Daniel Börtz at 80
Daniel Börtz is without a doubt one of Sweden’s major composers. He will be 80 years old this year and his birthday will be celebrated with several premieres as well as with jubilee concerts.
For Daniel Börtz, the fundamental existential questions are of vital importance. His definitive breakthrough came in 1991 when he collaborated with Ingmar Bergman on the opera Backanterna (The Bacchae). The following year the Stockholm Concert Hall devoted their international composer festival to his music. Almost forty works were performed during the festival, which was a huge success.
Some years later, in 1998, when Stockholm was the European Capital of Culture, his opera Marie Antoinette had its premiere at Folkoperan. It is today the second most frequently performed modern Swedish opera, after Karl-Birger Blomdahl’s Aniara.
The big orchestral works, especially the symphonies – or sinfonias as he chooses to call them – are often grandiose and rich in sonorities. Bruckner – and even Mahler – are mentioned as predecessors and sources of inspiration. During the 1990s the melodic and singable elements acquired more scope in his music. A number of solo concertos were given titles relating to vocal music: Songs and Dances for trumpet and orchestra, Songs and Shadows for violin and orchestra and Songs and Light for clarinet and orchestra.
Sinfonia 13 & 14
Börtz’s Sinfonia 13 had its premiere in May 2019 at the Stockholm Concert Hall. It forms the third part in a triptych which also includes In the Darkness of Voices for choir a cappella with texts by Göran Sonnevi, and the full-length opera Medea, based on Euripides’ drama. Sinfonia 13 contains ten texts from Kjell Espmark’s book ‘The Creation’, in which both anonymous deceased and historical figures are struggling to become alive, in the poems and in us. We encounter war, flight and persecution.
– At first sight the three works in the triptych seem quite different, but all of them originate in a fundamentally dark outlook on life, where only mankind itself has the capacity to influence the world in a brighter direction. This music comprises the blackest darkness, violent aggressiveness and the mildest tenderness. You might perhaps think that Sinfonia 13 could just as well be called an oratorio as a symphony. But firstly, for me maybe the most important ingredient in
an oratorio is a choir, and in Sinfonia 13 there is none; and besides, I seem to have used the ‘symphonic paint brush’ to a very great extent in this work, explains Daniel Börtz.
The work consists of three parts, and in addition to the richly adorned orchestra there are two reciters, as well as three singers, a mezzo-soprano, a countertenor and a baritone. At the bottom of this is a will to expand the whole instrument that is the orchestra. Indeed, Börtz also has a highly developed sensitivity for the voice and the nuances of the text. His thirteenth sinfonia, too, is by far the longest.
– In these three “building blocks” – the choral work, the opera and the sinfonia – there are furthermore features in common dealing with mankind’s relationship to both nature and to how we behave in this world. Which is vital in the times we are living in now, with all the frightful, oppressive things going on around us.
Sinfonia 13 is probably the darkest piece Börtz has ever composed. With Sinfonia 14 for string orchestra he wanted to find a new direction.
– I turned everything over and took a look back at my own Sinfonia 1 from 1973, he says as we talk on the phone.
And in a manner similar to that in the first sinfonia, Sinfonia 14 begins with a soft chord in the major that grows and finally explodes. It was composed expressly for Musica Vitae on the initiative of the orchestra’s former concertmaster and artistic leader, the violinist Malin Broman. In a commentary in connection with the premiere in Växjö on 12 February of this year, Malin said that “Daniel Börtz’s music is always deeply moving, and Sinfonia 14 contains everything: it is dramatic, beautiful and fervent”.
Double Concerto for One & Sinfonia 15
The collaboration with Malin Broman dates back to the 1990s. Börtz has also written expressly for Malin the Double Concerto for One, to be premiered this March.
