Alfven: Symphony No. 4, Op. 39 / Festival Overture, Op. 52
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Hugo Alfven (1872-1960) Symphony No. 4, 'From the Outermost Skerries' Festival Overture Although the music of Hugo Alfven has never been widely heard...
Hugo Alfven (1872-1960)
Symphony No. 4, 'From the Outermost Skerries' Festival Overture
Although the music of Hugo Alfven has never been
widely heard internationally, in his native Sweden he
ranks, alongside Wilhelm Stenhammar, as the most
significant composer after Berwald. Born in Stockholm
on 1st May 1872, he studied at the conservatory there,
followed by two years spent as a violinist in the opera
orchestra, after which he decided to devote himself to
composition. Unlike his predecessors, he was ambitious:
two substantial symphonies [Naxos 8.553962 and
8.555072] appeared in 1897 and 1898 respectively, the
Stockholm première of the latter in 1900 confirming his
national reputation.
Over the following quarter century, a number of
major works appeared: they include the Third [Naxos
8.553729] and Fourth Symphonies, the oratorio The
Lord's Prayer, the Revelation Cantata, the balletpantomime
The Mountain King, and three Swedish
Rhapsodies, of which the first, Midsummer Vigil [Naxos
8.553115] has remained his most popular piece. After
1923 his output focused increasingly on choral music,
reflecting his commitments as conductor of the Siljan
Choir and Orpheus Singers, with whom he toured
frequently. His Fifth Symphony occupied him
throughout the 1940s and 1950s, while the ballet The
Prodigal Son found the 85-year-old composer making
inventive use of traditional and folk-music. Alfven died,
quite the elder statesman of Swedish music, in Falun on
8th May 1960.
A gifted watercolourist and vividly illustrative
author, Alfven was well equipped by ability as well as
temperament to depict the unique island landscape of
the Stockholm archipelago, in the vicinity of which he
spent much of his formative years. The 1904 tone poem
A Legend of the Skerries [Naxos 8.553729] evokes a
soundworld far removed from the drama of his first two
symphonies, and it was hardly surprising when, four
years later, he decided to give his experiences of the
archipelago symphonic expression. Work on the Fourth
Symphony progressed fitfully and it was not until 1918,
following several sailing expeditions and the taking of a
sabbatical from his post as Director of Music at Uppsala
University, that he was able to proceed apace. The work
was completed by the spring of 1919 and received its
première at a gala concert at the Stockholm Musical
Academy on 4th November that year, followed by a
public airing on 23rd January 1920. Despite reservations
expressed by several prominent critics, general acclaim
was forthcoming both then and at subsequent
performances in Paris, Frankfurt, Vienna and Berlin.
One of the main reservations concerned the use of
two voices, soprano and tenor, as part of the orchestral
apparatus, though Alfven was doubtless aware of a
precedent in Nielsen's Third Symphony of 1911 [Naxos
8.550825] in this respect. The other criticism concerned
the erotic nature of its programme, one which Alfven
refuted to the extent of dedicating the work to his then
teenage daughter Margita. He nevertheless stated that
"My symphony tells the tale of two young souls. The
action takes place in the skerries, where sea rages
among the rocks on gloomy, stormy nights, by
moonlight and in sunshine ... the moods of nature are
no less than symbols for the human heart". Playing
continuously, the work falls into four sections, a first
movement with slow introduction, depicting desire on
the part of a young man, an intermezzo-like scherzo,
evoking the musing of a young girl, a slow movement
depicting the happiness of love, and a finale whose
storm-swept mood is an analogy for the demise of that
happiness and in which the solo voices are notable by
their absence.
The mysterious opening sets the scene, rippling
piano figuration and deft percussion building to a brief
climax before dissolving into the sound of solo violin
against softly held upper strings. Its theme migrates to
lower strings, gaining in emotional intensity with music
of Straussian opulence. Ardour subsides as the tenor
enters for the first time, intoning an expressive melody.
A faster tempo sees the brief first climax recalled,
followed by a resumption of the tenor vocalise.
Descending woodwind arabesques presage the scherzo
section, featuring darting figures on solo wind, after
which, underpinned by the piano, the soprano makes a
wistful first appearance. The darting music resumes in
more elaborate scoring, at length vanishing into the
ether. The 'slow movement' now begins searchingly in
lower strings, moving to an affirmative climax, before
subsiding into gentle rhapsody. The lush scoring
embodies elements of tenor and soprano vocalise, both
voices re-entering, intertwined, to enhance the mood of
ecstatic fulfilment. A more capricious quality brings
about the movement's culmination, shot through with a
fatalistic certainty that is held at bay while the solo
voices recede beyond earshot. The music darkens
appreciably, a brief but baleful outburst on brass
ushering in the final section in a mood of storm and
stress. Woodwind add their malevolent touch; then,
after magical textures for piano, harp and strings, the
solo cor anglais intones a melody that suggests
resignation in the face of the inevitable. Ideas heard
earlier are recalled, gathering momentum for a final,
tragic climax that alludes to the beginning of the section
and, in turn, to that of the whole work. It remains for the
closing bars to return the music to the watery depths out
of which it arose.
A very different side to the composer is to be heard
in the Festival Overture of 1944, first heard that year in
Stockholm. This is Alfven the respected public figure,
writing music in a direct, uncomplicated idiom for the
widest possible audience. The piece opens with a
vaunting theme on strings and brass, woodwind calming
the mood before a lively, dance-like idea is introduced
by solo bassoon. Taken up by the remainder of the
orchestra, it is presently combined with the opening
music, and a brief but lively development of both ideas
ensues. The calmer music returns, bringing about a full
reprise of the opening section: this time, however, the
dance theme leads into a roof-raising coda, seeing the
overture through to a triumphal close.
Richard Whitehouse
Symphony No. 4 in C minor, Op. 39, "Fran havsbandet" (From the Outskirts of the Archipelago) (more info)
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I. Moderato - Allegretto, ma non troppo - 11:04
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II. Allegro - Moderato - Allegro - 5:01
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III. Lento - Maestoso - Molto appassionato - 19:13
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IV. Allegro agitato - 12:50
Fest-ouverture, Op. 52 (more info)
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Festival Overture, Op. 52 - 10:04