Leon 
                  Björker may be a completely unfamiliar name, not only to the 
                  international public but also, I am afraid, to a majority of 
                  present day Swedish opera-goers.
                
“Why 
                  on earth haven’t I heard about this man before?” I can imagine 
                  more than one reader of this review exclaiming, having bought 
                  this Bluebell issue and, preferably, having played In diesen 
                  heil’gen Hallen from Die Zauberflöte (tr. 2). “This 
                  is a magnificent voice! A true basso cantante, the tone even 
                  from a ringing top C sharp down to a pitch-black sepulchral 
                  final E. It is a large voice, warm, noble, beautiful, a quick 
                  vibrato that is no defect, just a characteristic. My God! He 
                  should have been a world star!”
                
Searching 
                  one’s memory to find comparable voices, names like Kurt Moll 
                  or Martti Talvela may pop up; from further back Pinza’s roundness 
                  of tone and warmth paired with Kipnis’s power and incisiveness 
                  might be a sound description. Some may even remember the gigantic 
                  Norwegian Ivar Andrésen, and then we come close to the mark, 
                  since he was one of Björker’s two main vocal teachers.
                
Leon 
                  Björker (1900–1962) was a mainstay at the Stockholm opera from 
                  his debut in November 1927 as the Grandfather in Rangström’s 
                  Kronbruden, a role that was sung five years earlier by 
                  his teacher Andrésen at the Stockholm premiere of the work. 
                  Björker’s reading of the role can be heard on this disc in a 
                  recording from 1959, the year before his retirement. Comparing 
                  the earliest recordings here, from 1934, with what he sounded 
                  like 25 years later there is very little difference. The voice 
                  is just as sonorous and warm, no audible scratches on the surface; 
                  it may have dried out a little, but that’s it. He preserved 
                  his glorious instrument practically intact during his long career. 
                  Listening through the whole disc and marvelling at what one 
                  hears the question arises again: Why didn’t he become a world-star, 
                  like his famous teacher? The answer is possibly - even though 
                  I can’t find written testimony to this – that he did not want 
                  world fame. He never appeared abroad, apart from on the Royal 
                  Opera’s tours in Scandinavia and at Edinburgh. Nor did he make 
                  many commercial recordings. What exists comes to us via a number 
                  of recordings from Swedish Radio, which are the main source 
                  for Bluebell’s wholly admirable “Great Swedish Singers” series.
                
Having 
                  admired his Sarastro – the part could have been created with 
                  Björker’s voice in mind – we also meet him as a noble but formidable 
                  Commendatore in the final scene of Don Giovanni, where 
                  Sigurd Björling is a gloriously defiant Don. These Mozart excerpts 
                  were recorded in the early 1940s, when he was at the height 
                  of his powers. However, as I have already intimated and as we 
                  shall see if we jump back and forth in time, this height lasted 
                  practically unimpaired throughout his career. He was a masterly 
                  Wagnerian bass – Birgit Nilsson regarded him as the greatest 
                  in her experience – and his Landgrave in Tannhäuser is 
                  regal – the comparison with Andrésen is apt. This was recorded 
                  in 1957; jumping backwards 18 years we hear his noble Pogner 
                  in Die Meistersinger and we listen closely: is his voice 
                  production a little easier? Possibly a notch, but only a small 
                  notch. Another five years backwards and the scratchy recording 
                  from 1934 tells us the age. As Padre Guardiano in La forza 
                  del destino his voice is more mellow to begin with, and 
                  so it should; but then he is as mighty as any other bass in 
                  memory. Does he even challenge Pinza in his legendary recording 
                  with Rosa Ponselle? It might be irreverent to say so, but beyond 
                  the bacon frying and the variable levels we hear the same fullness, 
                  the same nobility. Yes, nobility is the noun that constantly 
                  comes to mind. It should be mentioned, though, that he also 
                  encompassed nasty characters like Hunding and Hagen with the 
                  same eloquence. He isn’t partnered by Rosa Ponselle but we hear 
                  a finely nuanced Leonora from Brita Herzberg, who was a star 
                  at the Royal Opera for more than thirty years, not least in 
                  Wagner roles. She and her husband Einar Beyron were the dream 
                  couple of Tristan und Isolde, and their daughter Catarina 
                  Ligendza was an international star in the same repertoire some 
                  decades ago.
                
With 
                  Issay Dobrowen conducting, Björker sings a deeply-felt Confutatis 
                  maledictis from Verdi’s Requiem, recorded in 1950. 
                  Such warmth! The reference to Pinza is again close at hand. 
                  This is sung in the original Latin; all the other arias are 
                  sung in Swedish, as was the rule at the time. It has also been 
                  Bluebell’s policy with this series to include something from 
                  the world of Swedish opera, which makes them even more valuable. 
                  Ture Rangström may be known mainly as a composer of some very 
                  fine songs, often settings of Bo Bergman, but he was also fascinated 
                  by August Strindberg: his first symphony. from 1914, is entitled 
                  “August Strindberg in Memoriam” and the opera Kronbruden 
                  (1915–16) is not only based on Strindberg’s play but is in fact 
                  a setting, word for word, of Strindberg’s text – or rather the 
                  first four acts; the last two acts were cut with the author’s 
                  consent. Rangström met Strindberg on several occasions in 1909 
                  and discussed the possibility of an opera. The finished score 
                  was sent to the Stockholm Opera in early 1917. It was two years 
                  before he received an answer and then Harald André, manager 
                  of the opera, suggested that it would have to wait a couple 
                  of years. In the meantime Rangström, with his colleague Atterberg 
                  as mediator, had met Max von Schillings from the Stuttgart Opera, 
                  who within a couple of months accepted it for performance. Thus 
                  the world premiere took place in Stuttgart on 21 October 1919. 
                  It was another three years before it finally was staged in Stockholm. 
                  There are few separate numbers in the opera, no arias; the vocal 
                  parts are mainly declamatory and we can admire Björker’s exemplary 
                  enunciation of the text.
                
Kurt 
                  Atterberg may be a better known quantity as composer, at least 
                  to record collectors, who today can acquire his total symphonic 
                  output in excellent recordings (see Rob Barnett’s review). 
                  He was also an avid producer of operas and Björker took part 
                  in four of Atterberg’s world premieres. Best known is Fanal, 
                  most of all since Jussi Björling sang Martin Skarp at the premiere 
                  and also recorded his aria I männer over lag och rätt commercially. 
                  The premiere performance was also recorded, at least in parts. 
                  It is wonderful to hear Björker’s warm and noble voice in the 
                  Duke’s part. It would be great if some enterprising company 
                  – hint, CPO! – recorded at least highlights from this opera.
                
In 
                  the excerpt from Roméo et Juliette Björker is a tender-hearted 
                  Frère Laurent. As the lovers we hear Jussi Björling and his 
                  frequent partner Hjördis Schymberg, who recently celebrated 
                  her 98th birthday and reportedly sang to her own 
                  piano accompaniment at the reception!
                
The 
                  final tracks are from the first act of Brazilian Carlos Gomes’s 
                  partly folk-inspired opera Il Guarany, which was staged 
                  in Stockholm in May 1945. Björker is as sonorous and warm as 
                  expected and he is surrounded by a number of leading singers. 
                  Among them is a glorious Sigurd Björling and – in the aria Gentile 
                  di cuore – the Belgian soprano Henriette Guermant, who sang 
                  in Stockholm 1940–1958 and is little represented on record. 
                  This seems to be her first appearance on CD, which is a shame, 
                  since hers was an agile and glittering lyrical voice of the 
                  first order.
                
Naturally 
                  the sound is variable, recorded over such a long period, but 
                  even the oldest excerpts are more than acceptable. All in all 
                  this disc offers such magnificent bass singing that it should 
                  be in every respectable vocal collection.
                
Göran 
                  Forsling 
                
              
Earlier 
                reviews in the series “Great Swedish Singers” on Bluebell:
                
                 Margareta Hallin
                Kjerstin Dellert
                Barbro Ericson
                Elisabeth Söderström
                Erik Saedén
                Gösta 
                Winbergh
                Ingvar 
                Wixell
                Nicolai 
                Gedda
                Kerstin Meyer