Geirr Tveitt
Biography
Geirr Tveitt
With his prolific output and a vividness of imagination that is all his own, plus a nationalism unsurpassed in the musical life of Norway, Geirr Tveitt (1908-1981) is one of the most distinctive Norwegian composers of this century.
He grew up in Hardanger, in the fjord country of western Norway, where he inherited important ideas from the folk music traditions of his native district. He originally intended to become an architect, but instead, from 1928 to 1935, he devoted himself to the study of music, his teachers including Grabner in Leipzig, Wellesz in Vienna, and Honegger and Villa-Lobos in Paris. He appeared as a concert pianist in several countries, notably France and England, and he conducted performances of his own works in Norway and abroad.
At an early stage Tveitt developed his keen interest in the modal scales which have always been the hallmark of his compositions. In a thesis he wrote in 1937, he set out to explain the basis of his compositional technique. Starting with the fundamental premise that modal scales are actually Old Norse modes (to which he allotted Old Norse names) and taking the Lydian mode as his point of departure, he developed his own personal system of cadences, based on parallel movements (in fifths or fourths) of leading-notes.
Some of his compositions from the 1930´s (among them the ballets Baldurs Draumar and Birgingu and the opera Dragaredokko) are imbued with an ultra-nationalism which, though undoubtedly typical of the age, nonetheless met with considerable opposition in some quarters.
In 1942, after spending some years in Oslo where he worked as a teacher and music critic, Tveitt returned to Hardanger. There, using as a base his collection of close on one thousand folk tunes — mostly vocal — he wrote one of his major and most successful compositions, Hundrad Hardingtonar for orchestra (Op. 151). This work is divided into suites, most of them consisting of 15 pieces. Many of the suites are characterized by a highly refined sense of harmony and instrumentation, which won for him a well-deserved reputation as a distinguished representative of Scandinavian music. Tveitt has written five operas, one of which Jeppe (based on the comedy by Ludvig Holberg) was given its first performance at the Bergen Music Festival in 1966; it achieved a more resounding success two years later, however, when a revised version was presented in Oslo. Other works include Symphony No. 1 ("Christmas Eve"), six piano concertos, a harp concerto, a violin concerto, two concertos for the Hardanger fiddle (the second of which, Three Fjords, Op. 252, was premiered in Brussels in 1965), and a wide range of piano sonatas and vocal compositions.
Geirr Tveitt
Discography
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Geirr Tveitt: From a Travel Diary
05.08.2011
Exotic and adventurous. The remarkable musical gift of Geirr Tveitt continues to surprise and delight us with 'new' material - 30 years after he left us. Violinist and musicologist Tor Johan Bøen has brought new things forth.
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Geirr Tveitt plays Geirr Tveitt
08.08.1994
In his preface on this release, Leif Ove Andsnes wrote:
"My first encounter with Geirr Tveitt as a pianist and performer was in August 93. Together with others from the Risør Chamber Music Festival, we visited the composers daughter, Gyri, to examine some material. We were at the same time given the pleasure of listening to old recordings with the composer himself as the performer. [...]
In addition to this awsome playing it is also sensational that recordings exist of the 'lost' works such as the Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra, and the Morild Etude, with the composer himself at the piano. To me, Geirr Tveitt ranks among the greatest composer/pianists of the century, alongside with Bela Bartok, Behjamin Britten, Serge Prokofiev and Serge Rachmaninoff." -
Norwegian Heartland - The Romantic Orchestral Heritage
06.06.2005
What better way to celebrate the centenary of Norway in 2005 than to present the music written by our five greatest orchestral composers in the national romantic tradition. Five different composers merging national and international inspiration in their music. This is the Heartland of our classical orchestral tradition, presented in new and sparkling performances by one of the top orchestras in the world. Released as SACD Hybrid 5.1 surround/stereo.
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