This CD with chamber music by Stefan Lindgren is a co-production 
                  between Nosag Records and FIM - Föreningen Ideell Musik 
                  (The Society for Idealistic Music). The total proceeds of sale 
                  go to WWF’s (World Wildlife Fund) collection for the environment 
                  in the Baltic Sea. All the participants take part gratis. Nosag 
                  and FIM have previously supported a great number of aid contributions 
                  and earlier CD-issues are listed in the booklet. 
                    
                  Mats Rodius, the flute soloist in Association is also 
                  the motor and initiator of FIM, financing the activities through 
                  a fund, built on the inheritance from his mother Margit Rodius. 
                  In view of this it might be improper to write a traditional 
                  critical review of this issue, but the achievements of all concerned 
                  are on a level that take it well beyond being just another charity 
                  record. 
                    
                  Stefan Lindgren is well known among classical music listeners 
                  in his native Sweden in several capacities: as chamber musician, 
                  accompanist, répétiteur and solo pianist. To this 
                  can now be added composer, a fact I became aware of when visiting 
                  the Saxå Chamber Music Festival this summer (see review). 
                  
                    
                  His compositions are characterized by incisive rhythms and sharp 
                  contrasts, sometimes going from one extreme to the other. The 
                  continuous flow of the music is further marked by the movements 
                  being woven into each other, even though there are marked borders 
                  between them. In the first movement of the sonata for cello 
                  and piano small rhythmic repeated cells in the piano part 
                  are the basic building blocks, above and around which the cello 
                  weaves melodic lines. This is energetic and urging music, constantly 
                  striving forward. Percussive piano contrasts with the legato 
                  playing of the cello in the second movement, but towards the 
                  end both instruments are dancing, wilder and wilder until the 
                  energy finally ebbs out. The third movement also starts with 
                  great rhythmic intensity, gradually transforming into a contemplative 
                  section, but after a while it again gathers energy and finishes 
                  in a great eruption. This is a long work, almost half an hour, 
                  while the other instrumental works are far shorter. 
                    
                  The sonata for flute and piano, in two movements, begins 
                  lightly and airily but after a while darker undertones creep 
                  in. The second movement can, to borrow terminology from pictorial 
                  art, initially be described as pointillism before a middle section 
                  where the paint is applied with broad brushstrokes only to return 
                  to the pointillism patterns. 
                    
                  In the sonata for bassoon and piano the first movement 
                  explores both ends of the instrument’s register. The middle 
                  movement becomes a vehicle for the virtuoso, melodious and burlesque 
                  bassoon while the finale hails the elegiac side of the instrument. 
                  
                    
                  The short Association for flute and piano is a lyric 
                  meditation, very beautiful. 
                    
                  The Seven songs are settings of poems from a book entitled 
                  Hotel Luscinia. ‘Luscinia’ is a family of 
                  birds to which the nightingale belongs. The first four songs 
                  have ‘silence’ in common, which means they live 
                  in the same room at the hotel. The last two songs, The mole 
                  and Spring ball at Odenplan, infest a double room. In 
                  between these two groups Intermezzo occupies a single 
                  room. This cycle is probably the hardest nut to crack. The vocal 
                  line is generally carried out as a recitative with an expressive 
                  piano part in a way contrapuntal to the texts. Having listened 
                  to the songs a number of times they still seem difficult to 
                  come to terms with. Those inhabitants of the double room are 
                  more outgoing and communicative than the rest in a rather burlesque 
                  manner and it’s there I would recommend readers to start. 
                  That’s also where Sten Niclasson’s warm and expressive 
                  voice finds scope for his dramatic powers; he has among many 
                  other things been a successful Wagner singer. 
                    
                  Stefan Lindgren’s versatility as a pianist is well displayed 
                  on this disc and his co-musicians - all of them belonging to 
                  the Swedish elite on their instruments, are audibly committed 
                  to their task. For international listeners the lack of English 
                  notes may be a drawback but by and large the music speaks for 
                  itself and the recording leaves nothing to be desired. 
                    
                  Göran Forsling