|
|
|
Donald E. Osborne, Director California Artists Management 564 Market Street, Suite 420, San Francisco, CA 94104-5412 415 362-2787 / fax: 415 362-2838 / Skype: calartistsdon / Email |
Susan Endrizzi Morris, Director California Artists Management P.O. Box 2479, Mendocino, CA 95460-2479 707-937-4787 / cell: 415-302-1083 / Skype: sueendrizzi / Email |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
||
|
The Swedish Radio Choir
Ragnar Bohlin, guest
conductor
North American Tour:
February / March 2010
|
Thirty-two professional singers form the Swedish
Radio Choir – which has been recognized since the 1960s as one of the great a
capella choirs of the world, frequently engaged by the foremost international
conductors such as Claudio Abbado, Riccardo Muti and Valery Gegiev for concerts,
tours and recordings.
It is unique in its mastery of the full spectrum of choral repertoire in all its
breadth and depth, from Bach and Palestrina, through the Romantics, to Strauss,
Ligeti and contemporary composers.
Founded in 1925, the world took note of the Swedish Radio Choir in 1952
when Eric Ericson became its principal conductor,
molding it into the flexible choral
instrument that it remains today.
Ericson transformed
the choir into an ensemble capable of performing advanced choral
repertoire — works by such composers as Richard Strauss and Max Reger as well as
music of its own day. Arthur Honegger heard his own choral music sung for the
first time the way he had imagined it, and began spreading word that this choir
could sing practically anything.
The Ericson sound became legendary. Many composers found the Swedish Radio Choir
to be the ideal instrument for their music: composers such as Ingvar Lidholm,
Sven-Erik Bäck and Lars Edlund; György Ligeti and Krzysztof Penderecki. The
works they wrote specifically for this choir count among the classics of choral
repertoire in Sweden and internationally. Eric Ericson retired after more than
thirty years’ service, but he has been welcomed back many times as Conductor
Emeritus.
Each successive Music Director since Ericson has impressed his individual stamp
on the choir and brought new colors and skills. In the 1980s Anders Öhrwall
shared his specialist understanding of Baroque music. Gustaf Sjökvist premiered
works by Sven-David Sandström, Tomas Jennefelt and Hans Gefors, while also
presenting programs with Lill Lindfors, songwriter Olle Adolphson and other
guest artists from the popular sphere. Tõnu Kaljuste, the first non-Swedish
director. brought repertoire from Eastern Europe including the music of Arvo
Pärt and Alfred Schnittke, while Stefan Parkman presented a series comprising
all of Bach’s major works. Peter Dijkstra was named Music Director of the choir
in 2007.
Since its first sensational tours to Berlin and Venice the
Swedish Radio Choir has carried on a rich and varied schedule of international
activities. It is regularly invited to participate in international festivals
and concerts. Its work with Riccardo Muti and Claudio Abbado in the 1980s
resulted in a series of acclaimed concerts and recordings. This year the choir
has toured in Italy, The Netherlands
and Nordic countries. It took part in a festival in Rotterdam and The Hague,
joined forces with the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and Valery Gergiev and
other important ensembles and conductors. Next year will bring tours in Italy
with Claudio Abbado and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra among others and in 2010
they return to North America under the direction of Ragnar Bohlin.
The choir is well represented on CD and DVD with performances of
both a cappella and major symphonic works on such labels as
Deutsche Grammophon, EMI,
SONY and Virgin Classics. The Swedish Radio Choir’s vision is
to deploy its exceptional sonic range to place its own special imprint on the a
cappella and symphonic choral repertoires. It is an ensemble in which each
individual voice finds its place in a unified artistic expression.
Ragnar Bohlin
began his tenure as Chorus Director of the San Francisco Symphony in March 2007.
Born in 1965, he served as choirmaster of Stockholm’s Maria Magdalena Church and
holds a masters degree in organ and conducting and a postgraduate degree in
conducting from the Royal Academy of Music in Stockholm. Mr. Bohlin studied with
the renowned choir director Eric Ericson and studied piano with professor Peter
Feuchtwanger in London on a British Council scholarship. Through a
Sweden-America Foundation scholarship he visited choruses throughout the United
States. He studied singing with the great Swedish tenor Nicolai Gedda and
has performed as tenor soloist for concerts and oratorio. With Stockholm’s KFUM
Chamber Choir, the Maria Magdalena Motet Choir and the Maria Vocal Ensemble, Mr.
Bohlin has toured internationally and won numerous prizes in international
competitions. He has prepared choruses for some of the world’s foremost
conductors including Herbert Blomstedt, Valery Gergiev, Esa Pekka Salonen, and
Alan Gilbert. Mr. Bohlin
has appeared regularly on Swedish radio with the Swedish Radio Choir, the Maria
Vocal Ensemble, and the Maria Magdalena Motet Choir and has worked frequently
with The Ericson Chamber Choir, the Royal Philharmonic Choir and the Opera Choir
of Stockholm. With the Maria Vocal Ensemble and special guests Rigmor Gustafsson
and Lena Willemark, Mr. Bohlin recorded a CD of new jazz music by
composer/pianist Elise Einarsdotter who set texts by great poets including E. E.