– At first I intended to write a viola concerto, but after hearing her in some context play both the violin and the viola I realised that I could actually use both instruments in one and the same concerto. In principle, it is designed so that the outer movements are for viola and the middle movement for violin. We didn’t have a commission for this work, but when it was ready the Norrköping Symphony Orchestra said they wanted to perform it, and since then a number of other orchestras have shown interest. I am really quite pleased with this, says Börtz.
After the double concerto Daniel Börtz found time to compose yet another sinfonia, his 15th.
It was written during the pandemic years 2021–22 and is scheduled to be premiered by the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic in November 2023. His commentary on the music hints at drama as well as dynamics.
– In Sinfonia 13 the orchestra’s “alternative instruments” are given a sizeable role, e.g. the alto flute, the English horn, the bass clarinet, etc. In Sinfonia 15 these instruments – plus the piccolo, the E-flat clarinet and others – have been brought out further. They play roles in the borderland between light and darkness. They dare to be provocative and with their voices build bridges over what is black and threatening. At times their conviction of something better fails, and the shadow or the darkness enters in. But sometimes there are: light, tranquillity and warmth. That is what Sinfonia 15 is all about.
There is always musical activity going on in Daniel Börtz’s head. He will be 80 in August and does what he wants. In Sara Norling’s biography about him from 2017, he says: “With the right of age I feel a greater freedom to surprise myself and I sometimes let the means of expression decide for me. When you are young it is more difficult to affirm things, as you want to be strict and true to your ideals, or what the heck you may call it.”
And what we can count on Daniel Börtz in the near future affirming and surprising both himself and us with, we will soon surely see in the form of chamber music, he discloses.
Göran Persson
HIGHLIGHTS 1/2023 6
Photo: Hans Lindén
KIRMO LINTINEN Haapaneitty, Mettäntyttö / Skogens dotter, aspens ande (2007) Dur: 30’
A musical tale for narrator and ensemble: fl, ob, string quintet
Text: Arja Puikkonen (Fin), transl.
Paula Roselius (Swe) Lintinen’s stirring idiom joins an exciting story by Puikkonen in a breath-taking adventure in a forest of myths and legends where the leading character meets goblins and gnomes. The music alternates with narration, but sometimes the two overlap, thus raising the intensity. The characters are transported along on delightful themes, dances and short motifs.
CECILIA DAMSTRÖM
Dumma Kungen (The Silly King) (2016–17) Dur: 65’
Libretto: Monica Vikström-Jokela (Swe)
Children’s opera for boy soprano, coloratura soprano, 2S, Mz, T, B, children’s choir & chamber orchestra: 1010-0100-01-pf-acc-str (min 11011)
The Silly King is a fairy tale opera about xenophobia, power abuse, and about daring to embrace what is new and foreign. The self-centered King of My Land passes whatever laws he chooses, one more stupid than the other. When a large number of foreigners from Flatland arrives with the newly built railway, the King tries every trick to stop them. He is annoyed as he can’t control the Flatlanders that speak and sing in a language he does not understand. The Silly King was awarded the Aino Prize 2018 (The Children’s Opera of the Year).
KARIN REHNQVIST
Sötskolan/Beauty School/Die Schönheitsfalle (1999) Dur: 60’
Libretto: Kerstin Perski (Swe/Ger/Eng/Nor)
A horror opera for children from 10 years
2S, 1 Mz, 1 Bar & ensemble: fl, cl, tbn, hp, vln, vla, vlc. The Beauty School is about the constant demands on children to please the adult world with their behaviour and looks. Bella refuses to be her mother’s sweet little girl. She ends up in a nightmarish fantasy world where the countess Mammalia is going to teach her how to be sweet and nice. However, she soon finds out that all the sweet and nice girls are sooner or later offered up to the Vampire! Rehnqvist builds up a musical thriller atmosphere that is challenging with its blend of harsh and shrill dissonances, lovely melodious sections and humour.
