These 
                  recordings may be old – the Holberg Suite dates back thirty-six 
                  years – but they come from a golden period in the illustrious 
                  history of the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, in collaboration 
                  with Sir Neville Marriner, who had formed the orchestra in 1959.  
                  The playing is out of the very top drawer, and the recorded 
                  sound is representative of Decca’s best in the 1970s – more 
                  than acceptable even by the highest current standards. 
                
There 
                  is something very special about Scandinavian string music, though 
                  it is very difficult to say exactly what it is.  It’s something 
                  to do, I’m sure, with the clean, brilliant sound of strings, 
                  uncompromised by the heavier tones of brass and woodwind.  Cool, 
                  maybe, yet full of beauty and passion when required.  
                
The 
                  programme of this disc is most elegantly put together, contrasting 
                  the Neo-Classical busy-ness of the Grieg Holberg Suite with 
                  the more angular Dag Wirén Serenade from the 1930s, then finishing 
                  with Sibelius’ Rakastava, one of his less familiar pieces, yet 
                  an undoubted miniature masterpiece.  On earlier tracks, we have 
                  Grieg’s Two Elegiac Melodies op.34, Hjerterar - The Wounded 
                  Heart -  and Våren - The Last Spring - and I have never heard 
                  the latter sound so heart-breakingly beautiful as in this rapt 
                  performance.  Sibelius’ famous Valse Triste which follows is 
                  equally fine, full of dark intensity.  The pianissimo of the 
                  strings here is a special joy, as is the lovely woodwind playing 
                  in the central episode - the only time these instruments are 
                  heard on the disc.
                
Tracks 
                  9-11 bring the Nielsen Little Suite, his op.1, yet an impressively 
                  assured and striking piece.  I hadn’t heard this for years, 
                  and had forgotten just how good it is.  You’d have difficulty 
                  in identifying the composer if you knew only Nielsen’s mature 
                  works, yet each movement is highly characterised, showing the 
                  influence of Dvořák and Grieg; compare the charming central 
                  Intermezzo, for example, with Grieg’s ‘Anitra’s Dance’ from 
                  Peer Gynt.  The backward glance at the first movement’s mournful 
                  main theme at the beginning of the Finale is a ‘cyclic’ touch 
                  inherited from Dvořák, which then leads, via some lovely 
                  key-changes, to the exuberant concluding Allegro. 
                
The 
                  Serenade op.11 by the Swedish composer Dag Wirén will ever retain 
                  a place in the affections of, shall we say, listeners ‘of a 
                  certain age’ (knocking on a bit), because of the use of its 
                  march as the theme music to the ‘Monitor’ programmes about the 
                  arts in the 1950s and 1960s, masterminded by the great Huw Weldon.  
                  But it is an excellent piece throughout, thoroughly representative 
                  of a composer who is highly regarded in Scandinavia yet barely known in this country.  It is 
                  beautifully written for the strings, and has much subtle interplay 
                  of motifs between the four movements.  And of course that final 
                  Marcia is incredibly catchy – I defy you not to be whistling 
                  or humming the tune all day after hearing it a couple of times.  
                  
                
The 
                  best word for Sibelius’s suite Rakastava op.14 is haunting.  
                  The music originated as settings of folk-poetry for male voice 
                  choir, then the composer made this version for strings and light 
                  percussion – the best-known – in 1911, and it has three exquisite 
                  and highly typical movements.  The first, ‘The lover’, is passionate 
                  yet hesitant, while the second, ‘The path of the lover’, has 
                  that suppressed excitement that we find again in the finale 
                  to the 5th Symphony. The third, ‘Good night, my beloved, 
                  farewell’, harks wistfully back to the first movement, and opens 
                  out into an elegiac coda of great beauty.  As elsewhere, the 
                  playing of the Academy strings is quite superb – not only in 
                  ensemble, but where solos are taken, everything is of the very 
                  highest musicianship and sensitivity. 
                
              
In 
                its way, this is a very special recording, impossible to recommend 
                too strongly.  Snap it up and enjoy! 
                
                 Gwyn Parry-Jones  
                
              
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