"Johan Svendsen was born in Christiana (now Oslo) on 30 September 1840, and died in Copenhagen on 14 June 1911. At an early age he acquired a working knowledge of a variety of instruments from his father, who was a military musician, and he began his career as a clarinettist in a regimental band. His principal instrument, however, was the violin, and as a young man he played in the orchestra of Norske Theater (of which Ibsen was Director) and his first experience of the symphonic repertory, and of Beethoven in particular, was as a violinist in the subscription concerts organised in 1857-9 by Halfdan Kjerulf and Gottfried Conradi. His formal musical education did not begin until 1863, when, with the aid of a stipend granted to him by the King of Sweden and Norway, he entered the Conservatoire in Leipzig (he was offered a place in an advanced class, but asked to start at the beginning of the course because he considered his musical education to be rudimentary). He studied the violin with Mendelssohn's old friend and colleague Ferdinand David, but within a year had decided to concentrate on composition and conducting. He successfully pursued a career in both capacities (together, initially, with that of a solo and orchestral violinist), and this naturally meant that was away from his native Norway for much of the time. In 1872 he returned to Christiana as joint conductor, with his compatriot and close contemporary Grieg, of the Musikforening concerts, becoming sole conductor two years later. In 1883 he was appointed Musical Director of the Royal Opera in Copenhagen, and retained the position until ill-health forced him to retire in 1908.
"Svendsen's most important compositions, which include two symphonies, two concertos (for violin and for cello), four Norwegian Rhapsodies for orchestra, vocal and chamber music, were written before 1880. The Octet in A major, Op. 3 for strings (four violins, two violas and two cellos), like the String Quartet in A minor, Op. 1 and the String Quintet in C, Op. 5, dates from his last years at the Leipzig Conservatoire. It was performed there for the first time in 1866, and won him the Conservatoire's First Prize; it also prompted an offer from the great Leipzig publishing house of Breitkopf & Härtel, who issued it a year later, with a dedication, 'in deepest gratitude and respect', to Her Majesty Louise, Queen of Sweden and Norway. In May 1868, when Svendsen went to the musical festival in Weimar and met Liszt, the Octet was performed by a group of Germany's foremost string players.
"The industrious and fluent Louis Spohr composed four double quartets between 1823 and 1847, but these are, as their titles imply, octets for two string quartets, with the accent as much, if not more, on antiphonal effects between the two groups, as on treatment of the eight instruments as a homogeneous ensemble. For the classic example of a true string octet, one has to turn to the one in E-flat, Op. 20, that Mendelssohn wrote in 1825 at the age of sixteen; and probably the only nineteenth-century parallel to this, even if it does not match the sheer genius of Mendelssohn's youthful masterpiece, is Svendsen's Op. 3. Both main themes of its first movement incorporate prominent dotted rhythms, and these are to prove a recurring feature throughout the work. The emphatic first subject is announced boldly by all eight instruments in octaves and re-stated in two contrasting ways before a sustained chromatic transition prepares the way for the short second subject in (in E), gently introduced by first violin and first viola in turn. The compact development is mainly concerned with the first two bars of the first subject, but later the second subject enters the discussion; further development takes place during the course of the recapitulation, which is appreciably longer than the exposition and development section combined. The inventive and rhythmically intriguing second movement (in E) has something of the spirit of a scherzo, but is formally more like a loose-limbed rondo. The 'scherzo' element is provided by the chattering triplets of the opening, the 'trio' element by the short, lyrical theme (with a dotted rhythm in its second bar) initiated by the first viola at bar 4I but subsequently expanded almost beyond recognition. The slow movement (in C) can perhaps be best described as a set of free, continuous variations, with considerable fluctuation of mood and tempo, on the theme as presented at the outset by the first violin. But there is an impassioned subsidiary theme that recalls the 'trio' theme of the third movement, and a second 'variation' theme, first played by the first cello to a descant on the first violin in running semiquavers. A slow introduction, bristling with dotted rhythms, prefaces the sonata-form 'Finale', whose angular main theme it foreshadows; a lyrical, curving second subject, of by now familiar outline, is presented by the first viola and provides most of the material for the development, which is separated from the recapitulation by a virtuoso semiquaver passage in octaves.