Cummings. In October 2007, Mr. Bohlin conducted the world premiere of a new
requiem by composer Fredrik Sixten, broadcast on Swedish Public Radio.
Bohlin's CD recording of a Saint Mark Passion by the same composer and another
recording, “Mysterium,” featuring
mainly a cappella music, were released in Sweden in spring 2008. He has taught
at the Royal Academy in Stockholm and in February 2008 was Visiting Professor at
Indiana University. In October 2008 he will conduct and record a performance
with trombonist/composer Christian Lindberg and the Swedish Radio Choir. Ragnar
Bohlin was awarded the prestigious Johannes Norrby-medallion for expanding the
frontiers of Swedish choral music.
“He had particular; fine
assistance from the chorus, which seems to be flowering under the leadership of
its new director, Ragnar Bohlin.”
San Francisco Chronicle – May 23, 2008
“Bohlin
proceeded to lead Poulenc’s masterpiece entirely from memory and with enormous
passion and conviction. The San Francisco Symphony Chorus was in rare form,
performing with excellent diction, a wide range of tone color, and exquisite
balance.”
San Francisco Classical Voice - June 6, 2008
Press Comments:
Brahms
Requiem, Rotterdam Philharmonic /
Valery Gergiev, De Doelen Concert Hall:
“Star among stars was the fabulous
Swedish Radio Choir which sang as close to perfection as one could wish for.
Gergiev was visibly excited and stimulated by the amazing possibilities of this
extrra which reacted to each tiny
movement of his fingers, each blink of his eyes. The first two movements, for
choir and orchestra, were miracles of balance and concentration. The audience
was extremely silent and witnessed a blending of timbre in choir and orchestra
which had to be heard to be believed.”
Musicweb-International.com - May 24,
2008
Durufle “Requiem;” Faure “Requiem.”
Fredrik Malmberg, BIS Records
“The Swedish Radio Choir is an ensemble
whose reputation walks miles in front of it, and I have yet to hear them in a
bad performance. The same holds true here, and they deliver a wonderful
performance of both works, sounding for all the world as if they lived in France
instead of Sweden.”
Audiophile Audition - November 21, 2007
Fauré
Requiem, Rachmaninoff
Liturgy, Mostly Mozart / Louis Langrée:
“The choir sounded superb, revealing
the serenity of Fauré’s calmly unfolding, beautiful melodies and floating,
enchanting harmonies, with the gentle voices balanced against the robust tension
of the strings. Members of the choir were also immaculate in excerpts from
Rachmaninoff’ Liturgy. They sang with perfect balance, precisely controlled
dynamic shadings and elegantly tapered phrase endings.”
New York Times – August 10, 2007
“This is something that far transcends
beats and barlines. This is hypnosis.”
Expressen – March 8, 2006
Brahms’
German Rquiem, Royal Albert Hall,
London:
“Even more
striking than the refined playing of the Swedish Radio Orchestra was the
flawlessly shaded singing of the Swedish Radio Choir. Their first hushed
pianissimo instantly had one's ears pricking. The power of the choir was
impressive, more incisive and cleanly projected than with choirs twice the
size.”
The Guardian – August 18, 2003
Rachmaninoff
Vespers, Virgin Classics:
“The Swedish Radio Choir
makes a fantastic interpretation of this wonderful sacral classic! This is the
best recording I've ever heard for chambersized choirs!
www.amazon.com - August 11, 2002
Beethoven Symphony No. 9, Berlin Philharmonic, Claudio Abbado:
“The Swedish
choir's singing is nonpareil.”
Fanfare Magazine – March / April 2001
Brahms:
Ein Deutsches Requiem, Berlin Philharmonic, Claudio Abbado:
“A reverential performance,
with very fine choral forces. Abbado, daringly taking his Berlin orchestra to the home of the Vienna
Philharmonic, gives a suitably loving, almost reverential reading. Abbado
prefers professional choirs from Sweden to any German-speaking group, and they
reward him with singing of the utmost strength, concentration and euphony, all
sections ideally balanced.”
Gramophone – September 2000
Mozart
Requiem, Berlin Philharmonic, Claudio Abbado:
“It has virtues that are very much Abbado’s, and to which the restrained
baroque elegance of Salzburg Cathedral makes a deeply satisfying and appropriate
backdrop. It helps that the chorus is not enormous, and very clean-cut in its
delivery, so that the textures emerge clearly enough even in the cathedral
acoustic, which comes over very naturally in the surround-sound recording.”
Gramophone – August 2000
Hambraeus:
Apocalipsis cum figuris secundum Dürer,
BIS Records:
“The performances
seem remarkable in their ability to fuse life into what would seem to be
unpromising material. I enjoyed it enormously. The recording quality is
stunning.”
