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Works and recordings
Compositions
Dag Wiréns list of works includes 44 works with opus numbers, mainly
instrumental music of various types: quartets, other chamber music, piano
pieces, symphonies, concertos, and also some vocal and scenic works.
Among the works without opus numbers one finds almost all his theater and
film music, unpublished student works, a pair of operettas written for radio,
some choral works, solo songs, and a TV ballet.
Quantitatively, his pieces for stage and film coupled with his orchestral and
concertante works are dominant, with about 25 examples each. After this comes
his chamber music, with 18 pieces, of which three are unnumbered. His solo
pieces for piano consist of six works with opus numbers. To this can be
added a great many songs, piano pieces, and youthful works for special occasions
(e g "Preludium dedicated to Mother on Mothers Day), sketches, drafts, and more
imprecise documentations.
The only thing that appears to be missing is an opera.
Apparently, plans for such a work did exist. His friends Erik Hjalmar
Linder and Gustav Gröndahl both bear witness that Wirén was especially interested in Hjalmar
Bergmans novel "Knutsmässomarknad", but the lack of a libretto impeded the
project.
In general, Wiréns works are part of a classical Swedish tradition, with
Wilhelm Stenhammar as his closest antecedent. Stenhammar left 45 opus numbers
after him, Wirén 44. Music for stage and chamber music played somewhat of a
primary role for both, even if Stenhammar paid special interest to vocal music
with solo voice. Stenhammar also wrote two operas, Wirén none. Even in the case
of Stenhammar, his opus-numbered piano works are noticeably few, even though he
(like Wirén) was actually a pianist. Both wrote music to Shakespeares "Romeo
and Juliet" and "Hamlet", about 40 years apart, and both had a fruitful, close
relationship with an outstanding director. In the case of Stenhammar it was Per
Lindberg, with Wirén it was Alf Sjöberg. They also had a similar relationship to
the string quartet genre, where both gave their very best! In addition, the two
were quite classically oriented. There does not appear to have been any personal
contact between them, if one excepts that Wirén on at least one occasion in fact
experienced the pianist Stenhammar (with the violinist Marteau) in concert in
Örebro.
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Dag Wiréns most performed work by far is the "Serenade for String Orchestra"
op 11, commissioned and premiered by Tobias Wilhelmi and the Stockholm Chamber
Orchestra at the National Museum in Stockholm in 1937. This is a unique work
within the realm of Swedish musical creation and one of our two most often
performed orchestral works internationally.
The other work is Alfvéns "Midsommarvaka".
According to the search motor Google, the Serenade is still played regularly
around the globe and, in contrast to Alfvén's Midsommarvaka, quite often in
concert. The number of current recordings of the complete Serenade right now
(6/30/2005) is 22, of which 15 are on various international labels. Among the
ensembles recording the piece, one can find everything from The Chinese Radio
Folk Orchestra to the British Academy of Saint-Martin-in-the Fields.
Movement 4 (Marcia) appears in 20 separate (often arranged) versions, played
by groups ranging from the Spårvägen music corps in Gothenburg to the Royal Air
Force Band in England. The theme from the same movement has also been used as a
signature melody for a program series on the BBC.
After the Serenade, "Titania" for female choir and the "Small Serenade" for
guitar are his most often recorded works, with 5 productions each. Then comes
"Sinfonietta op. 7" and his "String Quartet No. 2" op. 9, each represented on 4
recordings. "Ironic Small Pieces for piano exists on three different
productions, along with "Improvisations" for piano. So much for his most
recorded works.´
Wiréns most well known composition, both nationally and internationally, is
probably "Annorstädes vals," which won the Swedish nomination to the Eurovision
song contest. Alf Henrikson wrote a text to the melody, and the song was
performed by Ingvar Wixell. The song exists on three recordings (on different
labels), one of which is English: "Absent friends." It also exists in different
arrangements: with piano, accordion, and strings, and with a salon orchestra.
The song bears a definite stamp of Wirén, but appears most often today on
different anthologies celebrating the Eurovision song contest.
Dag Wirén despised no genre and had a generous attitude towards different
forms of new thought, even if he himself remained true to his musical role
models, namely, the great classics. He tested and developed his own work
methods, and became with time successively more modernistic with regard to
form and motivic development. He also became freer from tonality, but avoided
the more dogmatic systemic solutions. He was happy to allow his pieces to take
their own form; that is, a special form for each work, as he said.
