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Jean Sibelius

Jean Sibelius (/sɪˈbliəs/ sib-AY-lee-əs;[1] Finland Swedish: [ˈjɑːn siˈbeːliʉs, ˈʃɑːn -] ; born Johan Julius Christian Sibelius;[2] 8 December 1865 – 20 September 1957) was a Finnish composer of the late Romantic and early-modern periods. He is widely regarded as his country's greatest composer, and his music is often credited with having helped Finland develop a national identity during its struggle for independence from Russia.

Jean Sibelius
Born(1865-12-08)8 December 1865
Died20 September 1957(1957-09-20) (aged 91)
Järvenpää, Finland
WorksList of compositions
Signature

The core of his oeuvre is his set of seven symphonies, which, like his other major works, are regularly performed and recorded in Finland and countries around the world. His other best-known compositions are Finlandia, the Karelia Suite, Valse triste, the Violin Concerto, the choral symphony Kullervo, and The Swan of Tuonela (from the Lemminkäinen Suite). His other works include pieces inspired by nature, Nordic mythology, and the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala; over a hundred songs for voice and piano; incidental music for numerous plays; the one-act opera The Maiden in the Tower; chamber music, piano music, Masonic ritual music,[3] and 21 publications of choral music.

Sibelius composed prolifically until the mid-1920s, but after completing his Seventh Symphony (1924), the incidental music for The Tempest (1926), and the tone poem Tapiola (1926), he stopped producing major works in his last 30 years— a retirement commonly referred to as the "silence of Järvenpää", (the location of his home). Although he is reputed to have stopped composing, he attempted to continue writing, including abortive efforts on an eighth symphony. In later life, he wrote Masonic music and re-edited some earlier works, while retaining an active but not always favourable interest in new developments in music. Although this 'silence' has often perplexed scholars, in reality, Sibelius was clear: he felt he had written enough.

The Finnish 100 mark note featured his image until 2002, when the euro was adopted.[4] Since 2011, Finland has celebrated a flag flying day on 8 December, the composer's birthday, also known as the Day of Finnish Music.[5] In 2015, in celebration of the 150th anniversary of Sibelius's birth, a number of special concerts and events were held, especially in Helsinki, the Finnish capital.[6]

Life edit

Early years edit

 
Sibelius's birthplace in Hämeenlinna

Sibelius was born on 8 December 1865 in Hämeenlinna (Swedish: Tavastehus) in the Grand Duchy of Finland, an autonomous part of the Russian Empire. He was the son of the Swedish-speaking medical doctor Christian Gustaf Sibelius and Maria Charlotta Sibelius (née Borg). The family name stems from the Sibbe estate in Eastern Uusimaa, which his paternal great-grandfather owned.[7] Sibelius's father died of typhoid in July 1868, leaving substantial debts. As a result, his mother—who was again pregnant—had to sell their property and move the family into the home of Katarina Borg, her widowed mother, who also lived in Hämeenlinna.[8] Sibelius was therefore brought up in a decidedly female environment, the only male influence coming from his uncle, Pehr Ferdinand Sibelius, who was interested in music, especially the violin. It was he who gave the boy a violin when he was ten years old and later encouraged him to maintain his interest in composition.[9][10] For Sibelius, Uncle Pehr not only took the place of a father but acted as a musical adviser.[11]

 
11-year-old Sibelius in 1876

From an early age, Sibelius showed a strong interest in nature, frequently walking around the countryside when the family moved to Loviisa on the coast for the summer months. In his own words: "For me, Loviisa represented sun and happiness. Hämeenlinna was where I went to school; Loviisa was freedom." It was in Hämeenlinna, when he was seven, that his aunt Julia was brought in to give him piano lessons on the family's upright instrument, rapping him on the knuckles whenever he played a wrong note. He progressed by improvising on his own, but still learned to read music.[12] He later turned to the violin, which he preferred. He participated in trios with his elder sister Linda on piano, and his younger brother Christian on the cello. (Christian Sibelius was to become an eminent psychiatrist, still remembered for his contributions to modern psychiatry in Finland.)[13] Furthermore, Sibelius often played in quartets with neighboring families, adding to his experience in chamber music. Fragments survive of his early compositions of the period, a trio, a piano quartet and a Suite in D Minor for violin and piano.[14] Around 1881, he recorded on paper his short pizzicato piece Vattendroppar (Water Drops) for violin and cello, although it might just have been a musical exercise.[11][15] The first reference he made to himself composing is in a letter from August 1883 in which he writes that he composed a trio and was working on another: "They are rather poor, but it is nice to have something to do on rainy days."[16] In 1881, he started to take violin lessons from the local bandmaster, Gustaf Levander, immediately developing a particularly strong interest in the instrument.[17] Setting his heart on a career as a great violin virtuoso, he soon succeeded in becoming quite an accomplished player, performing David's Concerto in E minor in 1886 and, the following year, the last two movements of Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in Helsinki. Despite such success as an instrumentalist, he ultimately chose to become a composer.[18][19]

Although his mother tongue was Swedish, in 1874 Sibelius attended Lucina Hagman's Finnish-speaking preparatory school. In 1876, he was then able to continue his education at the Finnish-language Hämeenlinna Normal Lyceum where he was a rather absent-minded pupil, although he did quite well in mathematics and botany.[16] Despite having to repeat a year, he passed the school's final examination in 1885, which allowed him to enter a university.[20] As a boy he was known as Janne, a colloquial form of Johan. However, during his student years, he adopted the French form Jean, inspired by the business card of his deceased seafaring uncle. Thereafter he became known as Jean Sibelius.[21]

Studies and early career edit

After graduating from high school in 1885, Sibelius began to study law at the Imperial Alexander University in Finland but, showing far more interest in music, soon moved to the Helsinki Music Institute (now the Sibelius Academy) where he studied from 1885 to 1889.

 
Martin Wegelius, Sibelius's teacher in Finland

One of his teachers was its founder, Martin Wegelius, who did much to support the development of education in Finland. It was he who gave the self-taught Sibelius his first formal lessons in composition.[22] Another important influence was his teacher Ferruccio Busoni, a pianist-composer with whom he enjoyed a lifelong friendship.[23] His close circle of friends included the pianist and writer Adolf Paul and the conductor-to-be Armas Järnefelt (who introduced him to his influential family including his sister Aino who would become Sibelius's wife).[11] The most remarkable of his works during this period was the Violin Sonata in F, rather reminiscent of Grieg.[24]

Sibelius continued his studies in Berlin (from 1889 to 1890) with Albert Becker, and in Vienna (from 1890 to 1891) with Robert Fuchs and the Hungarian-Jewish Karl Goldmark. In Berlin, he had the opportunity to widen his musical experience by going to a variety of concerts and operas, including the premiere of Richard Strauss's Don Juan. He also heard the Finnish composer Robert Kajanus conducting the Berlin Philharmonic in a program that included his symphonic poem Aino, a patriotic piece that may have triggered Sibelius's later interest in using the epic poem Kalevala as a basis for his own compositions.[23][25] While in Vienna, he became particularly interested in the music of Anton Bruckner whom, for a time, he regarded as "the greatest living composer", although he continued to show interest in the established works of Beethoven and Wagner. He enjoyed his year in Vienna, frequently partying and gambling with his new friends. It was also in Vienna that he turned to orchestral composition, working on an Overture in E major and a Scène de Ballet. While embarking on Kullervo, an orchestral work with chorus and soloists inspired by the Kalevala, he fell ill but was restored to good health after gallstone-excision surgery.[26] Shortly after returning to Helsinki, Sibelius thoroughly enjoyed conducting his Overture and the Scène de Ballet at a popular concert.[27] He was also able to continue working on Kullervo, now that he was increasingly developing an interest in all things Finnish. Premiered in Helsinki on 28 April 1892, the work was an enormous success.[11]

 
Sibelius in 1891, when he studied in Vienna

It was around this time that Sibelius finally abandoned his cherished aspirations as a violinist:

My tragedy was that I wanted to be a celebrated violinist at any price. Since the age of 15 I played my violin practically from morning to night. I hated pen and ink—unfortunately I preferred an elegant violin bow. My love for the violin lasted quite long and it was a very painful awakening when I had to admit that I had begun my training for the exacting career of a virtuoso too late.[28]

In addition to the long periods he spent studying in Vienna and Berlin, in 1900 he travelled to Italy, where he spent a year with his family. He composed, conducted and socialized actively in the Scandinavian countries, Britain, France and Germany and later travelled to the United States.[29]

Marriage and rise to fame edit

While Sibelius was studying music in Helsinki in the autumn of 1888, Armas Järnefelt, a friend from the Music Institute, invited him to the family home. There he met and immediately fell in love with Aino, the 17-year-old daughter of General Alexander Järnefelt, the governor of Vaasa, and Elisabeth Clodt von Jürgensburg, a Baltic aristocrat.[19] The wedding was held on 10 June 1892 at Maxmo. They spent their honeymoon in Karelia, the home of the Kalevala. It served as an inspiration for Sibelius's tone poem En saga, the Lemminkäinen legends and the Karelia Suite.[11] Their home, Ainola, was completed near Lake Tuusula, Järvenpää, in 1904. During the years at Ainola, they had six daughters: Eva, Ruth, Kirsti (who died aged one from typhoid),[30] Katarina, Margareta and Heidi.[31] Eva married an industrial heir, Arvi Paloheimo, and later became the CEO of the Paloheimo Corporation. Ruth Snellman (fi) was a prominent actress, Katarina Ilves married a banker and Heidi Blomstedt was a designer, wife of architect Aulis Blomstedt. Margareta married conductor Jussi Jalas, Aulis Blomstedt's brother.[32]

In 1892, Kullervo inaugurated Sibelius's focus on orchestral music. It was described by the composer Aksel Törnudd [fi] as "a volcanic eruption" while Juho Ranta who sang in the choir stated, "It was Finnish music."[33] At the end of that year the composer's grandmother, Katarina Borg died. Sibelius went to her funeral, visiting his Hämeenlinna home one last time before the house was sold. On 16 February 1893, the first (extended) version of En saga was presented in Helsinki although it was not too well received, the critics suggesting that superfluous sections should be eliminated (as they were in Sibelius's 1902 version). Even less successful were three more performances of Kullervo in March, which one critic found incomprehensible and lacking in vitality. Following the birth of Sibelius's first child Eva, in April the premiere of his choral work Väinämöinen's Boat Ride was a considerable success, receiving the support of the press.[34]

On 13 November 1893, the full version of Karelia was premiered at a student association gala at the Seurahuone in Viipuri with the collaboration of the artist Axel Gallén and the sculptor Emil Wikström who had been brought in to design the stage sets. While the first performance was difficult to appreciate over the background noise of the talkative audience, a second performance on 18 November was more successful. Furthermore, on the 19th and 23rd Sibelius presented an extended suite of the work in Helsinki, conducting the orchestra of the Philharmonic Society.[35] Sibelius's music was increasingly presented in Helsinki's concert halls. In the 1894–95 season, works such as En saga, Karelia and Vårsång (composed in 1894) were included in at least 16 concerts in the capital, not to mention those in Turku.[36] When performed in a revised version on 17 April 1895, the composer Oskar Merikanto welcomed Vårsång (Spring Song) as "the fairest flower among Sibelius's orchestral pieces".[37]

 
Sibelius (right) socializing with Akseli Gallen-Kallela (the artist, left), Oskar Merikanto, and Robert Kajanus

For a considerable period, Sibelius worked on an opera, Veneen luominen (The Building of the Boat), again based on the Kalevala. To some extent, he had come under the influence of Wagner, but subsequently turned to Liszt's tone poems as a source of compositional inspiration. Adapted from material for the opera, which he never completed, his Lemminkäinen Suite consisted of four legends in the form of tone poems.[11] They were premiered in Helsinki on 13 April 1896 to a full house. In contrast to Merikanto's enthusiasm for the Finnish quality of the work, the critic Karl Flodin found the cor anglais solo in The Swan of Tuonela "stupendously long and boring",[38][34] although he considered the first legend, Lemminkäinen and the Maidens of the Island, as representing the peak of Sibelius's achievement to date.[39]

To pay his way, from 1892 Sibelius had taken on teaching assignments at the Music Institute and at Kajanus's conducting school but this left him insufficient time for composing.[40] The situation improved considerably when in 1898 he was awarded a substantial annual grant, initially for ten years and later extended for life. He was able to complete the music for Adolf Paul's play King Christian II. Performed on 24 February 1898, its catchy tunes appealed to the public. The scores of four popular pieces from the play were published in Germany and sold well in Finland. When the orchestral suite was successfully performed in Helsinki in November 1898, Sibelius commented: "The music sounded excellent and the tempi seem to be right. I think this is the first time that I have managed to make something complete." The work was also performed in Stockholm and Leipzig.[41]

In January 1899, Sibelius embarked on his First Symphony at a time when his patriotic feelings were being enhanced by the Russian emperor Nicholas II's attempt to restrict the powers of the Grand Duchy of Finland.[42] The symphony was well received when it was premiered in Helsinki on 26 April 1899. But the program also premiered the even more compelling, blatantly patriotic Song of the Athenians for boys' and men's choirs. The song immediately brought Sibelius the status of a national hero.[41][42] Another patriotic work followed on 4 November in the form of eight tableaux depicting episodes from Finnish history known as the Press Celebration Music. It had been written in support of the staff of the Päivälehti newspaper, which had been suspended for a period after editorially criticizing Russian rule.[43] The last tableau, Finland Awakens, was particularly popular; after minor revisions, it became the well-known Finlandia.[44]

 
Sibelius: sketch by Albert Engström (1904)

In February 1900, the Sibelius' youngest daughter, Kirsti, died. Nevertheless, in the summer Sibelius went on an international tour with Kajanus and his orchestra, presenting his recent works (including a revised version of his First Symphony) in thirteen cities including Stockholm, Copenhagen, Hamburg, Berlin and Paris. The critics were highly favorable, bringing the composer international recognition with their enthusiastic reports in the Berliner Börsen-Courier, the Berliner Fremdenblatt and the Berliner Lokal Anzeiger.[45][46]

During a trip with his family to Rapallo, Italy in 1901, Sibelius began to write his Second Symphony, partly inspired by the fate of Don Juan in Mozart's Don Giovanni. It was completed in early 1902 with its premiere in Helsinki on 8 March. The work was received with tremendous enthusiasm by the Finns. Merikanto felt it exceeded "even the boldest expectations," while Evert Katila qualified it as "an absolute masterpiece".[45] Flodin, too, wrote of a symphonic composition "the likes of which we have never had occasion to listen to before".[47]

Sibelius spent the summer in Tvärminne near Hanko, where he worked on the song Var det en dröm (Was it a Dream) as well as on a new version of En saga. When it was performed in Berlin with the Berlin Philharmonic in November 1902, it served to firmly establish the composer's reputation in Germany, leading shortly afterwards to the publication of his First Symphony.[45]

In 1903, Sibelius spent much of his time in Helsinki where he indulged excessively in wining and dining, running up considerable bills in the restaurants. But he continued to compose, one of his major successes being Valse triste, one of six pieces of incidental music he composed for his brother-in-law Arvid Järnefelt's play Kuolema (Death). Short of money, he sold the piece at a low price but it quickly gained considerable popularity not only in Finland but internationally. During his long stays in Helsinki, Sibelius's wife Aino frequently wrote to him, imploring him to return home but to no avail. Even after their fourth daughter, Katarina, was born, he continued to work away from home. Early in 1904, he finished his Violin Concerto but its first public performance on 8 February was not a success. It led to a revised, condensed version that was performed in Berlin the following year.[48]

Move to Ainola edit

 
Ainola, photographed in 1915
 
Jean Sibelius and wife Aino read in Ainola's dining room

In November 1903, Sibelius began to build his new home Ainola (Aino's Place) near Lake Tuusula some 45 km (30 miles) north of Helsinki. To cover the construction costs, he gave concerts in Helsinki, Turku and Vaasa in early 1904 as well as in Tallinn, Estonia, and in Latvia during the summer. The family were finally able to move into the new property on 24 September 1904, making friends with the local artistic community, including the painters Eero Järnefelt and Pekka Halonen and the novelist Juhani Aho.[48]