KIMMO HAKOLA
Mara and Katti (2011) Dur: 55’
Libretto: Johanna Jokipaltio (Fin)
Children’s opera for 4 soloists, descant choir and ensemble: cl, hp, pf, acc, vla Hakola’s opera provides plenty of food for the imagination. The action-packed story is about Mara, who meets a singing cat called Katti. During their journey, they encounter the rat king, languish in prison and escape on a scooter. Hakola’s virtuoso music switches from one genre to another and creates a musical adventure in which entertainment, humour and sophistication go hand in hand.
ROOPE MÄENPÄÄ
Hyönteissinfonia/Insect Symphony (2021) Dur: 30’ for two narrators (adult, child) and orchestra: 2221-2201-02-str
Text: Roope Mäenpää (Fin/Swe/Eng)
A delightful and ambitious orchestral work with an important ecological message. The narration, in the form of a dialogue, sets out to explore nature and the miraculous world of little organisms. The music is melodic, as befits a piece for the whole family, and in many places calls to mind the speed and colour of film music. Lovely illustrations by Emmi Nieminen add to the experience.
Hipinäaasi apinahiisi (2019–20) Dur: 30’
A musical fairytale for narrator and orchestra: 2221-2201-02-str
Text: Ville Hytönen (Fin)
The fresh, gently anarchistic musical fairytale based on a popular children’s book by Hytönen is about two lonely animals that become friends. It is also a fascinating journey of discovery in the sound world of an orchestra, introducing the stylistic devices of contemporary music in between more traditional ones.
CHRISTOFFER NOBIN
Hion om natten (Hion at Night) (2014) Dur: 65’
Libretto: Henrik Ståhl (Swe)
SATU SIMOLA
The Mouse/Hiiri (2012) Dur: 25’ for narrator and orchestra: 2222-2210-11-pf-str or 2fl-pf-str or ensemble
Text: Satu Simola (Fin/Swe/Eng/Chinese)
This musical adventure is a perfect family concert. It tells of a timid mouse that lives in a machine it has built to protect it from the world. One day, a bird lands on the machine and the mouse has to choose between loneliness and friendship. The charming music is supported by narration and pictures. Available in a choice of languages.
ARMAS JÄRNEFELT
Miranda (1901) Dur: 15’
Alkuperäisteos: Zacharias Topelius
for narrator and orchestra: 2121-2210-03(/4)-str
Näytelmän sovitus: Jalmari Finne
Text: Jalmar Finne (Fin) after Z. Topelius
Sävellys: Armas Järnefelt
Ohjaus ja koreografia: Sanna Heiskanen
Kapellimestari: Janne Saarinen
Apulaiskapellimestari: Juhani Palola
Hiekka-animaatio ja lavastus: Amadeu Vives
This musical fairytale or “melodrama” was discovered hidden in the archives of the Finnish National Library and recently published for the first time. Järnefelt’s music enlivens Topelius’s epic about a princess and her suitors. The seven movements, each of a different nature, reflect the events and the characters’ psychology. The music has panache, force, a lilting waltz-like quality and a touch of oriental mystery.
Valosuunnittelu: Joni Kallio
Valokuvaus: Johannes Wilenius
Graafinen suunnittelu: Ankara Design / Anna Aalto
Vastaava tuottaja: Matti Karhos
Tuotanto: Lahden kaupungin kulttuuripalvelut / Sari Tuominen ja Henna Keihäs
Children’s opera for S, Mz, T, actor, choir, orchestra: 3333-4331-11-str. This is a sad, beautiful, warm, and compelling tale about the little village Hion, where the ruler Michael has decreed that no one should stay awake at night. But the girl Signa is not like the others. One night she is still up when everyone else is lying in their beds. She opens the door and peeks out, and suddenly, everything is changed. Nobin has let the music develop out of the story. It is full of drama, and there are melodies here that linger in one’s memory long after the end of the performance.
