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ClassicsOnline Home » GRIEG: Lyric Pieces, Books 1 - 4, Opp. 12, 38, 43 and 47
Penguin Guide 01-Jan-2009
This Tour has been strange. The Audiences have been on my Side. In Germany I have received more acclaim for my ART than ever before. But the Critics both in Munich and in Berlin have let me know in no uncertain terms, that they think I am a dead Man. That is my punishment for my lack of Productivity in these last Years, which my wretched physical condition has caused. It is a hard and undeserved Punishment - but I comfort myself with the thought that it is not the Critics, who govern the world. (Letter to Frants Beyer, 5 March 1907)
I cannot be blamed if my music is played in third-rate hotels and by school-girls. I could not have created my music any other way, even though I did not have my audience in mind at the time. I guess this popularity is all right, hut it is dearly bought. My reputation as a composer is suffering because of it, and the criticism is disparaging.' (Letter to Julius Röntgen, London, 25 May 1906)
In my Op. 17 and Op. 66, I have arranged folk-songs for the piano, in Op. 30, I have freely rendered folk-ballads for the male voice. In three or four of my remaining works, I have attempted to use Norwegian songs thematically. And since I have published up to seventy works by now, I should be allowed to say that nothing is more incorrect than the claim from German critics that my so-called originality is limited to my borrowing from folk-music. It is quite another thing if a nationalistic spirit, which has been expressed through folk-music since ancient times, hovers over my original creative works.' (Letter to Henry T. Finck, 17 July 1900)
While the bright-eyed company discussed music, Ravel quietly went over to Molard's piano and began to play one of the master's Norwegian Dances. Grieg listened with a smile, but then began to show signs of impatience, suddenly getting up and saying sharply: "No, young man, not like that at all. Much more rhythm. It's a folk-dance, a peasant dance. You should see the peasants at home, with a fiddler stamping in time with music. Play it again!" And while Ravel played, the little man jumped up and skipped about the room to the astonishment of the company. (A Ravel Reader: Correspondence, articles, interviews, ed. Arbie Orenstein. New York: Columbia University Press, 1990, p. 237. This story comes from Lionel Carey, Delius: The Paris Years, p. 56.)
The realm of harmony, has always been my dream world, and my relationship to this harmonious way of feeling and the Norwegian Folk-songs has been a mystery even for me. I have understood that the secret depth one finds in our Folk-songs is basically owing to the richness of their untold harmonic possibilities. In my reworking of the folk-songs Op. 66, but also elsewhere, l have attempted to express my interpretation of the hidden harmonies in our folk-songs. (Letter to Henry T. Finck, 17 July 1900)
My Silence is unforgivable, because I honestIy haven't done anything, other than the so-called, "Lyric Pieces", which are surrounding me like lice and fleas in the country. (Letter to Emil Horneman, 15 September 1898)
Spring is spring, Chirping birds are chirping birds, and one finds them both in abundance here, but they do not move me. Nobody here understands what draws me to our Norwegian nature as you do … The other day my longing was so deep that it ended in Hymn of Thankful Fraise to our rugged and wildly beautiful, Norwegian Nature. There is nothing new in it, but it is profoundly sincere … (Letter to Frants Beyer, 26 April 1886)
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GRIEG: Lyric Pieces, Books 1 - 4, Opp. 12, 38, 43 ...