In January 1905, Sibelius returned to Berlin where he conducted his Second Symphony. While the concert itself was successful, it received mixed reviews, some very positive while those in the Allgemeine Zeitung and the Berliner Tageblatt were less enthusiastic. Back in Finland, he rewrote the increasingly popular Pelléas and Mélisande as an orchestral suite. In November, visiting Britain for the first time, he went to Liverpool where he met Henry Wood. On 2 December, he conducted the First Symphony and Finlandia, writing to Aino that the concert had been a great success and widely acclaimed.[49]

In 1906, after a short, rather uneventful stay in Paris at the beginning of the year, Sibelius spent several months composing in Ainola, his major work of the period being Pohjola's Daughter, yet another piece based on the Kalevala. Later in the year he composed incidental music for Belshazzar's Feast, also adapting it as an orchestral suite. He ended the year conducting a series of concerts, the most successful being the first public performance of Pohjola's Daughter at the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg.[49]

Ups and downs edit

From the beginning of 1907, Sibelius again indulged in excessive wining and dining in Helsinki, spending exorbitant amounts on champagne and lobster. His lifestyle had a disastrous effect on the health of Aino who was driven to retire to a sanatorium, suffering from exhaustion. While she was away, Sibelius resolved to give up drinking, concentrating instead on composing his Third Symphony. He completed the work for a performance in Helsinki on 25 September.[50] Although its more classical approach surprised the audience, Flodin commented that it was "internally new and revolutionary".[49]

Shortly afterwards Sibelius met Gustav Mahler who was in Helsinki. The two agreed that with each new symphony, they lost those who had been attracted to their earlier works. This was demonstrated above all in St Petersburg where the Third Symphony was performed in November 1907 to dismissive reviews. Its reception in Moscow was rather more positive.[49]

 
Blue plaque, 15 Gloucester Walk, Kensington, London, his home in 1909

In 1907, Sibelius underwent a serious operation for suspected throat cancer. Early in 1908, he had to spend a spell in hospital. His smoking and drinking had now become life-threatening. Although he cancelled concerts in Rome, Warsaw and Berlin, he maintained an engagement in London but there too his Third Symphony failed to attract the critics. In May 1908, Sibelius's health deteriorated further. He travelled with his wife to Berlin to have a tumour removed from his throat. After the operation, he vowed to give up smoking and drinking once and for all.[49] The impact of this brush with death has been said to have inspired works that he composed in the following years, including Luonnotar and the Fourth Symphony.[51]

More pleasant times edit

In 1909, the successful throat operation resulted in renewed happiness between Sibelius and Aino in the family home. In Britain too, his condition was well received as he conducted En saga, Finlandia, Valse Triste and Spring Song to enthusiastic audiences. A meeting with Claude Debussy produced further support. After another uneventful trip to Paris, he went to Berlin where he was relieved to learn that his throat operation had been entirely successful.[52]

Sibelius started work on his Fourth Symphony in early 1910 but his dwindling funds also required him to write a number of smaller pieces and songs. In October, he conducted concerts in Kristiania (now Oslo) where The Dryad and In Memoriam were first performed. His Valse triste and Second Symphony were particularly well received. He then travelled to Berlin to continue work on his Fourth Symphony, writing the finale after returning to Järvenpää.[52]

Sibelius conducted his first concerts in Sweden in early 1911 when even his Third Symphony was welcomed by the critics. He completed the Fourth Symphony in April but, as he expected, with its introspective style it was not very warmly received when first performed in Helsinki with mixed reviews. Apart from a trip to Paris where he enjoyed a performance of Richard Strauss's Salome, the rest of the year was fairly uneventful. In 1912, he completed his short orchestral work Scènes historiques II. It was first performed in March together with the Fourth Symphony. The concert was repeated twice to enthusiastic audiences and critics including Robert Kajanus. The Fourth Symphony was also well received in Birmingham in September. In March 1913, it was performed in New York but a large section of the audience left the hall between the movements while in October, after a concert conducted by Carl Muck, the Boston American labelled it "a sad failure".[52]

Sibelius's first significant composition of 1913 was the tone poem The Bard, which he conducted in March to a respectful audience in Helsinki. He went on to compose Luonnotar (Daughter of Nature) for soprano and orchestra. With a text from the Kalevala, it was first performed in Finnish in September 1913 by Aino Ackté (to whom it had been dedicated) at the music festival in Gloucester, England.[52][53] In early 1914, Sibelius spent a month in Berlin where he was particularly drawn to Arnold Schoenberg. Back in Finland, he began work on The Oceanides, which the American millionaire Carl Stoeckel had commissioned for the Norfolk Music Festival. After first composing the work in D-flat major, Sibelius undertook substantive revisions, presenting a D major version in Norfolk, which was well received, as were Finlandia and the Valse triste. Henry Krehbiel considered The Oceanides one of the most beautiful pieces of sea music ever composed, while The New York Times commented that Sibelius's music was the most notable contribution to the music festival. While in America, Sibelius received an honorary doctorate from Yale University and, almost simultaneously, one from the University of Helsinki where he was represented by Aino.[52]

First World War years edit

While travelling back from the United States, Sibelius heard about the events in Sarajevo that led to the beginning of the First World War. Although he was far away from the fighting, his royalties from abroad were interrupted. To make ends meet, he composed smaller works for publication in Finland. In March 1915, he was able to travel to Gothenburg in Sweden, where his work The Oceanides was widely appreciated. While working on his Fifth Symphony in April, he saw 16 swans flying by, inspiring him to write the finale. "One of the great experiences of my life!" he commented. Although there was little progress on the symphony during the summer, he was able to complete it by his 50th birthday on 8 December.[54]

On the evening of his birthday, Sibelius conducted the premiere of the Fifth Symphony in the hall of the Helsinki Stock Exchange. Despite high praise from Kajanus, the composer was not satisfied with his work and soon began to revise it. Around this time, Sibelius was running ever deeper into debt. The grand piano he had received as a present was about to be confiscated by the bailiffs when the singer Ida Ekman paid off a large proportion of his debt after a successful fund-raising campaign.[54]

A year later, on 8 December 1916, Sibelius presented the revised version of his Fifth Symphony in Turku, combining the first two movements and simplifying the finale. When it was performed a week later in Helsinki, Katila was very favourable but Wasenius frowned on the changes, leading the composer to rewrite it once again.[54]

From the beginning of 1917, Sibelius started drinking again, triggering arguments with Aino. Their relationship improved with the excitement resulting from the start of the Russian Revolution. By the end of the year, Sibelius had composed his Jäger March. The piece proved particularly popular after the Finnish parliament accepted the Senate's declaration of independence from Russia in December 1917. The Jäger March, first played on 19 January 1918, delighted the Helsinki elite for a short time until the start of the Finnish Civil War on 27 January.[54] Sibelius naturally supported the Whites, but as a Tolstoyan, Aino Sibelius had some sympathies for the Reds too.[55]

In February, his house (Ainola) was searched twice by the local Red Guard looking for weapons. During the first weeks of the war, some of his acquaintances were killed in the violence, and his brother, the psychiatrist Christian Sibelius, was arrested because he refused to reserve beds for the Red soldiers who had suffered shell shock at the front. Sibelius's friends in Helsinki were now worried about his safety. The composer Robert Kajanus negotiated with the Red Guard commander-in-chief Eero Haapalainen, who guaranteed Sibelius a safe journey from Ainola to the capital. On 20 February, a group of Red Guard fighters escorted the family to Helsinki. Finally, from 12 to 13 April, the German troops occupied the city and the Red period was over. A week later, the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra gave a concert in homage to the German commander Rüdiger von der Goltz. Sibelius finished off the event by conducting the Jäger March.[55]

Revived fortunes but growing hand tremor edit

 
Sibelius in 1923

In early 1919, Sibelius enthusiastically decided to change his image, shaving off what remained of his thinning hair. In June, together with Aino, he visited Copenhagen on his first trip outside Finland since 1915, successfully presenting his Second Symphony. In November he conducted the final version of his Fifth Symphony, receiving repeated ovations from the audience. By the end of the year, he was already working on the Sixth.[54]

In 1920, despite a growing tremor in his hands, Sibelius composed the Hymn of the Earth to a text by the poet Eino Leino for the Suomen Laulu Choir and orchestrated his Valse lyrique, helped along by drinking wine. On his birthday in December 1920, Sibelius received a donation of 63,000 marks, a substantial sum the tenor Wäinö Sola [fi] had raised from Finnish businesses. Although he used some of the money to reduce his debts, he also spent a week celebrating to excess in Helsinki.[56]

At this time, Sibelius held detailed negotiations with George Eastman, inventor of the Kodak camera and founder of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. Eastman offered $20,000 salary to teach for a single year,[57] and before Sibelius declined, negotiations were so firm that the New York Times published Sibelius's arrival as fact.[58]

Sibelius enjoyed a highly successful trip to England in early 1921—conducting several concerts around the country, including the Fourth and Fifth symphonies, The Oceanides, the ever-popular Finlandia, and Valse triste. Immediately afterwards, he conducted the Second Symphony and Valse triste in Norway. He was beginning to suffer from exhaustion, but the critics remained positive. On his return to Finland in April, he presented Lemminkäinen's Return and the Fifth Symphony at the Nordic Music Days.[56]

Early in 1922, after suffering from headaches Sibelius decided to acquire spectacles although he never wore them for photographs. In July, he was saddened by the death of his brother Christian. In August, he joined the Finnish Freemasons and composed ritual music for them. In February 1923, he premiered his Sixth Symphony. Evert Katila highly praised it as "pure idyll." Before the year ended he had also conducted concerts in Stockholm and Rome, the first to considerable acclaim, the second to mixed reviews. He then proceeded to Gothenburg where he enjoyed an ecstatic reception despite arriving at the concert hall suffering from over-indulgence in food and drink. Despite continuing to drink, to Aino's dismay, Sibelius managed to complete his Seventh Symphony in March 1924. Under the title of Fantasia sinfonica it received its first public performance in Stockholm where it was a success. It was even more highly appreciated at a series of concerts in Copenhagen in late September. Sibelius was honoured with the Knight Commander's Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog.[56]

He spent most of the rest of the year resting as his recent spate of activity was straining his heart and nerves. Composing a few small pieces, he relied increasingly on alcohol. In May 1925, his Danish publisher Wilhelm Hansen and the Royal Danish Theatre invited him to compose incidental music for a production of Shakespeare's The Tempest. He completed the work well in advance of its premiere in March 1926.[56] It was well received in Copenhagen although Sibelius was not there himself.[59]

The music journalist Vesa Sirén has found evidence that Sibelius perhaps suffered from essential tremor since a young age and that he reduced the symptoms by drinking alcohol. This self-medication is common and effective but discouraged by doctors due to the risks outweighing the benefits. Sirén's research is supported by several medical experts. The tremor presumably prevented writing and impaired his social life.[60]

Last major works edit

 
Sibelius and Aino in Järvenpää (early 1940s)

The year 1926 saw a sharp and lasting decline in Sibelius's output: after his Seventh Symphony, he produced only a few major works during the rest of his life. Arguably the two most significant of these were the incidental music for The Tempest and the tone poem Tapiola.[61] For most of the last thirty years of his life, Sibelius even avoided talking publicly about his music.[62]

There is substantial evidence that Sibelius worked on an eighth symphony. He promised the premiere of this symphony to Serge Koussevitzky in 1931 and 1932, and a London performance in 1933 under Basil Cameron was even advertised to the public. The only concrete evidence of the symphony's existence on paper is a 1933 bill for a fair copy of the first movement and short draft fragments first published and played in 2011.[63][64][65][66] Sibelius had always been quite self-critical; he remarked to his close friends, "If I cannot write a better symphony than my Seventh, then it shall be my last." Since no manuscript survives, sources consider it likely that Sibelius destroyed most traces of the score, probably in 1945, during which year he certainly consigned a great many papers to the flames.[67] His wife Aino recalled,

In the 1940s there was a great auto da fé at Ainola. My husband collected a number of the manuscripts in a laundry basket and burned them on the open fire in the dining room. Parts of the Karelia Suite were destroyed – I later saw remains of the pages which had been torn out – and many other things. I did not have the strength to be present and left the room. I therefore do not know what he threw on to the fire. But after this my husband became calmer and gradually lighter in mood.[68]

Second World War years edit

On Sibelius's 70th birthday (8 December 1935), the German Nazi regime awarded him the Goethe-Medal with a certificate signed by Adolf Hitler. After the attempted Soviet invasion of Finland in late 1939–40 (the Winter War) which, though initially repelled, forced Finland to cede territory to the Soviet Union after the later defeat of the Finnish military, the Sibelius family returned for good to Ainola in the summer of 1941, after a long absence. Anxious about Bolshevism, Sibelius advocated that Finnish soldiers march alongside German forces after Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. Sibelius did not make any utterances about the genocide of the Jews although, in a diary entry in 1943, he wondered why he had signed the Aryan certificate.[69]

On 1 January 1939, Sibelius had participated in an international radio broadcast during which he conducted his Andante Festivo. The performance was preserved on transcription discs and later issued on CD. This is probably the only surviving example of Sibelius interpreting his own music.[70]

Final years and death edit

 
Sibelius in 1939

From 1903 and for many years thereafter Sibelius lived in the countryside. From 1939 he and Aino again had a home in Helsinki, but they moved back to Ainola in 1941, only occasionally visiting the city.[71] After the war he returned to Helsinki only a couple of times. The so-called "silence of Järvenpää" became something of a myth, as in addition to countless official visitors and colleagues, his grandchildren and great-grandchildren also spent their holidays there.[72]

Sibelius avoided public statements about other composers, but Erik W. Tawaststjerna and Sibelius's secretary Santeri Levas[73] have documented private conversations in which he admired Richard Strauss and considered Béla Bartók and Dmitri Shostakovich the most talented composers of the younger generation.[74] In the 1950s he promoted the young Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara.[75]

His 90th birthday, in 1955, was widely celebrated, and both the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Sir Thomas Beecham gave special performances of his music.[76][77]

Tawaststjerna also relates an anecdote in connection with Sibelius's death:[78]

[He] was returning from his customary morning walk. Exhilarated, he told his wife Aino that he had seen a flock of cranes approaching. "There they come, the birds of my youth," he exclaimed. Suddenly, one of the birds broke away from the formation and circled once above Ainola. It then rejoined the flock to continue its journey.

