How do we listen to music? Indeed, how do we listen to anything? What we as listeners encounter here is sheer auditory bliss. Trondheim Solistene take a new step towards bridging the gap between themselves and their audience. It is not the gap between the live performance and the recording which they attempt to close. It is the gap between the recording and the living, ever open human ear.
2L Music allocated two weeks in 2011 to record this album. Artistic director Øyvind Gimse and his associate Geir Inge Lotsberg initially chose two pieces that represent, in their estimation, “the most beautiful music ever composer for the string orchestra”: Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir de Florence and his Serenade for Strings. Aiming for a 90 minutes program left 30 more minutes to record. So the orchestra and 2L logged on to Facebook and asked the listeners worldwide what they’d like to hear. And the audience responded: Nielsen’s Suite Opus 1. A little gem that would exploit the Trondheim Soloists’ singular way with Nordic repertoire.
“Through its dynamic co-operation, Trondheim Solistene (the Trondheim Soloists) and 2L have always stretched the boundaries of what is possible to convey to the listener, aiming for the ultimate recorded listening experience. With the Serenade the team has taken things one step further with the Trondheim Solistene truly justifying their name. By placing each individual next to someone from a different voice rather than sitting in conventional sections we are working at the very outer limits of what is possible and creating chamber music at the highest level” – Øyvind Gimse, 2012.
Tracklist
Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.Total time: 01:25:18
Additional information
Label | |
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SKU | 2L090 |
Qualities | DSD 256 fs, DSD 128 fs, DSD 64 fs, DXD 24 Bit, FLAC 192 kHz, FLAC 96 kHz |
Channels | |
Artists | |
Composers | |
Genres | |
Digital Converters | Sphynx 2, Merging Technologies |
Editing Software | Pyramix, Merging Technologies |
Financial Support | NTNU – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim Municipality, Fond for lyd og bilde and Fond for Utøvende Kunstnere |
Mastering Engineer | Morten Lindberg |
Microphone Preamps | Millennia Media |
Microphones | DPA Microphones |
Notes | We are pleased to announce the availability of this release in DSD 64, DSD 128 and DSD 256, as well as the original DXD recorded release. These higher resolution DSD bitrates were produced from the original DXD recording using a Pyramix Digital Audio Workstation by NativeDSD Mastering Engineer Tom Caulfield. The sonic advantage to these new Stereo DSD 64, DSD 128 and DSD 256 releases, as with all higher DSD bit rate releases, is the wider audio frequency passband prior to the onset of modulation noise.This results in allowing the listener’s DAC to use gentler and more phase linear filters for playback of the music. |
Instruments | |
Original Recording Format | |
Producer | Morten Lindberg |
Recording Engineer | Morten Lindberg |
Recording Location | Selbu Church, Norway, May and October 2011 |
Recording Software | Pyramix, Merging Technologies |
Recording Technician | Beatrice Johannessen |
Recording Type & Bit Rate | DXD |
Release Date | May 13, 2019 |
Press reviews
Audio Review
Souvenir was probably the first in the world to make the 9.1 Auro 3D format available for music. Apart from the format, the expressive and dynamic rendition of the group of strings is record-breaking
HRAudio.Net
This is a glorious set, full of passion and repose as required.
The two Nielsen additions aside, this is a near direct mirror of one of the very first SACDs to see the light of day (Tchaikovsky: Serenade for Strings, Souvenir de Florence – Boni). That recording was (and in many respects, still is) revelatory as an audio experience: the sheer clarity and vibrancy of the sound for once accompanied that of the playing it captured. So it is here as well, albeit far more adventurously presented for those with a multi-channel setup. In the opening Souvenir de Florence, the solitary double bass is straight ahead, with cellos and first violins to the listeners right and left, respectively; the violas are behind the listener slightly to the right and the second violins fill the gap between the violas and the first violins. The solo sextet is in a smaller circle within the outer circle.
After an appropriate amount of time to gather one’s thoughts, the Trondheim Solistene launch passionately into Nielsen’s Ved en Ung Kunsters Baare (At the Bier of a Young Artist). The rapt sense of repose in the central pages is starkly contrasted with the opening material when they are juxtaposed. Here the layout of the players is in a single circle, with the violins diagonally opposite one another (1st violins: front left, 2nd violins: rear right), the violas taking rear left and cellos front right (with the double bass breaking the circle, just behind them).
The Suite by Nielsen follows with yet another change of positions: the double bass returns to front center, with antiphonal violins either side (1st violins, left), the violas rear left and cellos rear right. There are some beautiful solos in the opening probing Prelude, some delightful interplay between the sections in the Intermezzo; after a passionate introduction, the Finale is dazzling in its high spirited start. That the music seems to recall compositions of other masters is perhaps not surprising given that this was the first work that acquired an opus number for Nielsen; it is still far from derivative if not quite as radical as his later works became. The TrondheimSolistene play with a disarming charm that is engaging and rewards repeated listening, in common with the rest of this album.
To bring the album to a close, Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings is given as winning a reading as the opening Souvenir de Florence. Throughout there is a grace and ease to the playing, rubato, and phrasing from the TrondheimSolistene that make this playing so rewarding. Although one could single out the sheer eloquence of the Elegie or the impassioned outer movements in their hands, the way the TrondheimSolistene play the Walzer provides a sense of blissful joy to warm the heart of even the most jaded listener. The surefooted yet magical way the coda is handled would be very impressive with a conductor and, of course, here there is none! Here, the layout is complicated with the “under the shoulder” strings intermingling either side of the listener, two cellos & the double bass straight ahead and a solitary cello behind.
The sound from 2L is well up to their high standards and, providing one is not against the idea of 2L’s more experimental take on seating the musicians, then the timbres are remarkably lifelike. One can almost imagine being able to reach and touch the musicians and one can almost hear the rosin scrunch into the strings when the passion of the music increases.
A wonderful release in every possible respect.
The Absolute Sound
Souvenir is a terrific program with which to demonstrate the virtues of multichannel, especially multichannel of the more “immersive”—some would say “aggressive”—variety. There’s plenty of direct sound in the rear channels, yet one still gets the impression of experiencing a performance in a real space, in this case, a small, stone parish church with a capacity of 400. The listener is located in a very different place than usual, namely onstage with the players. This is especially involving if you have any history, however distant, of playing in an orchestra yourself: there’s a sense of participation that connects one viscerally to the music. You’ll want to listen loud.
Additionally, 2L’s DXD recording shows us how far digital recording has come, taking on what may be classical music’s toughest sonic nut to crack, the sound of massed strings. There’s the same resiny texture heard with the best analog recordings, plus we can appreciate that the violin sections are made up of many nonidentical instruments.
Typical for 2L, two weeks were allotted to record 90 minutes of music (a second Souvenir release will be forthcoming). Further deconstructing the usual paradigm for recording an orchestra is that the players are not sitting in standard
“sections” — first violins, second violins, violas, etc.— but instead, are mixed together. Yet the coherence of the performances is in no way compromised, a tribute to the players who truly function as chamber musicians. The reading of Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings captures both the sunny lyricism of that piece — listen to the soaring cello line beginning at 2:03 in the last movement — as well as its contrapuntal exuberance.
The opening of the first movement is significantly less turgid than is often the case: We feel the triple meter clearly even at a slow tempo. The less familiar Nielsen work—the composer’s Opus 1 — employs a similar harmonic language to the Tchaikovsky, but it’s a bit more serious in tone, more “Northern” in outlook. Still, the conclusion is upbeat and we leave refreshed.
The stereo download version of the album derives mostly from the right and left main mikes, with the center providing “stability and substance.”
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