Showing posts with label André Gertler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label André Gertler. Show all posts

06 July 2016

Scandinavian Special: Music by Larsson, von Koch, Fernström, Nielsen and Schultz

Two LPs of 20th century Scandinavian music today. The first contains music by the Swedes Lars-Erik Larsson, Erland von Koch and John Fernström, transferred in response to a request on another site. The second is of short works by the Dane Carl Nielsen and his follower Svend Schultz.

Larsson, von Koch, Fernström

Lars-Erik Larsson
The highlight of the first LP is the first recording of Lars-Erik Larsson's Violin Concerto, as performed by its dedicatee, André Gertler, relatively soon after its 1952 premiere. The score is in an attractive mid-century modern style. I find the pastoral slow movement particularly enjoyable. Gertler employs his own cadenza; Larsson was to eventually write his own, which was utilized in Leo Berlin's 1976 effort.

The LP is filled out with works by two of Larsson's Swedish contemporaries. Erland von Koch's folkish Oxberg Variations, from 1956, is built on a march theme from Dalecarlia. John Fernström's Concertino for Flute, Women's Chorus and Chamber Orchestra, dating from 1941, is a entertaining but kitschy exercise in exotica. It is a setting in translation of Carl Sandburg's poem "Early Moon," which reads as follows (thanks to Derek Katz for finding this):

THE BABY moon, a canoe, a silver papoose canoe, sails and sails in the Indian west.
A ring of silver foxes, a mist of silver foxes, sit and sit around the Indian moon.
One yellow star for a runner, and rows of blue stars for more runners, keep a line of watchers.
O foxes, baby moon, runners, you are the panel of memory, fire-white writing to-night of the Red Man's dreams.
Who squats, legs crossed and arms folded, matching its look against the moon-face, the star-faces, of the West?
Who are the Mississippi Valley ghosts, of copper foreheads, riding wiry ponies in the night? — no bridles, love-arms on the pony necks, riding in the night a long old trail?
Why do they always come back when the silver foxes sit around the early moon, a silver papoose, in the Indian west?

Sten Frykberg leads the Stockholm Radio Orchestra in the Larsson and Fernström works. Stig Westerberg conducts the Stockholm Symphony (other sources list it as the Stockholm Philharmonic) in the von Koch.

This transfer is from a 1974 Turnabout LP, but all the recordings are from years earlier. As noted, the Larsson is from 1952 or soon thereafter. It was first released by London (and, I believe, Discofil) on the same LP as the 1954 Fernström recording. (That album also contained a work by Karl-Birger Blomdahl, missing here). The Oxberg Variations were taped in May 1960 by Grammofon AB Electra.

The Larsson and Fernström items are mono. I have added an ambient stereo effect to help alleviate the boxiness of the Concertino recording. The von Koch is in good stereo sound.

Nielsen, Schultz

The main work on second LP is a magisterial performance of Nielsen’s 1903 Helios Overture. Nielsen is one of my favorite composers; it’s surprising that he hasn’t appeared here more often than the lone appearance of his Symphony No. 3. The other work on the LP is Svend Schultz’s Serenade for Strings, a much different work from the Nielsen but pleasant enough. Eric Tuxen leads the Danish State Radio Symphony Orchestra in these works. Michael Gray’s discography dates the Nielsen to 1952; presumably the Schultz is of the same vintage.

The transfer is from the original issue on a 10-inch Decca LP, sourced several years ago from the European Archive site and remastered recently by me. The sound is very good.