 
Sibelius's funeral at the Helsinki Cathedral in 1957

Two years later in Ainola, on the evening of 20 September 1957, Sibelius died of a brain haemorrhage at the age of 91. At the time of his death, his Fifth Symphony, conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent, was being broadcast by radio from Helsinki. At the same time, the United Nations General Assembly was in session, and the then President of the Assembly, Sir Leslie Munro of New Zealand, called for a moment of silence and delivered a eulogy: "Sibelius belonged to the whole world. He enriched the life of the entire human race with his music".[79] Another well-known Finnish composer, Heino Kaski, died on the same day, but his death was overshadowed by that of Sibelius. Sibelius was honoured with a state funeral and is buried in the garden at Ainola.[80]

Aino Sibelius continued to live in Ainola for the next 12 years until her death on 8 June 1969 at the age of 97. She is buried next to her husband.[81]

Music edit

 
Jean Sibelius' Finlandia premiere edition; 1952 autographed copy for the Mayor of New York City, Vincent Impellitteri

Sibelius is widely known for his symphonies and his tone poems, especially Finlandia and the Karelia suite. His reputation in Finland grew in the 1890s with the choral symphony Kullervo, which like many subsequent pieces drew on the epic poem Kalevala. His First Symphony was first performed to an enthusiastic audience in 1899 at a time when Finnish nationalism was evolving. In addition to six more symphonies, he gained popularity at home and abroad with incidental music and more tone poems, especially En saga, The Swan of Tuonela and Valse triste.[82] Sibelius also composed a series of works for violin and orchestra including a Violin Concerto, the opera Jungfrun i tornet, many shorter orchestral pieces, chamber music, works for piano and violin, choral works and numerous songs.[83]

In the mid-1920s, after his Sixth and Seventh Symphonies, he composed the symphonic poem Tapiola and incidental music for The Tempest. Thereafter, although he lived until 1957, he did not publish any further works of note. For several years, he worked on an Eighth Symphony, which he later burned.[84]

As for his musical style, hints of Tchaikovsky's music are particularly evident in early works such as his First Symphony and his Violin Concerto.[85] For a period, he was nevertheless overwhelmed by Wagner, particularly while composing his opera. More lasting influences included Ferruccio Busoni and Anton Bruckner. But for his tone poems, he was above all inspired by Liszt.[34][86] The similarities to Bruckner can be seen in the brass contributions to his orchestral works and the generally slow tempo of his music.[87][88]

Sibelius progressively stripped away formal markers of sonata form in his work and, instead of contrasting multiple themes, focused on the idea of continuously evolving cells and fragments culminating in a grand statement. His later works are remarkable for their sense of unbroken development, progressing by means of thematic permutations and derivations. The completeness and organic feel of this synthesis has prompted some to suggest that Sibelius began his works with a finished statement and worked backwards, although analyses showing these predominantly three- and four-note cells and melodic fragments as they are developed and expanded into the larger "themes" effectively prove the opposite.[89]

 
Portrait of Sibelius from 1892 by his brother-in-law Eero Järnefelt

This self-contained structure stood in stark contrast to the symphonic style of Gustav Mahler, Sibelius's primary rival in symphonic composition.[61] While thematic variation played a major role in the works of both composers, Mahler's style made use of disjunct, abruptly changing and contrasting themes, while Sibelius sought to slowly transform thematic elements. In November 1907 Mahler undertook a conducting tour of Finland, and the two composers were able to take a lengthy walk together, leading Sibelius to comment:

I said that I admired [the symphony's] severity of style and the profound logic that created an inner connection between all the motifs ... Mahler's opinion was just the reverse. "No, a symphony must be like the world. It must embrace everything."[90]

Symphonies edit

Sibelius started work on his Symphony No. 1 in E minor, Op. 39, in 1898 and completed it in early 1899, when he was 33. The work was first performed on 26 April 1899 by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by the composer, in an original, well received version that has not survived. After the premiere, Sibelius made some revisions, resulting in the version performed today. The revision was completed in the spring and summer of 1900, and was first performed in Berlin by the Helsinki Philharmonic, conducted by Robert Kajanus on 18 July 1900.[91] The symphony begins with a highly original, rather forlorn clarinet solo backed by subdued timpani.[92]

 
Robert Kajanus, founder and chief conductor of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, who was a notable interpreter of Sibelius's symphonies

His Second Symphony, the most popular and most frequently recorded of his symphonies, was first performed by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society on 8 March 1902, with the composer conducting. The opening chords with their rising progression provide a motif for the whole work. The heroic theme of the finale with the three-tone motif is interpreted by the trumpets rather than the original woodwinds. During a period of Russian oppression, it consolidated Sibelius's reputation as a national hero. After the first performance, Sibelius made some changes, leading to a revised version first performed by Armas Järnefelt on 10 November 1903 in Stockholm.[93]

The Third Symphony is a good-natured, triumphal, and deceptively simple-sounding piece. The symphony's first performance was given by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society, conducted by the composer, on 25 September 1907. There are themes from Finnish folk music in the work's early chords. Composed just after his move to Ainola, it contrasts sharply with the first two symphonies, with its clear mode of expression developing into the marching tones of the finale.[82][94] His Fourth Symphony was premiered in Helsinki on 3 April 1911 by the Philharmonia Society, with Sibelius conducting. It was written while Sibelius was undergoing a series of operations to remove a tumour from his throat. Its grimness can perhaps be explained as a reaction from his (temporary) decision to give up drinking. The opening bars, with cellos, basses and bassoons, convey a new approach to timing. It then develops into melancholic sketches based on the composer's setting of Poe's The Raven. The waning finale is perhaps a premonition of the silence Sibelius would experience twenty years later. In contrast to the usual assertive finales of the times, the work ends simply with a "leaden thud".[82]

Symphony No. 5 was premiered in Helsinki to great acclaim by Sibelius himself on 8 December 1915, his 50th birthday. The version most commonly performed today is the final revision, consisting of three movements, presented in 1919. The Fifth is Sibelius's only symphony in a major key throughout. From its soft opening played by the horns, the work develops into rotational repetitions of its various themes with considerable transformations, building up to the trumpeted swan hymn in the final movement.[82][95] While the Fifth had already started to veer away from the sonata form, the Sixth, conducted by the composer at its premiere in February 1923, is even further removed from the traditional norms. Tawaststjerna comments that "the [finale's] structure follows no familiar pattern".[96] Composed in the Dorian mode, it draws on some of the themes developed while Sibelius was working on the Fifth as well as from material intended for a lyrical violin concerto. Now taking a purified approach, Sibelius sought to offer "spring water" rather than cocktails, making use of lighter flutes and strings rather than the heavy brass of the Fifth.[97]

Symphony No. 7 in C major was his last published symphony. Completed in 1924, it is notable for having only one movement. It has been described as "completely original in form, subtle in its handling of tempi, individual in its treatment of key and wholly organic in growth".[98] It has also been called "Sibelius's most remarkable compositional achievement".[99] Initially titled Fantasia sinfonica, it was first performed in Stockholm in March 1924, conducted by Sibelius. It was based on an adagio movement he had sketched almost ten years earlier. While the strings dominate, there is also a distinctive trombone theme.[100]

Tone poems edit

After the seven symphonies and the violin concerto, Sibelius's thirteen symphonic poems are his most important works for orchestra and, along with the tone poems of Richard Strauss, represent some of the most important contributions to the genre since Franz Liszt. As a group, the symphonic poems span the entirety of Sibelius's artistic career (the first was composed in 1892, while the last appeared in 1925), display the composer's fascination with nature and Finnish mythology (particularly the Kalevala), and provide a comprehensive portrait of his stylistic maturation over time.[101]

 
Sibelius at his home, Ainola, playing the piano (1930)

En saga (meaning "A Fairy Tale" in Swedish) was first presented in February 1893 with Sibelius conducting. The single-movement tone poem was possibly inspired by the Icelandic mythological work Edda although Sibelius simply described it as "an expression of [his] state of mind". Beginning with a dreamy theme from the strings, it evolves into the tones of the woodwinds, then the horns and the violas, demonstrating Sibelius's ability to handle an orchestra.[102] The composer's first significant orchestral piece, it was revised in 1902 when Ferruccio Busoni invited Sibelius to conduct his work in Berlin. Its successful reception encouraged him to write to Aino: "I have been acknowledged as an accomplished 'artist'".[103]

The Wood Nymph, a single-movement tone poem for orchestra, was written in 1894. Premiered in April 1895 in Helsinki with Sibelius conducting, it is inspired by the Swedish poet Viktor Rydberg's work of the same name. Organizationally, it consists of four informal sections, each corresponding to one of the poem's four stanzas and evoking the mood of a particular episode: first, heroic vigour; second, frenetic activity; third, sensual love; and fourth, inconsolable grief. Despite the music's beauty, many critics have faulted Sibelius for his "over-reliance" on the source material's narrative structure.[104][105]

The Lemminkäinen Suite was composed in the early 1890s. Originally conceived as a mythological opera, Veneen luominen (The Building of the Boat), on a scale matching those by Richard Wagner, Sibelius later changed his musical goals and the work became an orchestral piece in four movements. The suite is based on the character Lemminkäinen from the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala. It can also be considered a collection of symphonic poems. The second/third section, The Swan of Tuonela, is often heard separately.[106]

Finlandia, probably the best known of all Sibelius's works, is a highly patriotic piece first performed in November 1899 as one of the tableaux for the Finnish Press Celebrations. It had its public premiere in revised form in July 1900.[44] The current title only emerged later, first for the piano version, then in 1901 when Kajanus conducted the orchestral version under the name Finlandia. Although Sibelius insisted it was primarily an orchestral piece, it became a world favourite for choirs too, especially for the hymn episode. Finally the composer consented and in 1937 and 1940 agreed to words for the hymn, first for the Freemasons and later for more general use.[107]

The Oceanides is a single-movement tone poem for orchestra written in 1913–14. The piece, which refers to the nymphs in Greek mythology who inhabited the Mediterranean Sea, premiered on 4 June 1914 at the Norfolk Music Festival in Connecticut with Sibelius himself conducting. The work (in D major), praised upon its premiere as "the finest evocation of the sea ever produced in music",[108] consists of two subjects Sibelius gradually develops in three informal stages: first, a placid ocean; second, a gathering storm; and third, a thunderous wave-crash climax. As the tempest subsides, a final chord sounds, symbolizing the mighty power and limitless expanse of the sea.[109]

Tapiola, Sibelius's last major orchestral work, was commissioned by Walter Damrosch for the New York Philharmonic Society where it was premiered on 26 December 1926. It is inspired by Tapio, a forest spirit from the Kalevala. To quote the American critic Alex Ross, it "turned out to be Sibelius's most severe and concentrated musical statement."[82] Even more emphatically, the composer and biographer Cecil Gray asserts: "Even if Sibelius had written nothing else, this one work would entitle him to a place among the greatest masters of all time."[110]

Other important works edit

The Karelia Music, one of the composer's earlier works, written for the Vyborg Students' Association, was first performed on 13 November 1893 to a noisy audience. The "Suite" emerged from a concert on 23 November consisting of the overture and the three movements, which were published as Op. 11, the Karelia Suite. It remains one of Sibelius's most popular pieces.[111]

Valse triste is a short orchestral work that was originally part of the incidental music Sibelius composed for his brother-in-law Arvid Järnefelt's 1903 play Kuolema (Death). It is now far better known as a separate concert piece. Sibelius wrote six pieces for the 2 December 1903 production of Kuolema. The waltz accompanied a sequence in which a woman rises from her deathbed to dance with ghosts. In 1904, Sibelius revised the piece for a performance in Helsinki on 25 April where it was presented as Valse triste. An instant success, it took on a life of its own, and remains one of Sibelius's signature pieces.[48][112]

The Violin Concerto in D minor was first performed on 8 February 1904 with Victor Nováček as soloist. As Sibelius had barely completed the piece in time for the premiere, Nováček had insufficient time to prepare, with the result that the performance was a disaster. After substantial revisions, a new version was premiered on 19 October 1905 with Richard Strauss conducting the Berlin Court Orchestra. With Karel Halíř, the orchestra's leader, as soloist it was a tremendous success.[113] The piece has become increasingly popular and is now the most frequently recorded of all the violin concertos composed in the 20th century.[114]

Kullervo, one of Sibelius's early works, is sometimes referred to as a choral symphony but is better described as a suite of five symphonic movements resembling tone poems.[115] Based on the character Kullervo from the Kalevala, it was premiered on 28 April 1892 with Emmy Achté and Abraham Ojanperä as soloists and Sibelius conducting the chorus and orchestra of the recently founded Helsinki Orchestra Society. Although the work was only performed five times during the composer's lifetime, since the 1990s it has become increasingly popular both for live performances and recordings.[116]

Activities and interests edit

Freemasonry edit

When Freemasonry in Finland was revived, having been forbidden under the Russian reign, Sibelius was one of the founding members of Suomi Lodge No. 1 in 1922 and later became the Grand Organist of the Grand Lodge of Finland. He composed the ritual music used in Finland (Op. 113) in 1927 and added two new pieces composed in 1946. The new revision of the ritual music of 1948 is one of his last works.[117]

Sibelius attended six sessions of the lodge during its first year of operation. These visits became less frequent in the following years. His name no longer appears in the minutes of the Suomi Lodge after January 1927.[118]

Nature edit

Sibelius loved nature, and the Finnish landscape often served as material for his music. He once said of his Sixth Symphony, "[It] always reminds me of the scent of the first snow." The forests surrounding Ainola are often said to have inspired his composition of Tapiola. On the subject of Sibelius's ties to nature, his biographer, Tawaststjerna, wrote:

Even by Nordic standards, Sibelius responded with exceptional intensity to the moods of nature and the changes in the seasons: he scanned the skies with his binoculars for the geese flying over the lake ice, listened to the screech of the cranes, and heard the cries of the curlew echo over the marshy grounds just below Ainola. He savoured the spring blossoms every bit as much as he did autumnal scents and colours.[119]

Reception edit

 
Leevi Madetoja, Sibelius's most notable pupil and, as a critic, a defender of his works

Sibelius exerted considerable influence on symphonic composers and musical life, at least in English-speaking and Nordic countries. The Finnish symphonist Leevi Madetoja was a pupil of Sibelius (for more on their relationship, see Relationship with Sibelius). In Britain, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Arnold Bax both dedicated their fifth symphonies to Sibelius. Furthermore, Tapiola is prominently echoed in both Bax's Sixth Symphony and Ernest John Moeran's Symphony in G minor.[120][121] The influence of Sibelius's compositional procedures is also strongly felt in the First Symphony of William Walton.[122] When these and several other major British symphonic essays were being written in and around the 1930s, Sibelius's music was very much in vogue, with conductors like Thomas Beecham and John Barbirolli championing its cause both in the concert hall and on record. Walton's composer friend Constant Lambert even asserted that Sibelius was "the first great composer since Beethoven whose mind thinks naturally in terms of symphonic form".[123] Earlier, Granville Bantock had championed Sibelius (the esteem was mutual: Sibelius dedicated his Third Symphony to the English composer, and in 1946 he became the first President of the Bantock Society). More recently, Sibelius was also one of the composers championed by Robert Simpson. Malcolm Arnold acknowledged his influence, and Arthur Butterworth also saw Sibelius's music as a source of inspiration in his work.[124]

New Zealand's most accomplished 20th century composer, Douglas Lilburn, wrote of the inspiration he derived from Sibelius's work, particularly for his earlier compositions.[125]

Eugene Ormandy and, to a lesser extent, his predecessor with the Philadelphia Orchestra Leopold Stokowski, were instrumental in bringing Sibelius's music to American audiences by frequently programming his works; the former developed a friendly relationship with Sibelius throughout his life. Later in life, Sibelius was championed by the American critic Olin Downes, who wrote a biography of the composer.[126]

In 1938 Theodor Adorno wrote a critical essay, notoriously charging that "If Sibelius is good, this invalidates the standards of musical quality that have persisted from Bach to Schoenberg: the richness of inter-connectedness, articulation, unity in diversity, the 'multi-faceted' in 'the one'."[127] Adorno sent his essay to Virgil Thomson, then music critic of the New York Herald Tribune, who was also critical of Sibelius; Thomson, while agreeing with the essay's sentiment, declared to Adorno that "the tone of it [was] more apt to create antagonism toward [Adorno] than toward Sibelius".[68] Later, the composer, theorist and conductor René Leibowitz went so far as to describe Sibelius as "the worst composer in the world" in the title of a 1955 pamphlet.[128]

Perhaps one reason Sibelius has attracted both the praise and the ire of critics is that in each of his seven symphonies he approached the basic problems of form, tonality, and architecture in unique, individual ways. On the one hand, his symphonic (and tonal) creativity was novel, while others thought that music should be taking a different route.[129] Sibelius's response to criticism was dismissive: "Pay no attention to what critics say. No statue has ever been put up to a critic."[82]

