The musical reputation of the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius (18651957)deified in the Twenties and Thirties by conductors and public alike, declining markedly in the Forties, and hitting a very deep bottom from the Fifties onhas taken another turn. His shares are up. There is now once more a Sibelius Question. No such thing as a Stravinsky Question or even a Schoenberg Question troubles the sleep of music critics: their respective reputations are secure for the time being.
The renewed controversy about the musical viability and the simple quality of Sibeliuss music was the subject of a series of performances and a symposium in December at Avery Fisher Hall titled Northern Lights: The Music of Jean Sibelius. Sir Colin Davis and the London Symphony performed three concerts of five of the seven symphonies of the Finnish master, plus a few tone poems and some songs for soprano and orchestra.[1] His less-abunda ...
Alexander Coleman was a long-time contributor to The New Criterion and a close friend of the editors
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 16 February 1998, on page 51
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