“Tapiola”: Sibelius’ Mysterious Final Tone Poem

In Pohjola there are thick, dark forests
that dream wild dreams, forever secret.
Tapio’s eerie dwellings are there
and half-glimpsed spirits, and the voices of twilight.

– Jean Sibelius 

Tapio is the mythological spirit of the mysterious, remote forests of northern Finland who figures prominently in the Nordic folklore of the Kalevala. This is the subject of the tone poem, Tapiola, Jean Sibelius’ last major work, written in 1926 on a commission from Walter Damrosch and the New York Philharmonic Society.

This strange and haunting music evokes bleak, desolate landscapes, icy ruggedness, the strange play of light in northern latitudes, and (as is written in a quatrain in the published score) “ancient, mysterious, brooding savage dreams.” It unleashes something both eternal and terrifying. As with the Seventh Symphony, which we explored last week, Tapiola begins with an austere summons in the timpani. Additionally, it unfolds with a similar sense of “profound logic,” developing from a single core motive which is heard in the opening bars in the strings. The music critic Alex Ross has called this final tone poem “Sibelius’s most severe and concentrated musical statement.” 

Tapiola is filled with strange, ghostly voices which sometimes emerge just above silence. At moments, the tonal center dissolves completely and we’re left with pure sound. The piece’s vast, windswept sonic landscape brings to mind another quote from Alex Ross which describes the kind of music Sibelius was hearing just before he descended into the permanent compositional silence of his final thirty years:

Suddenly dissatisfied with the fluid form that had evolved in the Fifth [Symphony], he began to dream of a continuous blur of sound without any formal divisions—symphonies without movements, operas without words. Instead of writing the music of his imagination, he wanted to transcribe the very noise of nature. He thought that he could hear chords in the murmurs of the forests and the lapping of the lakes; he once baffled a group of Finnish students by giving a lecture on the overtone series of a meadow.

The final works of the greatest composers often give us a glimpse of strange, terrifying revelations. With Tapiola, we get the sense that Sibelius is opening the door to something which lies “beyond.” Turn off any background noise in your room and listen carefully to the layers of sound which form Sibelius’ orchestral swan song.

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About Timothy Judd

A native of Upstate New York, Timothy Judd has been a member of the Richmond Symphony violin section since 2001. He is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music where he earned the degrees Bachelor of Music and Master of Music, studying with world renowned Ukrainian-American violinist Oleh Krysa.

The son of public school music educators, Timothy Judd began violin lessons at the age of four through Eastman’s Community Education Division. He was a student of Anastasia Jempelis, one of the earliest champions of the Suzuki method in the United States.

A passionate teacher, Mr. Judd has maintained a private violin studio in the Richmond area since 2002 and has been active coaching chamber music and numerous youth orchestra sectionals.

In his free time, Timothy Judd enjoys working out with Richmond’s popular SEAL Team Physical Training program.

3 thoughts on ““Tapiola”: Sibelius’ Mysterious Final Tone Poem”

  1. So is next week’s review going to be of the third pillar of Sibelius’ three final orchestral masterpieces, the incidental music to “The Tempest”?

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  2. As much as I had wanted to visit Ainola, I could not avoid feeling a strange sense of discomfort upon my arrival. Everything there remains the property of the past. Time stands still. Nothing has changed, or so we are led to believe. The rooms and furnishings appear much as they do in the many photographs taken of the Sibelius family at home in the 19 and 19. Sibelius’ white jacket hangs in his bedroom, as do his hat and cane. His pens still rest on his desk, his six ashtrays (each one for a different mood) still grace the side-tables throughout the house. Not a hair out of place; not a hair to be seen. These stage props, set up to mimic Sibelius’ lived experience, wait in vain for life to begin. For what makes the house slightly eerie is precisely the absence of life. Nothing stirs. The house is frozen in time in order to help maintain our illusions, to allow us to pretend that we really can step back into the past; as if we might somehow meet Sibelius leaning against his made-to-order green-tiled fireplace, puffing gently on a cigar. For all the impressive attention to period detail, silence is what rings out loudest of all, a silence that only seems to intensify the mystery surrounding the final decades of Sibelius’ life.

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