 
Star on the Musik Meile (Music Mile) in Vienna

In the latter decades of the twentieth century, Sibelius became seen more favourably: Milan Kundera said the composer's approach was that of "antimodern modernism," standing outside “the status quo of perpetual progress”.[68] In a similar vein, the philosopher Slavoj Žižek contrasts Sibelius to the "modernist" approach of Schoenberg and the "post-modernist" one of Stravinsky; for Žižek, Sibelius represents the alternative of "persistent traditionalism", of continuing in the inherited tradition but with artistic integrity, not as a "phony conservative".[130] In 1990, the composer Thea Musgrave was commissioned by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra to write a piece in honour of the 125th anniversary of Sibelius's birth: Song of the Enchanter premiered on 14 February 1991.[131] In 1984, the American avant-garde composer Morton Feldman gave a lecture in Darmstadt, Germany, wherein he stated that "the people you think are radicals might really be conservatives – the people you think are conservatives might really be radical," whereupon he began to hum Sibelius's Fifth Symphony.[68]

Writing in 1996, the Pulitzer Prize-winning music critic Tim Page stated, "There are two things to be said straightaway about Sibelius. First, he is terribly uneven (much of his chamber music, a lot of his songs and most of his piano music might have been churned out by a second-rate salon composer from the 19th century on an off afternoon). Second, at his very best, he is often weird."[132] Pianist Leif Ove Andsnes offers a counterweight to Page's assessment of Sibelius's piano music. Acknowledging that this body of work is uneven in quality, Andsnes believes that the common critical dismissal is unwarranted. In performing selected piano works, Andsnes finds that audiences were "astonished that there could be a major composer out there with such beautiful, accessible music that people don't know."[133]

For the 150th anniversary of Sibelius's birth, the Helsinki Music Centre planned an illustrated and narrated "Sibelius Finland Experience Show" every day during the summer of 2015. The production was also planned to extend over 2016 and 2017.[134] On 8 December itself, the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by John Storgårds planned a commemorative concert featuring En Saga, Luonnotar and the Seventh Symphony.[135]

Legacy edit

 
The Sibelius Park (Sibeliuksenpuisto) in Kotka, Finland

In 1972, Sibelius's surviving daughters sold Ainola to the Finnish state. The Ministry of Education and the Sibelius Society of Finland opened it as a museum in 1974.[71] Sibelius has been memorialized by art, stamps, and currency; the Finnish 100 mark bill featured his image until 2002 when the euro was adopted.[4] Since 2011, Finland has celebrated a flag flying day on 8 December, the composer's birthday, also known as the "Day of Finnish Music".[5] The year 2015, the 150th anniversary of the composer's birth, featured a number of special concerts and events, especially in the city of Helsinki.[6]

The quinquennial International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition, instituted in 1965, the Sibelius Monument, unveiled in 1967 in Helsinki's Sibelius Park, the Sibelius Museum, opened in Turku in 1968, and the Sibelius Hall concert hall in Lahti, opened in 2000, were all named in his honour, as was the asteroid 1405 Sibelius.[136]

The complete edition of Sibelius's œuvre has been in preparation in Finland since 1996. It is a joint venture between the National Library of Finland, the Sibelius Society of Finland, and Breitkopf & Härtel publishers. When finished, this critical edition will comprise 60 volumes.[137]

Sibelius kept a diary from 1909 to 1944, and his family allowed it to be published, unabridged, in 2005. The diary was edited by Fabian Dahlström [fi; sv] and published in the Swedish language in 2005.[138] To celebrate the 150th anniversary of the composer, the entire diary was also published in the Finnish language in 2015.[139] Several volumes of Sibelius's correspondence have also been edited and published in Swedish, Finnish and English.

The scorewriter program Sibelius is named after him.[140]

Manuscripts edit

Parts of the literary estate of Sibelius—correspondence and manuscripts—are preserved at the National Archives of Finland and National Library of Finland, but several items are in foreign private collections, even as investments, only partially accessible for scholars.

In 1970, a lot of 50 music manuscript items was acquired by the National Library with aid from the government of Finland, banks and foundations.[141] Sibelius's personal music archive was donated to the National Library in 1982 by the heirs of the composer.[142]

Another lot of 50 items was procured in 1997, with aid from the Ministry of Education.[143] In 2018, the Italian-Finnish collector and benefactor Rolando Pieraccini donated a collection of Sibelius's letters and other materials to the National Museum of Finland.[144] On the other hand, in 2016 the manuscript of Pohjola's Daughter was sold to an anonymous buyer for 290,000 euros, and it is no longer available to scholars.[143]

In early 2020, the current owner of the Robert Lienau collection offered for sale 1,200 pages of manuscripts, including the scores of Voces intimae, Joutsikki, and Pelléas and Mélisande, and the material was not available to scholars during negotiations. The original price tag was said to be over one million euros for the lot as a whole.[145] At the end of the year, the National Library was able to acquire this collection with aid from foundations and donors. The final price was "considerably below one million euros."[146]

Nowadays, it is not legally possible to export Sibelius's manuscripts from Finland without permission, and, according to Hufvudstadsbladet, such permission would probably not be given.[143]

In 2021, the music manuscripts of Sibelius were included in the Memory of the World Programme by the UNESCO.[147]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Tawaststjerna (1997, p. 15): only in the 1990s was it discovered that Sibelius's original first names (at christening) were Johan Christian Julius; he himself used the order Johan Julius Christian, and that is present in most sources.
  3. ^ . The Music of Freemasonry. Archived from the original on 20 June 2003. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  4. ^ a b "100 markkaa 1986". Setelit.com. from the original on 9 October 2015. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  5. ^ a b . Ministry of the Interior. Archived from the original on 11 November 2015.
  6. ^ a b . Visit Helsinki. Archived from the original on 31 May 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  7. ^ Ringbom 1950, p. 8.
  8. ^ Goss 2009, p. 19.
  9. ^ Goss 2009, p. 53.
  10. ^ Lagrange 1994, p. 905.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Murtomäki 2000.
  12. ^ Barnett 2007, p. 4.
  13. ^ "Sibelius" (in Swedish). Nordisk Familjebok. 1926. p. 281. from the original on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  14. ^ Ringbom 1950, pp. 10–13.
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  17. ^ Barnett 2007, p. 6.
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  21. ^ Ekman 1972, p. 11.
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  23. ^ a b Lagrange 1994, p. 985.
  24. ^ Tawaststjerna 1976, p. 62.
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General sources edit

  • Adorno, Theodor (1938). "Törne, B. de, Sibelius; A Close Up". Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung. 7: 460–463. doi:10.5840/zfs19387336. Later reprinted as "Glosse über Sibelius". Cited and translated in Jackson 2001, p. xviii
  • Barnett, Andrew (2007). Sibelius. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11159-0.
  • Botstein, Leon (14 August 2011). "The Transformative Paradoxes of Jean Sibelius". The Chronicle of Higher Education. from the original on 22 June 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  • Bullock, Philip Ross (2011). The Correspondence of Jean Sibelius and Rosa Newmarch, 1906–1939. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1-84383-683-4.
  • Eden, Bradford Lee (2010). Middle-earth Minstrel: Essays on Music in Tolkien. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-5660-4.
  • Ekman, Karl (1972). Jean Sibelius, his Life and Personality. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-8371-6027-6.
  • Freed, Richard (1995). . The Kennedy Center. Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  • Goss, Glenda Dawn (1995). Jean Sibelius and Olin Downes: music, friendship, criticism. Northeastern University Press. ISBN 978-1-55553-200-0.
  • Goss, Glenda Dawn (2009). Sibelius: A Composer's Life and the Awakening of Finland. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-30479-3.
  • Goss, Glenda Dawn (2011). "Jean Sibelius and His American Connections". In Grimley, Daniel M. (ed.). Jean Sibelius and His World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15280-6.
  • Grimley, Daniel M. (2004). The Cambridge Companion to Sibelius. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89460-9.
  • Hepokoski, James (2001). "Sibelius". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Vol. xxiii (2nd ed.). Macmillan. pp. 319–347. ISBN 978-0-333-23111-1.
  • Jackson, Timothy L. (2001). Sibelius Studies. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-62416-9.
  • James, David Burnett (1989). Sibelius. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-7119-1683-8.
  • Kaufman, Schima (1938). Everybody's Music. Columbia Broadcasting System: Thomas Y. Crowell Company.
  • Kilpeläinen, Kari (1995). "Sibelius Eight. What happened to it?". Finnish Music Quarterly (4). from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  • Kilpeläinen, Kari (2012). "Aallottaret (Breitkopf & Härtel Assets)" (PDF). breitkopf.com. (PDF) from the original on 20 June 2015. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  • Kurki, Eija (1999). . Music Finland. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  • Lagrange, Christophe (1994). Au coeur du classique: Les Grands compositeurs et leur musique (in French). Vol. 5. Little Big Man. ISBN 978-2-7365-0029-0.
  • Lambert, Constant (1934). Music Ho!. New York: Charles Scribner. from the original on 7 April 2018. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  • Layton, Robert (1965). Sibelius. Schirmer Books. ISBN 978-0-02-871322-9.
  • Layton, Robert (2002). "Sibelius". In Wintle, Justin (ed.). Makers of Modern Culture. Routledge. pp. 478–479. ISBN 978-0-415-26583-6.
  • Leibowitz, René (1955). Sibelius, le plus mauvais compositeur du monde. Liège, Belgium: Éditions Dynamo. OCLC 28594116.
  • Lew, Douglas (2010). Great Composers in Watercolor. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4269-3437-7.
  • Mäkelä, Tomi (2011). Jean Sibelius. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84383-688-9.
  • Murtomäki, Veijo [in Finnish] (2000). "Sibelius, Jean (1865–1957)". In Marjomaa, Ulpu (ed.). . Translated by Roderick Fletcher. Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura [The Finnish Literature Society]. ISBN 978-951-746-215-0. Archived from the original on 21 June 2015. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  • Pike, Lionel (1978). Beethoven, Sibelius and 'the Profound Logic': Studies in Symphonic Analysis. Athlone Press. ISBN 978-0-485-11178-1.
  • Poroila, Heikki (2012). [Uniform Jean Sibelius: list of works with harmonised titles] (PDF) (in Finnish) (Fourth, online ed.). Suomen musiikkikirjastoyhdistys [Finnish Music Library Association]. ISBN 978-952-5363-14-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  • Ringbom, Nils-Eric (1950). Sibelius (in Danish). translated from the Swedish by Johan Koch. Nyt Nordisk Forlag Arnold Busck.
  • Ross, Alex (2009) [2007]. "5". The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century (3rd ed.). Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-1-84115-476-3.
  • Sadie, Julie Anne (2005). Calling on the Composer: A Guide to European Composer Houses and Museums. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10750-0.
  • Schaarwächter, Jürgen [in German] (2015). Two Centuries of British Symphonism: From the beginnings to 1945. A preliminary survey. Vol. 1. With a foreword by Lewis Foreman. Georg Olms Verlag. ISBN 978-3-487-15227-1.
  • Sirén, Vesa (October 2011a). "Is this the sound of Sibelius' lost Eighth Symphony?". Helsingin Sanomat.
  • Sirén, Vesa (30 October 2011b). . Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Archived from the original on 17 February 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  • Stearns, David Patrick (3 January 2012). "One last Sibelius symphony after all?". The Philadelphia Inquirer. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  • Tawaststjerna, Erik W. (1976). Sibelius: 1865–1905. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03014-5.
  • Tawaststjerna, Erik W. (1997). Tawaststjerna, Erik T. (ed.). Sibelius (in Finnish). Helsinki: Otava. ISBN 978-951-1-14231-7.
  • Tawaststjerna, Erik W. (2008). "Civil War". Sibelius Volume III: 1914–1957. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-057-12477-4-5.
  • Walker, Lynne (2 August 2008). "King Arthur". Classical Music. from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 1 July 2011 – via MusicWeb International.
  • Whittall, Arnold. "The later symphonies". In Grimley (2004).
  • Wicklund, Tuija (2014). Jean Sibelius's En saga and Its Two Versions: Genesis, Reception, Edition, and Form (PDF). Studia Musica (Thesis). Vol. 57. University of the Arts Helsinki, Sibelius Academy. (PDF) from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  • Woodstra, Chris (2005). All Music Guide to Classical Music: The Definitive Guide to Classical Music. Backbeat Books. pp. 1279–1282. ISBN 978-0-87930-865-0.

