account
basket
Challenge Records Int. logo
Chronotope: Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra
Bjørn Kruse

Bjørn Kruse, Fredrik Fors, Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra

Chronotope: Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra

Price: € 19.95 13.97
Format: CD
Label: Lawo Classics
UPC: 7090020181516
Catnr: LWC 1129
Release date: 08 September 2017
old €19.95 new € 13.97
Buy
1 CD
✓ in stock
19.95 13.97
old €19.95 new € 13.97
Buy
 
Label
Lawo Classics
UPC
7090020181516
Catalogue number
LWC 1129
Release date
08 September 2017
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

BJØRN KRUSE ABOUT CHRONOTOPE
The title Chronotope is a term used by the Russian literary philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975) to describe how an awareness of time and space (chronos and topos) is represented in language and discourse. I find that the term also naturally applies as a model to the experience of temporal and spatial dimensions in musical "discourse", where the immediate memory of events in the past, and the expectations of events in the future, fills and enriches the moment of listening. Music creates its own chronotope, a spacious ‘now’, colored by the sensory perception of a past, present, and future.

The collaborative efforts of soloist Fredrik Fors, conductor Christian Eggen and the Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra excellently work in bringing out the work’s conceptual intention and musical character. Fredrik embodies all that I could ever wish for in a soloist. He possesses a perfect virtuoso technique along with a beautiful, lyrical clarinet sound; he fuses these qualities into a powerful and intense expression that elevates the work beyond my dreams and creates a convincing ownership to the performance. Truly a co-creative music artist!
BJØRN KRUSE ÜBER CHRONOTOPE
Der Titel Chronotop ist ein Begriff, der vom russischen Literaturphilosophen Michail Bachtin (1895-1975) verwendet wurde, um zu beschreiben, wie ein Bewusstsein von Zeit und Raum (Chronos und Topos) in Sprache und Diskurs dargestellt wird. Ich finde, dass der Begriff natürlich auch als Modell für die Erfahrung der zeitlichen und räumlichen Dimensionen im musikalischen "Diskurs" gilt, wo die unmittelbare Erinnerung an Ereignisse in der Vergangenheit und die Erwartungen an die Ereignisse in der Zukunft den Augenblick füllen und das Hören bereichern. Musik schafft ein eigenes Chronotop, ein geräumiges "Jetzt", gefärbt durch die sinnliche Wahrnehmung einer Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft.
Der Solist Fredrik Fors, Dirigent Christian Eggen und das Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra arbeiten hervorragend daran, die konzeptionelle Intention und den musikalischen Charakter des Werkes umzusetzen. Fredrik verkörpert alles, was ich jemals von einem Solisten wünschen kann. Er besitzt eine perfekte virtuose Technik mit einem schönen, lyrischen Klarinettenklang. Er verschmilzt diese Qualitäten zu einem mächtigen und intensiven Ausdruck, der die Arbeit über meine Träume hinaus hebt...

Artist(s)

Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra

On 27 September 1919, a new orchestra took to the stage of the old Logan Hall in Oslo to give its first public concert. Conductor Georg Schnéevoigt presided over thrilling performances of Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto and Christian Sinding’s First Symphony. After forty years of making-do, the Norwegian capital had at last got the orchestra it deserved. The Oslo Philharmonic was born. In the eight months that followed, the Oslo Philharmonic gave 135 concerts, most of which sold out. It tackled passionate Mahler, glistening Debussy and thrusting Nielsen. Soon, world famous musicians were coming to conduct it, relishing its youth and enthusiasm. Igor Stravinsky and Maurice Ravel visited Oslo to coach the musicians through brand new music. National broadcaster NRK...
more

