Jean Sibelius Recordings


   Sibelius was a late Romantic Composer, a Finnish Nationalist when Finland was being oppressively controlled by Tsarist Russia Politically and culturally when many of their elites felt closer ties with Sweden.  Much of his music evokes the great subarctic Finnish Landscape, and Finnish legends provide a subplot for much of it.

   Influences of Tchaikovsky and Bruckner abound but he had  a distinctive voice which grew more idiosyncratic through his creative lifespan.  He paints on vast Orchestral canvases, with powerful brass, cold and piercing woodwinds and rich shimmering strings.

   His best music will also test your system.  The Finnish Conductor Osmo Vanska had released a set of his music on the audiophile label BIS with a relatively small provincial Finnish Orchestra.  I heard him conduct Tapiola, perhaps Sibelius most evocative score, in Chicago soon after.  Clearly the CSO was several leagues ahead of the Lahti Symphony, but I couldn't believe how big and vast the sonic landscape was, truly evoking the limitless, pitiless Arctic Forests.  I have never been able to get any recording to even begin to approximate that sound on my system.

   Finnish musicians have taken the lead, and continue to do so, but Herbert von Karajan and Colin Davis (particularly in Boston) delivered superb performances as well.  I didn't much care for Leonard Bernstein in Sibelius, but his recording of the Violin Concerto with Francescati is incandescent.  I really dislike the current practice of slowing this work down and milking it.  Francescati and  Bernstein are Hell For Leather in one of the greatest recordings of anything.

   Any recommendations/favorites amongst the Sibelius recordings, both for performance and for sonics?

mahler123

The Davis Boston series is very strong.  I prefer it to the LSO cycle .  I have the Ormandy, and the Philadelphia Orchestra was great in Sibelius.. I agree that the Makela cycle is very good, would like to hear what he does with Sibelius in another 15 years.

von Karajan on either EMI or DG is peerless in the Fourth

Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra with Leif Segestram is wonderful and very well recorded (Pohjola's Daughter, Symphony #4, Finlandia).

FWIW, I think Sibelius sort of crossed over into being a neo classicist with his 3rd Symphony where he starts to develop his own distinct voice (which coincides with my interest in his music). I agree with your assessment of Van Karajan's 4th Sym. I like Bergman's cycle, especially with the COE. I think they flatter his  post romantic style. And while I'm here, I'm in love with the Finlandia Hymn for male choir. The unofficial national anthem. Very moving! Image soldiers marching off to war with Russia singing this song!! :-)

Would have to agree that I quite like Paavo Berglund.

I have a full Symphonic set by Maazel on DECCA that I am also quite fond of.

I do wish Szell had done a full cycle. His #2 with the Concertgebouw is an all time favorite.