If Fjord in a Morning Mood for Lyric Peace, Don’t for Gynt Grieg

If Fjord in a Morning Mood for Lyric Peace, Don’t for Gynt Grieg

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Yay, it’s Edvard Grieg’s birthday today! I’ll have something interesting to listen to in the car. I love Grieg’s stuff, and I take it down from the shelf far too seldom. Did the guy ever write a bad note?

Celebrated as Norway’s greatest composer, Grieg embraced his native folk music, lovingly elevated it, and infused it with an intriguing delicacy, melancholy, and yes, lyricism. Like listening to a Nordic Schubert, you never know when a cloud will break across the fjords. Or perhaps, more to the point, a sunny jaunt across a field of wildflowers will be disrupted by an encounter with a troll.

The most common criticism leveled against Grieg is that he was essentially a miniaturist. You may as well attack Chopin for being a sloppy orchestrator.

From his letters, we know that Grieg himself was frustrated by his propensity for shorter works. “Nothing that I do satisfies me,” he wrote, “and though it seems to me that I have ideas, they neither soar nor take form when I proceed to the working out of something big.”

Claude Debussy was only too happy to kick him while he was down. He famously derided Grieg’s output as so many “pink bonbons filled with snow.” Yet it has been convincingly demonstrated that Debussy owed more than a bit to his Norwegian colleague in the writing of his String Quartet in G minor and in some of his own piano miniatures. What is it about Grieg that so galled the Gauls?

Myself, I could listen to Grieg all day. In fact, I think I will.

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If fjord in a “Morning Mood” for lyric peace, don’t for “Gynt” Grieg! 😉


Neeme Järvi conducts the four “Symphonic Dances.” I used the second of these as signature music for an overnight show, back when I was starting out in community radio.


Emil Gilels plays a selection of the “Lyric Pieces.” Gilels hedged when asked to make the recording, fearing that no one would buy it. Of course, it went on to become one of the great piano classics.


Then husband-and-wife team Augustin Dumay and Maria João Pires whip up a fair amount of unsuspected passion in the Violin Sonatas. Here’s the full album.


“The First Meeting,” sung by Barbara Bonney


Six Songs, Op. 48


“Solveig’s Song” from “Peer Gynt”


“Peer Gynt” with creepy puppets


Arturo Benedetto Michelangeli shatters the stereotype of Grieg as “regional” composer with a volcanic performance of the Piano Concerto in A minor.


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PHOTO: Grieg is great! Happy birthday, master!


Comments

4 responses to “If Fjord in a Morning Mood for Lyric Peace, Don’t for Gynt Grieg”

  1. Anonymous

    Love Grieg! And having been to Norway, he’s right about the trolls!

  2. Anonymous

    He’s fascinating I think. I’m not so keen on the orchestral stuff but his songs and piano pieces contain extraordinary things: the Lyric Piece Bell-ringing for instance, the Slåtter, the 19 Norwegian Folk Tunes, or many of the late songs: op 60 The Sea Bird (so bleak). Love the vehemence of some of the chamber music too……

  3. Anonymous

    Love Grieg and also wonder whether he ever wrote a bad note. Sniping at Grieg is sure evidence of a weakness of character; I would restrict my involvement with such a person to the merest of pleasantries in brief conversation.

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