Fanfare Magazine – May / June 2000
Virtuoso Choral Music, Clarion Records:
“Anyone who really appreciates choral
music--especially 20th-century choral music--must make this collection a
priority acquisition. If you were around in the 1970’s and you cared about such
repertoire and choir performances then you may have owned (or lusted after)
these recordings by the incomparable Swedish Radio Choir. Surely these are among
the most outstanding performances of any body of important work in any genre,
and the mastering of these recordings for this CD issue is nothing short of
superb.”
www.classicstoday.com
Alfred Schnittke's Psalms of
Repentance:
“Kaljuste's Swedish Radio Choir is one
of today's top contemporary music ensembles. Its technical virtuosity and
exemplary interpretive skills serve this marvelous and moving music very well.”
www.classicstoday.com
Amazon.com's Best of 1999: “Schnittke attains a new level of severely controlled beauty in the
a cappella
Psalms of Repentance,
given here in a superb recording by the Swedish Radio Choir.”
amazon.com Editorial review
Amazon.com essential recording: “This
is a tour de force for any choir, and Kaljuste's Swedish Radio Choir shows here
why it is one of today's top contemporary-music ensembles. Highlights include
the beautiful, otherworldly Sixth Psalm, and the final Psalm No. 12--an
ethereal, wordless prayer, a masterpiece of choral writing and choral singing.”
amazon.com Editorial review
“A splendid performance by the Swedish
Radio Choir.”
New York Times
Discography
Beethoven:
Missa Solemnis, Vienna Philharmonic, Levine,
DG435 770-2
Beethoven:
Symphony No. 9, Berlin Philharmonic,
Abbado,
Sony
SK 62634
Blomdahl:
Aniara, Westerberg,
Caprice CAP 22016
Blomdahl:
Danssvit,
Ehrling.
Caprice CAP 21424
Brahms:
Ein Deutches Requiem, Berlin Philharmonic, Abbado, DG437 517-2
Bäck:
Motets,
Phono Suecia PSCD 10
Dallapiccola:
Il Prigioniero, Swedish Radio Orchestra, Salonen, Sony
B000002BZZ
Dofta, dofta, vit syrén,
Musica Sveciae MSCD 609
Eliasson: Canto del
Vagabondo, Caprice CAP21402
Gefors:
Christina-scener, Phono Suecia PSCD 73
Hæffner: Electra,
Schuback, Caprice
CAP 22030
Hallén:
Ett Juloratorium,
Andersson,
Sterling
CDS 1028-2
Hambraeus: Motets,
BIS CD-1048
Hammerth:
Stockholmskantat,
Segerstam, Phono Suecia,
PSCD 121
Haydn:
Creation, Berlin Philharmonic,
Levine,
DG445 584-2
Jennefelt:
Dichterliebe, Phono Suecia,
PSCD 68
Julens Sånger och Hymner,
Sjökvist.
Skivbolaget
SBCD 507
Larsson:
Det ljusa landet,
Parkman,
Phono Suecia
PSCD 714
Lidholm:
A riveder le stele,
Ericson,
Phono Suecia
PSCD 35
Lindberg:
Requiem, Phono Suecia
PSCD 78
Lindberg:
O mistress mine,
Blue Bell
ABCD 032
Mellnäs:
Porträtt,
Phono Suecia
PSCD 22
Mozart:
Requiem, Berlin Philharmonic,
Muti,
EMI
7 49640 2
Mozart,
Requiem, Berlin Philharmonic,
Abbado, DG
463 181-2
Nielsen:
Fynsk foraar, Swedish Radioj Orchestra, Salonen, Sony
B0000028XK
Nilsson:
Balthasar, Phono Suecia,
PSCD 40
Pärt:
Credo, Swedish Radion Orchestra,
Salonen, DG
B000GZQZ4E
Pärt:
Orient Occident,
ECM Records
472 080-2
Rabe:
Basta, Nilsson,
Phono Suecia
PSCD 67
Rachmaninov:
Vespers,
Virgin Classics
VC 5 45124 2
Rosenberg:
Johannes uppenbarelse,
Caprice
CAP 21429
Sandström:
Requiem, Caprice
CAP 22027
Sandström:
The High Mass,
Caprice
CAP 22036
Schnittke:
Psalms of Repentance,
ECM 453 513-2
Schnittke:
Requiem,
Caprice
CAP 21515
Schumann:
Scenes from Goethe's Faust, Berlin Philharmonic, Abbado,
Sony
S2K 66308
Stenhammar:
Kantater, Sewdish Radio Symphony Orchestra,
Sterling
CDS 1023-2
Stenhammar:
Serenad,
Salonen,
Musica Sveciae
MSCD 626
Stravinsky:
Les Noces, Ehrling,
BIS
BISCD 400
Stravinsky:
Oedipus Rex, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra,
Salonen,
Sony
SK 48057
Stravinsky:
The Rake’s Progress, Swedish Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Salonen, Warner
398422352-2
Swedish Highlights:
Caprice CAP 21340
Verdi:
Quattro pezzi sacri, Berlin Philharmonic,
Muti,
EMI
7 47066 2
Verdi:
Requiem, Berlin
Philharmonic,
Abbado,
EM 5 57168 2