Pohjola's Daughter


The tone poem Pohjola's Daughter, Op. 49, was composed by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius in 1906. Originally, Sibelius intended to title the work Väinämöinen, after the character in the Kalevala. The publisher Robert Lienau insisted on the German title Tochter des Nordens, which is a literal translation of the work's Finnish title, Pohjolan tytär, traditionally given in English as Pohjola's Daughter. Sibelius then countered with the new title L'aventure d'un héros. He also considered calling the work Luonnotar. However, Lienau's suggestion eventually became the work's published title. This was the first work that Sibelius wrote directly for a German music publisher. Its first performance was given in Saint Petersburg in December 1906, with the composer himself conducting the Orchestra of the Mariinsky Theatre.
The passage in the Kalevala that inspired this work is in the 8th Runo, known in various English translations as "The Wound" or "Väinämöinen and the Maiden of North Farm". The tone poem depicts the "steadfast, old," white-bearded Väinämöinen, who spots the beautiful "daughter of the North ", seated on a rainbow, weaving a cloth of gold while he is riding a sleigh through the dusky landscape. Väinämöinen asks her to join him, but she replies that she will only leave with a man who can perform a number of challenging tasks, such as tying an egg into invisible knots and, most notably, building a boat from fragments of her distaff. Väinämöinen attempts to fulfill these tasks through his own expertise in magic; in many of the tasks he succeeds, but he is eventually thwarted by evil spirits when attempting to build the boat and injures himself with an axe. He gives up, abandons the tasks and continues on his journey alone.

Instrumentation

Pohjola's Daughter is scored for the following instruments, organized by family :

Discography

The Finnish conductor Robert Kajanus and the London Symphony Orchestra made the world premiere studio recording of Pohjola's Daughter in June 1932, which appeared on Volume 1 of HMV's The Sibelius Society series. Since Kanajus's pioneering example, many conductors have recorded the work, with Sir Colin Davis—in terms of superlatives—having made four recordings. The table below lists these and other commercially available recordings:
ConductorOrchestraTimeRecording venueLabel
1London Symphony Orchestra 193212:38Abbey Road Studio No. 1Naxos Historical
2Boston Symphony Orchestra 193612:23Boston Symphony HallNaxos Historical
3NBC Symphony Orchestra194012:45Rockefeller CenterNaxos Historical
4Standard Hour Symphony Orchestra1948?, San FranciscoMusic & Arts
5London Philharmonic Orchestra 195613:45Walthamstow Town HallSOMM
6London Symphony Orchestra 195412:44Kingsway HallBeulah
7 Philadelphia Orchestra 195511:45Academy of Music, PhiladelphiaSony Classical
8BBC Symphony Orchestra195812:31Kingsway HallEMI Classics
9Morton Gould Orchestra196213:40Manhattan CenterRCA Red Seal
10New York Philharmonic196412:35Manhattan CenterSony Classical
11Hallé Orchestra 196614:13Abbey Road Studio No. 1EMI Classics
12L'Orchestre de la Suisse Romande197113:10Victoria HallDecca
13Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra197413:50Southampton GuildhallEMI Classics
14 Philadelphia Orchestra 197613:01Scottish Rite Cathedral, PhiladelphiaSony Classical
15Royal Scottish National Orchestra197712:30Glasgow City HallsChandos
16 Boston Symphony Orchestra 197914:55Symphony Hall, BostonDecca Records
17London Symphony Orchestra 198515:18Abbey Road Studio No. 1Cirrus
18Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra 198512:53Gothenburg Concert HallBIS
19Philharmonia Orchestra198613:46Abbey Road Studio No. 1CBS Masterworks
20Czechoslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra198813:59Czechoslovak Radio Concert HallNaxos
21 Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra 198813:02KulttuuritaloRCA Red Seal
22Danish National Symphony Orchestra199114:16Danish Radio Concert HallChandos
23Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra199113:02Mosfilm StudiosBrilliant Classics
24Atlanta Symphony Orchestra199214:12Woodruff Arts CenterTelarc
25Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra 199412:05Gothenburg Concert HallDeutsche Grammophon
26Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra199513:29Tampere HallOndine
27City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra200111:51Symphony HallErato
28 London Symphony Orchestra 200015:05Watford Town HallRCA Red Seal
29Iceland Symphony Orchestra200014:01, ReykjavíkNaxos
30Lahti Symphony Orchestra200013:10Sibelius HallBIS
31 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra200214:29ConcertgebouwRCO Live
32Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra200414:24Finlandia HallOndine
33 London Symphony Orchestra 200514:32Barbican CentreLSO Live
34Hallé Orchestra 200713:13Bridgewater HallHallé
35 London Philharmonic Orchestra 200812:14Royal Festival HallLPO
36Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra 201413:43Helsinki Music CentreOndine
37Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra201613:49Grieg HallChandos
38Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra 202212:56Gothenburg Concert HallAlpha