Kyllikki (Sibelius) Explained

Finnish: Kyllikki
Type:Piano solos
Image Upright:.8
Border:Yes
Opus:41
Movements:3
Publisher:Breitkopf & Härtel (1906)
Duration:10.5 mins

Finnish: Kyllikki (subtitled "Three Lyric Pieces"; in German: "German: Drei lyrische Stücke|italics=no"), Op. 41, is a three-movement suite for piano written in September 1904 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. Although the title is taken from the Kalevala, Finland's national epic, Sibelius denied that the piece was programmatic in nature. (is a maiden who appears in Runos XI–XII.)

History

In September 1904 found Sibelius beset by dual distractions. First, he worried that he was beginning to go deaf (as he wrote to his patron,, "My hearing is very bad ... As far as the new works I am working on are concerned, I rely on the inner ear ...") and he even admitted himself to a private clinic). Moreover, construction on Sibelius's new home in Järvenpää (subsequently named Ainola after his wife, Aino) was nearing completion and the family was preparing to move in at the end of the month. Nevertheless, Sibelius was in a good mood ("I have sunny thoughts".) and experienced a creative surge: he had begun work two major projects, the Third Symphony (Op. 52, 1904–1907) and the incidental music to French: [[Pelléas et Mélisande (Sibelius)|Pelléas et Mélisande]] (JS 147/Op. 46, 1904–1905) for a production at the Swedish Theatre of Maurice Maeterlinck's 1893 play. Moreover, around 22 September he finished work on a three-movement piano piece called Finnish: Kyllikki.

Structure and music

The work consists of three movements:

Musically, Robert Layton argues that Finnish: Kyllikki "speaks much the same harmonic language as the Second Symphony and the Violin Concerto". The Sibelius biographer Andrew Barnett, too, emphasizes the suite's "Kalevala romanticism"—indeed, the "end of a stylistic" in the composer's output for piano.

Reception

Layton, however, dismisses Finnish: Kyllikki as "on the whole ... an unsuccessful piece with few attractions ... the actual paint writing is, by the exhalted standards Sibelius himself set elsewhere, limited in resource".

Discography

The American pianist David Rubenstein made the world premiere studio recording of Finnish: Kyllikki in 1971 for the Musical Heritage Society. The table below lists this and other commercially available recordings:

PianistTimeRecording venueLabel
111:44Musical Heritage Society
210:20Toshiba
312:241977Eaton's AuditoriumSony Classical
410:591979, NackaBIS
511:49Melodiya
612:091993St George's Church, Brandon HillOlympia
711:411994Finlandia
812:091995Ondine
911:011995Naxos
1012:261999St Martin's Church, East WoodhayNaxos
1111:001999YLE M2 Studio, HelsinkiFinlandia
122003Tokyo Bunka KaikanExton
1311:302004Studio Spidam, Passavant, DoubsSyrius
1411:522004Bach Recording, CopenhagenClassico
1510:262007BIS
1611:382014Jacqueline Du Pré Music BuildingQuartz
1711:012015[{{em|Unknown}}], HelsinkiSony Classical
182016Teldex Studio, BerlinSony Classical

Notes, references, and sources