Further reading edit

External links edit

jean, sibelius, sibelius, redirects, here, music, notation, software, sibelius, scorewriter, other, uses, sibelius, disambiguation, finland, swedish, ˈjɑːn, siˈbeːliʉs, ˈʃɑːn, born, johan, julius, christian, sibelius, december, 1865, september, 1957, finnish, . Sibelius redirects here For the music notation software see Sibelius scorewriter For other uses see Sibelius disambiguation Jean Sibelius s ɪ ˈ b eɪ l i e s sib AY lee es 1 Finland Swedish ˈjɑːn siˈbeːliʉs ˈʃɑːn born Johan Julius Christian Sibelius 2 8 December 1865 20 September 1957 was a Finnish composer of the late Romantic and early modern periods He is widely regarded as his country s greatest composer and his music is often credited with having helped Finland develop a national identity during its struggle for independence from Russia Jean SibeliusBorn 1865 12 08 8 December 1865Hameenlinna Grand Duchy of FinlandDied20 September 1957 1957 09 20 aged 91 Jarvenpaa FinlandWorksList of compositionsSignatureThe core of his oeuvre is his set of seven symphonies which like his other major works are regularly performed and recorded in Finland and countries around the world His other best known compositions are Finlandia the Karelia Suite Valse triste the Violin Concerto the choral symphony Kullervo and The Swan of Tuonela from the Lemminkainen Suite His other works include pieces inspired by nature Nordic mythology and the Finnish national epic the Kalevala over a hundred songs for voice and piano incidental music for numerous plays the one act opera The Maiden in the Tower chamber music piano music Masonic ritual music 3 and 21 publications of choral music Sibelius composed prolifically until the mid 1920s but after completing his Seventh Symphony 1924 the incidental music for The Tempest 1926 and the tone poem Tapiola 1926 he stopped producing major works in his last 30 years a retirement commonly referred to as the silence of Jarvenpaa the location of his home Although he is reputed to have stopped composing he attempted to continue writing including abortive efforts on an eighth symphony In later life he wrote Masonic music and re edited some earlier works while retaining an active but not always favourable interest in new developments in music Although this silence has often perplexed scholars in reality Sibelius was clear he felt he had written enough The Finnish 100 mark note featured his image until 2002 when the euro was adopted 4 Since 2011 Finland has celebrated a flag flying day on 8 December the composer s birthday also known as the Day of Finnish Music 5 In 2015 in celebration of the 150th anniversary of Sibelius s birth a number of special concerts and events were held especially in Helsinki the Finnish capital 6 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Studies and early career 1 3 Marriage and rise to fame 1 4 Move to Ainola 1 5 Ups and downs 1 6 More pleasant times 1 7 First World War years 1 8 Revived fortunes but growing hand tremor 1 9 Last major works 1 10 Second World War years 1 11 Final years and death 2 Music 2 1 Symphonies 2 2 Tone poems 2 3 Other important works 3 Activities and interests 3 1 Freemasonry 3 2 Nature 4 Reception 5 Legacy 6 Manuscripts 7 See also 8 References 9 General sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife editEarly years edit nbsp Sibelius s birthplace in HameenlinnaSibelius was born on 8 December 1865 in Hameenlinna Swedish Tavastehus in the Grand Duchy of Finland an autonomous part of the Russian Empire He was the son of the Swedish speaking medical doctor Christian Gustaf Sibelius and Maria Charlotta Sibelius nee Borg The family name stems from the Sibbe estate in Eastern Uusimaa which his paternal great grandfather owned 7 Sibelius s father died of typhoid in July 1868 leaving substantial debts As a result his mother who was again pregnant had to sell their property and move the family into the home of Katarina Borg her widowed mother who also lived in Hameenlinna 8 Sibelius was therefore brought up in a decidedly female environment the only male influence coming from his uncle Pehr Ferdinand Sibelius who was interested in music especially the violin It was he who gave the boy a violin when he was ten years old and later encouraged him to maintain his interest in composition 9 10 For Sibelius Uncle Pehr not only took the place of a father but acted as a musical adviser 11 nbsp 11 year old Sibelius in 1876From an early age Sibelius showed a strong interest in nature frequently walking around the countryside when the family moved to Loviisa on the coast for the summer months In his own words For me Loviisa represented sun and happiness Hameenlinna was where I went to school Loviisa was freedom It was in Hameenlinna when he was seven that his aunt Julia was brought in to give him piano lessons on the family s upright instrument rapping him on the knuckles whenever he played a wrong note He progressed by improvising on his own but still learned to read music 12 He later turned to the violin which he preferred He participated in trios with his elder sister Linda on piano and his younger brother Christian on the cello Christian Sibelius was to become an eminent psychiatrist still remembered for his contributions to modern psychiatry in Finland 13 Furthermore Sibelius often played in quartets with neighboring families adding to his experience in chamber music Fragments survive of his early compositions of the period a trio a piano quartet and a Suite in D Minor for violin and piano 14 Around 1881 he recorded on paper his short pizzicato piece Vattendroppar Water Drops for violin and cello although it might just have been a musical exercise 11 15 The first reference he made to himself composing is in a letter from August 1883 in which he writes that he composed a trio and was working on another They are rather poor but it is nice to have something to do on rainy days 16 In 1881 he started to take violin lessons from the local bandmaster Gustaf Levander immediately developing a particularly strong interest in the instrument 17 Setting his heart on a career as a great violin virtuoso he soon succeeded in becoming quite an accomplished player performing David s Concerto in E minor in 1886 and the following year the last two movements of Mendelssohn s Violin Concerto in Helsinki Despite such success as an instrumentalist he ultimately chose to become a composer 18 19 Although his mother tongue was Swedish in 1874 Sibelius attended Lucina Hagman s Finnish speaking preparatory school In 1876 he was then able to continue his education at the Finnish language Hameenlinna Normal Lyceum where he was a rather absent minded pupil although he did quite well in mathematics and botany 16 Despite having to repeat a year he passed the school s final examination in 1885 which allowed him to enter a university 20 As a boy he was known as Janne a colloquial form of Johan However during his student years he adopted the French form Jean inspired by the business card of his deceased seafaring uncle Thereafter he became known as Jean Sibelius 21 Studies and early career edit After graduating from high school in 1885 Sibelius began to study law at the Imperial Alexander University in Finland but showing far more interest in music soon moved to the Helsinki Music Institute now the Sibelius Academy where he studied from 1885 to 1889 nbsp Martin Wegelius Sibelius s teacher in FinlandOne of his teachers was its founder Martin Wegelius who did much to support the development of education in Finland It was he who gave the self taught Sibelius his first formal lessons in composition 22 Another important influence was his teacher Ferruccio Busoni a pianist composer with whom he enjoyed a lifelong friendship 23 His close circle of friends included the pianist and writer Adolf Paul and the conductor to be Armas Jarnefelt who introduced him to his influential family including his sister Aino who would become Sibelius s wife 11 The most remarkable of his works during this period was the Violin Sonata in F rather reminiscent of Grieg 24 Sibelius continued his studies in Berlin from 1889 to 1890 with Albert Becker and in Vienna from 1890 to 1891 with Robert Fuchs and the Hungarian Jewish Karl Goldmark In Berlin he had the opportunity to widen his musical experience by going to a variety of concerts and operas including the premiere of Richard Strauss s Don Juan He also heard the Finnish composer Robert Kajanus conducting the Berlin Philharmonic in a program that included his symphonic poem Aino a patriotic piece that may have triggered Sibelius s later interest in using the epic poem Kalevala as a basis for his own compositions 23 25 While in Vienna he became particularly interested in the music of Anton Bruckner whom for a time he regarded as the greatest living composer although he continued to show interest in the established works of Beethoven and Wagner He enjoyed his year in Vienna frequently partying and gambling with his new friends It was also in Vienna that he turned to orchestral composition working on an Overture in E major and a Scene de Ballet While embarking on Kullervo an orchestral work with chorus and soloists inspired by the Kalevala he fell ill but was restored to good health after gallstone excision surgery 26 Shortly after returning to Helsinki Sibelius thoroughly enjoyed conducting his Overture and the Scene de Ballet at a popular concert 27 He was also able to continue working on Kullervo now that he was increasingly developing an interest in all things Finnish Premiered in Helsinki on 28 April 1892 the work was an enormous success 11 nbsp Sibelius in 1891 when he studied in ViennaIt was around this time that Sibelius finally abandoned his cherished aspirations as a violinist My tragedy was that I wanted to be a celebrated violinist at any price Since the age of 15 I played my violin practically from morning to night I hated pen and ink unfortunately I preferred an elegant violin bow My love for the violin lasted quite long and it was a very painful awakening when I had to admit that I had begun my training for the exacting career of a virtuoso too late 28 In addition to the long periods he spent studying in Vienna and Berlin in 1900 he travelled to Italy where he spent a year with his family He composed conducted and socialized actively in the Scandinavian countries Britain France and Germany and later travelled to the United States 29 Marriage and rise to fame edit While Sibelius was studying music in Helsinki in the autumn of 1888 Armas Jarnefelt a friend from the Music Institute invited him to the family home There he met and immediately fell in love with Aino the 17 year old daughter of General Alexander Jarnefelt the governor of Vaasa and Elisabeth Clodt von Jurgensburg a Baltic aristocrat 19 The wedding was held on 10 June 1892 at Maxmo They spent their honeymoon in Karelia the home of the Kalevala It served as an inspiration for Sibelius s tone poem En saga the Lemminkainen legends and the Karelia Suite 11 Their home Ainola was completed near Lake Tuusula Jarvenpaa in 1904 During the years at Ainola they had six daughters Eva Ruth Kirsti who died aged one from typhoid 30 Katarina Margareta and Heidi 31 Eva married an industrial heir Arvi Paloheimo and later became the CEO of the Paloheimo Corporation Ruth Snellman fi was a prominent actress Katarina Ilves married a banker and Heidi Blomstedt was a designer wife of architect Aulis Blomstedt Margareta married conductor Jussi Jalas Aulis Blomstedt s brother 32 In 1892 Kullervo inaugurated Sibelius s focus on orchestral music It was described by the composer Aksel Tornudd fi as a volcanic eruption while Juho Ranta who sang in the choir stated It was Finnish music 33 At the end of that year the composer s grandmother Katarina Borg died Sibelius went to her funeral visiting his Hameenlinna home one last time before the house was sold On 16 February 1893 the first extended version of En saga was presented in Helsinki although it was not too well received the critics suggesting that superfluous sections should be eliminated as they were in Sibelius s 1902 version Even less successful were three more performances of Kullervo in March which one critic found incomprehensible and lacking in vitality Following the birth of Sibelius s first child Eva in April the premiere of his choral work Vainamoinen s Boat Ride was a considerable success receiving the support of the press 34 On 13 November 1893 the full version of Karelia was premiered at a student association gala at the Seurahuone in Viipuri with the collaboration of the artist Axel Gallen and the sculptor Emil Wikstrom who had been brought in to design the stage sets While the first performance was difficult to appreciate over the background noise of the talkative audience a second performance on 18 November was more successful Furthermore on the 19th and 23rd Sibelius presented an extended suite of the work in Helsinki conducting the orchestra of the Philharmonic Society 35 Sibelius s music was increasingly presented in Helsinki s concert halls In the 1894 95 season works such as En saga Karelia and Varsang composed in 1894 were included in at least 16 concerts in the capital not to mention those in Turku 36 When performed in a revised version on 17 April 1895 the composer Oskar Merikanto welcomed Varsang Spring Song as the fairest flower among Sibelius s orchestral pieces 37 nbsp Sibelius right socializing with Akseli Gallen Kallela the artist left Oskar Merikanto and Robert KajanusFor a considerable period Sibelius worked on an opera Veneen luominen The Building of the Boat again based on the Kalevala To some extent he had come under the influence of Wagner but subsequently turned to Liszt s tone poems as a source of compositional inspiration Adapted from material for the opera which he never completed his Lemminkainen Suite consisted of four legends in the form of tone poems 11 They were premiered in Helsinki on 13 April 1896 to a full house In contrast to Merikanto s enthusiasm for the Finnish quality of the work the critic Karl Flodin found the cor anglais solo in The Swan of Tuonela stupendously long and boring 38 34 although he considered the first legend Lemminkainen and the Maidens of the Island as representing the peak of Sibelius s achievement to date 39 To pay his way from 1892 Sibelius had taken on teaching assignments at the Music Institute and at Kajanus s conducting school but this left him insufficient time for composing 40 The situation improved considerably when in 1898 he was awarded a substantial annual grant initially for ten years and later extended for life He was able to complete the music for Adolf Paul s play King Christian II Performed on 24 February 1898 its catchy tunes appealed to the public The scores of four popular pieces from the play were published in Germany and sold well in Finland When the orchestral suite was successfully performed in Helsinki in November 1898 Sibelius commented The music sounded excellent and the tempi seem to be right I think this is the first time that I have managed to make something complete The work was also performed in Stockholm and Leipzig 41 In January 1899 Sibelius embarked on his First Symphony at a time when his patriotic feelings were being enhanced by the Russian emperor Nicholas II s attempt to restrict the powers of the Grand Duchy of Finland 42 The symphony was well received when it was premiered in Helsinki on 26 April 1899 But the program also premiered the even more compelling blatantly patriotic Song of the Athenians for boys and men s choirs The song immediately brought Sibelius the status of a national hero 41 42 Another patriotic work followed on 4 November in the form of eight tableaux depicting episodes from Finnish history known as the Press Celebration Music It had been written in support of the staff of the Paivalehti newspaper which had been suspended for a period after editorially criticizing Russian rule 43 The last tableau Finland Awakens was particularly popular after minor revisions it became the well known Finlandia 44 nbsp Sibelius sketch by Albert Engstrom 1904 In February 1900 the Sibelius youngest daughter Kirsti died Nevertheless in the summer Sibelius went on an international tour with Kajanus and his orchestra presenting his recent works including a revised version of his First Symphony in thirteen cities including Stockholm Copenhagen Hamburg Berlin and Paris The critics were highly favorable bringing the composer international recognition with their enthusiastic reports in the Berliner Borsen Courier the Berliner Fremdenblatt and the Berliner Lokal Anzeiger 45 46 During a trip with his family to Rapallo Italy in 1901 Sibelius began to write his Second Symphony partly inspired by the fate of Don Juan in Mozart s Don Giovanni It was completed in early 1902 with its premiere in Helsinki on 8 March The work was received with tremendous enthusiasm by the Finns Merikanto felt it exceeded even the boldest expectations while Evert Katila qualified it as an absolute masterpiece 45 Flodin too wrote of a symphonic composition the likes of which we have never had occasion to listen to before 47 Sibelius spent the summer in Tvarminne near Hanko where he worked on the song Var det en drom Was it a Dream as well as on a new version of En saga When it was performed in Berlin with the Berlin Philharmonic in November 1902 it served to firmly establish the composer s reputation in Germany leading shortly afterwards to the publication of his First Symphony 45 In 1903 Sibelius spent much of his time in Helsinki where he indulged excessively in wining and dining running up considerable bills in the restaurants But he continued to compose one of his major successes being Valse triste one of six pieces of incidental music he composed for his brother in law Arvid Jarnefelt s play Kuolema Death Short of money he sold the piece at a low price but it quickly gained considerable popularity not only in Finland but internationally During his long stays in Helsinki Sibelius s wife Aino frequently wrote to him imploring him to return home but to no avail Even after their fourth daughter Katarina was born he continued to work away from home Early in 1904 he finished his Violin Concerto but its first public performance on 8 February was not a success It led to a revised condensed version that was performed in Berlin the following year 48 Move to Ainola edit nbsp Ainola photographed in 1915 nbsp Jean Sibelius and wife Aino read in Ainola s dining room In November 1903 Sibelius began to build his new home Ainola Aino s Place near Lake Tuusula some 45 km 30 miles north of Helsinki To cover the construction costs he gave concerts in Helsinki Turku and Vaasa in early 1904 as well as in Tallinn Estonia and in Latvia during the summer The family were finally able to move into the new property on 24 September 1904 making friends with the local artistic community including the painters Eero Jarnefelt and Pekka Halonen and the novelist Juhani Aho 48 In January 1905 Sibelius returned to Berlin where he conducted his Second Symphony While the concert itself was successful it received mixed reviews some very positive while those in the Allgemeine Zeitung and the Berliner Tageblatt were less enthusiastic Back in Finland he rewrote the increasingly popular Pelleas and Melisande as an orchestral suite In November visiting Britain for the first time he went to Liverpool where he met Henry Wood On 2 December he conducted the First Symphony and Finlandia writing to Aino that the concert had been a great success and widely acclaimed 49 In 1906 after a short rather uneventful stay in Paris at the beginning of the year Sibelius spent several months composing in Ainola his major work of the period being Pohjola s Daughter yet another piece based on the Kalevala Later in the year he composed incidental music for Belshazzar s Feast also adapting it as an orchestral suite He ended the year conducting a series of concerts the most successful being the first public performance of Pohjola s Daughter at the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg 49 Ups and downs edit From the beginning of 1907 Sibelius again indulged in excessive wining and dining in Helsinki spending exorbitant amounts on champagne and lobster His lifestyle had a disastrous effect on the health of Aino who was driven to retire to a sanatorium suffering from exhaustion While she was away Sibelius resolved to give up drinking concentrating instead on composing his Third Symphony He completed the work for a performance in Helsinki on 25 September 50 Although its more classical approach surprised the audience Flodin commented that it was internally new and