BENJAMIN STAERN
Snödrottningen/The Snow Queen/Die Schneekönigin (2016)
Dur: 70’
Libretto: Anelia Kadieva Jonsson after H.C. Andersen (Swe/Ger/Eng)
Family opera for 11 soloists, children’s chorus and orchestra: 2222-2220-02-hppf-str
The Snow Queen is based on H.C. Andersen´s well-known fairy tale about Gerda, who ventures out to save her friend Kai after he has been abducted by the Snow Queen. The evil and the goodness are easily recognizable in the music, depicted with sharp dissonances and noise, or in major/minor harmonies. The music is congenial with the tale, it is full of flashes of wit and swarming with musical references. It is an opera replete with excitement, humour and a heart-warming message, friendship’s victory over evil. The libretto is now also available in German and English.
TIPS Music for children and
REPERTOIRE
families
HIGHLIGHTS 1/2023 7
Highly interesting premiere
The new work also starts out with an airy chord in the major that immediately sharpens all of the listener’s senses… Even though the building blocks are recognizable and in fact rather simple, the composer twists everything together into something very special… one is astonished by the string instruments’ capacity to create such variegated
Highly recommended
sound. Moreover, the music does something inexplicable with one’s perception of time. It is as if it radiates in different directions simultaneously.
Sydsvenska Dagbladet 13.2.
Daniel Börtz: Sinfonia 14 World premiere: Musica Vitae/Malin Broman, 10.2.2023 Växjö, Sweden
Anders Paulsson traverses its [Symphony No. 3] five continuous sections – from an agitatedly expectant ‘Quest’, via the guardedly expressive ‘Solitude’ and assaultive ‘Shudders’, to a plaintively affecting ‘Sad’ before dissolving into the postlude that is ‘Mists’… The Fourth Symphony is among Eliasson’s most characteristic in its formal and expressive aims. Here a powerfully wrought Allegro summons up some of this composer’s most uninhibited music; evolving with no little motivic ingenuity to an Adagio whose concertante role for flugelhorn, eloquently rendered by Joakim Agnas, exudes a wistfully evocative tone. A scherzo-like section marked ‘threatening’ then builds to a climax, from where a brief Adagio returns the flugelhorn for a subdued envoi… the latter two pieces here find his idiom at its most refined, unfolding with a cumulative inevitability that could be thought Nordic in its ethos.
Arcana January 2023
Anders Eliasson: Symphonies Nos 3 & 4, Trombone Concerto CD: Gothenburg SO/Johannes Gustavsson, Royal Stocholm PO/Sakari Oramo, sol. Anders Paulsson, ssax, Christian Lindberg, tbn (BIS-2368)
Text-sensitive tone painter Kortekangas
The highlight of the concert was the premiere of Songs of Meena, in which the vocal mastery of Kortekangas, an old hand at opera, once again came to light… The delicate orchestration never drowned the soloists and he knows the human voice like the back of his hand. Kortekangas is also a master at coaxing out every nuance in the text. Hufvudstadsbladet 4.12.
Olli Kortekangas: Songs of Meena for soprano and orchestra World premiere: Helsinki PO/Osmo Vänskä, sol. Tuuli Takala, 29.11.2022 Helsinki, Finland
Helvi Leiviskä concerts
Her style and way of executing a symphony are utterly original… What is familiar is her linear counterpoint, an extremely tight polyphonic texture that rises to impressive climaxes in the brass but sometimes acquires hints of humour. Amfion.fi 7.12.
Helvi Leiviskä: Symphony No. 2 (1954)
Lahti SO/Anna-Maria Helsing, 6.12.2022 Lahti, Finland
We heard the Piano Trio and Piano Quartet…both with French influences brought to Finland by Erkki Melartin… The piano part is demanding, even tough in the Trio, whereas the Quartet is expansively symphonic music for chamber ensemble. Long impressionistic timbral sweeps from which supporting themes develop. The work ends with a jubilant, triumphant finale. Amfion.fi 7.12.
