Phono-Suecia's pilgrimage through the byways of Swedish 
          music has yielded up many treasures. This is the fifteenth disc in the 
          series issued between 1998 and 2003 at the rate of four per year. There 
          are two volumes anthologised from Swedish solo piano music during the 
          period 1910 to 1945. Both include music of conservative inclination 
          as well as pieces some which glance towards dissonant horizons. The 
          two discs (both reviewed on this site) are unusual in this series in 
          that they mix music by a range of composers rather than working on the 
          basis that predominates across Phono-Sueciae of one composer per disc. 
        
 
        
Bjorkander, a Stockholm figure. He was not a 
          profuse producer. There is a Sonatina (1942), a concert fantasy (piano 
          and orchestra) and various suites: In Hemmar Hamlet and Glimtar 
          (Glimpses),both from 1946. The Four Archipelago Sketches 
          are variously joyous and unbridled, with tartly harmonised carillons, 
          dance figures and rain-drop reflections. Bjorkander can conjure an easy-flowing 
          dance in the spirit of Grieg. Several moments in this sequence are a 
          counterpart, though shorter-breathed, of John Foulds' April-England. 
        
 
        
Sköld's slavonic Prelude and Fugue was 
          written in Brno. This is darker and rhapsodic music with a touch of 
          Gold's Exodus about the Prelude. Sköld wrote a great deal 
          including four symphonies and four string quartets. There are also three 
          piano concertos and two fantasies for piano and orchestra. The piece 
          featured here is dedicated to his teacher Wilém Kurz - that's 
          the same Kurz who made a performing edition of the Dvořák 
          Piano Concerto.  
        
 
        
Beckman's five miniature 'blooms' are lightish 
          Macdowell-like pieces although sometimes, as in the fourth piece, The 
          Evening Hearth ... (tr. 10), there is a touch of the singing Medtner 
          about the themes. This composer, rather like Sillén (whose orchestral 
          music appeared on a Sterling CD last year) and Ives, was an insurance 
          broker. There is a symphony in F major (1895), a tone poem About 
          Happiness and a bipartite work for strings entitled Under Summer 
          Stars. Such titles! 
        
 
        
Heintze wrote extensively for the piano. There 
          are four piano concertos and another for two pianos. In addition there 
          are some reportedly elegant chamber pieces, a piano quintet and trio, 
          and two violin concertos. The impromptu swings in the slowest of slow 
          motion. The Ballad is a major piece, Grieg-like but serious and rising 
          to an ecstatic release. 
        
 
        
Liljefors' Andante e scherzo manages 
          to summon up images of rain-heavy clouds, a Siberian shiver in the air 
          and a wintry downpour. He also wrote a symphony (1943), sinfonietta 
          (1961) and violin concerto (1956). His father was Ruben, another composer 
          whose symphony has been recorded by Sterling. 
        
 
        
Gottfried Berg has more of a reputation (at 
          least in Sweden) for sacred choral music. The four pieces entitled Wandering 
          are out of the same folk-naïf style as Peterson-Berger's Frösö 
          pieces and Bjorkander's marine pastels. These are fresh air pieces similar 
          to Moeran's Irish style. Wanderings take in some bleak and the 
          desolation of empty spaces. 
        
 
        
Lastly Lennart Lundberg rounds out the generous 
          collection (a longer playing time than vol. 2) with a Nocturne 
          (clear-eyed and lissom) and a Toccata (shatter-cold and with 
          a Beethovenian blunt masculinity). 
        
 
        
Phono Sueciae again directs light into the darker recesses 
          of Swedish music. So dark in fact that those who wondered at all probably 
          concluded there was nothing there worth illuminating. They were wrong. 
        
 
        
Pålsson has all the requisite sympathy and technique 
          for these pieces. The recording quality tends to a warmth that slightly 
          clouds the middle register. 
        
          Rob Barnett