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EDVARD HAGERUP GRIEG (1843--1907)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 594 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDVARD HAGERUP

GRIEG (1843--1907)  ,
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Norwegian musical composer, was born on the 15th of
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June 1843 in
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Bergen, where his
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father, Alexander Grieg (sic), was
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English consul . The Grieg
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family were of Scottish origin, but the composer's grandfather,593 a supporter of the Pretender,
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left his home at Aberdeen after Charles
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Edward's defeat at
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Culloden, and went to Bergen, where he carried on business . The composer's
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mother, Gesine Hagerup, belonged to a pure Norwegian peasant family; and it is from the mother rather than from the father that Edvard Grieg derived his musical talent . She had been educated as a pianist and began to give her son lessons on the pianoforte when he was six years of age . His first composition, " Variations on a German melody," was written at the age of nine . A summer
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holiday in Norway with his father in 1858 seems to have exercised a powerful influence on the child's musical
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imagination, which was easily kindled at the sight of mountain and fjord . In the autumn of the same
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year, at the recommendation of Ole Bull, young Grieg entered the
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Leipzig Conservatorium, where he passed, like all his contemporaries, under the influence of the Mendelssohn and Schumann school of romantics . But the curriculum of
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academic study was too narrow for him . He dreamed
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half his time away and overworked during the other half . In 1862 he completed his Leipzig studies, and appeared as pianist and composer before his
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fellow-citizens of Bergen . In 1863 be studied in Copenhagen for a short time with Gade and Emil Hartmann, both composers representing a sentimental strain of Scandinavian temperament, from which Grieg emancipated himself in favour of the harder inspiration of Richard Nordraak . " The scales fell from my eyes," says Grieg of his acquaintance with Nordraak .

" For the first time I learned through him to know the

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northern folk tunes and my own nature . We made a pact to combat the effeminate Gade-Mendelssohn mixture of Scandinavism, and boldly entered upon the new path along which the northern school at
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present pursues its course." Grieg now made a kind of crusade in favour of
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national
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music . In the winter of 1864-1865 he founded the Copenhagen concert-society Euterpe, which was intended to produce the
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works of young Norwegian composers . During the winters of 1865-1866 and 1869-1870 Grieg was in Rome . In the autumn of 1866 he settled in Christiania, where from 1867 till 188o he conducted a musical union . From 188o to 1882 he directed the concerts of the
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Harmonic Society in Bergen . In 1872 the Royal Musical Academy of Sweden made Grieg a member; in 1874 the Norwegian Storthing granted him an
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annual
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stipend of 1600 kronen . He had already been decorated with the Olaf order in 1873 . In 1888 he played his pianoforte concerto and conducted his " two melodies for strings " at a Philharmonic concert in
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London, and visited England again in 1891, 1894 and 1896, receiving the degree of
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Mus.D. from the university of Cambridge in 1894 . He died at Bergen on the 4th of September 1907 . As a composer Grieg's distinguishing quality is lyrical . Whether his orchestral works or his songs or his best pianoforte works are submitted to examination, it is almost always the note of
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song that tells .

Sometimes, as in the music to

Ibsen's Peer Gynt, or in the suite for stringed orchestra, Aus Holbergs Zeit, this characteristic is combined with a strong power for raising pictures in the listener's mind, and the romantic " programme " tendency in Grieg's music becomes clearer the farther writers like Richard Strauss carry this
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movement . Grieg's songs may be said to be generally the more spontaneous the more closely they conform to the
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simple model of the Volkslied; yet the much sung " Ich Liebe dich " is a song of a different kind, which has hardly ever been surpassed for the perfection with which it depicts a strong momentary emotion, and it is difficult to ascribe greater merits to songs of Grieg even so characteristic as " Solvejg's Lied " and " Ein Schwan." The pianoforte concerto is brilliant and spontaneous; it has been performed by most pianists of the first rank, but its essential qualities and the pure
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nationality of its themes have been brought out to their perfection by one player only—the Norwegian pianist Knudsen . The first and second of Grieg's
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violin sonatas are agreeable, so
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free and artless is the flow of their melody . In his numerous piano pieces and in those of his songs which are devoid of a definitely national inspiration the impression made is less permanent . Billow called Grieg the " Chopin of the North." The phrase is an exaggeration rather than an expression of the truth, for the range of the
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appeal in Chopin is far wider, nor has the national of the classical
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languages and his almost disquieting
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diligence. movement inaugurated by Grieg shown promise of
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great develop- ment . He is rather to be regarded as the
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pioneer of a musical
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mission which has been perfectly carried out by himself alone . See La Mara, Edvard Grieg (Leipzig,1898) .

End of Article: EDVARD HAGERUP GRIEG (1843--1907)
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