Helvi Leiviskä: Piano Trio (1925), Piano Quartet (1926/1935)
Linda Suolahti, vl, Elina Heikkinen, vla, Kati Raitinen, vlc, Tiina Karakorpi, pf, Fanny Söderström, pf, 3.12.2022 Helsinki, Finland (Kokonainen Festival)
Inventive and arresting Sandström
Sandström’s Five Pieces for piano and orchestra is more reminiscent of five cohesive character pieces, where the music seems both rowdy and beautiful. Gentler sounds strive towards higher registers, like an “ascension”, to use the composer’s own words.
Opus No. 1 2023
The suite is a very fine piece of music, full of invention, with many arresting orchestral gestures. It amounts to a most satisfying whole. MusicWeb International 16.2.
Sven-David Sandström: Five Pieces for Piano and Orchestra
CD: Gothenburg SO/Ryan Bancroft, sol. Peter Friis Johansson (BIS-2576)
HIGHLIGHTS 1/2023 8 REVIEWS
Photo: Henna Salmela
Photo: Kuvasiskot studio/Museovirasto www.finna.fi Musica Vitae.
Photo: Lina Alriksson
Olli Kortekangas
Helvi Leiviskä
The Mountain King
Conductor Patrik Ringborg makes of the Malmö Symphony Orchestra an enthusiastic instrument, conjuring up the myth of nature’s destruction with Alfvén’s grandiose orchestral palette and sly leitmotifs: chromatically winding as in Richard Strauss, glittering and dancing as in Bizet and blackened as in Weill and Sibelius… When the score after 100 years (!) has been transformed from a handwritten manuscript to a printed edition, there are no excuses for not playing the work in its entirety. For “The Mountain King” is something of a Swedish “Fire Bird” or “Don Juan” – and it has an important message to tell. Dagens Nyheter 2.12.
Hugo Alfvén: The Mountain King (Bergakungen – complete ballet music)
Malmö SO/Patrik Ringborg, 1.12.2022 Malmö, Sweden
Impressive Puumala Violin Concerto
Tree of Memories was just taking shape when Puumala’s father fell ill, deteriorated and passed away… Puumala says that the work is about memory and the vanishing of memories… It is easy for the listener to get caught up in the richly-nuanced idiom reaching out in many directions, with its refined orchestration and at times surprisingly alluring intonation, its spectral-like orchestral textures and its ghosts from even as far back as Romanticism. Carolin Widmann’s solo varied fascinatingly between rough and smooth, being pungently theatrical at its most impressive. Rondo 12/2022
Veli-Matti Puumala: Violin Concerto “Tree of Memories”
World premiere: Finnish RSO/Jukka-Pekka Saraste, sol. Carolin Widmann, 6.12. 2022 Helsinki, Finland
Extraordinary imagination
In my view Kalevi Aho is the greatest composer now living. (…) because he has not only an extraordinary imagination and a good grasp of structure, but because, unlike so many composers out there (even the good ones), he uses far more than just one style of composing. One can go from piece to piece and sometimes be quite surprised that what you are hearing is the work of the same composer…. One of the reasons I love Aho’s music so much is that it is not at all cold. On the contrary, it is generally bristling with both emotion and energy. He always has a “long view” of where his music is going and what it will do once it arrives there. He also has a great instinct for avoiding anything resembling a cliché, particularly in the endings of movements. ArtMusic Lounge 10.2.
Kalevi Aho: Violin Concerto No. 2, Cello Concerto No. 2
CD: Kymi Sinfonietta/Olari Elts, sol. Elina Vähälä, vln, Jonathan Roozeman, vlc (BIS-2466)
A Wennäkoski CD bursting with energy
Composing a curtain raiser for the last night of the Proms is no easy job, but Lotta Wennäkoski really did it in 2017: Flounce was an international hit. Also on the disc are two other brilliant works, and the result is bursting with orchestral energy… Wennäkoski propels the listener along with strength and determination, but the rhythm is as rich as the timbres and orchestral effects. The solo harpist in Sigla is spot on with the dancing rhythms and in the process shatters all the superfluous preconceived ideas about the instrument… Sedecim relies on almost intoxicating orchestral effects, but here again the music swirls swiftly along. The FRSO and Collon really have to get their swing act together in the closing movement. Yle.fi 18.2.
