Eldbjørg Hemsing / Wiener Symphoniker / Olari Elts BORGSTRÖM Violin Concerto Op. 25 SHOSTAKOVICH Violin Concerto no. 1
Eldbjørg Hemsing has been a household name in her native Norway since
childhood and made her solo debut with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra
at the age of 11. During
and after her studies in Vienna, she has absorbed repertoire ranging
from Beethoven to Tan Dun, a composer she has collaborated with on
several projects in both Europe and Asia.
The present disc marks Eldbjørg Hemsing’s first appearance on BIS, and
is also her début CD. For the occasion she has chosen to highlight an
all but forgotten work by a countryman, Hjalmar Borgström. Like Grieg in
the preceding generation, and indeed like many Nordic composers in the
late nineteenth century, Borgström went to Germany to study. However, in
contrast to Grieg who returned from Germany firmly resolved to carve
out an authentic, Norwegian idiom, Borgström came back a staunch
proponent of new German symphonic music. His Violin Concerto in G major
was first performed in 1914 as part of a celebration of the centenary of
the Norwegian constitution, and the highly tuneful and expressive work
was well received. It did not become established in the repertoire,
however, and remained practically unknown for nearly a century.
It is combined here with a work that is rather more central to the
violin repertoire, Dmitri Shostakovich’s First Violin Concerto. This was
composed at a difficult time for the composer, whose music was
denounced as ‘formalistic’ and ‘anti-democratic’ in the infamous
so-called Zhdanov decree of 1948. As a result of the post-Stalin thaw
the work could finally be premièred in 1955, and with David Oistrakh as
its advocate it became instantly successful. Eldbjørg Hemsing is
supported in this and in Borgström’s concerto by the eminent Wiener
Symphoniker conducted by Olari Elts.
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