On 27 September 1919, a new orchestra took to the stage of the old Logan Hall in Oslo to give its first public concert. Conductor Georg Schnéevoigt presided over thrilling performances of Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto and Christian Sinding’s First Symphony. After forty years of making-do, the Norwegian capital had at last got the orchestra it deserved. The Oslo Philharmonic was born. In the eight months that followed, the Oslo Philharmonic gave 135 concerts, most of which sold out. It tackled passionate Mahler, glistening Debussy and thrusting Nielsen. Soon, world famous musicians were coming to conduct it, relishing its youth and enthusiasm. Igor Stravinsky and Maurice Ravel visited Oslo to coach the musicians through brand new music. National broadcaster NRK began to hang microphones at the orchestra’s concerts, transmitting them to the whole of Norway.
Over the next half-century, the Oslo Philharmonic’s reputation grew steadily. Then, in 1979, it changed forever. A young Latvian arrived in Norway, taking the orchestra apart section-by-section, putting it back together a finely tuned machine with a whole new attitude. Under Mariss Jansons, the orchestra became a rival to the great Philharmonics of Vienna, Berlin and New York. It was soon playing everywhere, from Seattle to Salzburg, Lisbon to London. Back home in Oslo, it got a modern, permanent concert hall of its own. In 1986, EMI drew up the largest orchestral contract in its history, ensuring the world would hear the rich, visceral sound of the Oslo Philharmonic.
Three decades after that, the world is still listening. The Oslo Philharmonic retains its spirit of discovery and its reputation for finesse. Under Jukka-Pekka Saraste it cultivated even more the weight and depth that Jansons had instilled; under Chief Conductor Vasily Petrenko, it works at the highest levels of detail and style. Still the orchestra travels the globe, but it has never felt more at home. Its subscription season in Oslo features the best musicians in the business. Outdoor concerts attract tens of thousands; education and outreach programmes connect the orchestra with many hundreds more. In 2019/2020 the thriving city of Oslo will celebrate 100 years of the Oslo Philharmonic, the first-class orchestra it still deserves.


less

Fredrik Fors (clarinet)

Fredrik Fors is one of Scandinavia's leading clarinetists. In addition to being a soloist and chamber musician Fors has held the position of co-principal clarinetist of the Oslo Philharmonic since 1995. Fors made his debut as a soloist in 1989 with the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra in a performance of the Concerto Op. 5 by B.H. Crusell. Since then he has performed as a soloist with many orchestras including the Oslo Philharmonic, the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Vienna Radio Orchestra (ORF), Norrköping Symphony, Tampere Philharmonic, Presidential Orchestra of Istanbul, Orchestre National de Lille and the Gävle Symphony. Fors is an active chamber musician and has performed at festivals around the world, and he is also solo clarinetist of the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra. In 1993 Fors...
more
Fredrik Fors is one of Scandinavia's leading clarinetists. In addition to being a soloist and chamber musician Fors has held the position of co-principal clarinetist of the Oslo Philharmonic since 1995.
Fors made his debut as a soloist in 1989 with the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra in a performance of the Concerto Op. 5 by B.H. Crusell. Since then he has performed as a soloist with many orchestras including the Oslo Philharmonic, the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Vienna Radio Orchestra (ORF), Norrköping Symphony, Tampere Philharmonic, Presidential Orchestra of Istanbul, Orchestre National de Lille and the Gävle Symphony.
Fors is an active chamber musician and has performed at festivals around the world, and he is also solo clarinetist of the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra.
In 1993 Fors received the Juventus Prize awarded by the Council of Europe and Foundation Claude Nicolas Ledoux.
He has previously recorded two recital CDs for the Harmonia Mundi and 2L labels together with pianist Sveinung Bjelland.
Fors studied at the Royal Academy of music in Stockholm with Sölve Kingstedt receiving his Soloist Diploma in 1996. He currently teaches at the Norwegian Academy of Music and has held masterclasses all over the world.

less

Christian Eggen (conductor)

