Mihkel Kerem: Orchestral Music, Volume Two
The Estonian composer Mihkel Kerem – born in Tallinn in 1981 and a front-desk violinist in the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra since 2015 – used the Covid lockdown to produce no fewer than four symphonies, two of them, his Seventh and Eighth, conceived as a contrasting pair. Kerem’s dark and ominous Seventh Symphony, like that of Sibelius, plots a huge sonata-form arch, growing from and back into its opening material. Its soundworld sits somewhere between Sibelius and Schnittke, combining a sense of natural symphonic growth with dramatic twists of kaleidoscopic textural variety. No. 8, which also nods to Sibelius’ Seventh by quoting its celebrated trombone theme, is a vast, unhurried accelerando, its three linked movements tapping into the Nordic-Baltic tradition of using the controlled power of the orchestra to suggest the vastness of nature.
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
Andrew Manze, conductor
Listen To This Recording:
- Symphony No. 7 (2021) (25:21)
Symphony No. 8 (2022) (26:56)
- I. Mesto (14:24)
- II. Comodo (6:08)
- III. Volante (6:23)
First Recordings

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.