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Too often it can be easy to overlook the breadth of Finnish classical music. It’s a small country, after all, and Sibelius casts quite a shadow. Here are works by other greats as well: Selim Palmgren, Väinö Raitio, and Leevi Madetoja, all rough contemporaries of Sibelius (give or take a couple of decades). A great reminder that great composers like Sibelius don’t just come out of nowhere.

Weston Williams

Rumon Gamba and Oulu Sinfonia present a fascinating picture of Finnish orchestral music, their second program of works from their native land. The album takes its title from Selim Palmgren’s four-movement suite, written in 1904, offering richly atmospheric character pieces celebrating the changing seasons. Several works take inspiration from the natural world, such as Kurkikohtaus (Scene with Cranes) which Sibelius composed as incidental music for a play by his brother-in-law, Arvid Järnefelt. Robert Kajanus is often considered the father of Finnish music. As a young man, he was one of the standard bearers in the drive for Finnish independence, and he developed a keen artistic interest in Finnish folklore and vernacular traditions. His Second Finnish Rhapsody, Op. 8, dates from 1886 and is the oldest work here. The album also features works by two further key Finnish composers: Väinö Raitio and Leevi Madetoja – the latter a native of Oulu. All works but the Sibelius selection are new to the WFMT library.

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