Conductor, composer, and pianist Christian Eggen (b. 1957) is one of the most influential figures on the Norwegian music scene. His field of expertise ranges from contemporary music via genre-merging projects, installations, television and radio drama productions to film, theatre, jazz, opera, and classical music.   As a conductor, he is known as one of Europe’s finest interpreters of contemporary music and has worked closely with composers such as Morton Feldman, John Cage, and Helmut Lachenmann. As a conductor of the Ny Musikk Ensemble, The Norwegian Radio Orchestra, and later as permanent conductor and artistic director of Cikada and Oslo Sinfonietta, he has developed Norwegian sinfonietta repertoire since the early eighties and regularly appears on the European contemporary music scene with groups...
more
Conductor, composer, and pianist Christian Eggen (b. 1957) is one of the most influential figures on the Norwegian music scene. His field of expertise ranges from contemporary music via genre-merging projects, installations, television and radio drama productions to film, theatre, jazz, opera, and classical music.
As a conductor, he is known as one of Europe’s finest interpreters of contemporary music and has worked closely with composers such as Morton Feldman, John Cage, and Helmut Lachenmann. As a conductor of the Ny Musikk Ensemble, The Norwegian Radio Orchestra, and later as permanent conductor and artistic director of Cikada and Oslo Sinfonietta, he has developed Norwegian sinfonietta repertoire since the early eighties and regularly appears on the European contemporary music scene with groups such as the Ensemble MusikFabrik and Ensemble InterContemporain. He has worked with many orchestras including the Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala in Milan, and the Royal Philharmonic in London.
He has written music for a vast range of formations and settings. His first opera, Franz Kafka Pictures, received its complete world premiere at the Norwegian National Opera in the autumn of 2013. Sections of the opera have been performed since 2009. As a pianist, Eggen is internationally renowned for his interpretations of Mozart and Carl Nielsen, the latter presented on the recording Carl Nielsen: Piano Music on the Victoria label.
Christian Eggen has collaborated on a multitude of recordings within all aspects of his faceted musical career. He was the Festival Artist of the Year at the Bergen International Festival in 2007 and was appointed Commander of The Royal Norwegian Order of Saint Olav for his contribution to contemporary music in Norway and abroad.

less

Composer(s)

Bjørn Kruse

Bjørn Kruse (born 1946 in London, England) studied at UCLA, California, and the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo, where he taught from 1976. He became Professor of Composition in 1997 and is today Professor Emeritus. His list of works numbers more than 150, from chamber and choral music to larger orchestral works and four operas. In addition to composing and lecturing on fine arts topics, he works with painting, having had his latest major exhibitions at Galleri Albin Upp in Oslo, in 2009 (Chaos and Order) and 2010 (Time and Space). His latest book is Thinking Art – An Interdisciplinary Approach to Applied Aesthetics, released in November 2016.
more
Bjørn Kruse (born 1946 in London, England) studied at UCLA, California, and the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo, where he taught from 1976. He became Professor of Composition in 1997 and is today Professor Emeritus. His list of works numbers more than 150, from chamber and choral music to larger orchestral works and four operas. In addition to composing and lecturing on fine arts topics, he works with painting, having had his latest major exhibitions at Galleri Albin Upp in Oslo, in 2009 (Chaos and Order) and 2010 (Time and Space). His latest book is Thinking Art – An Interdisciplinary Approach to Applied Aesthetics, released in November 2016.

less

Press

Play album Play album

You might also like..

Klaus Lang, Rolf Wallin, Richard Barrett
Cikada Live - Huddersfield / Donaueschingen
Cikada
Åsmund Feidje
Åsmund Feidje: Chamber Works
Åsmund Feidje
Max Bruch, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Samuel Barber
Bruch / Vaughan Williams / Barber
Sonoko Miriam Welde
Nils Henrik Asheim
Hornflowers
NyNorsk Messingkvintett
Sergei Prokofiev, Nikolai Myaskovsky
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 6 / Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 27
Vasily Petrenko
Nils Henrik Asheim, Johan Harstad
Grader av hvitt / Degrees of White
Norwegian Radio Orchestra
Sergei Prokofiev, Nikolai Myaskovsky
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5 / Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 21
Vasily Petrenko
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio Espagnol, Op. 34 / Russian Easter Festival Overture, Op. 36 / Sheherazade, Op. 35
Vasily Petrenko | Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra
Richard Strauss
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64 / Tod und Verklärung, Op. 24
Vasily Petrenko | Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra