Pekka Kuusisto gathers Sibelius' birds into the same flock of notes. The solo violin gives character to Pēteris Vasks’ lonely angel.
Swan, robin, peacock, cranes. Pekka Kuusisto gathers Sibelius' birds into the same flock of notes. The solo violin gives character to Pēteris Vasks’ lonely angel, who hovers over the broken world, fretting and tirelessly guarding it. Anna Clyne composed Within Her Arms in memory of her mother, in which grief leads from cutting pain to comfort and peace.
Pekka Kuusisto
Pekka Kuusisto (b. 1976) is one of Finland's most renowned and internationally successful musicians. With the opening of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra’s 2023/24 concert season, Kuusisto will begin a three-year term as Principal Guest Conductor and Artistic Co-director as a member of the Artistic Leadership Team responsible for planning the programme.
”The planning of this concert season has been a wonderful adventure, and I hope it brings the joy of both discovery and homecoming to our listeners,” Kuusisto says. In the HPO’s concerts, Kuusisto will appear as conductor, violin soloist and lead, meaning he will be conducting the orchestra while playing the violin instead of holding a baton.
Pekka Kuusisto grew up in a musical family and started playing the violin at the age of three. His solo career really kicked off after he won the International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition in 1995. Since then, his work has taken him at an accelerating pace to all continents throughout the world. His regular workplaces currently include Oslo (Norwegian Chamber Orchestra), Bremen (Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie), Berlin (Mahler Chamber Orchestra) and San Francisco (San Francisco Symphony) – and now also Helsinki.
Pekka Kuusisto is known for his bold and innovative approach, and his repertoire extends from folk music through classical to music that defies genre boundaries. Kuusisto combines, creates new things and moves widely in different art fields, also renewing concert traditions and the interaction between musicians and the audience without detracting from the hard core of tradition, for example as an instrumentalist or – increasingly often – as a conductor.
Kuusisto plays the Antonio Stradivari “Scotta” violin of 1709 generously loaned by a patron through the Tarisio auction house.
https://www.harrisonparrott.com/artists/pekka-kuusisto
Pēteris Vasks: Lonely Angel
Pēteris Vasks (b. 1946) is a Latvian composer of the “sacred minimalist” school in which slowly shifting harmonies and mournful melodies evoke images of spirituality and religiosity. People today, he says, have lost their spiritual dimension. His intention is, in his music, therefore to nourish the soul. Lonely Angel (2006), composed for Gidon Kremer, seeks to spread hope and light in the darkness and is subtitled Meditation for violin and string orchestra. During its composition, Vasks had a special image in mind: “I saw an angel, flying over the world; the angel looks at the world’s condition with grieving eyes, but an almost imperceptible, loving touch of the angel’s wings brings comfort and healing. This piece is my music after the pain. The solo part of the violin lends a sonorous voice to the lonely angel who tirelessly watches over the Earth.”
Janne’s Birdworld
Judging from his diaries, Jean Sibelius (1865–1957) took an almost childlike delight in the sounds of nature, and especially of birds. The best-known manifestation of this is no doubt the theme in the last movement of the fifth symphony, which he sketched after watching the flight of sixteen swans and described as one of the great experiences of his life. The “Birdworld” suite compiled by Pekka Kuusisto presents four birds immortalised by Sibelius in music.
Cranes
The Scene with Cranes, op. 44 is from the suite arranged by Sibelius from his incidental music (which also includes his famous Valse Triste) to a play called Death by Arvid Järnefelt. The first part of the Scene introduces the character Elsa in the play, the young woman with whom Paavali is in love. Cranes bring the young couple a child, and in their song Paavali hears the voice of his dead mother.
The Robin and The Peacock
Sibelius composed the incidental music for the Helsinki premiere of Strindberg’s play Svanevit (Swanwhite) in 1908, and later arranged some of the highlights for a larger orchestra. The fairytale story tells of a princess whose father, evil step-mother and three maids aim to marry her off to a neighbouring king, but who falls in loves with the king’s messenger, a prince. Also living with her in the castle are a peacock, robin, swans and other creatures. The robin in the suite’s fourth movement is part of a pantomime scene in which the king turns out to be cruel and the prince is Mr Right. The scene relies greatly on the music: the pizzicatos are the prince, the harp the swan mother, the three tings on the triangle indicate the early hour, and the flutes are the Robin’s call. The opening movement depicts the fabulous Peacock, its pecking represented by castanets.
The Swan of Tuonela
The Swan of Tuonela (1893/1900) was originally intended as the overture to an opera that was never composed and instead became the third movement of the Lemminkäinen Suite. Rather than trying to imitate the bird’s cry, Sibelius sought to symbolise its innocence and purity. He was also inspired by the painting by Akseli Gallén-Kallela in which Lemminkäinen’s mother mourns the fate of her dead son on the murky banks of the river leading to Tuonela, the realm of the dead in Finnish mythology.
Joseph Haydn: Symphony No. 45 in F-sharp Minor, “The Farewell”
Joseph Haydn (1732–1809) had been composer and Kapellmeister at the court of the Hungarian Prince Nicolaus Esterházy when, in 1772, he decided the time had come for his orchestra to take action. For his patron refused to give them any time off despite all the overtime they had worked. He therefore slipped an extra symphony into the programme for the next day’s concert, and though otherwise in his familiar style, it had a surprise hidden in it. Instead of the typical resounding cadences, it ended with a dreamy Adagio during which the players, one by one, blew out their candles and disappeared backstage. Which is why the symphony is nowadays known as The Farewell. The ruse makes a good story, but The Farewell is in no way less inventive than all Haydn’s symphonies. To start with, it is one of the few by him in a minor key, and at times quite dissonant for its day.
Anna Clyne: Within Her Arms
Within her Arms (2008/2009) was composed by Anna Clyne (b. 1980), an English composer now resident in New York, as the result of a spontaneous reaction. She was working on a commission from Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic when she received the news of her mother’s sudden death. Returning to her home in London, she sat down at the piano, lit a candle and gazed at a photo of her mother taken only a couple of days before she died. Within Her Arms, a setting of a poem by the Vietnamese author, monk and peace activist Thich Nhat Hanh, is, says Clyne, music for her mother, with love.
“Earth will keep you tight within her arms dear one / So that tomorrow you will be transformed into flowers / This flower smiling quietly in this morning field / This morning you will sleep no more dear one / For we have gone through too deep a night. / This morning, yes, this morning, I kneel down on the green grass / And I notice your presence. / Flowers, that speak to me in silence. / The message of love and understanding has indeed come.”
Violin 1 Jan Söderblom Siljamari Heikinheimo Mari Poll-Novakovic Maiju Kauppinen Helmi Kuusi Elina Lehto Ilkka Lehtonen Jani Lehtonen Petri Päivärinne Elina Viitasaari Totti Hakkarainen Tuomas Ikonen
Violin 2 Terhi Paldanius Kari Olamaa Heini Eklund Teppo Ali-Mattila Siiri Rasta Krista Rosenberg Harry Juho Rayner Tatevik Ayazyan Aada Kuoppa Eleonora Oswald
Viola Atte Kilpeläinen Petteri Poijärvi Lotta Poijärvi Aulikki Haahti-Turunen Kaarina Ikonen Mariette Reefman Hajnalka Standi-Pulakka Mari Viluksela
Cello Lauri Kankkunen Beata Antikainen Basile Ausländer Veli-Matti Iljin Fransien Paananen Joanna Hanhikoski
Bass Adrian Rigopulos Mehdi Nejjoum-Barthélémy Paul Aksman Jani Pensola | Flute Jenny Villanen Annaleena Jämsä
Oboe Nils Rõõmussaar Paula Malmivaara
Clarinet Osmo Linkola Heikki Nikula
Bassoon Mikko-Pekka Svala Erkki Suomalainen
Horn Ville Hiilivirta Mika Paajanen Miska Miettunen Pasi Tiitinen
Trombone Anu Fagerström Jussi Vuorinen Joni Taskinen
Timpani Mikael Sandström
Percussion Pasi Suomalainen
Harp Minnaleena Jankko |