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Edvard Grieg's choral music has remained little known outside
Scandinavia. One of the chief aims of this book is to bring this
body of work to the notice of a wider audience, in the hope that it
may receive greater prominence in concert programmes. Choral pieces
form a relatively small proportion of Grieg's total output,
although works such as the Album for Male Voices and the Four
Psalms represent significant developments in his compositional
career. In this study Beryl Foster not only provides an in-depth
examination of this music, but also presents a picture of Norwegian
musical life in the second half of the nineteenth century. An
overview of Norway's choral tradition from the Middle Ages provides
the historical context from which Grieg came to the genre.
Subsequent chapters discuss in detail the types of choral works
that he wrote, such as occasional and commemorative pieces,
dramatic works and solo song arrangements. A set of useful
appendices, including a chronological list of works and a
discography complete this original survey.
Edvard Grieg's choral music has remained little known outside
Scandinavia. One of the chief aims of this book is to bring this
body of work to the notice of a wider audience, in the hope that it
may receive greater prominence in concert programmes. Choral pieces
form a relatively small proportion of Grieg's total output,
although works such as the Album for Male Voices and the Four
Psalms represent significant developments in his compositional
career. In this study Beryl Foster not only provides an in-depth
examination of this music, but also presents a picture of Norwegian
musical life in the second half of the nineteenth century. An
overview of Norway's choral tradition from the Middle Ages provides
the historical context from which Grieg came to the genre.
Subsequent chapters discuss in detail the types of choral works
that he wrote, such as occasional and commemorative pieces,
dramatic works and solo song arrangements. A set of useful
appendices, including a chronological list of works and a
discography complete this original survey.
Comprehensive survey of Grieg's 180 songs, considering particularly
questions and issues of performance. Edvard Grieg's 180 songs
mirror his artistic and personal development more intimately than
any of his other music, yet are still the least known part of his
output. This definitive appraisal, now revised and updated,
discusses every song, including those left only in manuscript and
sketches at the composer's death, set against the background of his
life and times. It also deals with the poetry set, often chosen to
reflect his current situation, and the poets, several of whom,
including great figures of the day such as Ibsen and Bjornson, were
his friends and colleagues. Grieg frequently bemoaned poor
translations and indifferent performances, and the various editions
and translations, from first publication to the present day, are
also discussed, together with his own ideas for interpretation.
Musical examples and analysis are included to give a closer
understanding of Grieg's word-setting and harmonic development,
although their performance is always kept paramount. BERYL FOSTER
is a graduate of London University and studied singing in
Colchester and at the Royal College of Music. As well as all the
usual repertoire, since 1980 she has made a particular study of the
songs of Grieg and other Norwegian composers, giving recitals,
lectures and workshops in Britain, Norway, Germany, the
Netherlands, Italy and China. She is also a private teacher
andfestival adjudicator.
The first English language discussion of the life and music of this
twentieth century Norwegian composer. The Norwegian composer Ludvig
Irgens-Jensen (1894-1969) was one of the towering creative figures
of his native land, although his dignified and powerful music does
not receive the attention its quality deserves, either at home
orabroad. The success of his dramatic symphony Heimferd
(Homecoming) in 1930 brought him national fame, but the post-War
triumph of modernism, coupled with his personal modesty, pushed
Irgens-Jensen's tonal music into the shadows: its contrapuntally
based textures and its modally tinged harmonies were seen as things
of the past. But a growing number of recordings is revealing him as
one of the most distinguished and distinctive voices in
twentieth-century music, a figure of international importance who
wrote music of striking nobility and strength of purpose - with
some meltingly lovely melodic lines. Arvid O. Vollsnes' Ludvig
Irgens-Jensen: The Life and Music of a Norwegian Composer is the
first discussion in English of this profoundly decent man and his
life-enhancing music. A review of the original Norwegian
publication of this book in Aftenposten, the main Norwegian daily
paper, described it as 'a gripping biographical portrait. As well
as Irgens-Jensen's life we get a broad picture of Norwegian musical
life from the 1920s to his death in 1969'. A CD of extracts from
Irgens-Jensen's works has been prepared to accompany the English
edition, providing readers with an introduction to his highly
individual and immediately appealing sound-world.
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