Nightride and Sunrise explained

Type:Tone poem
Nightride and Sunrise
Native Name:Finnish: Öinen ratsastus ja auringonnousu
Image Upright:.9
Border:Yes
Opus:55
Publisher:Lienau (1909)
Duration:20 mins.
Premiere Location:Saint Petersburg,
Premiere Conductor:Alexander Siloti
Premiere Performers:?

Nightride and Sunrise (in Finnish: Finnish: Öinen ratsastus ja auringonnousu; in German: German: Nächtlicher Ritt und Sonnenaufgang), Op. 55, is a single-movement tone poem for orchestra written in 1908 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.

Orchestration

Sibelius scored the work for piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns (doubled if possible in the Sunrise), 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, snare drum, tambourine, triangle and strings.

Background

Sibelius gave different accounts of the inspiration for this music. One, told to Karl Ekman, was that it was inspired by his first visit to the Colosseum in Rome, in 1901. Another account, given in his later years to his secretary Santeri Levas, was that the inspiration was a sleigh ride from Helsinki to Kerava "at some time around the turn of the century", during which he saw a striking sunrise.

Sibelius completed the score by November 1908 and sent the manuscript to Alexander Siloti, who conducted the first performance, in Saint Petersburg, in 1909. The reviews of the first performance were unfavorable, except for one in Novy Russ, and one reviewer called Siloti's conducting "slack and monotonous". A writer for Novoye Vremya asked, "Who is actually riding, and why?" Siloti had made cuts to the score.

The work represents a subjective, spiritual experience of nature by "an ordinary man." It unfolds in three contrasting parts: a galloping section whose length and dogged determination produce one of Sibelius's strangest utterances; a brief hymnic transition in the strings; and an exquisite Northern sunrise whose first rays emerge in the horns.

A typical performance takes about fourteen minutes.

Discography

The British conductor Sir Adrian Boult and the BBC Symphony Orchestra made the world premiere studio recording of Nightride and Sunrise in 1936 for His Masters Voice (released in 2015 by Warner Classics). The sortable table below contains this and other commercially available recordings:

ConductorEnsembleTimeRecording venueLabel
1 (1)BBC Symphony Orchestra193613:37Abbey Road StudiosWarner Classics
2London Symphony Orchestra (1)195514:26Kingsway HallBeulah
3Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra195513:31HerkulessaalDeutsche Grammophon
4 (2)London Philharmonic Orchestra195614:11Walthamstow Assembly HallSomm
5 (1)196713:27Walthamstow Town HallRCA Red Seal
6London Symphony Orchestra (2)196915:15Abbey Road StudiosEMI Classics
7L'Orchestre de la Suisse Romande197114:23Victoria HallDecca
8Royal Scottish National Orchestra197715:02Glasgow City HallsChandos
9Philharmonia Orchestra (2)198114:28Abbey Road StudiosEMI Warner Classics
10Berlin Symphony Orchestra198316:11Brilliant Classics
11 (1)Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra (1)198515:32Gothenburg Concert HallBIS
12 (1)Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra198813:32KulttuuritaloRCA Red Seal
13Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra199114:15Mosfilm StudiosBrilliant Classics
14 (2)Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra (2)199514:49Gothenburg Concert HallDeutsche Grammophon
15Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra199614:41Stockholm Concert HallVirgin Classics
16Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra199816:40Ondine
17London Symphony Orchestra (3)199817:01Walthamstow Assembly HallRCA Red Seal
18 (2)Toronto Symphony Orchestra199814:19Massey HallFinlandia
19Lahti Symphony Orchestra200117:20Sibelius HallBIS
20New Zealand Symphony Orchestra200716:38Michael Fowler CentreNaxos

Notes, references, and sources

External links