Lotta Wennäkoski: Harp Concerto “Sigla”, Flounce, Sedecim
CD: Finnish RSO/Nicholas Collon, sol. Sivan Magen (Ondine ODE-1420-2)
VELI-MATTI PUUMALA
String Quartet No. 2
Kamus Quartet • 2.3. Helsinki, Finland (Musica Nova festival)
KALEVI AHO
Fragen (Duo for two violins)
Rémy & Iris Ballot • 7.3. Vienna, Austria
Concerto for Baritone Horn and Orchestra
Kymi Sinfonietta/Okko Kamu, sol. Mizuho Kojima-Haarala
7.6. Kotka, Finland (Kymijoen Lohisoitto festival)
PASI LYYTIKÄINEN
Sweet Septet
New European Ensemble/Ivan Buffa • 12.3. Hague, The Netherlands
MATTHEW WHITTALL
January – Wind Quintet
Arktinen hysteria • 15.3. Oulu, Finland (Oulunsalo soi festival)
KAI NIEMINEN
Two Pieces for Wind Quintet
Jyväskylä Sinfonia Quintet • 18.3. Jyväskylä, Finland
Quartetto V per archi – Dietro delle Maschere
Q Quartets • 19.4. Liverpool, UK
CECILIA DAMSTRÖM
Science Frictions (Conferment jubilee cantata)
Academic Choral Society, Helsinki University SO/Aku Sorensen, sol. David Hackston, Ctenor • 20.3. Helsinki, Finland
Renewables for solo accordion
MSH 50th Accordion Competition • 21.4. Helsinki, Finland
DANIEL BÖRTZ
Double Concerto for One
Norrköping SO/Simon Crawford-Phillips, sol. Malin Broman, vln & vla 23.3. Norrköping, Sweden
PER GUNNAR PETERSSON
Spring Has Now Unwrapped the Flowers
King’s Singers, Mogens Dahl Chamber Choir/Mogens Dahl 29.3. Copenhagen, Denmark
TOBIAS BROSTRÖM
Rubedo: The Red Chapter
Royal Stockholm PO/Johannes Gustavsson
30.3. Stockholm, Sweden (Stockholm Composer Weekend Festival)
Piano Quintet
Stenhammar Quartet, David Huang, pf
2.4. Stockholm, Sweden (Stockholm Composer Weekend Festival)
ALBERT SCHNELZER
SALT
Gothenburg SO/Gothenburg Symphonic Choir/Joana Carneiro, sol. Mari Eriksmoen, sop, Anders Larsson, bar • 20.4. Gothenburg, Sweden
KIMMO HAKOLA
Piano Quintet
Kimmo Hakola, pf, Kaija Saarikettu, vl, Lea Tuuri, vl, Eri Sugita, vla, Sami Mäkelä, vlc 26.4. Helsinki, Finland
Sinfonische Elegien for soprano and ensemble
Lux camerata/Kimmo Hakola, sol. Piia Komsi • 26.4. Helsinki, Finland
MATS LARSSON GOTHE
The Pigeons
Swedish Radio Choir/Kaspar Putnins • 29.4. Stockholm, Sweden
SVEN-DAVID SANDSTRÖM
Te Deum for mixed choir and orchestra
Philharmonischer Chor Berlin, Academy Chamber Choir of Uppsala, Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt/Stefan Parkman
7.5. Berlin, Germany
MIKKO HEINIÖ
New work for guitar and piano
Patrik Kleemola, gtr, Pasi Helin, pf • 18.5. Turku, Finland
MATTHEW PETERSON
