Allan PETTERSSON (1911-1980)
    
    Symphony No. 14 (1978) [52:38]
    Norrköping Symphony Orchestra/Christian Lindberg
    rec. January 2016, Louis de Geer Concert Hall, Norrköping, Sweden
    Reviewed as a 24/96 download from
    
        eClassical
    
    Pdf booklet included
    BIS BIS-2230 SACD
    [52:38]  
    
    And the Pettersson Project rolls on. I’ve already reviewed several
    instalments in this important series, all with Christian Lindberg and the
    Norrköping Symphony Orchestra:
    
        Nos. 1, 2, 6 & 9
    
    and, most recently,
    
        No. 13.
    Rob Barnett and I tend to overlap with our Pettersson, but he’s reviewed
    four symphonies that I’ve yet to hear:
    
        Nos. 4 & 16
    
    and
    
        Nos. 8 & 10,
    the latter with the same forces under Leif Segerstam. We mustn’t overlook
    the
    
        CPO
    
    set, although the inevitable BIS box will have two advantages: Lindberg’s
    ‘performing editions’ of Nos. 1 and 17. (The latter, coupled with No. 7, is
    planned for late 2017/early 2018.)
    My comparative version of No. 14 is the CPO recording with Johan Arnell and
    the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. As with the Lindberg it’s available
    from
    
        eClassical,
    albeit in mp3 and 16-bit lossless only. There’s even a booklet, rare with
    CPO downloads, but the notes are clumsily translated. Also, CPO present the
    symphony as one track; that’s a pity, as separate cues are very helpful
    when it comes to the stop-start, compare-and-contrast nature of a detailed
    review. LP buyers will know that Sergiu Comissiona and the Stockholm PO,
    who premiered the piece in 1981, recorded it for Phono-Suecia shortly
    afterwards. The CD has been around since 1986 (review).
    Like most of Pettersson’s symphonies, No. 14 is a large-scale work that
    plays for almost an hour. And, as with its predecessors, it’s difficult to
    separate the teller from the tale. Indeed, as Andreas K. W Meyer points out
    in his CPO booklet, the composer told his biographer Leif Aare that that
    his music is a mirror of his life, a litany of its ‘blessings and curses’.
    That in itself puts these symphonies into a late-Romantic context, although
    at first hearing the novice might not think so. Pettersson held fast to
    conventional forms, leaving serial/post-serial experiments to his
    contemporaries.
    That said, Pettersson was no stranger to the twelve-tone system, and there
    are many passages in his symphonies that appear to flirt with it. The
    opening Presto of No. 14 is no exception, but the composer’s lyrical
    impulse reasserts itself in the next, rather wistful movement. There’s a
    decent stereo spread, balances are convincing and the playing is assured;
    the scurrying strings in the third movement are a special delight, the
    contrasting turbulence truly threatening. Lindberg is very much in control
    here, the work’s diverse strands melded into a robust and trenchant whole.
    Granted, this is not always the easiest music to listen to, but as with
    Pettersson's other symphonies there’s a clear connective thread beneath the
    tumult that’s easy enough to follow. As for the more austere writing – the
    start of the fourth movement, for instance – it has a well-defined shape
    that’s thrown into sharp relief by the forensic, soul-baring sound. The
    military drum – sans snare – adds terrific bite to the martial
    interludes; then, without warning, Pettersson lapses into a strange kind of
    languor, in which pensive pizzicati alternate with a slow, tolling
    motif. And in the fifth movement the music’s tendency to rasp and grind is
    leavened by the absorbing, ‘hear-through’ nature of the recording.
    Happily, the symphony’s climactic moments – dense and forbidding as they
    often are – they arrive in a way that’s not at all rhetorical. Again,
    there’s an evolutionary and organic aspect to Pettersson’s writing that
    binds everything together in a most convincing fashion. The sheer focus and
    commitment of these players – not to mention Lindberg’s sure, steadying
    hand – certainly make for an eventful and challenging ride. There are no
    easy answers here, no platitudes or false cheer; that said, the finale
    brings with it a modicum of rest or, perhaps, an air of quiet stoicism.
    Arnell is a little swifter than Lindberg in this symphony – 47 minutes as
    opposed to 52.38 – but there’s not much in it. The CPO recording – an
    analogue original from 1988 – is easy on the ear, and the Berlin Radio band
    play very well indeed. As a performance this is less stark – less
    confrontational, even – and I suspect some listeners will prefer that
    approach to Lindberg’s. In particular, Arnell achieves a degree of
    transparency in the work’s quieter moments that’s really quite beguiling;
    his colour palette is more subtle, too. In short, Arnell’s is a credible,
    intensely human alterative to Lindberg’s tougher, more elemental
    one.
    Lindberg fans will want this one; others may prefer to look elsewhere.
    Dan Morgan