Edvard
Grieg (1843 - 1907)
Piano
Music Vol. 12
Edvard Grieg was born in Bergen, on the west coast of Norway, in 1843. He showed a strong interest in
music at a very early age, and after encouragement from the violinist and
composer Ole Bull (1810 - 1880) was sent to the Conservatory in Leipzig at the age of fifteen to receive his musical
education. There he had fundamental and solid musical training, and through the
city's flourishing musical life, received impressions and heard music which
would come to leave its stamp on him for the rest of his life - for better or
for worse. Even though he severely criticized the Leipzig Conservatory,
especially towards the end of his life, in reality his exceptional gifts were
recognised, and one sees in his sketchbooks of the Leipzig period that he had the freedom to experiment
as well. He had no good reason to criticize the conservatory, nor his teachers,
for poor teaching or a lack of understanding.
From Leipzig Grieg travelled to Copenhagen, bringing with him the solid musical
training he had acquired, and there soon became known as a promising young
composer. It was not long before he carne under the influence of Rikard Nordraak,
whose glowing enthusiasm and unshakeable belief that the key to a successful
future for Norwegian music lay in nationalism, in the uniquely Norwegian, the
music of the people - folk-songs - came to play a decisive role in Grieg's
development as a composer. Nordraak's influence is most obvious in the Humoresques
for piano, Op. 6, which was considered a turning-point in Grieg's career as
a composer.
In the autumn of 1866, Grieg settled in Christiania (Oslo).
In 1874 Norway's capital was the centre for his
activities. During this time he also wrote the majority of the works which laid
the foundation for his steadily increasing fame. In spite of his poor health
-he had had a defective lung ever since childhood -he was constantly on
concert-tour as a pianist or as a conductor, always with his own works on the
programme. After his last concert-tour in 1907, he wrote to his friend Frants
Beyer:
This Tour has been strange. The
Audiences have been on my Side. In Germany I have received more ac claim 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, 5th March, 1907)
More clearly than anything else, this letter shows a trend which
Grieg experienced in his later years in relation to his music. It was also a
development which would continue internationally until long after his death.
Within the musical "establishment", there were increasing numbers of
people who were gradually becoming more critical of Grieg's music and of his
abilities and talent as a composer. In the meantime his popularity among
music-loving audiences increased in inverse proportion. Grieg enjoyed some of
his greatest popularity with the general public during the last years of his
life, when, in spite of his greatly weakened health, he was continually on
tour, in popular demand from concert-managers all over the world. The critics,
however, were sceptical and condescending, and there is no doubt that Grieg
felt hurt by their attitude:
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.
From early on Grieg was labelled a composer of small forms. His
indisputable lyrical ability and talent were never doubted, but apart from some
very few works such as the Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16, and
the String Quartet in G minor, Op. 27, the Piano
Sonata in E minor, Op. 7, the three Violin Sonatas, Op. 8
in F major, Op. 13 in G major and Op. 45
in C minor, and the Cello Sonata in A minor, Op. 36,
he was not able, in spite of his many desperate attempts to do so, to feel
completely at home with more extended ihUSicil:1 forms. He felt that this was a
short-coming, and unfairly blamed his education at the Leipzig Conservatory.
Nevertheless, he also showed that he could master these f6rMs when on rare
occasions he found raw musical material that could be reworked and treated
within the traditional structure of sonata-form. The only problem was that the
musical material to which he felt closest and that most fascinated him, was of
another quality and character.
Grieg's encounter with Norwegian folk-music, and his
assimilation of essential features from this music, released certain aspects of
his own creativity that soon led to his music being, for many, identified with
folk-music. By some he was considered more or less simply an arranger of folk-music,
and that hurt him very deeply:
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.
Much instrumental Norwegian folk-music is built from small
melodic themes, units which are repeated with small variations in appoggialuras
and sometimes with rhythmic displacements. Sections are then joined together to
form larger units. We seldom find any true development as it is understood in
traditional classical music. It gradually became clear to Grieg that he felt the
greatest affinity with this music. That is why it also became so difficult to
distinguish between what in Grieg's works came originally from folk-music, and
what was his own composition. This must also have been especially difficult for
foreign critics and audiences.
In Grieg's music there are two features which particularly
attract our attention, rhythm and harmony. In many instances Grieg's rhythm in
his piano compositions is taken from the folk-dance, as well as from
compositions which are not based upon folk-music. He placed great emphasis on
the rhythmic element, and considered it paramount in the presentation of his
works which have dance as the point of departure. He was of the opinion that in
order to be able to play one of his compositions, one had to know and feel the
dance rhythm. Characteristic of his understanding of the rhythmic element is
the story about the meeting between Grieg and Ravel in Paris, in 1894, at the home of William Molard:
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 al1. 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.'
Harmony is at the heart of his work. Often it is the harmony
itself which is the basis of the composition. Grieg pointed this out
emphatically in a letter to his biographer, Henry T. Finck:
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. 1 have I understood that the secret
depth one finds in our Folk-songs is basica/1y owing to the richness of their
untold harmonic possibilities. In my reworking of the Folk-songs Op. 66, but
also I elsewhere, I have attempted to express my interpretation of the hidden harmonies
in our Folk- I songs.
