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Johan Halvorsen
Born: March 15, 1864; Drammen   Died: December 4, 1935; Oslo, Norway  
Johan Halvorsen was among the most prominent Norwegian composers in the generation following Edvard Grieg, and may well have been the most important figure of his time associated with the theater, both as composer and conductor. Halvorsen started his concert career as a violinist, but soon turned to conducting. He led countless performances both in the realm of theater and opera, and as a composer he wrote over 30 scores to accompany plays, most ...
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Featured Johan Halvorsen CDs & DVDs:
Halvorsen: Orchestral Works, Vol. 3 / Jarvi, Thorsen , Hemsing, Bergen Philharmonic
Release Date: 04/26/2011   Label: Chandos   Catalog: 10664   Number of Discs: 1
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Works
Andante Religioso (3)
Askeladden Suite (1)
Bergensiana (2)
Bjornstjerne Bjornson in Memoriam, Op. 30 (2)
Black Swans (1)
Concert Caprice on Norwegian Melodies (1)
Elegie for Violin (1)
Entry March of the Boyars (16)
Fossegrimen Suite and Danse visionaire (1)
Fossegrimen, Op. 21 (1)
Fossgrimen: Fanitullen "Wild Devil's Dance" (1)
Gurre Suite, Op. 17 (1)
La Mélancolie (1)
Little Masquerade Suite, for band (1)
Mascarade Suite (2)
Merchant of Venice: Suite (1)
Nordraakiana (1)
Norway's Greeting to Theodore Roosevelt, Op. 31 (1)
Norwegian Air, Op. 7 (2)
Norwegian Dances (3) for Violin and Orchestra (2)
Norwegian Dances (3) for Violin and Orchestra: Excerpt(s) (1)
Norwegian Dances (3) for Violin and Orchestra: no 1 in D major (1)
Norwegian Dances (3) for Violin and Orchestra: no 2 in A major (1)
Norwegian Festival Overture, Op. 16 (1)
Norwegian Rhapsodies (2) for Orchestra: no 1 in A major (2)
Norwegian Rhapsodies (2) for Orchestra: no 2 in G major (2)
Old Fisherman's Song (2)
Passacaglia and Sarabande with Variations in G minor after Handel (22)
Passacaglia and Sarabande with Variations in G minor after Handel: Passacaglia (3)
Passacaglia and Sarabande with Variations in G minor after Handel: Theme and Variations (1)
Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 32: no 1, Wedding March (4)
Scenes from Norwegian fairytales, Op. 37 (1)
Scenes from Norwegian fairytales, Op. 37: Dance of the Little Trolls (1)
Scenes from Norwegian fairytales, Op. 37: Entry of the Trolls into the Blue Mountain (1)
Scenes from Norwegian fairytales, Op. 37: The Princess Riding on the Bear (1)
Stimmungsbilder (1)
Suite ancienne, Op. 31 (2)
Suite de morceaux caractéristiques: Veslemöy's Sang (3)
Suite for Violin and Piano in G minor (1)
Suite Mosaique (1)
Symphony no 1 in C minor (2)
Symphony no 2 in D minor "Fate" (3)
Symphony no 3 in C major (2)
Wedding of Ravens in the Grove of the Crows (1)
More Featured Johan Halvorsen CDs & DVDs:
Halvorsen: Orchestral Works, Vol. 2 / Jarvi, Bergen Philharmonic
Release Date: 10/26/2010   Label: Chandos   Catalog: 10614   Number of Discs: 1
CD  $14.99
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Halvorsen: Orchestral Works Vol 1 / Jarvi, Bergen Philharmonic
Release Date: 03/30/2010   Label: Chandos   Catalog: 10584   Number of Discs: 1
CD  $14.99
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Biography by Robert Cummings
Johan Halvorsen was among the most prominent Norwegian composers in the generation following Edvard Grieg, and may well have been the most important figure of his time associated with the theater, both as composer and conductor. Halvorsen started his concert career as a violinist, but soon turned to conducting. He led countless performances both in the realm of theater and opera, and as a composer he wrote over 30 scores to accompany plays, most of which, unfortunately, are languishing in total obscurity today. But he wrote much other orchestral music, including three symphonies and the two Norwegian Rhapsodies, compositions cited by his admirers as among his greatest works. His best-known works are The Entry March of the Boyars (1893), for orchestra; "Bergensiana," Rococo Variations (1921), for orchestra; and the Passacaglia and Sarabande, with Variations in G minor after Handel (1894), for violin and viola/cello. While his reputation is still overshadowed by that of Grieg (ironically, he married Grieg's daughter and orchestrated some of Grieg's piano pieces), Halvorsen's stock has been on the rise since the late twentieth century, as recordings of his works have become more widely available.

Johan Halvorsen was born in Drammen, Norway, on March 15, 1864. He studied music in Oslo (then known as Kristiania) and in Stockholm, where his violin teacher was Jakob Lindberg. Later on he took instruction on violin from Adolph Brodsky in Leipzig. From the age of 15, Halvorsen played in theater and opera orchestras. He became the concertmaster for the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra in the 1885-1886 season, and served in the same first-chair post in Aberdeen, Scotland (1888-1889).

In 1889 he relocated to Helsinki to teach music and concertize. It was here where he began to focus on composition, largely at the urging of friends, among whom was Ferruccio Busoni. Soon Halvorsen began to turn out popular orchestral works, including the aforementioned Boyars March. In 1893 he was appointed principal conductor of the Bergen Philharmonic and in 1899 chief conductor of the Kristiania National Theater.

Halvorsen held the latter post for 30 years, leading both stage and symphonic performances, often of his own works. During the latter decade of his tenure at the National Theater, Halvorsen turned to more abstract composition, producing his three symphonies (1923, 1924, and 1928, respectively) and his two Norwegian Rhapsodies (1920). Halvorsen died in Oslo on December 4, 1935.
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