Wonderful Reviews from our April 11, 2019 Concert at Symphony Space
NORDSTJERNAN – June 1st, 2019
By Dr. Paul M. Shelden
“A night of classical Nordic music”
“On April 11th the New York Scandia Symphony, under the direction of conductor Dorrit Matson, delighted its audience with a performance in Manhattan’s Symphony Space. What a splendid night it was. The program, appropriately titled “Under Northern Lights,” featured works by Swedish-Finnish composer Bernhard Henrik Crusell and Danish composer Carl August Nielsen. The audience was treated to the sounds of some remarkably talented musicians who performed the beautiful Nordic-influenced music, fortunately heard more often in performance venues these days – and indeed the evening’s performers rose masterfully to the challenge of the works. The tonal quality of the orchestra was refreshingly pure: The strings in particular produced exhilarating highs in the violins and well focused tones in the lower strings, and the woodwinds matched this quality, producing an overall balanced blend.”
See the entire review: http://www.nordstjernan.com/news/people/8768/
THE DANISH PIONEER – July 2019
By Lisa Jo Sagolla
“New York Scandia Symphony Presents Pleasing Program of Works by Carl Nielsen and Bernhard Crusell.”
“Opening the program with the frothy overture from Nielsen’s opera Maskarade was a sage move on Matson’s part. The playful piece’s bright tempi and dansey rhythms – introducing the orchestra’s invigorating brass section and warm body of strings – set an inviting tone for the evening and some darker music to come…………..Hartman renders the melodic lines with care and, again, his exchanges with the string sections feel closely knit, as he’s getting advice from them each time before going out on his own journeys……………..As a complete contrast from the evening’s opener, Nielsen’s moody Symphony no. 5 closed the program with a fabulously diversified exploration of orchestral colors. A real departure stylistically from his earlier symphonies, this one is formed in only two movements, and, according to the program notes, has been described by Nielsen as ”the division of dark and light, the battle between evil good.”…………Throughout, the symphony’s inherent interest lies in its dramatically changing moods, accomplished through Nielsen’s imaginative toying with differing instrumental timbres. Matson proved masterful at bringing out these experimentations, underlining the emotional contrasts, while managing the work’s overall complexities.”
See the entire review: https://nyscandia.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Danish-Pioneer-Lisa-Jo-Sagolla.pdf