revolutionary 49 Shortly afterwards Sibelius met Gustav Mahler who was in Helsinki The two agreed that with each new symphony they lost those who had been attracted to their earlier works This was demonstrated above all in St Petersburg where the Third Symphony was performed in November 1907 to dismissive reviews Its reception in Moscow was rather more positive 49 nbsp Blue plaque 15 Gloucester Walk Kensington London his home in 1909In 1907 Sibelius underwent a serious operation for suspected throat cancer Early in 1908 he had to spend a spell in hospital His smoking and drinking had now become life threatening Although he cancelled concerts in Rome Warsaw and Berlin he maintained an engagement in London but there too his Third Symphony failed to attract the critics In May 1908 Sibelius s health deteriorated further He travelled with his wife to Berlin to have a tumour removed from his throat After the operation he vowed to give up smoking and drinking once and for all 49 The impact of this brush with death has been said to have inspired works that he composed in the following years including Luonnotar and the Fourth Symphony 51 More pleasant times edit In 1909 the successful throat operation resulted in renewed happiness between Sibelius and Aino in the family home In Britain too his condition was well received as he conducted En saga Finlandia Valse Triste and Spring Song to enthusiastic audiences A meeting with Claude Debussy produced further support After another uneventful trip to Paris he went to Berlin where he was relieved to learn that his throat operation had been entirely successful 52 Sibelius started work on his Fourth Symphony in early 1910 but his dwindling funds also required him to write a number of smaller pieces and songs In October he conducted concerts in Kristiania now Oslo where The Dryad and In Memoriam were first performed His Valse triste and Second Symphony were particularly well received He then travelled to Berlin to continue work on his Fourth Symphony writing the finale after returning to Jarvenpaa 52 Sibelius conducted his first concerts in Sweden in early 1911 when even his Third Symphony was welcomed by the critics He completed the Fourth Symphony in April but as he expected with its introspective style it was not very warmly received when first performed in Helsinki with mixed reviews Apart from a trip to Paris where he enjoyed a performance of Richard Strauss s Salome the rest of the year was fairly uneventful In 1912 he completed his short orchestral work Scenes historiques II It was first performed in March together with the Fourth Symphony The concert was repeated twice to enthusiastic audiences and critics including Robert Kajanus The Fourth Symphony was also well received in Birmingham in September In March 1913 it was performed in New York but a large section of the audience left the hall between the movements while in October after a concert conducted by Carl Muck the Boston American labelled it a sad failure 52 Sibelius s first significant composition of 1913 was the tone poem The Bard which he conducted in March to a respectful audience in Helsinki He went on to compose Luonnotar Daughter of Nature for soprano and orchestra With a text from the Kalevala it was first performed in Finnish in September 1913 by Aino Ackte to whom it had been dedicated at the music festival in Gloucester England 52 53 In early 1914 Sibelius spent a month in Berlin where he was particularly drawn to Arnold Schoenberg Back in Finland he began work on The Oceanides which the American millionaire Carl Stoeckel had commissioned for the Norfolk Music Festival After first composing the work in D flat major Sibelius undertook substantive revisions presenting a D major version in Norfolk which was well received as were Finlandia and the Valse triste Henry Krehbiel considered The Oceanides one of the most beautiful pieces of sea music ever composed while The New York Times commented that Sibelius s music was the most notable contribution to the music festival While in America Sibelius received an honorary doctorate from Yale University and almost simultaneously one from the University of Helsinki where he was represented by Aino 52 First World War years edit While travelling back from the United States Sibelius heard about the events in Sarajevo that led to the beginning of the First World War Although he was far away from the fighting his royalties from abroad were interrupted To make ends meet he composed smaller works for publication in Finland In March 1915 he was able to travel to Gothenburg in Sweden where his work The Oceanides was widely appreciated While working on his Fifth Symphony in April he saw 16 swans flying by inspiring him to write the finale One of the great experiences of my life he commented Although there was little progress on the symphony during the summer he was able to complete it by his 50th birthday on 8 December 54 On the evening of his birthday Sibelius conducted the premiere of the Fifth Symphony in the hall of the Helsinki Stock Exchange Despite high praise from Kajanus the composer was not satisfied with his work and soon began to revise it Around this time Sibelius was running ever deeper into debt The grand piano he had received as a present was about to be confiscated by the bailiffs when the singer Ida Ekman paid off a large proportion of his debt after a successful fund raising campaign 54 A year later on 8 December 1916 Sibelius presented the revised version of his Fifth Symphony in Turku combining the first two movements and simplifying the finale When it was performed a week later in Helsinki Katila was very favourable but Wasenius frowned on the changes leading the composer to rewrite it once again 54 From the beginning of 1917 Sibelius started drinking again triggering arguments with Aino Their relationship improved with the excitement resulting from the start of the Russian Revolution By the end of the year Sibelius had composed his Jager March The piece proved particularly popular after the Finnish parliament accepted the Senate s declaration of independence from Russia in December 1917 The Jager March first played on 19 January 1918 delighted the Helsinki elite for a short time until the start of the Finnish Civil War on 27 January 54 Sibelius naturally supported the Whites but as a Tolstoyan Aino Sibelius had some sympathies for the Reds too 55 In February his house Ainola was searched twice by the local Red Guard looking for weapons During the first weeks of the war some of his acquaintances were killed in the violence and his brother the psychiatrist Christian Sibelius was arrested because he refused to reserve beds for the Red soldiers who had suffered shell shock at the front Sibelius s friends in Helsinki were now worried about his safety The composer Robert Kajanus negotiated with the Red Guard commander in chief Eero Haapalainen who guaranteed Sibelius a safe journey from Ainola to the capital On 20 February a group of Red Guard fighters escorted the family to Helsinki Finally from 12 to 13 April the German troops occupied the city and the Red period was over A week later the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra gave a concert in homage to the German commander Rudiger von der Goltz Sibelius finished off the event by conducting the Jager March 55 Revived fortunes but growing hand tremor edit nbsp Sibelius in 1923In early 1919 Sibelius enthusiastically decided to change his image shaving off what remained of his thinning hair In June together with Aino he visited Copenhagen on his first trip outside Finland since 1915 successfully presenting his Second Symphony In November he conducted the final version of his Fifth Symphony receiving repeated ovations from the audience By the end of the year he was already working on the Sixth 54 In 1920 despite a growing tremor in his hands Sibelius composed the Hymn of the Earth to a text by the poet Eino Leino for the Suomen Laulu Choir and orchestrated his Valse lyrique helped along by drinking wine On his birthday in December 1920 Sibelius received a donation of 63 000 marks a substantial sum the tenor Waino Sola fi had raised from Finnish businesses Although he used some of the money to reduce his debts he also spent a week celebrating to excess in Helsinki 56 At this time Sibelius held detailed negotiations with George Eastman inventor of the Kodak camera and founder of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester New York Eastman offered 20 000 salary to teach for a single year 57 and before Sibelius declined negotiations were so firm that the New York Times published Sibelius s arrival as fact 58 Sibelius enjoyed a highly successful trip to England in early 1921 conducting several concerts around the country including the Fourth and Fifth symphonies The Oceanides the ever popular Finlandia and Valse triste Immediately afterwards he conducted the Second Symphony and Valse triste in Norway He was beginning to suffer from exhaustion but the critics remained positive On his return to Finland in April he presented Lemminkainen s Return and the Fifth Symphony at the Nordic Music Days 56 Early in 1922 after suffering from headaches Sibelius decided to acquire spectacles although he never wore them for photographs In July he was saddened by the death of his brother Christian In August he joined the Finnish Freemasons and composed ritual music for them In February 1923 he premiered his Sixth Symphony Evert Katila highly praised it as pure idyll Before the year ended he had also conducted concerts in Stockholm and Rome the first to considerable acclaim the second to mixed reviews He then proceeded to Gothenburg where he enjoyed an ecstatic reception despite arriving at the concert hall suffering from over indulgence in food and drink Despite continuing to drink to Aino s dismay Sibelius managed to complete his Seventh Symphony in March 1924 Under the title of Fantasia sinfonica it received its first public performance in Stockholm where it was a success It was even more highly appreciated at a series of concerts in Copenhagen in late September Sibelius was honoured with the Knight Commander s Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog 56 He spent most of the rest of the year resting as his recent spate of activity was straining his heart and nerves Composing a few small pieces he relied increasingly on alcohol In May 1925 his Danish publisher Wilhelm Hansen and the Royal Danish Theatre invited him to compose incidental music for a production of Shakespeare s The Tempest He completed the work well in advance of its premiere in March 1926 56 It was well received in Copenhagen although Sibelius was not there himself 59 The music journalist Vesa Siren has found evidence that Sibelius perhaps suffered from essential tremor since a young age and that he reduced the symptoms by drinking alcohol This self medication is common and effective but discouraged by doctors due to the risks outweighing the benefits Siren s research is supported by several medical experts The tremor presumably prevented writing and impaired his social life 60 Last major works edit nbsp Sibelius and Aino in Jarvenpaa early 1940s The year 1926 saw a sharp and lasting decline in Sibelius s output after his Seventh Symphony he produced only a few major works during the rest of his life Arguably the two most significant of these were the incidental music for The Tempest and the tone poem Tapiola 61 For most of the last thirty years of his life Sibelius even avoided talking publicly about his music 62 There is substantial evidence that Sibelius worked on an eighth symphony He promised the premiere of this symphony to Serge Koussevitzky in 1931 and 1932 and a London performance in 1933 under Basil Cameron was even advertised to the public The only concrete evidence of the symphony s existence on paper is a 1933 bill for a fair copy of the first movement and short draft fragments first published and played in 2011 63 64 65 66 Sibelius had always been quite self critical he remarked to his close friends If I cannot write a better symphony than my Seventh then it shall be my last Since no manuscript survives sources consider it likely that Sibelius destroyed most traces of the score probably in 1945 during which year he certainly consigned a great many papers to the flames 67 His wife Aino recalled In the 1940s there was a great auto da fe at Ainola My husband collected a number of the manuscripts in a laundry basket and burned them on the open fire in the dining room Parts of the Karelia Suite were destroyed I later saw remains of the pages which had been torn out and many other things I did not have the strength to be present and left the room I therefore do not know what he threw on to the fire But after this my husband became calmer and gradually lighter in mood 68 Second World War years edit On Sibelius s 70th birthday 8 December 1935 the German Nazi regime awarded him the Goethe Medal with a certificate signed by Adolf Hitler After the attempted Soviet invasion of Finland in late 1939 40 the Winter War which though initially repelled forced Finland to cede territory to the Soviet Union after the later defeat of the Finnish military the Sibelius family returned for good to Ainola in the summer of 1941 after a long absence Anxious about Bolshevism Sibelius advocated that Finnish soldiers march alongside German forces after Germany s invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 Sibelius did not make any utterances about the genocide of the Jews although in a diary entry in 1943 he wondered why he had signed the Aryan certificate 69 On 1 January 1939 Sibelius had participated in an international radio broadcast during which he conducted his Andante Festivo The performance was preserved on transcription discs and later issued on CD This is probably the only surviving example of Sibelius interpreting his own music 70 Final years and death edit nbsp Sibelius in 1939From 1903 and for many years thereafter Sibelius lived in the countryside From 1939 he and Aino again had a home in Helsinki but they moved back to Ainola in 1941 only occasionally visiting the city 71 After the war he returned to Helsinki only a couple of times The so called silence of Jarvenpaa became something of a myth as in addition to countless official visitors and colleagues his grandchildren and great grandchildren also spent their holidays there 72 Sibelius avoided public statements about other composers but Erik W Tawaststjerna and Sibelius s secretary Santeri Levas 73 have documented private conversations in which he admired Richard Strauss and considered Bela Bartok and Dmitri Shostakovich the most talented composers of the younger generation 74 In the 1950s he promoted the young Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara 75 His 90th birthday in 1955 was widely celebrated and both the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Sir Thomas Beecham gave special performances of his music 76 77 Tawaststjerna also relates an anecdote in connection with Sibelius s death 78 He was returning from his customary morning walk Exhilarated he told his wife Aino that he had seen a flock of cranes approaching There they come the birds of my youth he exclaimed Suddenly one of the birds broke away from the formation and circled once above Ainola It then rejoined the flock to continue its journey nbsp Sibelius s funeral at the Helsinki Cathedral in 1957Two years later in Ainola on the evening of 20 September 1957 Sibelius died of a brain haemorrhage at the age of 91 At the time of his death his Fifth Symphony conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent was being broadcast by radio from Helsinki At the same time the United Nations General Assembly was in session and the then President of the Assembly Sir Leslie Munro of New Zealand called for a moment of silence and delivered a eulogy Sibelius belonged to the whole world He enriched the life of the entire human race with his music 79 Another well known Finnish composer Heino Kaski died on the same day but his death was overshadowed by that of Sibelius Sibelius was honoured with a state funeral and is buried in the garden at Ainola 80 Aino Sibelius continued to live in Ainola for the next 12 years until her death on 8 June 1969 at the age of 97 She is buried next to her husband 81 Music editSee also List of compositions by Jean Sibelius nbsp Jean Sibelius Finlandia premiere edition 1952 autographed copy for the Mayor of New York City Vincent ImpellitteriSibelius is widely known for his symphonies and his tone poems especially Finlandia and the Karelia suite His reputation in Finland grew in the 1890s with the choral symphony Kullervo which like many subsequent pieces drew on the epic poem Kalevala His First Symphony was first performed to an enthusiastic audience in 1899 at a time when Finnish nationalism was evolving In addition to six more symphonies he gained popularity at home and abroad with incidental music and more tone poems especially En saga The Swan of Tuonela and Valse triste 82 Sibelius also composed a series of works for violin and orchestra including a Violin Concerto the opera Jungfrun i tornet many shorter orchestral pieces chamber music works for piano and violin choral works and numerous songs 83 In the mid 1920s after his Sixth and Seventh Symphonies he composed the symphonic poem Tapiola and incidental music for The Tempest Thereafter although he lived until 1957 he did not publish any further works of note For several years he worked on an Eighth Symphony which he later burned 84 As for his musical style hints of Tchaikovsky s music are particularly evident in early works such as his First Symphony and his Violin Concerto 85 For a period he was nevertheless overwhelmed by Wagner particularly while composing his opera More lasting influences included Ferruccio Busoni and Anton Bruckner But for his tone poems he was above all inspired by Liszt 34 86 The similarities to Bruckner can be seen in the brass contributions to his orchestral works and the generally slow tempo of his music 87 88 Sibelius progressively stripped away formal markers of sonata form in his work and instead of contrasting multiple themes focused on the idea of continuously evolving cells and fragments culminating in a grand statement His later works are remarkable for their sense of unbroken development progressing by means of thematic permutations and derivations The completeness and organic feel of this synthesis has prompted some to suggest that Sibelius began his works with a finished statement and worked backwards although analyses showing these predominantly three and four note cells and melodic fragments as they are developed and expanded into the larger themes effectively prove the opposite 89 nbsp Portrait of Sibelius from 1892 by his brother in law Eero JarnefeltThis self contained structure stood in stark contrast to the symphonic style of Gustav Mahler Sibelius s primary rival in symphonic composition 61 While thematic variation played a major role in the works of both composers Mahler s style made use of disjunct abruptly changing and contrasting themes while Sibelius sought to slowly transform thematic elements In November 1907 Mahler undertook a conducting tour of Finland and the two composers were able to take a lengthy walk together leading Sibelius to comment I said that I admired the symphony s severity of style and the profound logic that created an inner connection between all the motifs Mahler s opinion was just the reverse No a symphony must be like the world It must embrace everything 90 Symphonies edit Sibelius started work on his Symphony No 1 in E minor Op 39 in 1898 and completed it in early 1899 when he was 33 The work was first performed on 26 April 1899 by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by the composer in an original well received version that has not survived After the premiere Sibelius made some revisions resulting in the version performed today The revision was completed in the spring and summer of 1900 and was first performed in Berlin by the Helsinki Philharmonic conducted by Robert Kajanus on 18 July 1900 91 The symphony begins with a highly original rather forlorn clarinet solo backed by subdued timpani 92 nbsp Robert Kajanus founder and chief conductor of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra who was a notable interpreter of Sibelius s symphoniesHis Second Symphony the most popular and most frequently recorded of his symphonies was first performed by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society on 8 March 1902 with the composer conducting The opening chords with their rising progression provide a motif