Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | More... New ArkivMusic Reissues On Sale
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home > Composers >

WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
Leif Segerstam
Born: Mar 2, 1944; Finland  
Leif Segerstam is primarily known as a conductor, generally ranked among the most prominent from Finland in the latter twentieth and early twenty first centuries. But he is also a composer with a massive output, making the cataloging of his music difficult. For instance, by summer 2002, he had written 81 symphonies, 18 of them having been composed or completed in that year alone. Yet that seemingly enormous body of music is not quite what it ...
Read more
See all recordings available (23)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
Leif Segerstam titles in:
Recommended   ArkivCD   MP3 Downloads  
Featured Leif Segerstam CDs & DVDs:
Segerstam: Symphony No 18, Epitaph No 6, Etc
Release Date: 06/02/2009   Label: Ondine   Catalog: ODE877   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
See more featured titles
Works
A "On M...Pa..M.Poeme" Now (1)
A Last Melodioso (1)
A NNNNOOOOOWWW (2)
At the Border (1)
Concerto for Piano no 1 "Thoughts 1978" (1)
Concerto for Piano no 3 (1)
Concerto for Violin no 1 "Serioso" (1)
Concerto-Fantasia for Violin and Piano (1)
Divertimento for Strings (1)
Epitaph no 6 (1)
Flowerbouquette no 43E (1)
Impression of Nordic Nature no 4 (1)
Impressions of Nordic Nature no 1 (1)
Impressions of Nordic Nature no 2 "Alone in a boat in the middle of a lake" (1)
July (1)
Moments of Peace III (1)
Monumental Thoughts "Martti Talvela in memoriam" (1)
Nocturnal thoughts (1)
Nocturne (1)
Noem no 1 (1)
Noem no 2 (1)
Nostalgic Thoughts in KAAMOStime... (1)
Orchestral diary sheet no 30 "Waiting for..." (1)
Orchestral Diary Sheet no 34 (1)
Pandora: Sketches (1)
Patria (1)
Poem for Violin and Piano (1)
Quartet for Strings no 6 (1)
Quartet for Strings no 7 (1)
Rituals in La (1)
Seven Questions to Infinity (1)
Seven Red Moments: Nocturne (1)
Six Songs of experience (1)
Streamings in the Soul "Thoughts 1992"/Orchestral diary sheet no 47 (1)
Symphony no 11 (1)
Symphony no 13 (1)
Symphony no 14 (1)
Symphony no 15 "Ecliptic Thoughts" (1)
Symphony no 16 "Thoughts at the Border" (1)
Symphony no 162 "Doubling the Number for Bergen!" (1)
Symphony no 17 "Thoughts before 1992"/Orchestral diary sheet no 49 (1)
Symphony no 18 "In one Thought" (1)
Symphony no 181 "Names itself when played..." (1)
Symphony no 21 "September, Visions at Korpijärvi" (1)
Symphony no 23 "Afterthoughts Questioning Questionings" (1)
Symphony no 81 "After Eighty..." (1)
Symphony No. 21, `Visions at Korpijärvi' (1)
Symphony No. 23, `Afterthoughts Questioning Questionings' (1)
Thoughts (1)
Thoughts 1989 (1)
Thoughts 1990 (1)
Three Moments of Parting (1)
Trio no 2 "Of Thoughts in One Movement" (1)
Why Yes or No (1)
Zweixly con Ped (1)
More Featured Leif Segerstam CDs & DVDs:
Segerstam: Syms Nos 21 & 23
Release Date: 09/1999   Label: Ondine   Catalog: 928   Number of Discs: 1
ArkivCD
$12.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
On sale!
Biography by Robert Cummings
Leif Segerstam is primarily known as a conductor, generally ranked among the most prominent from Finland in the latter twentieth and early twenty first centuries. But he is also a composer with a massive output, making the cataloging of his music difficult. For instance, by summer 2002, he had written 81 symphonies, 18 of them having been composed or completed in that year alone. Yet that seemingly enormous body of music is not quite what it seems, since he typically writes the same piece in different scorings, using aleatoric methods involving less-complex and less-specific notation. Still, his output contains countless orchestral and choral works, concertos, songs, string quartets, and instrumental pieces.

Segerstam entered the Sibelius Academy of Music in Helsinki in his mid-teens, where he studied violin with Liisa Siikonen and conducting with Jussi Jalas. Segerstam was also an excellent pianist then and won first prize in the 1962 Maj Lind Piano Competition, held by the Sibelius Academy. The following year, he graduated with degrees in both violin and conducting and gave his first major concert as a violinist. By then, he had already written his earliest compositions, which included the brief 1960 orchestral work A Legend (Nils-Eric Fougstedt in Memoriam) and Three Songs for Soprano and Piano (1960-1961). Following Segerstam's graduation, he enrolled at the Juilliard School of Music, where he studied violin with Louis Persinger, conducting with Jean Morel, and composition with Vincent Persichetti and Hall Overton. In 1965, he received his first important conducting appointment to the Finnish National Opera as director for the 1973-1974 season. Segerstam held two other conducting posts at opera houses in Scandinavia and Germany, at the Royal Opera in Stockholm from 1968 to 1972, and at the Deutsche Oper in Berlin for a single season (1972-1973). Segerstam turned out many compositions during these early conducting years, including several sring quartets (the Fifth, subtitled "Lemming," was a stylistically pivotal work in his use of aleatory methods) and the song collection Tre plus eller fyra NNNUUUU-R, for mezzo soprano and piano, on texts by Gunnar Björling. Segerstam successively took three conducting posts with second-tier European orchestras in the period from 1977 to 1985 (the Austrian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, and the Rhineland-Pfalz State Philharmonic Orchestra). He was appointed chief conductor of the Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in 1989, a post that would allow him to record not only many classics in the repertory and modern works, but also some of his own. For the labels BIS, Ondine, and Finlandia, he turned out performances of his symphonies No. 9, No. 11, No. 13, No. 14, No. 16, No. 17, and No. 18, and violin concertos, Op. 33 and 99, with his wife Hannele Segerstam as soloist. Upon his departure from the DNRSO in 1995, he accepted the position of chief conductor for the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra and that same year, also returned to Stockholm's Royal Opera, once more as music director. Segerstam still held these two positions in the new century. At the Royal Opera House, Segerstam has conducted a wide range of works. In 2002, for example, he led performances of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Prokofiev's The Fiery Angel, and Janácek's The Makropulos Affair.

 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2012.
Data supplied by Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. Copyright 1948-2012. For personal use only. All rights reserved.