Högalidsmässan for mixed choir, brass quartet, percussion, organ and string orchestra
Högalidskyrkan Choir & CO/Benedikt Melichar, Nils Larsson, org 10.6. Stockholm, Sweden
BENJAMIN STAERN
En strimma hav
Gothenburg SO & Vocal Ensemble, Side by Side Youth Music Camp/Ron Davis Alvarez • 29.6. Gothenburg, Sweden
HIGHLIGHTS 1/2023
MARCH–JUNE
PREMIERES
9
Veli-Matti Puumala & Carolin Widmann
Photo: Tuula Sarotie
Photo: Dan Hansson
Patrik Ringborg
NEW PUBLICATIONS
CHORAL/VOCAL
TIMO ALAKOTILA
Valo for female choir
Text: wordless
FG 9790550118232
THOMAS JENNEFELT
Sieben Liebeslieder for mezzo-soprano and piano
Text: Else Lasker-Schüler (Ger)
GE 14448
LARS KARLSSON
Tre naturscener for descant choir
Text: Gustav Fröding (Swe)
FG 9790550118386
Julinatt på ön for mixed choir
Text: Arvid Mörne (Swe)
FG 9790550118379
Mare crisium for mixed choir
Text: Paula Hiekkala (Fin)
FG 9790550118355
ROBERT S. KELLY/EDWARD EKLÖF, ARR
Cry for mixed choir and baritone solo
Text: Robert S. Kelly (Eng)
GE 14340
MATS LARSSON GOTHE
Four arias from the opera The Promise for soprano and piano
Text: Susanne Marko (Swe)
GE 14446
The Pigeons for mixed choir
Text: Håkan Sandell, English transl. Bill Coyle
GE 14456
OLLE LINDBERG
Lacrimosa from A Requiem for the Living for mixed choir
Text: from Requiem Mass (Lat)
GE 14425
PER-GUNNAR PETERSSON
Spring Has Now Unwrapped the Flowers for double choir
Text: Piae Cantiones (Lat & Eng)
GE 14470
KARIN REHNQVIST
Blodhov (Bloodhof)
Monodrama for mezzo-soprano and eight instruments
Text: Gerður Kristný, Swedish transl. Johan Swedenmark
GE 14094 (score)
ALBERT SCHNELZER
Two pieces from the oratorio SALT
Det är en strimma hav for mixed choir
Text: Edith Södergran (Swe)
GE 14343
Jag är vigd åt vida vatten for mixed choir
Text: Karin Boye (Swe)
GE 14344
BENJAMIN STAERN
In paradisum
Song to the people of Ukraine for mixed choir
Text: Antiphon from Requiem Mass (Lat)
GE 14408
MARTIN ÅSANDER
Come, My Beloved for mixed choir
Text: Song of Solomon, 7:10-12 (Eng)
GE 14383
JEAN SIBELIUS
Drömmarna (JS 64) for mixed choir
Text: Jonatan Reuter (Swe)
FG 9790550118362
Den 25 Oktober 1902 (settings 1 [JS60] & 2 [JS 61]) for mixed choir
Text: Nils Wasastjerna (Swe)
FG 9790550118348
En etsi valtaa, loistoa / Giv mig ej guld, ej glans, ej prakt (We ask for Nothing Rich or Rare) for male choir
Text: Z. Topelius (Swe/Fin)
FG 9790550118331
These three new Sibelius editions are based on the complete critical edition “Jean Sibelius Works “(JSW). Den 25 Oktober 1902 includes two different settings to the same text.
