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Concert review

With luminous Sibelius and rousing Strauss, Mäkelä and CSO prepare to take it on the road

Fri Feb 20, 2026 at 2:30 pm

By Lawrence A. Johnson

Klaus Mäkelä conducted the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in music of Sibelius and Richard Strauss Thursday night. Photo: Todd Rosenberg

A pair of contrasted heroes made up the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s program Thursday night with Klaus Mäkelä returning to lead two epic works scored for large orchestral forces.

Beyond the challenging works themselves, the program proved notable in other respects. Theodore Thomas and the CSO gave the U.S. premieres of Richard Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben in 1900 as well as the two best-known sections of Jean Sibelius’s Lemminkäinen the following year.

On the current-events side, the program is significant since Mäkelä will take it on the road to Carnegie Hall next week as part of his debut CSO tour. The other mostly East Coast dates (Ann Arbor, Washington and Boston) will offer Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 and Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique, both of which the CSO’s music director designate led in local concerts last year.

Strauss’s autobiographical tone poem may be the flashier of the two pieces but most interest centered on Sibelius’s Lemminkäinen (aka Four Legends)—the most generous slice Mäkelä has served up in Chicago to date of his great Finnish compatriot. (The conductor’s ambitious recording debut was a complete set of Sibelius symphonies with the Oslo Philharmonic.)

Composed from 1893-96, Lemminkäinen predates all of Sibelius’s numbered symphonies. At 50 minutes it is longer than any of the composer’s other works save his even earlier vocal symphony Kullervo. Lemminkäinen is a sprawling four-part tone poem, inspired by mythic tales from the Kalevala, the Finnish national epic, here concentrated on the often surreal adventures of Lemminkäinen, the titular hero.

Lemminkäinen is not unified enough to be called a symphony and the titles of each section are more suggestive than directly programmatic a la Strauss. Yet the work is richly redolent of the Finnish composer’s mature style, atmospheric in its allusive mystery, gnarled brass bursts, running ostinatos and sense of epic grandeur imbued with a Northern sensibility.

“The Swan of Tuonela” is the most celebrated section and usually performed by itself, as was the case with Mäkelä’s sophomore CSO appearance in 2023. On Thursday the conductor set a spacious air of dark mystery in the opening passage for muted strings. English horn Scott Hostetler, performing standing, floated a mesmerizing depiction of the title swan gliding on the black river of Hades, his elegiac eloquence given an equally fine assist by principal cellist John Sharp.

Scott Hostetler performed the English horn solo in “The Swan of Tuonela” from Sibelius’s Lemminkäinen Thursday night.
Photo: Todd Rosenberg

“Lemminkäinen’s Return,” made an effective finale, the hero’s triumphant return manifest in the running figures and brass punctuations, building to a rousing, cataclysmic coda.

Yet the most striking moments came in the longer first and third sections where Mäkelä created a spacious canvas for Sibelius’s moody meditations.

In “Lemminkäinen and the Maidens of Saari” Mäkelä established an arresting atmospheric landscape, accented by William Welter’s searching oboe solo. Following a playful passage for winds reflecting the hero’s amorous adventures, Mäkelä’s built inexorably to a shimmering climax. Likewise in “Lemminkäinen in Tuonela” Mäkelä’s concentration and acute balancing was most impressive over the 17-minute span, from the opening ominous rustle of lower strings through the austere wind writing and abrupt brass bursts over a rolling bass drum. Beautiful playing by all including guest principal flute Herman van Kogelenberg from the Munich Philharmonic.

This was first-class Sibelius with powerful and sympathetic playing from the musicians in repertoire they infrequently perform. One looks forward to a complete cycle of Sibelius symphonies in a future Mäkelä season.

Richard Strauss‘s Ein Heldenleben (A Hero’s Life) has come in for much stick over the past century-and-a-quarter from those who bristle at the composer’s conceit of setting himself as the hero of his own tone poem—at age 34, no less. 

Yet for all its personal inspiration, Strauss doesn’t take this quasi-autobiography all that seriously. Regardless, his music is magnificent, with whipcrack writing for huge orchestra scored with ingenuity and imbued with ceaseless forward momentum.

The CSO‘s Strauss has been legendary for most of the orchestra’s existence—Fritz Reiner’s 1954 Heldenleben recording is still unequaled—and Mäkelä led a robust and idiomatic performance Thursday night that was squarely in the full-blooded local Strauss tradition.

From the blast of the beefy opening statement, the Hero’s striding theme went with brisk confidence and ample swagger. Strauss’s filleting of contemporary Viennese music critics (“The hero’s adversaries”) remains the most withering takedown in music history; the CSO high winds colorfully depicted his detractors as wheedling pipsqueaks, with the pompous mutterings of Dr. Dehring’s name in the tubas (“Dok-tor-Deh-ring”) making equally witty impact.

Ideally one would like richer violin tone for the depiction of Strauss’s wife, soprano Pauline de Ahna, than Robert Chen delivered Thursday night. Still, the CSO’s concertmaster’s playing was unerringly polished and certainly put across the querulous nature of Strauss’s formable spouse.

Mäkelä refrained from going over the top in the hero’s satirical mock-battle with his critics. Amid the off-kilter brass fanfares and alarums, the conductor’s transparency was impressive with multiple lines clear even in Strauss’s most massive and cacophonous moments.

Most effective of all was the “hero’s works of peace,” with passing fragments of nearly thirty Strauss compositions. The famous horn theme from Don Juan was less than clarion on this occasion yet the Don Quixote fragments were especially lovely, as the quotations floated by gently as if in a half-remembered dream.

The symbolic duet passage near the end between solo horn and violin managed to achieve the requisite sense of elevated repose, marred slightly by a horn burble on the final tutti chord.

Yet overall the evening’s performances were rousing, supremely well played, and directed with striking skill and sensitivity by the CSO’s maestro-in-waiting. It’s unfortunate that this rewarding and offbeat program is only being played once on tour but those in other cities will have to be content with music of Beethoven and Berlioz to experience Chicago’s new and notable musical partnership. 

The program will be repeated 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, as well as 8 p.m. February 25 at Carnegie Hall in New York. cso.org 

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February 20

Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Klaus Mäkelä, conductor
Sibelius: Lemminkäinen
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