disc should go a long way towards fostering it. Michail Jurowksi's performance with the Norrköping Symphony Orchestra is clear and full-blooded.

Track Listings:

  1. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Last Three Symphonies
  2. Yoshimatsu: Symphony No. 3 / Saxophone Concerto
  3. Acantus: Sacred Songs of Medieval Italy
  4. Antonio Vivaldi: Concerti Op. 8
  5. Artur Schnabel: Sonata for Violin & Piano; Sonata for Violin Solo
  6. Bach J.S: Brandenburg Concertos Nos. 4 & 6, Suite No.2 [Import]
  7. Bach: Works for Organ, Vol. 13
  8. Backhaus: The Complete British Acoustic Recordings, 1908-25
  9. Barbara Frittoli ~ Mozart / Sir Charles Mackerras, Scottish Chamber Orchestra
  10. Barber: Adagio for Strings/Violin Concerto/Schuman: To Thee Old Cause/In Praise Of Shahn

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