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Friday, May 27, 2022

Eyvind Alnæs - Symphonies (Terje Mikkelsen)


Information

Composer: Eyvind Alnæs
  • (01) Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 7
  • (05) Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 43

Latvian National Symphony Orchestra
Terje Mikkelsen, conductor

Date: 2010
Label: Sterling


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Review

Appealing Nordic rarities dusted off with polish and conviction

Anyone who invested in Piers Lane’s splendidly charismatic Hyperion recording (6/07) of the Piano Concerto by Eyvind Alnæs (1872-1932) will also find much to savour in this enterprising coupling of his two symphonies. Like Grieg, Svendsen and Sinding before him, Alnæs studied under Carl Reinecke in Leipzig, where his First Symphony enjoyed a successful premiere in 1899. A very likeable find it proves, too, a work of no little fluency and craft which reveals an undeniable lyrical gift in the generously songful Adagio slow movement in particular. There are echoes of Grieg, Dvorák and (closer to home) Stanford in this endearing music, which radiates a skip and warm-hearted honesty that make it easy to forgive the occasional lapse into sequential squareness and timid convention. Its successor (completed nearly a quarter of a century later) employs a larger orchestra – the celesta makes an ear-tickling appearance halfway through the first movement – but emerges more as a sizeable suite, albeit full of attractive invention and with rather more in the way of local colour to boot (the finale’s main idea dances to the step of the Norwegian halling).

To be honest, neither symphony operates at anywhere near the same level of exalted inspiration as Svendsen’s but they do make highly diverting listening and many will be well pleased to make their acquaintance, especially when Terje Mikkelsen secures such tidy, bright-eyed results from the Latvian National SO. Copious presentation and vivid sound, too, though the slightly hollow acoustic precludes the last ounce of transparency and bloom. No matter, inquisitive collectors with a sweet tooth can safely investigate.

-- Andrew Achenbach, Gramophone


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Eyvind Alnæs (29 April 1872, Fredrikstad – 24 December 1932, Oslo) was a Norwegian composer, pianist, organist and choir director. Alnæs studied music first in Oslo with Iver Holter, then in Leipzig with Carl Reinecke and, after the première of his first symphony in 1896, in Berlin with Julius Ruthardt. Alnæs wrote music in a late Romantic style; his output included two symphonies, one set of symphonic variations, a piano concerto, pieces for piano, chorale preludes for organ, choral works, and art songs (in Norwegian, romanser). A number of his songs, as well as his piano concerto and symphonies have been recorded.

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Terje Mikkelsen (born April 6, 1957 in Drøbak, south of Oslo) is an Norwegian conductor.

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  2. Can you reupload please? Thanks

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