Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2015
Among composers born in the 1950s, who witnessed the decline of the post-war avant-garde – together with its most cherished principle, integral serialism – the Finn Magnus Lindberg has produced some of the most challenging responses. It is tempting to attach considerable significance to Lindberg's national origins. Born in 1958, he belongs to a particularly vital generation of Finnish composers whose output extends from traditional symphonic forms to experimental creations involving electroacoustic and computer technology. On the one hand, they have benefitted from the example of composers (such as Aulis Sallinen) who emerged from Sibelius's shadow not only by founding a strong operatic tradition, but also by generating their own brand of orchestral music. On the other, several of the younger generation have continued the practice of studying abroad, though without sacrificing their independence from the European mainstream.
1 Home, David in “Music in our Time’; BBC Radio 3, 12 03 1992 Google Scholar.
2 Otonkoski, Lauri: ‘Marea’; Finnish Musical Quarterly, 2/1991, pp. 20–24 Google Scholar.