"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross."
-- Sinclair Lewis
Sunday, March 07, 2010
Sunday Classics: Rhapsodies from Sweden and points south and east
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Now this is more like it!Unfortunately in audio only, Vladimir Horowitz plays the rhapsody of rhapsodies, Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 (in, by the way, the composer's own version, more or less, not the pianist's famous arrangement). If you're looking for mediocre to revolting performances, there's no shortage on YouTube, as witness last night's fiasco.
by Ken
We still haven't quite finished with Norway's great composer, Edvard Grieg, even after pursuing him through Marching trolls and other lyric subjects (Lyric Pieces for piano, Lyric Suite for orchestra); "The Prophet has come!": The world of Peer Gynt (the two orchestral suites, enhanced); (more Peer Gynt and the Piano Concerto); Mastering the fine art of Edvard Grieg (the Lyric Pieces and Piano Concerto revisited, plus String Quartet No. 1). Meanwhile, we had a decent shot at Finland's Jan Sibelius, and at some point we'll come back for Denmark's Carl Nielsen.
Which leaves a gap in our Scandinavian itinerary. So today we're going to have a quick musical taste of Sweden in the form of a rhapsody, a form that composers have found well-suited to splashy musical quick portraits of their countries, dating back to the 19th-century rise of musical nationalism. And then we'll let the rhapsody transport us.
I. A QUICK TOUR OF SWEDEN AND ROMANIA: WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE THEIR RHAPSODIES
No, I don't suppose Sweden and Romania have a whole lot in common, beyond the curious phenomenon of a composer, arguably each country's best-known, who remains known principally for rhapsodies. (No, I'm not going to attempt a definition of rhapsody. Feel free to look it up if you like. By the end of this post you should be in a position to concoct your own definition if that's important to you.)
In Sweden's case, our composer is Hugo Alfvén (1872-1960). Alfvén in fact produced quite a sizable output, and there are admirers who consider his general neglect a scandal. I can't claim to be an expert on the subject, but what I've heard of his music is agreeable enough if not especially memorable (it's fair to say that worse music is played on a regular basis by most of the world's orchestras). Nevertheless, I don't see much likelihood of a change in the composer's fortunes, which have him known almost entirely for a single work that remains on the edge of the international repertory: the first of his three Swedish Rhapsodies, titled Midsummer Vigil (1903).
I got to know it through the back door, as it were. When we talked about Sibelius (see link above), I mentioned that two of my first three stereo LPs were bought for works by Sibelius, because -- outrageously! -- that's what you had to do to get Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra's recordings of The Swan of Tuonela and Finlandia. This left me with quite a lot of "filler" material. Okay, I suppose technically The Swan was the filler for Sibelius's Violin Concerto played by the great David Oistrakh, but that's not the way I looked at it in those days. The Finlandia fillers included Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite No. 1 (hmm, Peer Gynt, where have we heard about that?) and, yes, Alfvén's Swedish Rhapsody No. 1. Eventually I wound up listening to this stuff quite a lot. Here is that very recording of Midsummer Vigil.
ALFVÉN: Swedish Rhapsody No. 1: Midsummer Vigil, Op. 19
Ken: I don't much comment on bogs, but I have to tell you how much I appreciate you on Sundays. You've turned me on to so many incredibly exquisite things - David Oistrakh doing Beethoven, etc.
So as much as I appreciate (and generally agree with) the political viewpoint, these Sunday postings have brought some indescribable beauty into my life that have helped keep my going. Thanks (more than you can probably imagine)!
3 Comments:
Ken: I don't much comment on bogs, but I have to tell you how much I appreciate you on Sundays. You've turned me on to so many incredibly exquisite things - David Oistrakh doing Beethoven, etc.
So as much as I appreciate (and generally agree with) the political viewpoint, these Sunday postings have brought some indescribable beauty into my life that have helped keep my going. Thanks (more than you can probably imagine)!
You're welcome. The thanks are much appreciated.
Hey, this music goes a long way toward keeping me going too!
Best,
Ken
Thank you, friend.
You've made my Sunday.
My records are still in storage.
S
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