Friedrich Kuhlau
1. Overture: William Shakespeare, Op. 74
Claude Debussy
2. Prélude à l’apres-midi d’un faune
Edward Elgar
Serenade for Strings in E minor, Op. 20
3. Allegro piacevole
4. Larghetto
5. Allegretto
Jules Massenet
Ballet Music from the opera Le Cid
6. Castilliane
7. Aubade
8. Madrilène
9. Navarraise
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
10. Marche slave, Op. 31
Bedrich Smetana
11. Dance of the Comedians from The Bartered Bride
Aram Ilyich Khachaturian
12. Sabre Dance from Gayaneh
Johann Strauss, II
13. Schatz-Walzer, Op. 418
14. Tritsch-Tratsch Polka, Op. 214
Johann Strauss
15. Radetzky March, Op. 228
Edward Elgar
16. Salut d’ amour, Op. 12
Svend Erik Tarp
From Suite on Old Danish Folk Songs
17. The Raven He Flies in the Evening
18. Little Kirsten’s Dance
Carl Christian Møller
19. Bataille March
20. Aarhus Tappenstreg (Aarhus Tattoo)
Antonín Dvořák
Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Op. 95 ”From the New World”
1. Adagio – Allegro molto
2. Largo
3. Scherzo: Molto vivace
4. Allegro con fuoco
Joseph Haydn
Piano Concerto in D Major
5. Vivace
6. Un poco adagio
7. Rondo all ’Ungherese
Jean Sibelius
8. Andante festivo
Friedrich Kuhlau
9. Overture til Elverhøj (The Elf Hill)
Carl Nielsen
Symphony No. 1 in G minor, Op. 7
10. Allegro orgoglioso
Thomas Jensen Legacy, Vol. 8 ©
Martin Granau/Peter Quantrill
Public financing of cultural institutions outside the capital city was almost non-existent for most of the twentieth century. The State Library in Aarhus was the exception which proved the rule. An increasing dissatisfaction with this was especially apparent in Aarhus, the country’s second largest city on the east coast of Jutland. At the beginning of the century the city had experienced a not inconsiderable growth. Electric-powered trams arrived already in 1904, and the Great National Exhibition in 1909 had, together with the extensions of the harbour, considerably boosted the city’s ego. Cultural areas also benefitted from the development. The Jutland Academy of Music and Aarhus University were founded before the economic crisis seriously intervened after 1930.
The city also had a Philharmonic Society, founded during the First World War, but no orchestra. Thomas Jensen became associated with this private institution, whose basis was Aarhus Theatre’s small orchestra which he conducted, about 10 musicians plus wind players from the city’s two regimental bands. In addition to this there were external supernumeraries. The connection with the theatre meant that the concerts could be held in its very beautiful hall. The theatre was inaugurated in 1900 and was similar in style to The Royal Theatre, Copenhagen, smaller, of course, but even so with about 800 seats. The hall’s acoustics were well suited to theatrical performances but far too dry for orchestral concerts. CD 2 in this set has an example of this as a bonus track.
The theatre’s orchestra normally played entr’acte music at performances, about 200 a year. This was popular and the theatre wished to have a larger orchestra. As a result, the number of players in the orchestra was increased to 23 in 1935. It then had to serve simultaneously as an orchestra for the whole city. That ambitions were high can already be seen from the fact that the name City of Aarhus Orchestra with the subtitle Jutland Symphony Orchestra – more than hinted that the orchestra in the long term was to be a full-size orchestra. A goal for which Thomas Jensen strove tirelessly until 1957 when he left the city in favour of a permanent appointment with the Danish Radio Symphony orchestra (The Orchestra of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation) The difficulties were considerable. The reluctance of the city council, county council and the Ministry of Culture to contribute to the economy turned out to be virtually impossible to surmount, so that the orchestral players were only employed 8 – 10 months a year on a salary which was not much more than half of what their colleagues in Copenhagen were earning. The lack of a suitable concert hall was also one of the conditions that Jensen and the orchestra were forced to live with.
RELEASE DATE: January 2022
CATALOGUE NUMBER: DACOCD 918
EAN: 5709499918005