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Friday, July 12, 2019

Geirr Tveitt - Baldur's Dream; Telemakin (Ole Kristian Ruud)


Information

Composer: Geirr Tveitt

CD1:
  1. Baldurs Draumar: Act 1
  2. Baldurs Draumar: Act 2
CD2:
  1. Baldurs Draumar: Act 3
  2. Telemarkin

Solveig Kringelborn, soprano (Baldurs)
Ulf Øien. tenor (Baldurs)
Magne Fremmerlid, bass (Baldurs)
Trine Øien, mezzo-soprano (Telemakin)
Arve Moen Bergset, hardanger fiddle (Telemakin)
Jon Eikemo, narrator

Stavanger Symphony Orchestra
Ole Kristian Ruud, conductor

Date: 2003
Label: BIS
http://bis.se/label/bis/tveitt-baldur-s-dreams

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Review

ARTISTIC QUALITY: 10 / SOUND QUALITY: 10

The rediscovery of the music of Geirr Tveitt remains one of the more exciting things happening in the world of classical music recordings, and this new release may be the most fascinating find of all. Baldur’s Dream is “A symbolic play for dance and orchestra in three acts”, some 90 minutes of music with parts for singers who vocalise or apparently sing in the composer’s own concept of ancient Norwegian (in other words, the text doesn’t mean anything we need to worry about and largely adds color). Long before the catastrophic fire that destroyed much of Tveitt’s life’s work, this score was believed lost–in the London blitz during World War II. The piece was performed in Oslo in 1938, however, and a recording of that event exists, which permitted Russian composer Alexei Rybnikov to attempt a reconstruction.

However, while at work on the reconstruction of another work–Tveitt’s Sun-God Symphony, which bases its thematic material on Baldur’s Dream–Norwegian composer Kaare Dyvik Husby discovered the remains not only of that work but of the full score and orchestral parts of the original full-length dance drama. These permitted him to supplement Rybnikov’s reconstruction and come as close as makes no difference to what Tveitt’s original must have been, including the extensive and imaginative use of a virtuoso percussion section featuring nine tuned drums and “everything but the kitchen sink” besides. The spoken prologues to each act (which you can skip over if you like as they are tracked separately) exist from the surviving programs of the original performances, so this masterpiece of Tveitt’s youthful maturity (he was about 30 when he wrote it) now has been restored in all of its glory.

And how glorious it is! The story of Baldur is well known from Jon Leifs’ similarly epic dance drama, though of course the two composers are worlds apart stylistically. Leifs based his musical idiom on Icelandic folk music and quoted the ancient Edda texts directly. Tveitt, on the other hand, uses an invented style largely based on pentatonic modes, so that much of the music has an exotic, Eastern flavor or even brings to mind Miklos Rosza in his “biblical epic” mode (e.g. Ben Hur). In other words, this is really big, splashy, colorful Romantic music with as much incident packed into it as possible. The tunes are extremely beautiful, the instrumental textures glitter like diamonds, and the quiet ending (after a hugely powerful climax as Baldur is killed by a mistletoe-tipped arrow) is poetry incarnate. It will blow you away.

Telemarkin is a cantata for speaker, mezzo-soprano, Hardanger fiddle, and orchestra based on a rather silly text celebrating the natural beauties of the Telemark region of Norway. Never mind the words (unless of course you happen to live there and think that it’s the greatest place on earth). The music is very lovely and not in the least bit as bombastic and self-satisfied as the poem. Both this and Baldur’s Dream receive well nigh perfect performances from the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra under Ole Kristian Ruud. Having already presented Baldur’s Dream live, it’s obvious that they were up for the challenge of recording this mammoth piece, and every section of the orchestra responds with total commitment. The solo winds do a particularly fine job (and they have a lot to do), while the busy percussionists play with both power and subtlety. Fine solo singing (have pity on bass Magne Fremmerlid for Tveitt’s looney low notes) and demonstration-quality sound complete an irresistible package that will provide countless hours of pleasurable listening. It doesn’t get better than this.

-- David Hutwitz, ClassicsToday

More reviews:
http://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/tveitt-baldurs-dreams-telemarkin
http://www.amazon.com/Baldurs-Draumar-Telemarkin-G-Tveitt/dp/B00018D3T6

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Geirr Tveitt, born Nils Tveit (October 19, 1908 – February 1, 1981) was a Norwegian composer and pianist. Tveitt was a central figure of the national movement in Norwegian cultural life during the 1930s. His music draws from many styles and traditions, most notably Stravinsky, Bartók, Debussy and Ravel, always underpinned by idioms derived from Norwegian folk-music. In 1970, Tveitt's house in Kvam was burned to the ground, with almost 300 opuses of his manuscripts. 80% of Tveitt's production was gone forever. Most of Tveitt's remaining music is now commercially available on records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geirr_Tveitt

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Ole Kristian Ruud (born 2 October 1958, Lillestrøm) is a Norwegian conductor. He studied clarinet with Richard Kjelstrup at the Norwegian Academy of Music. He studied conducting at the Sibelius Academy and made his debut in Oslo with the National theater. Ruud was principal conductor of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, Norrköping Symphony Orchestra and Stavanger Symphony Orchestra. He has been professor of conducting at the Norwegian Academy of Music since 1999. In 2005, he completed recording the complete orchestral works of Grieg with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, for BIS records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ole_Kristian_Ruud

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FLAC, tracks
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6 comments:

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  2. MUCHAS GRACIAS !!! … Merci! Thank you! Obrigado! Спасибо! !ありがう! Arigato! Danke! Dziękuję! Dank je u! Mulţumesc! Teşekkür ederim! Tack! Tack så mycket! Grazie! Kiitos! תודה לך! Takk! Dakujem,ďakujem vám! Hvala! شكراً!shokran! Ευχαριστώ! 감사합니다! Děkuji! Tak skal du have! Dankon! Hvala! Najlepša hvala! Gràcies! Faleminderit! Ačiū! De’koju! Labai ačiū! ขอบคุณ! Shukrīya! بہت) شكريه (bahut)! Cảm ơn cô! Cảm ơn cô nhiều! Благодаря! Þakka þér! Baie dankie! Takk fyri! Sipas dekem! متشکرم! Благодарам! Təşəkkür! Paldies! Pateicos! Tencinu! Terima kasih! Дуже дякую! Спасибі! Баярлалаа! Гялайлаа! Танд их баярлалаа! Terima kasih! ধন্যবাদ (dhonyobād)! Salamat! Trugarez!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Choose one link, copy it to your browser's address bar, wait 5 seconds, then click on 'Skip Ad' (or 'Continue') (top right).
    If you are asked to download anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    CD1
    http://biastonu.com/1yhA
    or
    https://ouo.io/Z3xzRhK
    or
    http://uii.io/PuTuE

    CD2
    http://biastonu.com/1yhB
    or
    https://ouo.io/o8O8LD
    or
    http://uii.io/IMupN

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. booklet
      http://www.eclassical.com/shop/17115/art87/4915387-9e7ea5-BIS-1337-38_booklet_x.pdf

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  4. For the broken links of Linkshrink.net, could you provide me with an e-mail to send you the list?
    Thank you very much!

    Matsuni

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There are too many, so I prefer to renew them by request. Just leave a comment, it's easier for me to keep track.

      Delete