Linde: Violin Concerto / Cello Concerto
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Bo Linde (1933-1970) Violin Concerto, Op. 18 Cello Concerto, Op. 29 "I write in very beautiful triads," Bo Linde explained during an interview for the...
Bo Linde (1933-1970)
Violin Concerto, Op. 18 Cello Concerto, Op. 29
"I write in very beautiful triads," Bo Linde explained
during an interview for the Swedish Broadcasting
Corporation after he had been accepted as a student in
Lars Erik Larsson's composition class at the Academy
of Music in Stockholm at the tender age of fifteen. He
was not only a precocious talent but, from an early age,
he had a clear idea of what he wanted to do in music.
For example he submitted his first piano concerto as
part of his application for admission to the Academy.
Although he was a technically very gifted pianist he
rapidly abandoned the idea of a solo career. That would
merely interfere with his work as a composer. Most of
all he wanted to write organ music and music for the
theatre. In point of fact he was only to write a couple of
small-scale organ pieces and a children's opera in these
genres. Instead, he devoted his powers to writing
orchestral music, chamber music and, not least, songs.
Just like Benjamin Britten, whom he greatly admired,
Bo Linde had an unfailing sense of how poetry and
music could be united. The piano accompaniments in
the songs are often very lively and exciting.
The earliest of Bo Linde's compositions to have
survived were written when he was between ten and
twelve years old and in his early teens, for example, he
composed sonatinas for piano and oboe, piano and
trumpet and piano and cello. He was always a keen
reader of poetry and even before he entered the
Academy he composed his first song settings. Among
his earliest collections of songs there is one with
Chinese poetry and one that he called a "Swedish
Anthology". Over the years he produced a considerable
number of collections, two of which have become firm
favourites with Swedish singers: Fyra allvarliga sånger
(Four Serious Songs) and Tio naiva sånger (Ten Naïve
Songs). Bo Linde's first major orchestral work was his
Sinfonia fantasia, Op. 1, which dates from the autumn
of 1951, before the composer was nineteen.
The Violin Concerto, Op. 18, is dedicated to the
violinist Josef Grünfarb. Forty years after its première
Josef Grünfarb explained that this violin concerto
differed from other concertos which various composers
had offered him in that "Everything was complete. It
was just a matter of playing the elegant passagework
and cantilenas. The concerto is remarkably violinistic.
His feeling for the instrument was unique for someone
who did not play it himself." Grünfarb's pupil Karl-Ove
Mannberg has claimed that Linde's violin concerto
ought to be part of the standard repertoire alongside
those of the great masters.
The violin concerto is the most regularly performed
of Bo Linde's orchestral works and beyond the borders
of Sweden it has been heard in the United States,
Germany and Norway. The soft opening on the oboe in
the introductory Andante grows out of the silence to
which the concerto returns via the lyrical mood of the
introduction, which recurs in the slow, concluding
Lento. After the soloist's cadenza, a lively scherzo takes
over with a melodious second subject. The conclusion is
reminiscent of that of Bo Linde's only published string
quartet (Op. 9) in which the shimmeringly lovely
lyricism also disappears into the emptiness of space
where music can rise again out of the silence. The violin
concerto was first performed by Josef Grünfarb in Umeå
early in 1958.
Bo Linde was even fonder of his Cello Concerto,
Op. 29, than of the violin concerto, counting it among
his very finest works. In a newspaper interview prior to
the première he explained that "I am hopelessly in love
with this noble and beautiful instrument". He wrote the
concerto for Guido Vecchi who was the principal cellist
of the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and who also
gave the first performance of the work in Sandviken in
1965. The concerto has a rather special history in that it
was largely written over the telephone between Gavle
and Gothenburg. For hour after hour during the autumn
of 1964 composer and prospective soloist discussed
details in the composition, especially details in the solo
part. At times the telephone bills in the young Linde
household became almost prohibitively large.
The soloist opens the concerto with a musical
subject that contains most of the melodic and sonic
material in the work as well as a major-minor third
tension in a sonata form that, in the second movement,
transforms itself into lively, almost stormy rhythms
before the beautiful concluding movement with the
tempo indication Lento, ma tempo flessibile gives us an
opportunity to hear many of the cello's beautiful
aspects. Maria Kliegel, the soloist in this recording,
explains from the cellist's point of view that the
concerto is conceived on a grand scale, requiring
instrumental virtuosity to meet the technical demands
but that it is exciting enough to represent an alternative
to standard repertoire such as the concertos of Elgar and
Dvofiak. The romantic warmth of Bo Linde's musical
imagination splendidly captures the essence of the
cello's character and if the cello concerto has yet to be
granted the same interest as the violin concerto, this is
probably the result of continued ignorance of Bo
Linde's music rather than of the actual quality of this
composition. "It may seem somewhat banal", Bo Linde
wrote of the last movement in the programme note to
the première, "but I have consciously tried to bring out
the fundamental quality of the cello (its warm
melodiousness)".
Among the works that Bo Linde wrote after
completing the cello concerto were his Serenata
nostalgica, Op. 30, the diverting and humorous Suite
boulogne, Op. 32, and Pensieri sopra un cantico
vecchio, Op. 35, a set of highly romantic orchestral
variations on the famous hymn Es ist ein Ros
entsprungen. At this period he also wrote some ten
collections of songs based on Swedish poets including
Elsa Beskow, Erik Axel Karlfeldt, Edith Sodergran,
Gunnar Bjorling and Verner von Heidenstam. Some of
his finest chamber music also belongs to his final active
years, for example his String Trio in B major, Op. 37,
and his Sonata a tre, Op. 38.
Bo Linde's final orchestral work, Pezzo
concertante, Op. 41, is also a solo concerto, this time for
bass clarinet and orchestra. It was dedicated to the
clarinettist Lennart Stove who gave the first
performance a couple of weeks before the composer's
death at home in Gavle where he had been born only 37
years previously.
Besides his work as a composer, Bo Linde taught
piano and composition in Stockholm as well as in Gavle.
He also wrote more than three thousand articles and
reviews on musical topics in the local Gefle Dagblad.
Ulf Jonsson
Violin Concerto, Op. 18 (more info)
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I. Andante – Poco animato – (Cadenza) – Scherzando vivo - 14:21
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II. Allegro deciso – Tempo del comincio – Lento - 11:54
Cello Concerto, Op. 29 (more info)
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I. Moderato – Lento – Ben ritmico – Sostenuto – Lento - 12:45
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II. Allegro molto ed agitato – Presto – Prestissimo - 5:40
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III. Lento, ma tempo flessibile - 11:38