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Wennerberg-Reuter, Stenhammar, Hallen - Vocal & Chamber Music | BIS BIS2686

Wennerberg-Reuter, Stenhammar, Hallen - Vocal & Chamber Music

£13.98 £12.83

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Label: BIS

Cat No: BIS2686

Barcode: 7318599926865

Format: Hybrid SACD

Number of Discs: 1

Expected Release Date: 5th September 2025

Item is currently due
5th September 2025.

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Contents

Artists

Sofie Asplund (soprano)
Peter Friis Johansson (piano)
Johan Dalene (violin)
Daniel Migdal (violin)
Albin Uusijarvi (viola)
Amalie Stalheim (cello)

Works

Hallen, Andreas

Piano Quartet in D minor, op.3

Stenhammar, Wilhelm

Violin Sonata in A minor, op.19

Wennerberg-Reuter, Sara

Adagio
Ett barn
Hor, huru vindarne susa
Landsvagsmaja
Legende in G minor
Nar som majvindar susa
Tre trallande jantor
Uti var hage
Vallarelat

Artists

Sofie Asplund (soprano)
Peter Friis Johansson (piano)
Johan Dalene (violin)
Daniel Migdal (violin)
Albin Uusijarvi (viola)
Amalie Stalheim (cello)

About

Pianist Peter Friis Johansson has brought together renowned musicians, including violinist Johan Dalene and soprano Sofie Asplund, for a programme that juxtaposes three generations of Swedish composers. The vocal and chamber works performed here testify to the special place these genres occupy in Swedish art music and to the vitality of musical societies in the early twentieth century, which sparked an interest that went far beyond easily digestible music.

Andreas Hallén is the oldest of the composers featured here. His Piano Quartet shows great confidence despite being an early work. Like many composers of his generation, Hallén readily incorporates folk elements. Wilhelm Stenhammar produced an important and varied body of work. His Violin Sonata is a work that reflects the ideals of his German education: it is absolute music without any explicit extra-musical narrative content, a ‘synthesis of classicism and sensitive poetry’, as his first biographer put it. Sara Wennerberg-Reuter is the least-known of the three, and many of her scores remain unpublished. Stockholm’s only female organist with a permanent position, she left behind a varied body of work spanning a wide range of styles. She distanced herself from her contemporaries with a musical style that focused on melody, a commodity she felt had by then become scarce.

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