Tag: Agathe Backer Grøndahl

  • Nordic Music Delights Sweetness and Light

    Nordic Music Delights Sweetness and Light

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” it’s a program of lighter music from the northern countries.

    We’ll give poor overworked Edvard Grieg a break, with Norway represented by Johan Halvorsen and the now lesser-known pianist-composer Agathe Backer Grøndahl, a pupil of Franz Liszt.

    From Sweden, we’ll enjoy two versions of Hugo Alfvén’s evergreen “Swedish Rhapsody No. 1” – first, Mantovani’s popular hit from 1953, then with the composer himself conducting, from the very next year, in the first stereo recording ever made in Sweden.

    Speaking of popular hits, we’ll also hear Arthur Fiedler’s bestselling recording of “Jalousie,” by Danish composer Jacob Gade (no relation to Niels Wilhelm Gade), from 1935. Fiedler remade it in stereo, but it’s my show, so I’m keeping it hardcore.

    Also from Denmark, we’ll have a folk-music suite by Percy Grainger. Ah! But Grainger was not from the north, you say. He was born in Australia. Quite true. However, as an energetic pianist and composer of insatiable curiosity, he traveled seemingly everywhere, with a particular fondness for the Scandinavian countries. (His wife was Swedish.)

    But if authentic Danish composers are more your thing, not to worry, we’ll round out the hour with a galop by Hans Christian Lumbye.

    All eyes and ears face north this week on “Sweetness and Light.” I hope you’ll join me for this hour of northern “lights,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it wherever you are at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Christmas Music Book Haul Gipps Grondahl Ives

    Christmas Music Book Haul Gipps Grondahl Ives

    Too late to post anything of substance today, so I’m just sharing some highlights from my Christmas booty: two CDs of unusual and neglected repertoire (orchestral works by English composer Ruth Gipps and piano music by Norwegian composer Agathe Backer Grøndahl) and two books (“Mad Music: Charles Ives, the Nostalgic Rebel” by Stephen Budiansky and “Vaughan Williams” by Eric Saylor) — all new except the Ives bio, which was issued in 2014. Something must have happened to Santa’s naughty list!

  • Agathe Backer Grøndahl 175th Anniversary

    Agathe Backer Grøndahl 175th Anniversary

    Today is the 175th anniversary of the birth of Norwegian pianist and composer Agathe Backer Grøndahl. Backer, from a well-to-do, art-loving family, studied music in Christiana, Berlin, and Florence. Among her teachers were Theodor Kullak and Hans von Bülow.

    She made her professional debut in Christiana in 1868, as soloist in Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto, with Edvard Grieg on the podium. Of course, she was also a celebrated interpreter of Grieg’s own piano concerto. In fact, the two artists enjoyed a close friendship. She was also guided by Ole Bull, the famed Norwegian violinist, who recommended teachers and had a special piano constructed for her.

    In 1873, she became part of Franz Liszt’s circle at Weimar, and she took lessons with him. She herself was to become an influential teacher. George Bernard Shaw praised her as one of the greatest piano virtuosos of the century.

    She married Olaus Andreas Grøndahl, a vocal teacher, in 1875. A mother of three, Backer Grøndahl yet managed to compose more than 400 works for piano, voice, and orchestra. Over 70 of these were published in her lifetime. She died in 1907 at the age of 59.

    Her sister was the painter Harriet Backer.


    Sara Aimée Smiseth talks about and plays Agathe Backer Grøndahl. Smiseth recorded an album of Grøndahl’s works for the Grand Piano label.

    Geir Henning Braaten plays Grøndahl’s 3 Morceaux, Op. 15. The opening “Serenade” is among her most frequently performed works.

    Lubov Timofeyeva plays a Grøndahl assortment

    More about Grøndahl’s sister, Harriet Backer

    https://www.norwegianamerican.com/harriet-backer-a-gifted-determined-artist/


    PHOTOS: Agathe Backer Grøndahl, top, and at center, at an 1898 music festival in Bergen. To her left (our right) are some of the most famous names in Norwegian music: Edvard Grieg, Christian Sinding, Johan Svendsen, and Johan Halvorsen.

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