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Sibelius: A Symphony that Burned

Peggy Reynolds explores the story of Sibelius's notorious 'lost' 8th Symphony, and its remarkable rediscovery. From 2012.

The story of Jean Sibelius's 8th Symphony.

Featuring extracts from new musical fragments performed exclusively for the programme.

One morning in 1945, the composer took the pages of a symphony that had brought him to the brink of despair and burned the lot. Sibelius wanted to destroy the work, before it destroyed him.

His Symphony No. 8 became the most notorious 'lost work' in classical music. Not a single note could be traced.

But in 2011, three short, fragments of music were revealed - the culmination of years of painstaking research through piles of manuscript sketches.

The only evidence of any orchestral work by Sibelius during the 'silence of Ainola'. And almost certainly the only tantalising glimpse we may ever have of his fabled Eighth Symphony.

Writer and broadcaster Peggy Reynolds visits Sibelius's home near Helsinki to unpick - for the first time - his symphony riddle.

With contributions from British conductor and Sibelius expert, Sir Mark Elder.

Peggy also presents a performance of newly-discovered musical fragments, performed exclusively for the programme by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra under John Storgards.

After nine decades, this may be the closest we ever get to experiencing the most infamous lost work in 20th century music.

Producer Steven Rajam

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in July 2012

30 minutes

Last on

Fri 5 Sep 202500:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 10 Jul 201211:30
  • Tue 20 Mar 201806:30
  • Tue 20 Mar 201813:30
  • Tue 20 Mar 201820:30
  • Wed 21 Mar 201801:30
  • Mon 26 Sep 202214:30
  • Tue 27 Sep 202202:30
  • Thu 4 Sep 202510:30
  • Thu 4 Sep 202516:30
  • Fri 5 Sep 202500:30