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Sibelius: Kullervo & Kortekangas: Migrations
Lilli Paasikivi (mezzo-soprano) & Tommi Hakala (baritone), Lilli Paasikivi (mezzo-soprano)
Minnesota Orchestra & YL Male Voice Choir, Osmo Vänskä
Osmo Vänska’s Sibelius has always been distinguished by detail, rhythmic precision and poetic luminosity…this new live recording is better throughout, gaining perhaps from more extrovert Minnesota...
Sibelius: Kullervo & Kortekangas: Migrations
Lilli Paasikivi (mezzo-soprano) & Tommi Hakala (baritone), Lilli Paasikivi (mezzo-soprano)
Minnesota Orchestra & YL Male Voice Choir, Osmo Vänskä
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Osmo Vänska’s Sibelius has always been distinguished by detail, rhythmic precision and poetic luminosity…this new live recording is better throughout, gaining perhaps from more extrovert Minnesota...
About
Some 150 years ago what is sometimes called ‘The Great Migration’ of Finns to the United States began. Many of the Finns settled in the Mid-West, and especially in the so-called ‘Finn Hook’, consisting of parts of Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin. To celebrate this, the Minnesota Orchestra under its Finnish music director Osmo Vänskä commissioned the composer Olli Kortekangas to compose a work on the theme of migration, of a scale and nature suitable for performance alongside Jean Sibelius’s great Kullervo. Discovering the work of the Minnesota-based poet Sheila Packa, herself of Finnish descent, Kortekangas composed Migrations for mezzo-soprano, male voice choir and orchestra, the same forces as in Kullervo, with the exception of the baritone soloist in that work.
An all-star Finnish cast – soloists Lilli Paasikivi and Tommi Hakala and the celebrated YL Male Voice Choir – joined the Minnesota Orchestra and Osmo Vänskä for three concerts in February 2016, and captured by a recording team from BIS the memorable performances can now be enjoyed by a wider audience. Sibelius began working on Kullervo during his student days in Vienna in 1891, finding his inspiration in the Kalevala, Finland’s national epic. In a letter home to Finland he wrote about ‘a new symphony, totally in the Finnish spirit’ and the work is often regarded as the first successful example of a Finnish national musical language.
In spite of what Sibelius wrote in his letter, the five-movement work is usually regarded as a symphonic poem, but with a duration of c. 80 minutes Kullervo certainly has the scale of a large symphony, and as such the present performance forms a worthy appendix to the highly acclaimed Sibelius cycle which the orchestra and Vänskä brought to a close with the recent release of Symphonies No 3, 6 and 7. As a fitting close to this two-disc set, and to the concerts in Minneapolis’ Orchestra Hall, the orchestra performs Sibelius’s Finlandia, with the YL Male Voice Choir joining in in the famous hymn section.
Contents and tracklist
- Lilli Paasikivi, Tommi Hakala, YL Male Voice Choir
- Minnesota Orchestra
- Osmo Vänskä
- Recorded: 4-6 February 2016
- Recording Venue: Orchestra Hall, Minneapolis, USA
- Lilli Paasikivi
- YL Male Voice Choir, Minnesota Orchestra
- Osmo Vänskä
- Recorded: 4-6 February 2016
- Recording Venue: Orchestra Hall, Minneapolis, USA
- YL Male Voice Choir, Minnesota Orchestra
- Osmo Vänskä
- Recorded: 4-6 February 2016
- Recording Venue: Orchestra Hall, Minneapolis, USA
Awards and reviews
July 2017
Osmo Vänska’s Sibelius has always been distinguished by detail, rhythmic precision and poetic luminosity…this new live recording is better throughout, gaining perhaps from more extrovert Minnesota playing, with the YL choir, excellent if slightly mature soloists and SACD sound
May 2017
The YL Male Voice Choir performs magnificently behind mezzo Lilli Paasikivi on the Kortekangas piece, and the integration of choral parts with orchestral interludes gives the piece an almost symphonic solidarity…A lovely tribute to a nation’s music as both heritage and living tradition.
6th March 2017
The finest recording of Kullervo that I’ve ever heard, presented in magnificent sound.
23rd February 2017
Vänskä now revisits Sibelius’s first exercise in large-scale symphonic form...Tempi are more or less the same as before, though perhaps instrumental detail is highlighted more obviously this time; whether that’s down to Vänskä’s conducting or to the balance of the recording is hard to say.
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