for the whole work The heroic theme of the finale with the three tone motif is interpreted by the trumpets rather than the original woodwinds During a period of Russian oppression it consolidated Sibelius s reputation as a national hero After the first performance Sibelius made some changes leading to a revised version first performed by Armas Jarnefelt on 10 November 1903 in Stockholm 93 The Third Symphony is a good natured triumphal and deceptively simple sounding piece The symphony s first performance was given by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society conducted by the composer on 25 September 1907 There are themes from Finnish folk music in the work s early chords Composed just after his move to Ainola it contrasts sharply with the first two symphonies with its clear mode of expression developing into the marching tones of the finale 82 94 His Fourth Symphony was premiered in Helsinki on 3 April 1911 by the Philharmonia Society with Sibelius conducting It was written while Sibelius was undergoing a series of operations to remove a tumour from his throat Its grimness can perhaps be explained as a reaction from his temporary decision to give up drinking The opening bars with cellos basses and bassoons convey a new approach to timing It then develops into melancholic sketches based on the composer s setting of Poe s The Raven The waning finale is perhaps a premonition of the silence Sibelius would experience twenty years later In contrast to the usual assertive finales of the times the work ends simply with a leaden thud 82 Symphony No 5 was premiered in Helsinki to great acclaim by Sibelius himself on 8 December 1915 his 50th birthday The version most commonly performed today is the final revision consisting of three movements presented in 1919 The Fifth is Sibelius s only symphony in a major key throughout From its soft opening played by the horns the work develops into rotational repetitions of its various themes with considerable transformations building up to the trumpeted swan hymn in the final movement 82 95 While the Fifth had already started to veer away from the sonata form the Sixth conducted by the composer at its premiere in February 1923 is even further removed from the traditional norms Tawaststjerna comments that the finale s structure follows no familiar pattern 96 Composed in the Dorian mode it draws on some of the themes developed while Sibelius was working on the Fifth as well as from material intended for a lyrical violin concerto Now taking a purified approach Sibelius sought to offer spring water rather than cocktails making use of lighter flutes and strings rather than the heavy brass of the Fifth 97 Symphony No 7 in C major was his last published symphony Completed in 1924 it is notable for having only one movement It has been described as completely original in form subtle in its handling of tempi individual in its treatment of key and wholly organic in growth 98 It has also been called Sibelius s most remarkable compositional achievement 99 Initially titled Fantasia sinfonica it was first performed in Stockholm in March 1924 conducted by Sibelius It was based on an adagio movement he had sketched almost ten years earlier While the strings dominate there is also a distinctive trombone theme 100 Tone poems edit After the seven symphonies and the violin concerto Sibelius s thirteen symphonic poems are his most important works for orchestra and along with the tone poems of Richard Strauss represent some of the most important contributions to the genre since Franz Liszt As a group the symphonic poems span the entirety of Sibelius s artistic career the first was composed in 1892 while the last appeared in 1925 display the composer s fascination with nature and Finnish mythology particularly the Kalevala and provide a comprehensive portrait of his stylistic maturation over time 101 nbsp Sibelius at his home Ainola playing the piano 1930 En saga meaning A Fairy Tale in Swedish was first presented in February 1893 with Sibelius conducting The single movement tone poem was possibly inspired by the Icelandic mythological work Edda although Sibelius simply described it as an expression of his state of mind Beginning with a dreamy theme from the strings it evolves into the tones of the woodwinds then the horns and the violas demonstrating Sibelius s ability to handle an orchestra 102 The composer s first significant orchestral piece it was revised in 1902 when Ferruccio Busoni invited Sibelius to conduct his work in Berlin Its successful reception encouraged him to write to Aino I have been acknowledged as an accomplished artist 103 The Wood Nymph a single movement tone poem for orchestra was written in 1894 Premiered in April 1895 in Helsinki with Sibelius conducting it is inspired by the Swedish poet Viktor Rydberg s work of the same name Organizationally it consists of four informal sections each corresponding to one of the poem s four stanzas and evoking the mood of a particular episode first heroic vigour second frenetic activity third sensual love and fourth inconsolable grief Despite the music s beauty many critics have faulted Sibelius for his over reliance on the source material s narrative structure 104 105 The Lemminkainen Suite was composed in the early 1890s Originally conceived as a mythological opera Veneen luominen The Building of the Boat on a scale matching those by Richard Wagner Sibelius later changed his musical goals and the work became an orchestral piece in four movements The suite is based on the character Lemminkainen from the Finnish national epic the Kalevala It can also be considered a collection of symphonic poems The second third section The Swan of Tuonela is often heard separately 106 Finlandia probably the best known of all Sibelius s works is a highly patriotic piece first performed in November 1899 as one of the tableaux for the Finnish Press Celebrations It had its public premiere in revised form in July 1900 44 The current title only emerged later first for the piano version then in 1901 when Kajanus conducted the orchestral version under the name Finlandia Although Sibelius insisted it was primarily an orchestral piece it became a world favourite for choirs too especially for the hymn episode Finally the composer consented and in 1937 and 1940 agreed to words for the hymn first for the Freemasons and later for more general use 107 The Oceanides is a single movement tone poem for orchestra written in 1913 14 The piece which refers to the nymphs in Greek mythology who inhabited the Mediterranean Sea premiered on 4 June 1914 at the Norfolk Music Festival in Connecticut with Sibelius himself conducting The work in D major praised upon its premiere as the finest evocation of the sea ever produced in music 108 consists of two subjects Sibelius gradually develops in three informal stages first a placid ocean second a gathering storm and third a thunderous wave crash climax As the tempest subsides a final chord sounds symbolizing the mighty power and limitless expanse of the sea 109 Tapiola Sibelius s last major orchestral work was commissioned by Walter Damrosch for the New York Philharmonic Society where it was premiered on 26 December 1926 It is inspired by Tapio a forest spirit from the Kalevala To quote the American critic Alex Ross it turned out to be Sibelius s most severe and concentrated musical statement 82 Even more emphatically the composer and biographer Cecil Gray asserts Even if Sibelius had written nothing else this one work would entitle him to a place among the greatest masters of all time 110 Other important works edit The Karelia Music one of the composer s earlier works written for the Vyborg Students Association was first performed on 13 November 1893 to a noisy audience The Suite emerged from a concert on 23 November consisting of the overture and the three movements which were published as Op 11 the Karelia Suite It remains one of Sibelius s most popular pieces 111 Valse triste is a short orchestral work that was originally part of the incidental music Sibelius composed for his brother in law Arvid Jarnefelt s 1903 play Kuolema Death It is now far better known as a separate concert piece Sibelius wrote six pieces for the 2 December 1903 production of Kuolema The waltz accompanied a sequence in which a woman rises from her deathbed to dance with ghosts In 1904 Sibelius revised the piece for a performance in Helsinki on 25 April where it was presented as Valse triste An instant success it took on a life of its own and remains one of Sibelius s signature pieces 48 112 The Violin Concerto in D minor was first performed on 8 February 1904 with Victor Novacek as soloist As Sibelius had barely completed the piece in time for the premiere Novacek had insufficient time to prepare with the result that the performance was a disaster After substantial revisions a new version was premiered on 19 October 1905 with Richard Strauss conducting the Berlin Court Orchestra With Karel Halir the orchestra s leader as soloist it was a tremendous success 113 The piece has become increasingly popular and is now the most frequently recorded of all the violin concertos composed in the 20th century 114 Kullervo one of Sibelius s early works is sometimes referred to as a choral symphony but is better described as a suite of five symphonic movements resembling tone poems 115 Based on the character Kullervo from the Kalevala it was premiered on 28 April 1892 with Emmy Achte and Abraham Ojanpera as soloists and Sibelius conducting the chorus and orchestra of the recently founded Helsinki Orchestra Society Although the work was only performed five times during the composer s lifetime since the 1990s it has become increasingly popular both for live performances and recordings 116 Activities and interests editFreemasonry edit When Freemasonry in Finland was revived having been forbidden under the Russian reign Sibelius was one of the founding members of Suomi Lodge No 1 in 1922 and later became the Grand Organist of the Grand Lodge of Finland He composed the ritual music used in Finland Op 113 in 1927 and added two new pieces composed in 1946 The new revision of the ritual music of 1948 is one of his last works 117 Sibelius attended six sessions of the lodge during its first year of operation These visits became less frequent in the following years His name no longer appears in the minutes of the Suomi Lodge after January 1927 118 Nature edit Sibelius loved nature and the Finnish landscape often served as material for his music He once said of his Sixth Symphony It always reminds me of the scent of the first snow The forests surrounding Ainola are often said to have inspired his composition of Tapiola On the subject of Sibelius s ties to nature his biographer Tawaststjerna wrote Even by Nordic standards Sibelius responded with exceptional intensity to the moods of nature and the changes in the seasons he scanned the skies with his binoculars for the geese flying over the lake ice listened to the screech of the cranes and heard the cries of the curlew echo over the marshy grounds just below Ainola He savoured the spring blossoms every bit as much as he did autumnal scents and colours 119 Reception edit nbsp Leevi Madetoja Sibelius s most notable pupil and as a critic a defender of his worksSibelius exerted considerable influence on symphonic composers and musical life at least in English speaking and Nordic countries The Finnish symphonist Leevi Madetoja was a pupil of Sibelius for more on their relationship see Relationship with Sibelius In Britain Ralph Vaughan Williams and Arnold Bax both dedicated their fifth symphonies to Sibelius Furthermore Tapiola is prominently echoed in both Bax s Sixth Symphony and Ernest John Moeran s Symphony in G minor 120 121 The influence of Sibelius s compositional procedures is also strongly felt in the First Symphony of William Walton 122 When these and several other major British symphonic essays were being written in and around the 1930s Sibelius s music was very much in vogue with conductors like Thomas Beecham and John Barbirolli championing its cause both in the concert hall and on record Walton s composer friend Constant Lambert even asserted that Sibelius was the first great composer since Beethoven whose mind thinks naturally in terms of symphonic form 123 Earlier Granville Bantock had championed Sibelius the esteem was mutual Sibelius dedicated his Third Symphony to the English composer and in 1946 he became the first President of the Bantock Society More recently Sibelius was also one of the composers championed by Robert Simpson Malcolm Arnold acknowledged his influence and Arthur Butterworth also saw Sibelius s music as a source of inspiration in his work 124 New Zealand s most accomplished 20th century composer Douglas Lilburn wrote of the inspiration he derived from Sibelius s work particularly for his earlier compositions 125 Eugene Ormandy and to a lesser extent his predecessor with the Philadelphia Orchestra Leopold Stokowski were instrumental in bringing Sibelius s music to American audiences by frequently programming his works the former developed a friendly relationship with Sibelius throughout his life Later in life Sibelius was championed by the American critic Olin Downes who wrote a biography of the composer 126 In 1938 Theodor Adorno wrote a critical essay notoriously charging that If Sibelius is good this invalidates the standards of musical quality that have persisted from Bach to Schoenberg the richness of inter connectedness articulation unity in diversity the multi faceted in the one 127 Adorno sent his essay to Virgil Thomson then music critic of the New York Herald Tribune who was also critical of Sibelius Thomson while agreeing with the essay s sentiment declared to Adorno that the tone of it was more apt to create antagonism toward Adorno than toward Sibelius 68 Later the composer theorist and conductor Rene Leibowitz went so far as to describe Sibelius as the worst composer in the world in the title of a 1955 pamphlet 128 Perhaps one reason Sibelius has attracted both the praise and the ire of critics is that in each of his seven symphonies he approached the basic problems of form tonality and architecture in unique individual ways On the one hand his symphonic and tonal creativity was novel while others thought that music should be taking a different route 129 Sibelius s response to criticism was dismissive Pay no attention to what critics say No statue has ever been put up to a critic 82 nbsp Star on the Musik Meile Music Mile in ViennaIn the latter decades of the twentieth century Sibelius became seen more favourably Milan Kundera said the composer s approach was that of antimodern modernism standing outside the status quo of perpetual progress 68 In a similar vein the philosopher Slavoj Zizek contrasts Sibelius to the modernist approach of Schoenberg and the post modernist one of Stravinsky for Zizek Sibelius represents the alternative of persistent traditionalism of continuing in the inherited tradition but with artistic integrity not as a phony conservative 130 In 1990 the composer Thea Musgrave was commissioned by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra to write a piece in honour of the 125th anniversary of Sibelius s birth Song of the Enchanter premiered on 14 February 1991 131 In 1984 the American avant garde composer Morton Feldman gave a lecture in Darmstadt Germany wherein he stated that the people you think are radicals might really be conservatives the people you think are conservatives might really be radical whereupon he began to hum Sibelius s Fifth Symphony 68 Writing in 1996 the Pulitzer Prize winning music critic Tim Page stated There are two things to be said straightaway about Sibelius First he is terribly uneven much of his chamber music a lot of his songs and most of his piano music might have been churned out by a second rate salon composer from the 19th century on an off afternoon Second at his very best he is often weird 132 Pianist Leif Ove Andsnes offers a counterweight to Page s assessment of Sibelius s piano music Acknowledging that this body of work is uneven in quality Andsnes believes that the common critical dismissal is unwarranted In performing selected piano works Andsnes finds that audiences were astonished that there could be a major composer out there with such beautiful accessible music that people don t know 133 For the 150th anniversary of Sibelius s birth the Helsinki Music Centre planned an illustrated and narrated Sibelius Finland Experience Show every day during the summer of 2015 The production was also planned to extend over 2016 and 2017 134 On 8 December itself the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by John Storgards planned a commemorative concert featuring En Saga Luonnotar and the Seventh Symphony 135 Legacy edit nbsp The Sibelius Park Sibeliuksenpuisto in Kotka FinlandIn 1972 Sibelius s surviving daughters sold Ainola to the Finnish state The Ministry of Education and the Sibelius Society of Finland opened it as a museum in 1974 71 Sibelius has been memorialized by art stamps and currency the Finnish 100 mark bill featured his image until 2002 when the euro was adopted 4 Since 2011 Finland has celebrated a flag flying day on 8 December the composer s birthday also known as the Day of Finnish Music 5 The year 2015 the 150th anniversary of the composer s birth featured a number of special concerts and events especially in the city of Helsinki 6 The quinquennial International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition instituted in 1965 the Sibelius Monument unveiled in 1967 in Helsinki s Sibelius Park the Sibelius Museum opened in Turku in 1968 and the Sibelius Hall concert hall in Lahti opened in 2000 were all named in his honour as was the asteroid 1405 Sibelius 136 The complete edition of Sibelius s œuvre has been in preparation in Finland since 1996 It is a joint venture between the National Library of Finland the Sibelius Society of Finland and Breitkopf amp Hartel publishers When finished this critical edition will comprise 60 volumes 137 Sibelius kept a diary from 1909 to 1944 and his family allowed it to be published unabridged in 2005 The diary was edited by Fabian Dahlstrom fi sv and published in the Swedish language in 2005 138 To celebrate the 150th anniversary of the composer the entire diary was also published in the Finnish language in 2015 139 Several volumes of Sibelius s correspondence have also been edited and published in Swedish Finnish and English The scorewriter program Sibelius is named after him 140 Manuscripts editParts of the literary estate of Sibelius correspondence and manuscripts are preserved at the National Archives of Finland and National Library of Finland but several items are in foreign private collections even as investments only partially accessible for scholars In 1970 a lot of 50 music manuscript items was acquired by the National Library with aid from the government of Finland banks and foundations 141 Sibelius s personal music archive was donated to the National Library in 1982 by the heirs of the composer 142 Another lot of 50 items was procured in 1997 with aid from the Ministry of Education 143 In 2018 the Italian Finnish collector and benefactor Rolando Pieraccini donated a collection of Sibelius s letters and other materials to the National Museum of Finland 144 On the other hand in 2016 the manuscript of Pohjola s Daughter was sold to an anonymous buyer for 290 000 euros and it is no longer available to scholars 143 In early 2020 the current owner of the Robert Lienau collection offered for sale 1 200 pages of manuscripts including the scores of Voces intimae Joutsikki and Pelleas and Melisande and the material was not available to scholars during negotiations The original price tag was said to be over one million euros for the lot as a whole 145 At the end of the year the National Library was able to acquire this collection with aid from foundations and donors The final price was considerably below one million euros 146 Nowadays it is not legally possible to export Sibelius s manuscripts from Finland without permission and according to Hufvudstadsbladet such permission would probably not be given 143 In 2021 the music manuscripts of Sibelius were included in the Memory of the World Programme by the UNESCO 147 See also editSibelius film References edit Sibelius Dictionary com Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 Retrieved 16 July 2015 Tawaststjerna 1997 p 15 only in the 1990s was it discovered that Sibelius s original first names at christening were Johan Christian Julius he himself used the order Johan Julius Christian and that is present