The Songs of Edvard Grieg

The Songs of Edvard Grieg
Author: Beryl Foster
Publisher: Boydell Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2007
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781843833437

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.

Edvard Grieg

Edvard Grieg
Author: David Monrad Johansen
Publisher: New York : Tudor
Total Pages: 448
Release: 1938
Genre: Composers
ISBN:

The life of Edvard Grieg, a Norwegian composer and pianist. He is widely considered one of the leading Romantic era composers, and his music is part of the standard classical repertoire worldwide.

Grieg

Grieg
Author: Daniel M. Grimley
Publisher: Boydell Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2006
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781843832102

This text examines the role which music and landscape played in the formation of Norwegian cultural identity in the 19th century, and the function that landscape has performed in Edvard Grieg's work. Grieg's work presents several perspectives on the relationships between music, landscape and identity.

The Great Piano Works of Edvard Grieg

The Great Piano Works of Edvard Grieg
Author: Edvard Grieg
Publisher: Alfred Music
Total Pages: 148
Release:
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781457400179

This edition contains the Peer Gynt Suite with familiar titles such as 'Morning Mood,' 'Anitra's Dance,' 'The Death of Ase,' and 'In the Hall of the Mountain King' along with numerous of Grieg's Lyric Pieces. We've even included the opening theme of his Piano Concerto in A Minor. This publication contains 50 selections.

Towards a Harmonic Grammar of Grieg's Late Piano Music

Towards a Harmonic Grammar of Grieg's Late Piano Music
Author: Benedict Taylor
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2017-04-21
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1315307332

The music of Edvard Grieg is justly celebrated for its harmonic richness, a feature especially apparent in the piano works written in the last decades of his life. Grieg was enchanted by what he styled the ’dreamworld’ of harmony, a magical realm whose principles the composer felt remained a mystery even to himself, and he was not alone, in that the complex nature of late-Romantic harmony around 1900 has proved a keen source of debate up to the present day. Grieg’s music forms a particularly profitable repertoire for focusing current debates about the nature of tonality and tonal harmony. Departing from earlier approaches, this study is not simply an inventory of Griegian harmonic traits but seeks rather to ascertain the deeper principles at work governing their meaningful conjunction, how elements of Grieg’s harmonic grammar are utilised in creating an extended tonal syntax. Building both on historical theories and more recent developments, Benedict Taylor develops new models for understanding the complexity of late-Romantic tonal practice as epitomised in Grieg’s music. Such an investigation casts further valuable light on the twin issues of nature and nationalism long connected with the composer: the question of tonality as something natural or culturally constructed and larger historiographical claims concerning Grieg’s apparent position on the periphery of the Austro-German tradition.

Letters to Colleagues and Friends

Letters to Colleagues and Friends
Author: Edvard Grieg
Publisher: Peer Gynt Press
Total Pages: 752
Release: 2000
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Edvard Grieg (1843-1907) is known and loved throughout the world as one of the most important composers of the late nineteenth century. His music seems to embody the spectacular beauty of the mountains and fjords of his beloved Norway as well as the undercurrent of melancholy in the soul of its people. Scholars have long been aware that Grieg was a prolific and skillful letter-writer, but only recently have his letters been gathered from libraries and archives all over the world and made available in published form. Over 500 of the most important of these letters are presented in English in the present volume. Make no mistake about it: The author of this book is Edvard Grieg himself. This book constitutes a kind of autobiography. Not least, it provides a fascinating insight into what he was thinking, how he was feeling when he wrote this or that piece of music. The recipients of Grieg's letters included some of the most renowned people of his day -- Johannes Brahms, Henrik Ibsen, Clara Schumann, Peter Tchaikovsky -- as well as many unheralded colleagues and friends whose lives touched his in one way or another. To different correspondents, at different times, in different moods, he revealed various sides of his personality.

Edvard Grieg

Edvard Grieg
Author: Henry T. Finck
Publisher:
Total Pages: 188
Release: 1906
Genre: Composers
ISBN:

Palace of History

Palace of History
Author: Glasgow (Scotland). Scottish Exhibition of National History, Art and Industry
Publisher:
Total Pages: 698
Release: 1911
Genre: Glasgow
ISBN:

First Book for Pianists

First Book for Pianists
Author: Domenico Scarlatti
Publisher: Alfred Music
Total Pages: 28
Release:
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781457440397

These short, pleasing pieces assist early-intermediate pianists in developing overall musicianship and technique. The collection contains sonatas, minuets, an "Aria" and a "Pastoral" written in binary form. Halford provides suggestions for style and interpretation in a foreword, and includes fingering, phrasing and notated ornaments in light print within each composition. This is an important volume for students new to Scarlatti's brilliant and lyrical keyboard styles.

Edvard Grieg, Chamber Music

Edvard Grieg, Chamber Music
Author: Finn Benestad
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1993
Genre: Music
ISBN:

In anticipation of the 150th anniversary of Grieg's birth, this book traces Grieg's development from his early German romantic style, through his period of pronounced nationalism toward a more individual idiom in which he sought to fuse nationalism and universality into a genuine style of his own. The compositions are treated chronologically and stylistic analyses form the basic evaluations. The book focuses on characteristic stylistic traits as well as aspects of rhythm and harmony. The analysis of each single movement is followed by a brief synopsis of the formal construction of each composition.