A belated thank you for your support, Antonio.

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Jón Leifs - Dettifoss and other orchestral works (En Shao)


Information

Composer: Jón Leifs
  • (01) Organ Concerto, Op. 7
  • (04) Variations on a Theme by Beethoven (Variazioni pastorale), Op. 8
  • (15) Fine II (Farewell to earthly life), Op. 56
  • (16) Dettifoss, Op. 57

Björn Steinar Sólbergsson, organ (1-3)
Reynir Sigurdsson, vibraphone (15)
Loftur Erlingsson, baritone (16)

Kór Hallgrímskirkju, choir (16)
Iceland Symphony Orchestra
En Shao, conductor

Date: 1999
Label: BIS
http://bis.se/composer/leifs-jon/leifs-dettifoss-and-other-orchestral-works

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Review

Leifs is no wheedler or cajoler of audiences and concert promoters. He belongs in the same select cohort as Nikos Skalkottas, Havergal Brian, Allan Pettersson and Khaikhosru Sorabji. All to various extents affected indifference to the neglect of their music by bureaucrats and executants and all have benefited from the CD age.

This is not to say that Leifs wrote music without intrinsic attraction. In fact hearing the four BIS CDs of the orchestral music I was surprised to note so many instantly captivating works.

The Organ Concerto is not one of those works. It is sullen and Gothic - shorn of any audience ingratiation factor. It can easily sound like music for a dismal hopeless trek across limitless snow fields - like Vaughan Williams' music from Sinfonia Antartica. The aural equivalent of maze-marching can be heard in clashing hymns rather like Liszt's Hunnenschlacht and echoing Nielsen 4 and 5 in its suggestion of chaos clashing with harmony. Yet again the listener is struck by the extremes of dynamic range as well as by the Stygian baritonal blare of the brass section and the howls and squeals of the woodwind against emphatic drum punctuation. This is not dodecaphonic but surfaces are unadorned and brutal. Some of this would make glorious music for an adaptation of Tolkien's 'The Lord of the Rings'. It remains to be seen how Howard Shore will fare in the film trilogy due to appear in cinemas over the next two years - starting Christmas 2001. In any event Leifs would have made an ideal composer for the onslaught of nightmare Orcish armies.

A less thorny approach is encountered in the Beethoven Variations (Theme and ten variants) which date from the same year as the Concerto. The theme is from the LvB String Trio Op. 8. The Variations are strong and gentle music, melodious to the point of sounding, at times, like a French operatic interlude. At Var. 4 the serenading character begins to decay into something sallow. Var. 6 is in the form of a jerky military march of injured automata lurching towards negation and chaos. The quasi grave (Var 9) yet again sounds very much like Roy Harris with its sombre brass and drums. It is worth noting that in 1930 Roy Harris had no international reputation and a modest standing so far as the USA is concerned so this 'echo' is purely coincidental. Var 10 and the reprise lead us back to operatic intermezzi, to Gounod and to Bizet.

Fine II is from that cloudburst of productivity in the early 1960s. It is a work for vibraphone and string orchestra. The vibraphone is played by Reynir Sigurdsson. The music conjures the movement of marine ice floes, gigantic not grinding or bitter. The work has a slow drawling power and with the striking presence of that vibraphone (try 5.40) Roy Harris seems not far away yet again. A wonderful introduction to the music of this composer.

Intriguingly Fine I and Fine II (both subtitled 'Farewell to Earthly Life') were written to provide a finale to any orchestral work left incomplete at its death. They are associated with Leifs' most ambitious works: the three Edda oratorios. These are The Creation of the World (1936-39), The Life of the Gods (1951-66) and the incomplete Twilight of the Gods - all unrecorded. Are they next on your list BIS?

Dettifoss (the great Icelandic waterfall) begins in and ultimately retreats into stony Tallis-like arcana. Unlike some composers where you are aware of the human observer in the foreground, Leifs has you believing that the music is the scenery. In some strange way this music embodies the objective; it is the rock and the waters itself. You are alien to it and it is alien to you. The music is implacable, careless of you and your troubles - outside temporal limitations. It came as a surprise, after hearing the music, to read that this is one of Leifs' nature pieces that, in fact, has the observer (the poet) walking towards the waterfall, observing it and then walking away. The vehemence of the more furious music in Dettifoss can be compared with the awesome thrashing of some fearsome engine with con-rod buckled, crippled yet horrifically driven.

All the recordings in this orchestral series of CDs (4 to date, 2001) were recorded in the roomy stone acoustic of Hallgrím's Church, Reykjavik.

All but Fine II are world première recordings.

There are of course some other Leifs recordings including ones from Chandos and from the Icelandic Music Information Centre. None however competes directly with this disc work for work. Everything here is done with burning or smouldering conviction.

-- Rob Barnett, MusicWeb International

More reviews:
http://www.amazon.com/Leifs-Dettifoss-Other-Orchestral-Works/dp/B00000J2RS

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Jón Leifs (1 May 1899 – 30 July 1968), was an Icelandic composer, pianist, and conductor. Born in Iceland, he left for Germany in 1916 to study at the Leipzig Conservatory and graduated in 1921. During this period he also studied composition with Ferruccio Busoni. Beginning with piano arrangements of Icelandic folk songs, Leifs started an active career as a composer in the 1920s. In 1945 he moved back to Iceland, and became a fierce proponent of music education and of artists' rights. Most of his works is inspired by Icelandic natural phenomena and classic Icelandic sagas.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3n_Leifs

***

En Shao (born 3 October 1954 in Tianjin, China) is a Chinese conductor. After graduating from the Beijing Central Conservatory he became second Principal Conductor of the Chinese Broadcasting Symphony Orchestra. Shao was Associate Conductor of the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for 5 years, and was Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor of the Ulster Orchestra from 1992 to 1995. He is currently the Chief Conductor of the RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra, the Principal Guest Conductor of the China National Symphony Orchestra and the Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Taipei Chinese Orchestra.
https://www.discogs.com/artist/906658-En-Shao
http://imgartists.com/artist/en_shao

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FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

13 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  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. Links for Dettifoss are dead, but all the other Jon Leifs links worked today. Many thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've just checked the MEGA link, and it's still working. Could you please try again?

      Delete
  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Unfortunately, this is a defective rip.

      Every track has the last 2 seconds (exactly) either deleted or flattened to silence.

      Listen, for example, to the transition from track 5 to 6. The music should be continuous, but there are instead 2 seconds of missing music replaced by silence.

      I hope you can fix this.

      Thank you!

      Delete
    2. Thanks for pointing that out, I didn't notice it before. Check the new link I posted below. Hope everything is correct now.

      Delete
  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sorry it's taken me so long to thank you! I only just noticed I had forgotten.

      Very much appreciated! As is all the great music you share so generously!

      Delete
  6. Could you please re-upload this one?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Skip Ad' (or 'Get link').
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    http://usheethe.com/2kIo
    or
    https://uii.io/STVs2G
    or
    https://exe.io/iS3xjB

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you very much for re-uploading this disc so soon. I only recently 'discovered' Leifs. I heard his Saga-Symphony en wanted to hear his other music. Only this 'Dettifoss' disc was missing from my collection. Fasinating composer. Again thank you.

    ReplyDelete