Sibelius Symphony No.1. En Saga.
Gothenburg SO/Santtu-Matias Rouvali. Alpha 24/96 via Qobuz Studio/or CD.
In the finale of Sibelius’ 1st Symphony, Rouvali is very restrained at the first appearance of the big tune; all the better to astonish you with the work’s true climax, where the same theme has stunning sweep and power, but edge, shape and sensitivity too. The transition through here to the last pages is remarkable for control of pace, line and tension. This finale can be problematic - the episodes hard to keep together - to find their symphonic sense in the current of motivic recurrence; but the marriage of precision and primal energy makes this recording truly exceptional. Allegro Molto - a molten allegro!
True of the whole exceptional performance…
The Gothenburgers often have a rather opulent sound on record - strings especially, often too plush for my taste in northern sounds. But here the
strings are textured, open-weave, with a sharp cutting edge; their melodies are keenly shaped, utterly without blur or approximation. The winds are unusually prominent; the brass powerful but blended, not too overwhelming; part of the landscape. It’s this sense of giving voice tothe landscape, to the spirits and creatures that live within it, that, inter alia, makes this recording so remarkable for me. It has precision into the tiniest of all the deeply-resolved details, every phrase is considered and conducted-through, but that spontaneity - the sense of phenomenal drama, is very vivid. Quite some combination!
Personally, I much prefer performances of the Sibelius 1st that don’t emphasise the supposed Romantic -Tchaikovskian inheritance. I guess it is there, but in a reading like this, with sharpened thematic profiles, biting rhythms and transparent textures, very individualised wind voices (voices of the wind…) you are more aware of that deeper Sibelian essence, the connection to the landscape and the sensations of living within it. The keen winds, vast forests, the cries of wild birds; their mythical sprites and equivalents. That dark, noble creator spiritus at its musical heart.
The first movement is bar-to-bar made new, ultra-detailed yet thought-through, with a marvellously atmospheric opening; every wind solo tells its own tale. The slow movement never overindulges texture or melody for their own Romantic sake, offers instead exceptional sensitivity to phrase, balance and dynamics - but its climax is one of writhing turbulence; the coda regretful of fading energies. I’ve never heard this andante sound quite so essentially Sibelian - or so alive. The scherzo is similarly striking in its sharp-tipped clarity and careful sonic gradations; no previous conductor, surely, has ever found so much in the trio: the mysteries created by infinitesimal care for musical detail. Again, remarkable in a movement that is often just thrown off as a rhythmical repeater.
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You could easily relate this to say, the 1st Symphony in Vanska’s earlier Lahti cycle, and there are some similarities of clarified line, tempi and texture. But Rouvali’s is more impassioned: decidedly new, individual and very distinctive both in its visionary sweep, and its sharply-cut, extraordinarily nurtured detail.
(En Saga? It gets the performance of its life. See above for apt superlatives…)
I wonder how long their cycle will take…. “if it were done t’were well t’were done quickly”….
The better to keep it sharp and make it new, and create a Sibelius as a musical adventure for our own time.
How apt that this should appear on the ever-enterprising Alpha label; the Rouvali Sibelius Cycle may become just as radically epoch-making as their excellent Haydn 2032 Series.
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