There is no doubt however that he throughout his life felt a special
attraction towards what he called absolute music, that is, the purely
instrumental expressive forms. The all-out exertions that lie behind the four
approved symphonies and the four approved string quartets (he chose to
withdraw his first works) have few counterparts in our national musical
treasure, and he can without hesitation be placed on a level beside the
corresponding contributions by Berwald and Stenhammar.
Style and character
Dag Wiréns music is characterized throughout by a unity that is rare among
his Swedish colleagues. He found his own voice early on, where rhythm and
motivic development are two foundations. His formal restraint is a third, and
the plethora of ostinatos a fourth. His special characteristics are apparent as
early as in his Cello sonata op. 1. When it comes to form and style, classical
models were initially usedoften in the form of a theme and variationswhich is
also confirmed by his famed credo, where Bach and Mozart are the ideals. This is
something that once again reminds us of Stenhammar, who in spite of being one of
our great interpreters of Beethoven was at the forefront of our Bach and Mozart
renaissance.
There were no real exceptions to this aesthetic. Even though some of his
early stylistic attributes can be traced to Stenhammar (for example his String
Quartet No. 2 and his 2nd Symphony), later greats such as Prokofjev and
Stravinskijand to a certain extent Poulenche always remained himself. That
Wirén called Sibelius the greatest Nordic composer in one of his reviews is not
surprising either. Even here one can see influences, for example in his
instrumentation, but the boundaries are always crystal clear, and the
differences outnumber the similarities. His treatment of the material is
unmistakably Wirén, not least thanks to the restrained format and the motivic
structures.
Without even taking into account the experiments and systemic solutions that
marked his own musical century to such a great extent, Wirén is therefore one of
our great musical renewers. Thanks to his often-sarcastic musicality and his
frequently extreme frugality his contribution is unique. No one has really ever
followed in his footsteps.
Roughly speaking, one can sort Wiréns musical contribution into two main
categories: an earlier, sprightly, musical, and outgoing, sometimes a bit
romantic; and a later, more introverted and searching, even if there are many
examples of these attributes crossing into the other category. To
unquestioningly place his early production (such as the Serenade for Strings,
Piano Trio No. 1, Sinfonietta, e g) in the former group and the later works in
the latter would be to oversimplify matters. His attraction towards
the classical variation form, manifested as early as 1924 in "Variationer över
en vaggvisa" (Variations on a Lullaby), incidentally the same year that Wirén
graduated from high school, and even more thoroughly in "Theme with variations
for piano op.5" (Paris 1933) and the first movement of the 2nd String Quartet
(Stockholm 1935), was in effect a starting point towards the more sophisticated
variation form that eventually got the name metamorphosis technique, that is,
the idea of using a single, often concentrated idea to build entire movements,
or, as in the case of the 4th Symphony (1951-52), en entire work. This way of
reworking and changing motives or themes was interesting to Father Bach as well.
But Wirén undeniably took this to an extreme, and younger colleagues even saw in
this a sort of embryonic stage of the imminent birth of minimalism. This way of
expressing oneself was also Wiréns long goodbye to the classical sonata form,
even if its secure embrace could occasionally be called into duty in more
difficult situations, such as in the Piano Concerto op. 26" (1950), a work that
preceded "Symphony No. 4 " on his opus list. At the same time, the Sonatina for
piano (1950), composed at the same time, is yet another masterwork of motivic
concentration.
This undogmatic relationship to the problems of form can be partly explained
with Wiréns search for
a special form for each work, as he formulated it.
This proceeded all while he was becoming freer tonally.
Key signatures and tonal centers were abandoned as the motives demanded, even
if Wirén never fell into any sort of dissonance cult. On the contrary, one often
has the feeling of a tonal center, even if that feeling is sometimes
deceptive.
Wiréns unique ability to concentrate material became of course especially
useful when he wrote film and theater music, where the atmospheres were often
marked by quick changes. Wirén wrote music to ten films and as many plays. Many
commentators have speculated that this work may actually have contributed to the
development of his own special frugality. It was namely during the 40s and 50s
that this work was most intense, that is, when his so-called metamorphosis
technique was at its peak.
To sum up: Dag Wiréns extremely personal expression in combination with his
classical ideals gave his contribution a unique profile in a 20th century that
was otherwise to a great extent marked by experiments and exploration. And
judging by the statistics, a considerable number of his works, both early and
late, have nothing to fear in the future.
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