#SWEDISHCHORALMUSIC 2022
SUSANNA LINDMARK
Tschitta saltunza (The Butterfly’s Dance) for mixed choir
Text: Arnold Spescha (Romansh)
GE 14355
KRISTIN WARFVINGE
Une charogne (A Carcass) for mixed choir and mezzo-soprano solo
Text: Charles Baudelaire (Fr)
GE 14359
CHAMBER & INSTRUMENTAL
KALEVI AHO
Quartet for flute, alto saxophone, guitar & percussion
FG 9790550118157 (score & parts)
TIMO ALAKOTILA
La cantina – String Quartet No. 3
FG 9790550118256 (score & parts)
CECILIA DAMSTRÖM
Letters - from Leos to Kamila
String Quartet No. 2
GE 13612 (score),
GE 13613 (parts)
MAIJA HYNNINEN
Nine-channelled Pearl for piano quintet
FG 9790550118317 (score & parts)
LARS KARLSSON
Recitativo ed aria for flute and organ
FG 9790550118447
Serenade for a Friend for violin (flute) & piano (organ)
FG 9790550118409
OLLI KORTEKANGAS
Vida vingar
Partita for piano and organ
FG 9790550118263
OLLI KOSKELIN
7 Haiku (Seitsemän haikua) for flute and guitar
FG 9790550115521
For further information contact us at:
Gehrmans Musikförlag AB
Box 42026, SE-126 12 Stockholm, Sweden
Tel. +46 8 610 06 00
info@gehrmans.se
Web shop: www.gehrmans.se
Hire: hire@gehrmans.se
Sales: order@gehrmans.se
MATS LARSSON GOTHE
Caccio for solo violion
GE 14099
KAI NIEMINEN Hymnos IV (Waterscapes…) for clarinet
FG 979055011843-0
JUHANI NUORVALA
Prélude non retouché for organ
FG 9790550118300
DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH/ ESTHER BOBROVA LANGE, ARR.
Waltz No. 2 from Suite for Variety Orchestra for piano 4 hands
FG 9790550118393
ORCHESTRA/ENSEMBLE & REDUCTIONS
TOBIAS BROSTRÖM
Tragic Ouverture for brass band
GE 14291 (score), GE 14292 (parts), GE 14293 (study score)
CLAUDE DEBUSSY/ TOBIAS BROSTRÖM, ORCH.
Ariettes oubliées for soprano and string orchestra
Text: Paul Verlaine (Fr)
GE 14418 (score)
MIKKO HEINIÖ
Alla madre – Concerto per violino ed pianoforte Reduction for violin and piano
FG 9790550118249 (solo part & piano reduction)
LARS KARLSSON Clarinet Concerto Reduction for clarinet and piano
FG 9790550118324 (solo part & piano reduction)
LARA POE Contradanse for eight wind instruments
9790550166967 (score & parts)
AULIS SALLINEN
Serenade for two wind quartets
FG 9790550118270 (score & parts)
TUTORS
GÉZA SZILVAY
Colourstrings Violin ABC –Opettajien ja vanhempien opas (Handbook for Teachers and Parents, in Finnish)
FG 9790550118461 (revised edition)
MERI LOUHOS – CARLOS JURIS –HUI-YING LIU-TAWASTSTJERNA
Pianon avain (Piano Key)original repertoire for beginners
FG 9790550118089 (revised edition)
Fennica Gehrman Oy Ab
PO Box 158, FI-00121 Helsinki, Finland
Tel. +358 10 3871 220
info@fennicagehrman.fi
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Most new FG publications are also available as pdf files in Fennica Gehrman’s web shop. Several new Ebooks (eg. Colourstrings materials) are now also available.
Caccio for solo violin
Gothe
Mats Larsson
Tschitta saltunza The Butterfly’s Dance
Thomas Jennefelt Sieben Liebeslieder von Else Lasker-Schüler Mezzosopran und Klavier
from A Requiem for the Living A Journey Towards Eternal Light
OLLE LINDBERG Lacrimosa
Albert Schnelzer Det är en strimma hav SATB div cappella
In paradisum Come My Beloved
SATB a
Benjamin Staern
Martin Åsander
cappella
Letters String Quartet No. 2 Letters from Leos to Kamila
Cecilia Damström
Tobias Broström
Tragic Overture