Tag: Finnish Composers

  • Explore the Kalevala Finnish National Epic

    Explore the Kalevala Finnish National Epic

    The Kalevala is frequently referred to as the Finnish national epic. Its fantastic and heroic tales informed the work of Finland’s greatest artists at a time when the country began its surge toward independence, after 700 years of Swedish rule and another century as a duchy of the Russian Empire.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” with Kalevala Day right around the corner (celebrated in Finland with great pride on February 28), we’ll have music inspired by this disparate collection of long narrative poems.

    Robert Kajanus was the first great champion of Jean Sibelius. He conducted first performances of many of the composer’s major works and led the Helsinki Philharmonic for 50 years. He also wrote over 200 pieces himself. “Aino” was composed in 1885 for the Kalevala Society, to mark the 50th anniversary of the poem’s publication.

    One of the Kalevala’s central figures, Väinämöinen the wizard, always seems to be plagued by bad luck. He wins a singing contest, plunging his rival, Joukahainen, into a swamp, but when the latter promises him his sister’s hand in marriage if he will save him from drowning, the sister, Aino, drowns herself rather than submit to this seemingly intolerable fate. She returns to taunt the grieving Väinämöinen in the form of a salmon.

    Uuno Klami, one of the most important Finnish composers after Sibelius, brought a degree of French polish back from his studies in Paris, where he fell under the irreverent sway of Les Six. This led to the composition of an unusually anti-heroic take on the “Kalevala” legends, “Lemminkäinen’s Island Adventures.” Despite the Gallic influence on his music, Klami grew into one of Finland’s most respected composers. Sibelius recognized his talent and even lobbied for a small lifetime stipend for him from the Finnish government.

    Unlike Sibelius’ better-known “Four Legends from the Kalevala,” Klami’s “Kalevala Suite” scrupulously avoids the more swashbuckling elements of the epic’s narrative. Klami opts instead to paint on a much broader canvas, with movements titled “The Creation of the Earth,” “The Sprout of Spring,” “Terhenniemi” (replete with the sounds of nature and the sunny bliss of a summer’s day), “Cradle Song for Lemminkäinen” (Lemminkäinen’s mother’s song sung over the body of her son, soon to be resurrected), and “The Forging of the Sampo” (a kind of talisman everyone seems to want).

    Of course, no composer had more success drawing on the Kalevala legends than Sibelius himself. We’ll conclude the hour with a Sibelius rarity, “A Song for Lemminkäinen,” from 1896. This inspiring work for male chorus followed on the heels of the composer’s “Lemminkäinen Suite” (also known as “Four Legends from the Kalevala”), written earlier in the decade.

    I hope you’ll join me in acquiring some “Epic Finnish.” That’s music inspired by the Kalevala, this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    “Väinämöinen Sings Joukahainen into a Fen,” by Joseph Alanen (1885–1920)

  • Sibelius Footage & a Personal Connection

    Sibelius Footage & a Personal Connection

    A day late and a dollar short. The story of my life!

    The day after Jean Sibelius’ birthday anniversary, there’s plenty of cigar smoke in this six minutes of historic footage of the composer and his family, in and around their home, Ainola, located about 20 miles outside Helsinki.

    I had the good fortune to enjoy a friendship with one of the composer’s grandchildren, the son of Heidi (featured at the link), when he was living in Philadelphia and later, believe it or not, my hometown of Easton, PA!

    Anssi Blomstedt, a documentary filmmaker, now makes his home back in Helsinki. He also directed a feature film, “Axel” (1990), about Sibelius’ friendship with Axel Carpelan. It was Carpelan who suggested the name “Finlandia” for what became Sibelius’ most famous composition, and Sibelius dedicated his most frequently-performed symphony, the Symphony No. 2, to him.

    The film is based on a novel, “Axel,” by Bo Carpelan, who was the subject’s great-nephew. Come to think of it, Anssi gave me a copy of the book, and it occurs to me that I never read it. Perhaps I’ll add it to my January reading list.

