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Mikko Franck presides over the most intrepidly individual and pungently characterful performance of the Lemminkäinen Legends since Leif Segerstam's 1995 Helsinki PO account for this same label.... — Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010
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Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra Mikko Franck Recorded: December 1999 Recording Venue: Berwald Hall, Stockholm Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra Mikko Franck Recorded: December 1999 Recording Venue: Berwald Hall, Stockholm
2010
Mikko Franck presides over the most intrepidly individual and pungently characterful performance of the Lemminkäinen Legends since Leif Segerstam's 1995 Helsinki PO account for this same label. Clocking in at an eyebrow-raising 53'48" overall, Franck's conception evinces an unhurried authority, a generous expressive scope and a richly stocked imagination remarkable in one so young.
Lemminkäinen and the Maidens of the Island unfolds in especially gripping fashion here. Even more than Segerstam, Franck takes an extraordinarily long-breathed, flexible view of this heady tableau, imparting an unashamedly sensual voluptuousness to the secondary material in particular. It's a risky, impulsive approach, but one that pays high dividends in terms of intoxicating sweep, brazen ardour and, well, sheer daring. Both The Swan of Tuonela (which, in a refreshing change from the norm these days, Franck places second, according to Sibelius's final wishes) and Lemminkäinenin Tuonela combine dark-hued grandeur with tingling atmosphere, the latter's haunting A minor central episode handled with particular perception.
True, Lemminkäinen's Return lacks something in animal excitement, but its unruffled sense of purpose, rhythmic spring and sinewy, clean-cut textures serve up plenty of food for thought none the less.
The Legends are preceded by an uncommonly fresh En Saga, brimming with watchful sensitivity and interpretative flair, and once again studded with revelatory detail. Throughout, the Swedish RSO responds with heartwarming application and genuine enthusiasm, audibly galvanised by Franck's fervent, always invigorating direction. The engineering, too, is very good, without perhaps being absolutely in the top flight.
An auspicious recording début, then, from a young artist of clearly prodigious potential.