COMPOSERS: Sibelius
LABELS: CPO,Telarc
ALBUM TITLE: Kullervo
PERFORMER: Charlotte Hellekant (mezzo-soprano),
Nathan Gunn (baritone); Atlanta
Symphony Men’s Chorus & Orchestra/
Robert Spano
Kullervo
Satu Vihavainen (soprano), Juha
Uusitalo (bass-baritone); KYL Male
Chorus; Staatsphilharmonie
Rheinla
CATALOGUE NO: CD-80665 ¥ CPO 777 196-2
Sibelius’s symphonic portrait of
the Kalevala’s anti-hero was his
breakthrough work, thrillingly
asserting Finland’s musical identity
and his own; but, always self-critical,
he withdrew it. Paavo Berglund’s
revelatory premiere recording (on
EMI) was made only in 1970; now a
dozen more, especially Berglund (on
EMI again), Osmo Vänskä (BIS)
and Sir Colin Davis (LSO Live),
offer stiff competition. Having heard Robert Spano’s
2005 Ring at Seattle, I was
disappointed to find his Kullervo
so lacklustre. He cramps the first
movement’s atmospheric opening
theme and continues choppily, with
some tentative playing; the second,
‘Kullervo’s Youth’, drags, missing the
cradle-song quality Sibelius specified.
The third movement’s allegro vivace
opening disappoints at the great
choral entry; neither they nor Spano
grasp the springy Finnish rhythms
and stresses Sibelius agonized over.
You don’t have to be Finnish to get
this right, as the LSO Chorus in
Davis’s benchmark version show.
Nor do the Swedish and American
soloists sound idiomatic. The fourth
movement, Kullervo’s ride to battle,
begins brightly, and the chorus fare
better in the doomladen last, but the
effect is still shallow.
The new CPO recording
highlights all too clearly what
the Telarc lacks. Rising Finn Ari
Rasilainen shows us Kullervo the
national epic with a vengeance,
large-scale and bursting with creative
energy, vibrantly played and quite
spectacularly recorded in SACD
surround-sound. His pacing is sure
and detailed, vividly dramatic and
alive to the shifting colours of this
young man’s score. Right from the
expansive opening theme, the first
movement fluently surges forward
with ardour, yet the second begins
with exactly the right baleful,
foreboding tenderness. The third
excites as it builds up to the entry of
the splendid chorus – of the Helsinki
Business College no less. The
soloists are Finnish National Opera
stalwarts, Satu Vihavainen touching
in her narration, Juha Uusitaalo, now
a leading international Wagnerian,
singing Kullervo’s lament with
tormented power; the choral overlap
behind his first entry sounds
misjudged, but this is minor. The
fourth movement’s martial colours
positively blaze, and the finale’s eerie
opening leads to a searing catharsis.
Much as I admire other versions,
this one really gripped me with
its idiomatic, atmospheric vigour.
If it misses some of Davis’s dark
poetry, it recreates the excitement
Kullervo aroused at its premiere; and
although both are excellent SACDs,
CPO’s studio recording scores
in immediacy, detail and choral
perspective over LSO Live’s slightly
dry Barbican acoustic. For me
Rasilainen joins Davis as benchmark,
and might suit a newcomer better.
Sibelius
Sibelius’s symphonic portrait of
the Kalevala’s anti-hero was his
breakthrough work, thrillingly
asserting Finland’s musical identity
and his own; but, always self-critical,
he withdrew it. Paavo Berglund’s
revelatory premiere recording (on
EMI) was made only in 1970; now a
dozen more, especially Berglund (on
EMI again), Osmo Vänskä (BIS)
and Sir Colin Davis (LSO Live),
offer stiff competition. Having heard Robert Spano’s
2005 Ring at Seattle, I was
disappointed to find his Kullervo
Published: January 20, 2012 at 4:03 pm