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And after declaring Baroque & Early as tops I've discovered the modern composer Holmboe

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Posted on February 21, 2015 at 17:45:28
John C. - Aussie
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Posts: 5146
Location: Northern Tasmania
Joined: November 9, 1999

I'd never heard of him before but, as I type, am listening to the above disc.
This is what "The Gramophone" had to say about it -

Hard on the heels of BIS’s splendid brass concertos issue (3/97) comes the first volume in DaCapo’s survey of Holmboe’s 13 chamber concertos (the ‘chamber’ designation was later dropped, why it is sustained here is unclear). Those who know the symphonies and quartets will be surprised by this new disc, for if BIS revealed the composer in a new light, this one seems to start from an entirely different vantage point. The clarity of Holmboe’s orchestration and bracing neo-classicism (very unlike that of Stravinsky or Hindemith) create a sound world distinct from the symphony or quartet cycles (he had just finished the Second Symphony when the First Concerto was penned, while the first numbered quartets were still ten years away), though still completely his own.
Despite their closeness in time, these concertos are remarkably diverse. The lyrical, nostalgic opening of No. 1 (1939) gives rise to a 22-minute span that traverses some extremely varied terrain. Exceptionally, Holmboe succeeds in balancing a long slow movement with a single, short, fast one (Shostakovich’s Sixth Symphony and Hindemith’s Horn Concerto both require two). The vigorous, folky Second (1940) is an absolute delight, its last movement a heavy-footed Balkan dance, probably Romanian in origin, though akin to Skalkottas’s Greek Dances. The masterly Third (1942, revised 1976; incredibly, this may be its first performance), for clarinet, is more symphonic in design.
These are fine and committed performances, sensitively directed by Hannu Koivula, with uniformly excellent soloists, though pianist Anne Oland is a touch too recessed. A marvellous issue all in all, to which no recommendation of mine can do justice. Buy it.'

FWIW I find it very lovely to listen to.

What can be more subjective than music? It reflects our personal tastes and preferences.

 

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I recommended hin in TAS in the late 1990s, posted on February 21, 2015 at 17:53:55
John Marks
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One of the many under-rated Northern Lights of Music.

jm

 

RE: And after declaring Baroque & Early as tops I've discovered the modern composer Holmboe, posted on February 21, 2015 at 17:55:14
fantja
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Location: Alabama
Joined: September 11, 2010
Thanks! for sharing- John C.

 

Lovely indeed..., posted on February 21, 2015 at 18:28:06
Ivan303
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Posts: 48887
Location: Cadiere d'azur FRANCE - Santa Fe, NM
Joined: February 26, 2001
Steaming it on QOBUZ as I type this.

Thanks for the tip, would have never stumbled on it in a million years.




First they came for the dumb-asses
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a dumb-ass

 

Missed that - but catching up now :-), posted on February 21, 2015 at 18:56:02
John C. - Aussie
Audiophile

Posts: 5146
Location: Northern Tasmania
Joined: November 9, 1999
His chamber concertos are lovely with an alluring haunting quality, and in line with quite a lot of other earlier chamber compositions of earlier composers.

His Beatus Parvo, for chorus & orchestra, Op. 117 is particularly good.

What can be more subjective than music? It reflects our personal tastes and preferences.

 

The Oboe piece reminds a bit of Shostakovich..., posted on February 21, 2015 at 19:12:28
Ivan303
Audiophile

Posts: 48887
Location: Cadiere d'azur FRANCE - Santa Fe, NM
Joined: February 26, 2001
at least in the very beginning, then it 'lyrics' up a bit.

A lot to like here.




First they came for the dumb-asses
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a dumb-ass

 

Thanks, John C!, posted on February 22, 2015 at 10:38:23
Jay Buridan
Audiophile

Posts: 10283
Location: Michigan
Joined: January 21, 2004
will give a listen

"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people. "
― W.C. Fields

 

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