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Johan Svendsen

 
Music Encyclopedia: Johan (Severin) Svendsen

(b Oslo, 30 Sept 1840; d Copenhagen, 14 June 1911). Norwegian composer and conductor. He began his career as a violin virtuoso but in 1865, while at the Leipzig Conservatory, his interest shifted to composition. Among his early works, the String Octet op.3, Symphony no.1 op.4 (considered strongly national by Grieg) and String Quintet op.5 were particularly well received. After a time in Paris and at Bayreuth, where he was close to Wagner, he conducted the Christiania Music Society concerts (1872-7) and composed his most notable works, including the orchestral legend Zorahayda op.11, the fantasy Romeo og Julie op.18, the Symphony no.2 op.15 and three Norwegian Rhapsodies opp. 17, 19 and 21. He wrote his last important work, the popular Romance for violin and orchestra op.26, in 1881. From 1883 he was conductor at the Royal Opera, Copenhagen, where he enjoyed a commanding position in the city's musical life. Though contributing to the culmination of national Romanticism in Norway, Svendsen's style was marked by a natural mastery of the orchestra and of large classical forms. His two symphonies are the earliest by a Norwegian to have won an audience in Norway and to have remained in the repertory.



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Artist: Johan Svendsen
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  • Period: Romantic (1820-1869)
  • Country: Norway
  • Born: September 30, 1840 in Christiania, Norway
  • Died: June 14, 1911 in Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Genres: Concerto, Orchestral Music, Symphony

Biography

Johan Svendsen, along with his exact contemporary Grieg, represents Norwegian Romanticism at its apex. Outside of Norway, where his status has never been questioned, Svendsen, despite his eclipse by Grieg, has nonetheless retained a cult of admirers and it may be only a matter of time before he receives the same belated international interest accorded to Berwald and Nielsen.

Svendsen was the son of a military bandsman who instructed him on a number of wind instruments and the violin. This led him, while still a boy, to perform in both a regimental band and dance orchestras, respectively, as well as him composing music for both. His exposure to symphonic classics came with his appointment to the position of first violinist in the Norwegian Theatre Orchestra and the subsequent discovery of Beethoven's music. Further study of the masters developed through his lessons with Carl Arnold, as well as his organizing a small orchestra of his own. Procurement of a royal stipend enabled Svendsen to go the Leipzig Conservatory to study. Svendsen originally aimed for violin virtuosity, but shifted to composition due to nervous problems of the left hand. However, his musicality led to his being allowed to deputize as conductor in the conservatory orchestra. He left the conservatory with honors in 1867, having meanwhile completed his Symphony No. 1 and string quintet. Svendsen returned to Norway where a concert of his own music drew praise from a review by Grieg. Local response, however, was tepid and Svendsen, another stipend in hand, traveled back to Leipzig and then Paris, the latter the scene of increasing performances of his works. The Franco-Prussian War in 1870 aborted a conducting position in Leipzig, but a successful performance of his Symphony No. 1 with the Gewandhaus, as well as his betrothal to an American woman named Sara whom he had met in Paris, seemed ample compensation. Svendsen returned to Norway in 1872 to share directorship of the Christiana Music Society concerts with Grieg. The generosity of a government grant helped create a conducive atmosphere for Svendsen, these years seeing the Symphony No. 2 and his series of Norwegian Rhapsodies. His star continued to ascend with him receiving directorship of the Royal Opera in Copenhagen in 1883. He traveled widely, meeting and working with Pasdeloup, Saint-Saëns, Sarasate, and even cultivating a friendship with Wagner. Sadly, his marriage had deteriorated to a point where his wife jealously flung the completed manuscript of a third symphony into a fire in 1882. Whether this was a catalyst or not, Svendsen's creativity severely tapered off at this point. He remarried in 1901. His international reputation continued until illness forced him to cease performing in 1908.

In his music, Svendsen prolifically composed in all idioms. With his bent toward classical forms, he forms a yin and yang of Norwegian Romantic music with the more overtly national Grieg. Yet there is a Nordic inflection present in the language, much as Tchaikovsky's Russian-ism shows through in his selected Western models. As such, he may rightly be placed in the august line of composers of the Nordic symphonic tradition. ~ Wayne Reisig, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Johan Svendsen
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Johan Severin Svendsen

Johan Severin Svendsen (30 September 1840 – 14 June 1911) was a Norwegian composer, conductor and violinist. Born in Christiania (now Oslo), Norway, he lived most his life in Copenhagen, Denmark. His younger son from his second marriage is the famous Danish actor Eyvind Johan-Svendsen (1896-1946).

His father was a music teacher and Svendsen learned both the violin and clarinet from him. By the time he finished school, he was working as an orchestral musician, and occasionally made short concert tours as a violinist. In Lübeck, on one of his tours, he came to the attention of a wealthy merchant who made it possible for him to study from 1863-67 at the Leipzig Conservatory. He began his studies with Mendelssohn's favorite violinist, Ferdinand David, but problems with his hand forced him to switch to composition which he studied with Carl Reinecke. He completed his studies in Leipzig in 1867, receiving first prize in composition.

Gradually his attention turned to conducting. After spending time in Paris (1868-70) and Leipzig (1870-72), he returned to Christiania. In the summer of 1871, he went to New York City to marry Sarah (Sally, later changed to Bergljot) Levett Schmidt, whom he had met in Paris. He was conductor of the Musical Society Concerts in Christiania (1872-77), then spent three years in Germany, Italy, England and France. He returned to teach and conduct in Kristiania (1880-1883). In 1883, he was appointed principal conductor of the Royal Theater Orchestra in Copenhagen, where he lived until his death.

