Open Rehearsal: Sibelius, Nielsen, & Tarkiainen | Music of the Midnight Sun
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Symphony Hall, Boston, MA
John Storgårds, conductor
Pekka Kuusisto, violin
Outi TARKIAINEN Midnight Sun Variations
NIELSEN Violin Concerto
Intermission
SIBELIUS The Oceanides and The Bard
SIBELIUS Tapiola
The music and culture of Finland permeate Symphony Hall in this concert. Finnish conductor John Storgårds leads the first program in our Music of the Midnight Sun series, an exploration of Nordic storytelling and music. Finnish composer Outi Tarkiainen’s nuanced and colorful Midnight Sun Variations transport you to her homeland. Finnish violinist Pekka Kuusisto debuts with the BSO as the orchestra performs the great Danish composer Carl Nielsen’s 1911 Violin Concerto for the first time. The program closes with three of Jean Sibelius’s tone poems based on Finnish legends, their moods ranging from sweeping power to contemplative mystery.
Music of the Midnight Sun is supported, in part by the American Scandinavian Foundation.
The pre-rehearsal talk on February 29 will be given by Robert Kirzinger, Director of Program Publications. The talk will begin at 9:30am, and admission included with open rehearsal ticket.
Performance Details
Feb 29, 2024, 10:30am EST
Featuring
Program Notes & Works
Midnight Sun Variations
Born in Lapland, in the far north of Finland, Outi Tarkiainen describes her Midnight Sun Variations as “variations on the light when the sun never sets in the arctic summer night,” evoking a “rich spectrum of infinitely nuanced hues.”
Violin Concerto
Carl Nielsen composed his Violin Concerto in Norway and finished it at home in Denmark in 1911. He wrote it for the Danish violinist Peder Møller, who premiered it in February 1912.
The Oceanides
Sibelius's tone poem The Oceanides, another name for mythical naiads or water nymphs, portrays the animating spirit of the sea.
The Bard
Sibelius's harp-centered tone poem The Bard evokes a far-distant past.
Tapiola
Tapiola, one of Sibelius's best-known works, takes its title from the “forest spirit” of the Finnish national epic the Kalevala.