    Speaking of “Finlandia,” if you’ve never seen this, you owe it to yourself to watch it. You won’t be sorry. In fact, it will probably make you want to move to Finland.

  • Sibelius at 155 A Finnish Hero’s Legacy

    Sibelius at 155 A Finnish Hero’s Legacy

    EIGHT DAYS OF SIBELIUS – DAY 8

    Well, today is the day. The 155th anniversary of the birth of Jean Sibelius.

    The Sibelius legacy is an interesting one. In Finland, he is regarded as a national hero – so much more than a composer – since essentially, he provided the soundtrack for Finnish independence. His image has adorned statues, stamps, and currency. Finnish Flag Day is even celebrated on his birthday (December 8).

    Outside of Finland, Sibelius’ reputation has been a little spottier, his path to the pantheon a bit more circuitous. Broadly speaking, he has fared better in England and the Commonwealth, the United States and, naturally, Scandinavia. In Germany and France, much less so. In the modernist era, his music became regarded in some circles as a hopeless throwback. Here was a tonal composer who, in his naiveté, still wrote tunes! René Leibowitz went so far as to call him “the worst composer in the world.”

    There are still some who remain deaf to Sibelius’ charms, and blind to his significance. But in his way, he was every bit as innovative – and every bit as subversive – as Stravinsky or Schoenberg. Like Franz Liszt before him, the great Finn blazed his own trail, rejecting forms that had been developed over generations, particularly those of German origin, to reinvent the symphony, in a manner that would become recognized as wholly characteristic of the North.

    Few composers’ music has been so tied-up with the spirit of their homeland. Sibelius came of age at a time when artists of the “provincial” countries of Europe began to chafe against imperial domination, and to assert their own national identities. Sibelius loved Finland. He loved its history. He certainly loved its natural beauty.

    All this is reflected in his most famous piece, the tone poem “Finlandia,” his most flagrant expression of Finnish patriotism, performed under many names in its early days, in order to circumvent the Russian censors. The work was first heard in Helsinki on July 2, 1900. The conductor on that occasion was Sibelius’ good friend Robert Kajanus.

    YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO WATCH THIS EXCEPTIONAL VIDEO! “Finlandia” is given a stirring presentation, complemented by Northern Lights, imposing forests, and stunning wildlife footage. I guarantee it will be nine minutes of your day well-spent. An inspiring visual interpretation that breathes new life into an overplayed favorite.

    The serene melody at the heart of “Finlandia” is often heard separately as the “Finlandia Hymn.” Though not the Finnish national anthem, it is basically the Finnish national song. Listen to this lovely performance, recorded in November, by the Sibelius High School Chamber Choir. In this case, social distancing need not mean isolation.

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEAN SIBELIUS!


    PHOTO: “Passio Musicae” (1967) by Eila Hiltunen, the Sibelius Monument in Helsinki

  • Sibelius Travel Mug Cool Design for Music Lovers

    Sibelius Travel Mug Cool Design for Music Lovers

    Look what arrived over the weekend! Bound to inspire envy in anyone who espies me swilling from it, it’s my new Sibelius travel mug.

    When I imbibe from this cool-looking 20 oz. stainless steel vessel, I make the statement that I like my beverages austere, just like my symphonies.

    The snazzy, quasi-1950s design is by artist Irina Ivanova. A lot of her work is inspired by music and musicians. You’ll find more at her shop on society6.com.

    https://society6.com/irinaivanova

    or at her website

    https://iraivanova.wixsite.com/arti/portraits

    The vacuum seal delivers, keeping my joe hot and my shirts looking as fresh and pure as the unsullied snows of Lapland.

    Speaking of Sibelius, we’ll enjoy some of his music, as well as that of his fellow Finns, Tauno Pylkkänen and Oskar Merikanto, among my featured composers today, between 4 and 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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