In 1884, he and his wife separated, and she moved to Paris. Their relationship had been chaotic for several years. In 1883, in a fit of anger, she had thrown on a fire the only copy of his Symphony No. 3. This incident was used by Ibsen in Hedda Gabler. Following a divorce from Sarah (10 December 1901), he married (23 December 1901) Juliette Haase with whom he had been living and had three children. During his student days in Leipzig, Svendsen had a son out of wedlock, Johann Richard Rudolph (1867-1933)

In stark contrast to his more famous contemporary and close friend, Edvard Grieg, Svendsen was famous for his skill of orchestration rather than that of harmonic value. While Grieg composed mostly for small instrumentation, Svendsen composed primarily for orchestras and large ensembles. His most famous work is his romance for violin and orchestra. He was very popular in Denmark and Norway during his life both as a composer and a conductor, winning many national awards and honors. However this popularity did not translate into acceptance into the international repertory of classical music. He died in Copenhagen, aged 70.

Svendsen's first published work, the Op.1 string quartet in A minor, achieved great popular success. He quickly followed with the Op.3 String Octet and Op.5 String Quintet, both of which added to his early fame. All of Svendsen's chamber music was written while he was at the Leipzig Conservatory, yet these works were not then, and should not now be, considered student works. By general consensus, Svendsen was regarded as one of the most talented students then at the Conservatory. His works won prizes and received public performances to much acclaim.

Though Svendsen was at one time intimate friends with Wagner, the latter does not seem to have influenced his music. Svendsen's output includes two symphonies, a violin concerto, and the romance for violin, as well as a number of Norwegian rhapsodies for orchestra.

Works

In parentheses, composition years and premiere place and date

Orchestra
  • Symphony No.1 in D major Op.4 (1865-67; Christiania, 12 October 1867)
  • Symphony No.2 in B-flat major, Op.15 (1874; Christiania, 14 October 1876)
  • Violin Concerto, Op.6 (1868-70; Leipzig, 6 February 1872
  • Cello Concerto, Op.7 (1870; Leipzig, 16 March 1871)
  • Sigurd Slembe, Symphonic Prelude, Op.8 (1871; Leipzig, 12 December 1871)
  • Carnival in Paris, Episode, Op.9 (1872; Christiania, 26 October 1872)
  • Funeral March, On the Death of King Carl XV, Op.10 (1872; 26 October 1872)
  • Zorahayda, Legend, Op.11 (1874, rev. 1879; Christiania, 3 October 1874, rev. 11 May 1880)
  • Festival Polonaise, Op.12 (1873; Christiana, 6 August 1873)
  • Coronation March (for the Coronation of King Oscar II), Op.13 (1873; Trondheim, 18 July 1873)
  • Norwegian Artists' Carnival, Op.14 (1874; Christiania, 17 March 1874)
  • Norwegian Rhapsody No. 1, Op.17 (1876; Kristiania, 25 September 1877)
  • Romeo and Juliet, Fantasia, Op.18 (1876; Christiania, 14 October 1876)
  • Norwegian Rhapsody No. 2, Op.19 (1876; ??)
  • Norwegian Rhapsody No. 3, Op.21 (1876; Paris, January ??, 1879)
  • Norwegian Rhapsody No. 4, Op.22 (1877; Paris, 1 February 1879)
  • Violin Romance, Op.26 (1881; Kristiania, 30 October 1881)
  • Polonaise, Op.28 (1882)
  • Symphony No.3 in E major (1882-1883) - destroyed
String Orchestra
  • 2 Swedish Folk Melodies, Op.27 (1876, 1878)
  • 2 Icelandic Melodies, Op.30 (1874)
  • Ifjol gjætt' e gjeitinn (Last year I was tending the goats), Op.31 (1874)
Chamber
  • String Quartet, Op.1 (1865)
  • String Octet, Op.3 (1866)
  • String Quintet, Op.5 (1867)
  • Humorous March, Op.16 (1874)
Vocal
  • 2 Songs (Male Chorus), Op.2 (1865)
  • 5 Songs (Voice and Piano), Op.24 (1879)
  • 2 Songs (Voice and Piano), Op.25 (1878, 1880)
  • Wedding Cantata (for Prince Oscar Gustav Adolph and Princess Sophia Maria Victoria), Op.29 (1881; Kristiania, October 18, 1881)
  • Hymn (for golden wedding anniversary of King Christian IX and Queen Louise), Op.32 (1892)
Ballet
  • Foraaret kommer (The Arrival of Spring), Op.33 (1892; Copenhagen, May 26, 1892)

About 50 other minor works, not included in his numbered catalog

References

  • Benestad, Finn and Dag Schjelderup-Ebbe, "Johan Svendsen: Mennesket og kunstneren" H. Aschehoug & Co., 1990
  • English translation: Benestad, Finn and Dag Schjelderup-Ebbe, "Johan Svendsen: The Man, the Maestro, the Music," Peer Gynt Press, 1995.
  • Øystad Gaukstad article on Svendsen for Norwegian Cultural Council (NFK) LPs of Svendsen's chamber music, 1981
  • Some of the information above appears on the website of Edition Silvertrust but permission has been granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

External links

Preceded by
Holger Simon Paulli
Principal Conductors, Royal Danish Orchestra
1883–1908
Succeeded by
Frederik Rung

 
 
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