Song of the Earth (Sibelius)
| Song of the Earth | |
|---|---|
| Cantata by Jean Sibelius | |
The composer (c. 1918) | |
| Native name | Jordens sång |
| Opus | 93 |
| Text |
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| Language | Swedish |
| Composed | 1919 |
| Duration | 16 mins. |
| Premiere | |
| Date | 11 October 1919 |
| Location | Turku, Finland |
| Conductor | Jean Sibelius |
| Performers |
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Song of the Earth (in Swedish: Jordens sång; subtitled "Cantata for the Inaugural Ceremonies of Åbo Akademi University 1919"), Op. 93, is a single-movement, patriotic cantata for mixed choir and orchestra written in 1919 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. The piece, which is a setting of the Finnish author Jarl Hemmer's Swedish-language poem of the same name, is chronologically the seventh of Sibelius's nine orchestral cantatas; in particular, it belongs to the series of four "little known, but beautiful" cantatas from the composer's mature period that also includes My Own Land (Op. 92, 1918), Hymn of the Earth (Op. 95, 1920), and Väinämöinen's Song (Op. 110, 1926). Song of the Earth premiered on 11 October 1919 in Turku, Finland, with Sibelius conducting the Turku Musical Society and an amateur choir.