Review of Sun Song Guy S Rickards from Gramophone September 1999
If it sounds on paper like avant-garderie gone mad, in performance the effect is controlled and compelling, like the product of some quite alien musical culture. Yet the extremeity of means lies largely in ancient rural Swedish traditions, such as kulning, used by women goat- and cowherds to call their flocks. My first encounter with this piece left me numbed for days. The marvellous five-part cycle Sun Song (1994) is if anything more powerful, a hymn to the sun drawing mainly on the Icelandic poem Sólarljóth. Rehnqvist’s restraint and delicacy is evident from the cycle's Final song. ’Another day departs’, and the beautiful motet When you but walk on the ground (1995). These reissued performances (the Phono Suecia disc contains three orchestral pieces translating Rehnqvist’s manner into non-vocal media) are stunning, in exemplary BIS transfers. Rehnqvist’s music may seem discordant (though not on it own terms), alien at times uncomfortable, but is never less than absorbing. Love it or loathe it, you will not easily forget it. Very, very strongly recommmended. | ||
