While I quite enjoy Nielsen's clarinet concerto and his string quartets (esp 3&4), it is his symphonies that I'm most enamoured with. Symphony #2 'The Four Temperaments' was the first one that I was acquainted with, via a CD that came free with the BBC music Magazine. I was captured immediately. It's still a favourite.
In the early 1990s, I was lucky enough to catch Sir Simon Rattle and the City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra performing all six symphonies over several nights in London at the Barbican Centre. To my ears , they were astounding performances and it had something to do with the synergy produced by a conductor, orchestra and repertoire whose combination were made in Heaven! And also, perhaps, this was the artistic and performing peak of Sir Simon's association with the CBSO. Maybe he's never matched this, but that's another story for another thread!
Robert Simpson was an admirer and many of his works show the Nielsen influence. Simpson particularly advocated symphony #3, if I'm not wrong.
Many CDs, many listens and many concerts in the ensuing 29 years, and I'd be hard pushed to choose a favourite symphony or recording.
But for tonights playlist I shall pick two contenders:
Symphony #3 performed by the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Chung Myung-Whun with wordless singing from Finnish soprano Pia Raanoja, and the Norwegian Bass, Knut Skram in the andante pastorale second movement.
Symphony #5 Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra directed by Ole Schmidt.
Horenstein, Blomstedt, Storgårds, Schønwandt, Berglund et al, for another evening.
In the early 1990s, I was lucky enough to catch Sir Simon Rattle and the City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra performing all six symphonies over several nights in London at the Barbican Centre. To my ears , they were astounding performances and it had something to do with the synergy produced by a conductor, orchestra and repertoire whose combination were made in Heaven! And also, perhaps, this was the artistic and performing peak of Sir Simon's association with the CBSO. Maybe he's never matched this, but that's another story for another thread!
Robert Simpson was an admirer and many of his works show the Nielsen influence. Simpson particularly advocated symphony #3, if I'm not wrong.
Many CDs, many listens and many concerts in the ensuing 29 years, and I'd be hard pushed to choose a favourite symphony or recording.
But for tonights playlist I shall pick two contenders:
Symphony #3 performed by the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Chung Myung-Whun with wordless singing from Finnish soprano Pia Raanoja, and the Norwegian Bass, Knut Skram in the andante pastorale second movement.
Symphony #5 Performed by The London Symphony Orchestra directed by Ole Schmidt.
Horenstein, Blomstedt, Storgårds, Schønwandt, Berglund et al, for another evening.
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