in most sources Brother Sibelius The Music of Freemasonry Archived from the original on 20 June 2003 Retrieved 16 October 2011 a b 100 markkaa 1986 Setelit com Archived from the original on 9 October 2015 Retrieved 29 November 2015 a b The days the Finnish flag is flown Ministry of the Interior Archived from the original on 11 November 2015 a b Join the Sibelius 150 Celebration in 2015 Visit Helsinki Archived from the original on 31 May 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Ringbom 1950 p 8 Goss 2009 p 19 Goss 2009 p 53 Lagrange 1994 p 905 a b c d e f Murtomaki 2000 Barnett 2007 p 4 Sibelius in Swedish Nordisk Familjebok 1926 p 281 Archived from the original on 14 July 2015 Retrieved 11 June 2015 Ringbom 1950 pp 10 13 Music becomes a serious pursuit 1881 1885 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 1 February 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 a b Childhood 1865 1881 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 19 June 2015 Retrieved 19 June 2015 Barnett 2007 p 6 Grimley 2004 p 67 a b Studies in Helsinki 1885 1888 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 22 February 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Ringbom 1950 p 14 Ekman 1972 p 11 Goss 2009 p 75 a b Lagrange 1994 p 985 Tawaststjerna 1976 p 62 Kalevala taiteessa Musiikissa Ensimmaiset Kalevala aiheiset savellykset in Finnish Kalevalan Kultuuruhistoria Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Studies in Vienna 1890 91 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Kullervo and the wedding 1891 1892 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Kaufman 1938 p 218 Goss 2011 p 162 Classical Destinations An Armchair Guide to Classical Music Amadeus Press 2006 p 87 ISBN 978 1 57467 158 2 Lew 2010 p 134 The occupants of Ainola Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 19 June 2015 Retrieved 19 June 2015 Barnett 2007 p 74 a b c The Symposion years 1892 1897 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 28 June 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Barnett 2007 p 85 Tawaststjerna 1976 p 162 Sibelius Spring Song original 1894 ClassicLive Archived from the original on 22 June 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Grimley 2004 p 101 Tawaststjerna 1976 p 166 Lagrange 1994 p 988 a b Towards an international breakthrough 1897 1899 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 7 July 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 a b Works for choir and orchestra Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 6 July 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Jean Sibelius Press celebration music Sanomalehdiston paivien musikki incidental music for orchestra AllMusic Archived from the original on 15 July 2018 Retrieved 22 June 2015 a b Incidental music Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 6 July 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 a b c A child s death and international breakthrough 1900 1902 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 4 July 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2015 First symphony op 39 1899 1900 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Ringbom 1950 p 71 a b c The Waltz of Death and the move to Ainola 1903 1904 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 4 July 2015 Retrieved 2 August 2015 a b c d e The first years in Ainola 1904 1908 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2015 Sibelius Symphony No 3 15 September 2014 Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2020 via www classiclive com Woodstra 2005 pp 1279 1282 a b c d e Inner voices 1908 1914 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 17 December 2015 Retrieved 6 November 2015 Ozorio Anne Appreciating Sibelius s Luonnotar Op 70 by Anne Ozorio MusicWeb Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 13 November 2015 a b c d e The war and the fifth symphony 1915 1919 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 17 December 2015 Retrieved 13 November 2015 a b Tawaststjerna 2008 a b c d The last masterpieces 1920 1927 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 17 December 2015 Retrieved 15 November 2015 Lenti Vincent A 2004 For the Enrichment of Community Life George Eastman and the Founding of the Eastman School of Music Rochester New York Meliora Press p 53 ISBN 9781580461993 Finnish Composer Coming PDF The New York Times Vol LXX no 23 012 25 January 1921 p 2 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Incidental music Sibelius Music for The Tempest by William Shakespeare op 109 1925 26 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Sibeliuksen vapinalle loytyi syy in Finnish Reason found for Sibelius s tremor by Vesa Siren in Helsingin Sanomat a b Botstein 2011 Makela 2011 pp 67 68 Kilpelainen 1995 Siren 2011a Siren 2011b Stearns 2012 The war and the destruction of the eighth symphony 1939 1945 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 8 February 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2006 a b c d Ross 2009 Dagbok p 336 Inkpot Classical Music Reviews Sibelius Karelia Suite Luonnotar Andante Festivo The Oceanides King Christian II Suite Finlandia Gothenburg SO Jarvi DG Inkpot com Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 30 January 2012 a b Sadie 2005 p 339 The war and the destruction of the eighth symphony 1939 1945 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 8 February 2019 Retrieved 19 November 2015 Bullock 2011 pp 233 234 note 3 Makela 2011 pp 13 14 Rautavaara Einojuhani 1989 Omakuva Self portrait in Finnish Helsinki WSOY pp 116 118 ISBN 978 951 0 16015 2 Sibelius Eugene Ormandy Conducting The Philadelphia Orchestra Symphony No 4 In A minor Op 63 Symphony No 5 In E flat major Op 82 at Discogs Hurwitz David Beecham Sibelius Birthday C Classics Today Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Proms feature 3 Sibelius and the swans Natural Light Archived from the original on 19 November 2015 Retrieved 19 November 2015 SibEUlius Jean Sibelius 150 Years Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux Archived from the original on 23 August 2018 Retrieved 23 August 2018 Ainola Jean Sibelius Chronological Overview Jean Sibelius 1865 1957 ainola fi Archived from the original on 30 July 2016 Retrieved 3 July 2016 Death and funeral 1957 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 17 December 2015 Retrieved 19 November 2015 a b c d e f Ross Alex 9 July 2007 Sibelius Apparition from the Woods The New Yorker Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Poroila 2012 Jean Sibelius Gramophone Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Tawaststjerna 1976 p 209 Jackson 2001 p 102 Barnett 2007 p 63 Kalamidas Thanos 12 August 2009 Jean Sibelius Ovi Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Pike 1978 p 93 James 1989 p 41 David Ewen Music for the Millions The Encyclopedia of Musical Masterpieces READ Books 2007 p 533 First symphony op 39 1899 1900 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 9 December 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Second symphony op 43 1902 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 27 January 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Third symphony op 52 1907 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 16 May 2011 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Fifth symphony op 82 1915 1919 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 16 June 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Jackson 2001 p 322 Sixth symphony op 104 1923 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Layton 2002 p 479 Hepokoski 2001 Quoted by Whittall 2004 p 61 Seventh symphony op 105 1924 Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Layton 1965 p 95 En Saga Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 5 November 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Wicklund 2014 p 30 Kurki 1999 Other orchestral works Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Lemminkainen Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 15 December 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Finlandia Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 19 July 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Barnett 2007 p 242 Kilpelainen 2012 p viii Tapiola Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 4 December 2015 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Other orchestral works Karelia Music Overture and Suite Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 20 February 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Steinberg Michael Sibelius Valse Triste Opus 44 San Francisco Symphony Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Allsen J Michael Madison Symphony Orchestra Program Notes University of Wisconsin Whitewater Archived from the original on 4 May 2009 Violin concerto Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 12 November 2015 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Eden 2010 p 149 Kullervo Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Archived from the original on 18 June 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2015 Music for Freemasonry Jean Sibelius Finnish Club of Helsinki Retrieved 11 November 2015 permanent dead link Vapaamuurarit www sibelius info Retrieved 19 June 2023 Tawaststjerna 1976 p 21 Sir Arnold Bax PDF Chandos Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 5 December 2015 Schaarwachter 2015 p 494 Freed 1995 Lambert 1934 p 318 Walker 2008 Philip Norman Douglas Lilburn His Life and Music Auckland University Press 2006 pp 125 126 Goss 1995 Adorno 1938 Leibowitz 1955 Makela 2011 p 269 Zizek Slavoj 2012 Less Than Nothing London amp New York Verso pp 603 ff ISBN 978 1 84467 897 6 Retrieved 30 May 2022 Song of the Enchanter Thea Musgrave Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Page Tim 29 September 1996 Finn de Siecle The Washington Post Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Andsnes Leif liner notes for Leif Ove Andsnes Sibelius Sony Classical CD 88985408502 2017 Sibelius Finland Experience Musiikkitalo Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 5 December 2015 Sibelius 150 Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2015 1405 Sibelius 1936 RE Minor Planet Center Archived from the original on 21 November 2015 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Jean Sibelius Works JSW Archived 29 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine The National Library of Finland Sibelius Jean 2005 Fabian Dahlstrom ed Dagbok 1909 1944 in Swedish Helsingfors Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland ISBN 978 951 583 125 5 Sibelius Jean 2015 Fabian Dahlstrom ed Paivakirja 1909 1944 in Finnish Helsinki Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland ISBN 978 951 583 288 7 Rothman Philip 23 June 2015 An interview with Ben Finn co founder of Sibelius Part 1 of 2 scoringnotes com Archived from the original on 9 November 2018 Retrieved 31 January 2020 We decided to call it Sibelius for reasons we can no longer remember but it was almost certainly because composer Jean Sibelius was a Finn a play on our surname Siren Vesa 1 March 2020 Kansallisaarre vaarassa Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish p C 10 Archived from the original on 29 February 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Ollikainen Tapio Jean Sibelius Works suurhanke etenee Archived 20 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine National Library of Finland in Finnish a b c Virtanen Timo 26 February 2020 Nationalskatter i farozonen Hufvudstadsbladet in Swedish p 23 Archived from the original on 26 February 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Siren Vesa 19 January 2018 Kansallismuseo sai Sibelius kokoelman Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish p B 6 Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Siren Vesa 4 March 2020 Kansallisarkisto kiinnostui kasikirjoituksista Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish p B 6 Archived from the original on 3 March 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Tiikkaja Samuli 8 December 2020 Kansalliskirjasto sai ostettua Lienaun Sibelius kasikirjoitukset Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish p B 4 Archived from the original on 7 December 2020 Retrieved 10 December 2020 Arkiv klassas som varldsminnen Hufvudstadsbladet in Swedish 20 September 2021 p 5 General sources editAdorno Theodor 1938 Torne B de Sibelius A Close Up Zeitschrift fur Sozialforschung 7 460 463 doi 10 5840 zfs19387336 Later reprinted as Glosse uber Sibelius Cited and translated in Jackson 2001 p xviii Barnett Andrew 2007 Sibelius Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11159 0 Botstein Leon 14 August 2011 The Transformative Paradoxes of Jean Sibelius The Chronicle of Higher Education Archived from the original on 22 June 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Bullock Philip Ross 2011 The Correspondence of Jean Sibelius and Rosa Newmarch 1906 1939 Woodbridge Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 84383 683 4 Eden Bradford Lee 2010 Middle earth Minstrel Essays on Music in Tolkien McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5660 4 Ekman Karl 1972 Jean Sibelius his Life and Personality Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 8371 6027 6 Freed Richard 1995 William Walton Symphony No 1 in B flat minor 1968 version The Kennedy Center Archived from the original on 26 January 2012 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Goss Glenda Dawn 1995 Jean Sibelius and Olin Downes music friendship criticism Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 200 0 Goss Glenda Dawn 2009 Sibelius A Composer s Life and the Awakening of Finland University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 30479 3 Goss Glenda Dawn 2011 Jean Sibelius and His American Connections In Grimley Daniel M ed Jean Sibelius and His World Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15280 6 Grimley Daniel M 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Sibelius Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89460 9 Hepokoski James 2001 Sibelius In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol xxiii 2nd ed Macmillan pp 319 347 ISBN 978 0 333 23111 1 Jackson Timothy L 2001 Sibelius Studies Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62416 9 James David Burnett 1989 Sibelius Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 1683 8 Kaufman Schima 1938 Everybody s Music Columbia Broadcasting System Thomas Y Crowell Company Kilpelainen Kari 1995 Sibelius Eight What happened to it Finnish Music Quarterly 4 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2015 Kilpelainen Kari 2012 Aallottaret Breitkopf amp Hartel Assets PDF breitkopf com Archived PDF from the original on 20 June 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2015 Kurki Eija 1999 The Continuing Adventures of Sibelius s Wood Nymphs The Story So Far Music Finland Archived from the original on 27 November 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Lagrange Christophe 1994 Au coeur du classique Les Grands compositeurs et leur musique in French Vol 5 Little Big Man ISBN 978 2 7365 0029 0 Lambert Constant 1934 Music Ho New York Charles Scribner Archived from the original on 7 April 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2018 Layton Robert 1965 Sibelius Schirmer Books ISBN 978 0 02 871322 9 Layton Robert 2002 Sibelius In Wintle Justin ed Makers of Modern Culture Routledge pp 478 479 ISBN 978 0 415 26583 6 Leibowitz Rene 1955 Sibelius le plus mauvais compositeur du monde Liege Belgium Editions Dynamo OCLC 28594116 Lew Douglas 2010 Great Composers in Watercolor Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4269 3437 7 Makela Tomi 2011 Jean Sibelius Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1 84383 688 9 Murtomaki Veijo in Finnish 2000 Sibelius Jean 1865 1957 In Marjomaa Ulpu ed 100 Faces from Finland A Biographical Kaleidoscope Translated by Roderick Fletcher Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura The Finnish Literature Society ISBN 978 951 746 215 0 Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2011 Pike Lionel 1978 Beethoven Sibelius and the Profound Logic Studies in Symphonic Analysis Athlone Press ISBN 978 0 485 11178 1 Poroila Heikki 2012 Yhtenaistetty Jean Sibelius Teosten yhtenaistettyjen nimekkeiden ohjeluettelo Uniform Jean Sibelius list of works with harmonised titles PDF in Finnish Fourth online ed Suomen musiikkikirjastoyhdistys Finnish Music Library Association ISBN 978 952 5363 14 2 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2015 Ringbom Nils Eric 1950 Sibelius in Danish translated from the Swedish by Johan Koch Nyt Nordisk Forlag Arnold Busck Ross Alex 2009 2007 5 The Rest Is Noise Listening to the Twentieth Century 3rd ed Harper Perennial ISBN 978 1 84115 476 3 Sadie Julie Anne 2005 Calling on the Composer A Guide to European Composer Houses and Museums New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10750 0 Schaarwachter Jurgen in German 2015 Two Centuries of British Symphonism From the beginnings to 1945 A preliminary survey Vol 1 With a foreword by Lewis Foreman Georg Olms Verlag ISBN 978 3 487 15227 1 Siren Vesa October 2011a Is this the sound of Sibelius lost Eighth Symphony Helsingin Sanomat Siren Vesa 30 October 2011b Soiko HS fi n videolla Sibeliuksen kadonnut sinfonia Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish Archived from the original on 17 February 2015 Retrieved 11 January 2015 Stearns David Patrick 3 January 2012 One last Sibelius symphony after all The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2015 Tawaststjerna Erik W 1976 Sibelius 1865 1905 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 03014 5 Tawaststjerna Erik W 1997 Tawaststjerna Erik T ed Sibelius in Finnish Helsinki Otava ISBN 978 951 1 14231 7 Tawaststjerna Erik W 2008 Civil War Sibelius Volume III 1914 1957 London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 057 12477 4 5 Walker Lynne 2 August 2008 King Arthur Classical Music Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 1 July 2011 via MusicWeb International Whittall Arnold The later symphonies In Grimley 2004 Wicklund Tuija 2014 Jean Sibelius sEn sagaand Its Two Versions Genesis Reception Edition and Form PDF Studia Musica Thesis Vol 57 University of the Arts Helsinki Sibelius Academy Archived PDF from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 27 November 2015 Woodstra Chris 2005 All Music Guide to Classical Music The Definitive Guide to Classical Music Backbeat Books pp 1279 1282 ISBN 978 0 87930 865 0 Further reading editde Gorog Lisa 1989 From Sibelius to Sallinen Finnish Nationalism and the Music of Finland With the collaboration of Ralph de Gorog New York Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 26740 5 Goss Glenda 1998 Jean Sibelius Guide to Research New York Garland Press ISBN 0 8153 1171 0 Grimley Daniel M 2021 Jean Sibelius Life Music Silence Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1789144659 Johnson Harold E 1959 Jean Sibelius New York Knopf OCLC 603128 Layton Robert 1993 Sibelius Master Musicians Series New York Schirmer Books ISBN 0 02 871322 2 Levas Santeri 1972 Sibelius A Personal Portrait London Dent ISBN 0 460 03978 4 Rickards Guy 1997 Jean Sibelius London and New York Phaidon Press ISBN 0 7148 3581 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean Sibelius nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Jean Sibelius nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1922 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Sibelius Jean Julius Christian Free scores by Jean Sibelius at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Jean Sibelius the website English The Sibelius Society of Finland Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Films on Jean Sibelius by director Christopher Nupen Jean Sibelius Museum Finlandia by Jean Sibelius thisisFINLAND Discovering Sibelius BBC Radio 3 Jean Sibelius link collection List of compositions at AllMusic Newspaper clippings about Jean Sibelius in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW The musical heritage of Sibelius on in the landscapes and in the concerts Jean Sibelius Biografiskt lexikon for Finland in Swedish Helsingfors Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland urn NBN fi sls 4820 1416928957426 Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Opera nbsp Finland nbsp Biography nbsp Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Sibelius amp oldid 1189079450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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