The Swedish are a singing people and singing in choirs is regarded
                    as one of the most important national movements. About 600,000
                    people are estimated to sing regularly in one or more choirs
                    and considering the population is around nine million that’s
                    quite a high percentage. The male choir tradition derives
                    from the early 19th century, supposedly starting
                    in Uppsala in October 1808 when students gathered to sing
                    patriotic songs. It was in the academic world that singing
                    blossomed, first in Uppsala and somewhat later in Lund. The
                    tradition is still alive in those two cities, as it is in
                    Stockholm, whose Student Singers were formed in November
                    1905. Judging from this brand new recording they are still
                    in healthy voice after a full century. Their most legendary
                    conductor was Einar Ralf, older brother of Torsten Ralf,
                    who had an international career as Wagner tenor in the 1930s
                    and 1940s. Einar Ralf took over the leadership in 1917 and
                    stayed for fifty years. Several others have passed on the
                    tradition and the present conductor, Karin Oldgren, has held
                    her position since 1998. The choir today comprises around
                    fifty singers.
                
                 
                
                
                We are more used to hearing Christmas songs performed by mixed
                choirs but there is a special attraction in the sound of a male
                    choir – even in this repertoire. I am a bit biased of course,
                    having been singing in choirs all my adult life and the first
                    fifteen years or so in a male choir. A mixed choir has no
                    doubt a broader palette of colours but a good male choir,
                    like this one, has a homogeneity of sound that can send shivers
                    down the spine when everything functions well. On this disc
                    Praetorius’s classic Es ist ein Ros entsprungen has
                    that tingle factor, just as Carl Nielsen’s Forunderligt
                    at sige, originally also for mixed choir but Robert Sund’s
                    arrangement fits like a glove; no wonder, he has been Principal
                    Conductor of Orphei Drängar, arguably the most famous male
                    choir in the country, for more than twenty years. 
                
                 
                
                The whole programme gets a good start in an alert and springy Joy
                      to the World, also arranged by Robert Sund, while his
                      younger brother Håkan has sewn the male costume for När
                      juldagsmorgon glimmar, an originally German Christmas
                      song that many will recognize from Brahms’ Academic
                      Festival Overture. Former principal conductor of the
                      Student Singers, Göte Widlund, has also contributed several
                      arrangements besides Es ist ein Ros …, as has the
                      present conductor. 
                
                 
                
                As can be seen from the heading the programme is a mixture
                      of songs from Scandinavia and the rest of Europe. From
                      Finland comes
                    Selim Palmgren, best known, I believe, through his piano
                    music in an impressionist vein, and Sibelius, whom I suppose
                    everybody knows. Both have set Swedish poems: Palmgren’s Hosiannah! is
                    to a text by the late romantic Gustaf Fröding, who has retained
                    his popularity through the years and attracted many composers
                    to set his lyrics, Stenhammar and Rangström among them. Sibelius’s Christmas
                    Song has become immensely popular in both Finland and
                    Sweden. It is one of the five songs that constitute his Opus
                    1, to a text by 19th century poet Topelius, who
                    was Finnish but wrote in Swedish. Originally a solo song
                    it is here performed in the composer’s own arrangement for
                    male choir. Norway is represented by a pretty folk melody
                    and Denmark by Carl Nielsen. Morten Lauridsen, despite his
                    Danish name, was born in Colfax, Washington, and has become
                    one of the most frequently performed composers of choral
                    music in our time, O magnum mysterium one of his greatest
                    successes. It is serene, meditative music, immensely beautiful,
                    a little Russian Orthodox in character. 
                
                 
                
                    Bereden väg för Herran (Make way for the
                    Lord) is an old Swedish hymn, here performed to a tune from
                    the rural tradition with the melodic line embellished in
                    the manner of folk fiddlers. Nu tändas tusen juleljus is
                    one of the most popular Swedish Christmas songs, sung without
                    big gestures and the soprano solo done with disarming childish
                    simplicity. We also get songs by early 20th century
                    composers Ivar Widéen and Gustaf Nordqvist. 
                
                 
                
                The Anglo-Saxon tradition is also well taken care of and personally
                    I have a special fondness for Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing
                    Day with its intricate rhythms, well executed here and
                    with a bouncy organ accompaniment. From Germanic standard
                    fare Johan Pejler’s arrangement of Silent Night has
                    a certain likeness to Jan Sandström’s evocative treatment
                    of Es ist ein Ros entsprungen (not on this disc) with
                    the melody only gradually emerging out of a slightly dissonant
                    static body of sounds and at a very slow tempo. Halfway through
                    the piece, after some Christmas bells, it finally finds the
                    speed we are used to. It is an intriguing composition and
                    a thrilling alternative to more straightforward settings. 
                
                 
                
                Both Ave Maria and Reger’s Marias Wiegenlied are
                    performed as solo songs but with choir added and Folke Bohlin’s Look!
                    Shepherds of Bethlehem is a solo with organ. Bohlin was
                    leader of Lund’s Student Singers for many years. The soprano
                    soloist, Gunilla Backman, is best known as a musical artist,
                    singing several major roles in London’s West End, among them
                    Ellen in Miss Saigon. She has a light lyrical voice
                    with an easy top and she sings straightforwardly with warmth
                    and affection – which means in this case that the listener
                    shouldn’t be aware of the calculated “reading” behind the
                    seemingly artless. Johan Lindström participates in some of
                    the numbers with impassioned and acute organ accompaniments.
                    The recording, as always with this company, is perfectly
                    balanced in an agreeable acoustic, the surround sound giving
                    extra fullness. The sung texts – and with translations, since
                    there must be a large quantity of these songs that are unknown
                    to international listeners – are unfortunately missing from
                    the booklet, which however has notes on the music and profiles
                    on the choir, conductor, soloist and organist. 
                
                 
                
                I suspect that many listeners will make attractive ‘finds’ among
                    these 24 songs and the execution of them leaves little extra
                    to
                    be desired.
                
                 
                
                    Göran Forsling