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Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 5 "Solitudo"; Violin Concerto
 
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Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 5 "Solitudo"; Violin Concerto

Wilhelm Peterson-Berger , Michail Jurowski , Norrköping Symphony Orchestra Audio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Orchestra: Norrköping Symphony Orchestra
  • Conductor: Michail Jurowski
  • Composer: Wilhelm Peterson-Berger
  • Audio CD (August 16, 2005)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Cpo Records
  • ASIN: B000A16SKU
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #304,634 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Symphony No. 5 in B minor ('Solitudo'): Con molto tranquillo
2. Symphony No. 5 in B minor ('Solitudo'): Scherzando vivo, delicatissimo - Allegro moderato
3. Symphony No. 5 in B minor ('Solitudo'): Andante tranqullo - attacca
4. Symphony No. 5 in B minor ('Solitudo'): Allegro molto - Andante molto tranquillo
5. Concerto for violin and orchestra in F sharp minor: Allegro moderato, ma appassionata
6. Concerto for violin and orchestra in F sharp minor: Andante tranquillo e cantabile - attacca
7. Concerto for violin and orchestra in F sharp minor: Finale: Allegro moderato, ma con fuoco

 

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Tuneful, Conservative, Well-Crafted Symphony; A Marvelous Violin Concerto, August 20, 2005
This review is from: Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 5 "Solitudo"; Violin Concerto (Audio CD)
Although Amazon doesn't yet indicate this in their listing, this CD contains not only the Fifth Symphony of Wilhelm Peterson-Berger, but also his marvelous violin concerto. The latter really is quite wonderful, about which more below.

Peterson-Berger (1867-1942) was known primarily in his day as a stern music critic and as such he made enemies in his native Sweden and elsewhere. (Conductor Armas Järnefelt actually sued him because of a caustic review.) Consequently his own compositions were castigated or ignored during much of his lifetime. Nonetheless, he was a talented and skilled composer. The Fifth Symphony (his last) was written in 1932-33 and is subtitled 'Solitudo.' There is little about it that conjures up solitude, as far as I can hear, but it is a tuneful, well-constructed, ultra-conservative four-movement work that has Wagnerian elements (of the non-neurotic sort, rather more like Humperdinck than Wagner) and Grieg. The booklet notes comment rather extensively on the use of the pentatonic scale in the Violin Concerto, but it is also used frequently in the Symphony as well. Indeed there are some passages that sound Asian and others that sound rather like Native American (Indian) music with a throbbing 4/4 bass. These traits are not at all obtrusive, but hard to ignore once noticed, and although I hadn't been particularly aware of it before, a check of a couple of his earlier symphonies shows some of the same traits. Consequently, the booklet writer's (and contemporary critics') notion that he was in the thrall of Puccini's 'Turandot' (which makes similar use of pentatonicism) strikes me as ill-informed. Peterson-Berger's language also contains clear construction, memorable melodies and rhythms, and unobtrusive but masterful counterpoint. The third movement is a glorious song-inspired rhapsody, the finale a spirited tarantella. Structural seams are occasionally noticeable but not bothersome. A good regional orchestra, the Norköpping Symphony, does a fine job of playing both works under the direction of Michail Jurowski, himself from the middle generation of a quite musical Russian family -- his father was composer Wladimir Jurowski, his son the up-and-coming conductor Vladimir Jurowski who is making quite a name for himself in London and elsewhere.

The Violin Concerto is, in my view, a more successful piece than the symphony. It reminds one, in its language, of a mix of Wagnerian and Brahmsian gestures, rather like that of Max Bruch. It is densely melodic, has some interesting structural features (e.g., the use of a quite extended cadenza as most of the development of the first movement) and is entirely winning. I could easily see this concerto becoming, with the right sort of advocacy, a repertoire piece. I would love to hear that several touring violin virtuosi and adventuresome conductors have taken it up. In the usual three movements, it, like the symphony, makes use of Swedish folksong contours without, as far as I know, directly quoting any of them. The finale in particular uses this altogether charming procedure.

In the final analysis, Peterson-Berger's music is probably not ever destined for music's A List, but it certainly deserves more attention than it has had and the cpo label is to be given credit for issuing a number of recordings, including, as of now, all the symphonies.

Warmly recommended.

Scott Morrison
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5.0 out of 5 stars A stirring symphony and a marvelous concerto in first-rate performances, November 15, 2011
This review is from: Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Symphony No. 5 "Solitudo"; Violin Concerto (Audio CD)
I would first like to extend deep gratitude to CPO for making all the symphonies of Peterson-Berger available. Although I can understand why and how some people could dismiss them as second-rate, I have found each one of them absolutely wonderfully engaging - and the fifth may in certain respects be a favorite. As with his previous works in the genre the fifth symphony is nationalistic, tuneful, straightforward, conservative, owing something to Wagnerian late-romanticism, and - not the least - deeply atmospheric. Now, there may not be much that is particularly individual in terms of melodic content here, but the themes are good and they are imaginatively employed; nothing outstays its welcome and the whole work acquires a certain sweep (and even some urgency). The original touch, however, lies with the scoring, which is unusually but always deviously balanced with a prominent place for the piano. In terms of textures and sound world, therefore, Peterson-Berger's fifth does actually manage to stand out.

The symphony dates from 1932-33 and is titled "Solitudo"; and indeed there is a certain sense of bleak loneliness permeating the music, though the overall character is really not particularly dark, suggesting instead a certain bittersweet wistfulness in encounters with the vastness of nature (there are certainly passages of nature painting here) and fond recollections of childhood memories. So yes, there is a certain blatant appeal to emotions in the music, but no more so than in Dvorak, and I found the whole work wonderfully evocative and appealing; indeed with repeated listening this has come to be something of a favorite of mine (though I cannot really provide any objective argument for that) and I strongly urge anyone with even a passing interest in Scandinavian late romanticism to check it out.

The violin concerto (1928) is a substantial near-masterpiece. It opens with a noble but quite passionate first movement - long, but sufficiently eventful to avoid outstaying its welcome. It is followed by a beautifully reflective pastorale and an ebullient and strikingly memorable finale (which does contain some harmonic twists and surprises). The Norrköping Symphony Orchestra under Michail Jurowski seems to make the best possible case for this music; this is wonderfully sensitive, colorful playing, with ferocity as required but more importantly an ability to realize the coloristic subtleties of Peterson-Berger's sound world (especially in the peculiarly but effectively scored symphony). Ulf Wallin is an excellent soloist in the concerto and employs what strikes me as the exactly right balance between sweetness, fullness and ferocity for this work. The sound is good as well, and overall this is really a disc to be cherished. Enthusiastically recommended.
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