"The Romance for violin, probably Svendsen's best known work, was composed in Christiana in 1880, soon after his return from an extended foreign tour that took him to Leipzig, Rome, London (where he met the legendary Spanish violinist, Pablo de Saraste) and Paris. It was originally scored for solo violin, with an orchestra of strings, flute, oboe, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns and timpani, but here the accompaniment is arranged for strings. The main tempo is 'Andante', but there is a quicker central section in G minor.
"Carl Nielsen was born at Nørre Lyndelse (near Odense) in Denmark on 9 June 1865, and died in Copenhagen on 2 October 1931. Like Svendsen, he came from a modest background; his father taught him to play the violin and the cornet, he gained his first practical musical experience from playing in a local orchestra and in a military band, and he was enabled to study at the Royal Danish Conservatoire in Copenhagen (from 1884 to 1886) as a result of financial assistance from benefactors in Odense. But although he continued for some years to play the violin professionally (he was a member of the orchestra of the Royal Opera in Copenhagen under Svendsen, who was not only an influence on the young composer but an ardent admirer, and who conducted the first performance of Nielsen's first Symphony in 1894) and was a competent conductor, he never attained Svendsen's eminence in that field, whereas he quickly outstripped him as a composer. Not only did he become, with six symphonies to his credit, Denmark's greatest symphonist, but he was also a noted composer of music for the theatre, wrote three important concertos (for violin, flute and clarinet), choral music and songs, piano music and a considerable body of chamber music which includes three sonatas for violin and piano, six string quartets (the first two of them student works), a string quintet and a wind quintet.
"The String Quintet in G major (for the combination of two violins, two violas and cello, favoured by Mozart, Brahms and Dvořák, but not Schubert) was written in 1888, the same year as the first of Nielsen's four mature quartets (in G minor, Op. 13), and first performed on 28 April 1889. The score was dedicated to Thorvald Nielsen, Erlin Bloch, Hans Kassow and Louis Jensen, but not published until 1937, six years after the composer's death. The first movement, in fairly regular sonata form, is in a lilting 9/8 metre, but with occasional deft changes in rhythm (to 12/8 and, effectively, 3/4), which add to the music's piquancy and charm. There are three main thematic groups: the melodious theme introduced at the very beginning by the first violin; the airy transition initiated by the first viola, engendering a whole succession of oscillating semiquaver patterns; and the long-breathed theme on the first violin (on the first viola and the cello in octaves after the recapitulation) that emerges from it. The slow movement (in B-flat) is in ternary form, with the outer sections centred round a solemn theme intoned, after a chromatic introductory passage, by the first viola and the cello (on the two violins in octaves in the much shortened reprise). The middle section, in slightly quicker tempo, introduces a chorale-like theme on the first viola, this is then treated, in varying forms, rather as a 'cantus firmus' in different instrumental settings. The colourful third movement, alternately dancing and langorous, is permeated by quick, repeated-note 'ostinati'; a somewhat bucolic middle section (or trio) is followed by a literal repear of the first section, followed by a coda. The quintet ends with an exuberant sonata-form 'Finale', with an emphatic first subject and a playful second subject (on the first violin), which provides most of the material for the development section; there is a coda marked 'Presto'." (Robin Golding, 1994. From the liner notes.)
Performers: Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields Chamber Ensemble
1. Johan Svendsen - String Octet In A Major, Op. 3: I. Allegro Risoluto Ben Marcato
2. Johan Svendsen - String Octet In A Major, Op. 3: II. Allegro Scherzoso - Lento - Piu Mosso, Quasi Presto
3. Johan Svendsen - String Octet In A Major, Op. 3: III. Andante Sostenuto
4. Johan Svendsen - String Octet In A Major, Op. 3: IV Finale. Moderato - Allegro Assai Con Fuoco
5. Johan Svendsen - Romance, Op. 26
6. Carl Nielsen - String Quintet In G Major: I. Allegro Pastorale
7. Carl Nielsen - String Quintet In G Major: II. Adagio
8. Carl Nielsen - String Quintet In G Major: III. Andante Scherzando
9. Carl Nielsen - String Quintet In G Major: IV. Finale. Allegro Molto - Presto
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