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The Symphony No. 5, Washington Mosaics, Op. 57, is an orchestral composition by the Finnish composer Aulis Sallinen, who wrote the piece from 1984–85, revising the finale in 1987. The National Symphony Orchestra, the commissioning institution, premiered the work in 10 October 1985 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., under the direction of its music director, Mstislav Rostropovich.

Symphony No. 5
Washington Mosaics
by Aulis Sallinen
Opus57
Composed1984 (1984)–85 (r. 1987)
DurationApprox. 38 minutes
Movements5
Premiere
Date10 October 1985 (1985-10-10)
LocationKennedy Center, Washington, D.C., United States
ConductorMstislav Rostropovich
PerformersNational Symphony Orchestra

Composition



History


Mstislav Rostropovich, who commissioned Sallinen's Fifth Symphony and conducted its world premiere
Mstislav Rostropovich, who commissioned Sallinen's Fifth Symphony and conducted its world premiere

Structure


The symphony is in five movements:

  1. Washington Mosaics I
  2. Intermezzo I
  3. Intermezzo II
  4. Intermezzo III (attacca)
  5. Washington Mosaics II

Instrumentation


According to the publisher, Novello & Co, Symphony No. 5 is scored for the following:


Reception



Notable performances


The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, at which the NSO premiered Sallinen's Fifth Symphony
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, at which the NSO premiered Sallinen's Fifth Symphony

The Fifth Symphony had its world premiere on 10 October 1985, with Mstislav Rostropovich conducting the National Symphony Orchestra (NSO) at the Kennedy Center; also on the program was Sibelius's tone poem, En saga, and Beethoven's Second Symphony.[1] The Washington Post reviewed the work with ambivalence, calling it a "big, ambitious new symphony" with "genuinely moving moments" that nonetheless was "more intriguing than convincing," its "disjointed brilliance" unable "to resolve emotionally".[1] Three days later, Rostropovich and the NSO played the Fifth Symphony at Avery Fisher Hall in New York,[2] along with Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony and Haydn's Cello Concerto in C major (Rostropovich serving as soloist).[3] On 23 September 1988, Rostropovich and the NSO performed the revised version of the Fifth, again at the Kennedy Center in Washington; also on the program was Mozart's serenade for strings, Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, and Grieg's two Peer Gynt Suites.[4]

The British premiere took place on 15 February 1987, with Okko Kamu conducting the London Philharmonic at the Royal Festival Hall; also on the program was Gounod's St. Cecilia Mass.[5] The performance of Sallinen's Fifth, which commenced London's three-month multi-venue, multi-orchestra 'Spotlight on Finland' music festival, was received positively, with The Financial Times characterizing the work as consisting of "icy fragments of symphonic material [that] have been chipped off to clink and tinkle in Sallinen's structural cocktail shaker".[6] While noting the Fifth Symphony's "allusions to other music" (in particular its "post-Sibelian desolation"), The Sunday Times applauded the "vitality of Sallinen's rhythms and the sheer eventfulness of his scoring," as well as his "imaginative and masterly ... handling of the large orchestra".[7]


Recordings


To date, Symphony No. 5 has received three recordings, the first of which is from 1987 with Okko Kamu conducting the Helsinki Philharmonic on the Finlandia label. Finnish conductor Ari Rasilainen has also recorded the symphony as part of cpo's compendium of Sallinen's orchestral works. The Fifth Symphony joins the Third (Op. 35, 1975) on the penultimate volume of the cpo series. In his review of this CD (cpo 999970-2), Fanfare's Phillip Scott applauds Rasilainen for "performances of sensitivity and clarity, aided by a stunning recording", albeit played with less obvious irony than DePriest's effort with the Malmö Symphony Orchestra. Calling the Fifth and the Third "the pinnacle of Sallinen's orchestral work", he concludes: "Anyone curious about the symphony in contemporary music should own this [cpo] disc".[8] Writing for the American Record Guide, Paul Cook describes Rasilainen's interpretation of Symphony No. 5 (relative to his handling of the Third) "much more adroit and he gets it exactly right ... Despite my quibbles [on the Third], this is an excellent release and I think the Fifth deserves your attention".[9]

Conductor Orchestra Year Recording venue Duration Label (Available on)
Okko Kamu Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra 1987 Kulttuuritalo (Helsinki) 37:32 Finlandia (370)
James DePreist Malmö Symphony Orchestra 1993 Malmö Concert Hall (Malmö) 39:31 BIS (607)
Ari Rasilainen [fi] Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz 2004 Philharmonie (Ludwigshafen) 38:17 cpo (999970-2)

Notes, references, and sources



Notes



    References


    1. Tuck (1985)
    2. Rockwell (1985)
    3. McLellan (1985)
    4. McLellan (1988)
    5. Griffiths (1987)
    6. Loppert (1987)
    7. Cairns (1987)
    8. Scott (2009), p. 227–29
    9. Cook (2008), p. 166

    Sources


    Books

    CD liner notes

    Journal articles

    News reports




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