Edvard Grieg
(1843-1907)
Peer Gynt Suites Nos.
1 & 2
Lyric Pieces, Op. 68,
Nos. 4 & 5
Wedding Day at
Troldhaugen, Op. 65, No. 6
Holberg Suite, Op. 40
Three Orchestral
Pieces from Sigurd Jorsalfar, Op. 56
Edvard Grieg, the
greatest of Norwegian composers, was descended on his mother's side from a
Norwegian provincial governor who had adopted the name of Hagerup from his
adoptive father, the Bishop of Trondheim. On his father's side he was of
Scottish ancestry. His great-grandfather, Alexander Greig, had left Scotland
after the battle of Culloden, when the cause of the Stuart claimants to the
thrones of England and Scotland was finally destroyed
by the English army under its royal Hanoverian general. In Norway the Greigs
became Griegs and during the nineteenth century established themselves
comfortably in their new country, his father and grandfather both having served
as British consul in Bergen.
The Grieg household
provided a musical background for a child. Musicians visited the family and
these visitors included the distinguished violinist Ole Bull, who persuaded the
Griegs to send their son Edvard to Leipzig Conservatory, an institution he
entered at the age of fifteen, there to benefit from the demands of a
traditional German musical education.
In Leipzig not
everything was to Grieg's liking. He objected to the dryness of normal piano
instruction, based on the work of Czerny and Clementi, and was able to change
to a teacher who was to instill in him a love of Schumann. He attended concerts
by the famous Gewandhaus Orchestra that Mendelssohn had once directed and was
present when Clara Schumann played her husband's piano concerto there and at
performances of Wagner's Tannhäuser. At the same time he was able to
meet other musicians, including Arthur Sullivan, whose later fame, at least,
was to depend on the music he wrote for the operettas of W.S. Gilbert in
London.
After a short period
at home again in Norway, where he was unable to obtain a state pension, Grieg
moved to Denmark. The capital, Copenhagen, was a cultural centre for both
countries, and here he had considerable encouragement from Niels Gade. The
principal influence that was to change his life came from a meeting with Rikard
Nordraak, a young Norwegian, who fired him with ambition to seek inspiration in
the folk-music of Norway.
Nordraak was to die
tragically young, at the age of 24. Grieg, however, continued to prepare
himself for employment in Norway, first of all taking a long holiday, which led
him to Rome, where he met the great Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen. It was a
concert arranged by Grieg in Christiania (Oslo) and given by him with his
cousin and future wife Nina Hagerup and the violinist Wilhelmine Norman-Neruda
that secured him a position in Norway and provided support for the projected
Norwegian Academy of Music, established in the following year, 1867.
The period that
followed saw Grieg's struggle, with the backing of Liszt and the support of his
friend, the dramatist and theatre-director Bjørnson, to establish some sort of
national musical movement in Norway. He divided his time between concert
activities, on tour as conductor and pianist, composition, and periods spent in
enjoyment of the Norwegian countryside.
Grieg's ambitions for
Norwegian music were very largely realised. At home he occupied a position of
honour, and his collaboration with the writers Bjørnson and Ibsen further
identified him with the culture of his homeland. He died in 1907, as he was
about to undertake one more concert tour. For years he had suffered from lung
trouble, the result of an illness in his student days. It was this that was to
bring about his death at the age of 64.
Among the best known
music that Grieg wrote was his incidental music for Ibsen's remarkable play Peer
Gynt, first performed in Christiania in 1876. Suite No. 1 opens with
the famous Morning, music that seems based on the Norwegian fiddle, the
hardanger, with its characteristic tuning. In the drama the piece serves as an
introduction to Act IV, set on the south-western coast of Morocco. The scene
immediately follows the death of Peer's mother, Aase, with which Act III had
ended. Anitra's Dance, in the fourth act, welcomes Peer Gynt, hailing
him as prophet and master, in his Arab robes. The final excerpt in the first
suite is from Act II, set in the mountains of Norway, the land of Trolls and
of the Old Man of the Dovre, whose daughter Peer Gynt courts and whose
kingdom he covets.
Suite No. 2 opens with Ingrid's Lament, the
introduction to Act II, set on a high narrow mountain-track, where Peer Gynt
has taken Ingrid, a bride that he has abducted from her wedding and now plans
to betray. The Arabian Dance is taken from Act IV, where Peer has donned
his Arab robes, and Peer's Homecoming from the introduction to Act V, as
Peer Gynt returns as an old man to his own country. Solveig's Song, from
Act IV, offers a brief glimpse of the girl, now a middle-aged woman, who sits
waiting for Peer Gynt in the far North. She is there to accept him home again
after his wandering as the fifth and final act of the drama comes to an end.
After Voltaire
"the first writer in Europe [of] his generation", the "Molière
of the North", Ludwig Holberg (1684-1754) was born in Norway but spent
most of his life in Denmark. Apostle of the Scandinavian Enlightenment, his
French-influenced comedies and satires are considered especially significant.
Originally written for piano during the summer of 1884. Grieg's From
Holberg's Time: Suite in the Olden Style was commissioned to mark the
bicentenary of his birth. An early example of pastiche, of romantic
neo-classicism, its five movements, tonally all in G, consciously parody the clavéciniste
style and Bachian dance – suite forms of Holberg's century. Its composer's
personality, nevertheless, remains immutable. As his biographer David
Monrad-Johansen says (1934), assuming "the garments of the rococo
period", he "simply placed himself in the same milieu in which the
great satirist lived and worked. He looks at the present through the spectacles
of the past". The string arrangement – a repertory standard, idiomatic,
richly focused and as brilliant for its massed glories as its testing solos
(the closing Rigaudon, for instance, so-called "graveyard of
orchestral leaders") – was made by Grieg in 1885.
During his life Grieg
wrote a large number of so-called Lyrische Stücke, Lyric Pieces, primarily
for piano solo. He arranged two of the pieces of Opus 68, Evening in the
Mountains and Cradle Song for orchestra. The work was written in
1898. Wedding Day at Troldhaugen is taken from an earlier set of Lyric
Pieces, written in the previous year, and was arranged by the composer also
for piano duet.
The incidental music
for Bjørnson's play Sigurd Jorsalfar was completed in 1872 and used when
the play was staged in Christiania in May of the same year. Bjørnson has
suffered by comparison with his great contemporary Ibsen. His fame has not
travelled so far and his relevance to the development of drama has seemed more
local. The three orchestral pieces that Grieg extracted from the five of the original
score open with a Prelude, continue with Borghild's Dream, originally
the first music of the score, and end with the Homage March.