Grieg's interest in harmony had become obvious to others already
while he was at the Conservatory. At that time it was first and foremost a
desire to experiment. Later harmony became his way of bringing forth the very
"soul" of the folk-tunes. Among other things, he deliberately used
unfamiliar, "radical" chord progressions in order to suggest the
vague tonality (sotto voce half tones, vague thirds) such as one finds
in many of the songs, a melodic characteristic which would otherwise be
impossible from an instrument like the piano.
Grieg's instrument was primarily the piano. From his earliest
years to the concert-tour in the year he died, he performed as a pianist his
own compositions. He was not a virtuoso, but his intimate familiarity with the
piano allowed him to present his own music in such a way as to leave a deep and
lasting impression upon everyone who heard him play. According to contemporary
reports he had a marveilous ability to bring out the best, the very essence, of
his own piano pieces. When he took his place on the platform, the atmosphere
became electric, and the critics emphasized his refined touch, tone quality,
and the complete absence of superficial gestures.
Grieg's music contributed very modestly to the development of
piano technique. Most of his piano pieces are technically speaking within the
abilities of competent amateurs. This, together with musical characteristics
which seem to have a stimulating and refreshing effect, contributed to the fact
that he was one of the most played, and respected composers in Europe-popular,
if not with the critics, then at least with the majority of those interested in
music.
Grieg's compositions were written in the epoch of the piano.
Music and piano-playing in the average home were at a peak during the last half
of the nineteenth century and the first decades of this century. Cyril Ehrlich
has calculated that in 1910 alone more than 600,000 pianos were produced. To
know how to play the piano was part of the general education in most
middle-class families, especially for girls. No wonder the music publishers C.
F. Peters hoisted the flag in London and Frankfurt every time Grieg delivered a manuscript for
a new album of piano pieces. It is also understandable that Grieg sometimes
experienced the demand for new piano pieces as a strain. There were also times
when he felt that the production of piano pieces was a sort of bribe, or
indulgence, to make sure that the publishing-house issued his other works as
well. Nevertheless, in general, Grieg had an excellent relationship with his
publisher in Leipzig. He was particularly dose to Dr
Max Abraham (1831 - 1900), who became editor at Peters in 1863. This is dearly
shown by the abundant correspondence that has been preserved. Verlagsbuchhandlung
C. F. Peters Bureau de Musique, was the full name of the
publishing- house that acted as Grieg's exclusive publisher from 1890 and
agreed to pay him 4000 Marks every year, a sum which was adjusted to 6000 Marks
in 1901. In return, Grieg was to offer Peters all of his future compositions
with rights, für allen Länder (for all countries), for a certain fee.
Grieg experienced a great deal of adversity during certain
periods of his life, but he also had more success than most other composer
colleagues of his time. Nevertheless he never lost the feelings of unrest, of
not having developed his talent to the full degree, of having left something
undone, something unfulfilled within himself. Throughout his life, Grieg was a
restless soul. He never felt completely at peace anywhere. When he was in Bergen, he longed for Olristiania, and when he was
there he longed for Copenhagen and the continent. When he was
abroad, he longed to be back home, but no sooner had he arrived in Bergen than he felt oppressed and restless and
wanted to go off again. There were perhaps only two places where he really felt
at home and satisfied, on the concert- platform and in the Norwegian mountains,
especially Jotunheimen. When he was in the presence of his audience or
experiencing the powerful and free nature of the western part of Norway, he felt whole and complete.
Agitato, EG 106, was written in Copenhagen in
January 1865, when Grieg was full of ideas for his first really personal works
for the piano, the Humoresques, Op. 6 and Piano Sonata, Op. 7.
This pieces is clearly strongly influenced by the virtuoso continental piano
tradition, from which, only months later, he would distance himself. Doubtless
this is the reason that he never tried to have it published. The work was
printed for the first time in Volume 20 of the complete collection of Grieg's
works, the Grieg Gesamtausgabe.
Norwegian Dances, Op. 35, was originally written
for piano duet in 1880. In 1887 Grieg reworked the dance for one player and
both were published in the same year by Peters. Once again the composer turned
to Lindeman's Older and Newer Folk-Dance Music, as he so often had before,
when not composing his own "folk-songs". The dances, the piano-duet
version and the arrangement by Hans Sitt for orchestra, are among some of Grieg's
best known and most often played compositions.
Album-Leaf, EG 109, was published in the
collection Piano Music by Nordic Composers, published by Carl Warmuth in
Christiania in 1878. The composition presumably dates from the period of the
last three of the four Album-Leaf, Op. 28, written between 1874 and
1878.
The Waltz-Caprices, Op. 37, like the Norwegian
Dances, Op. 35, were originally written for piano duet in 1883. In 1887
Grieg arranged the pieces for one player and they were published by Peters at
the same time as Opus 35. Unlike the latter, however, there is here less
that is Norwegian. This is elegant and effective drawing-room music.
Johan Halvorsen (1864-1935) was an extremely talented
violinist, conductor and composer, who worked closely with Grieg on several
occasions. As a conductor for the theatre and the opera, first at the National
Theatre in Bergen from 1893 and then from 1899 to 1920 for the National Theatre
in Christiania (Oslo), he wrote effective music for a number of plays. In 1895,
when he received the offer of a position at the conservatory in Bucharest, he
wrote The Entry March of the Boyars, which became one of the most
popular works in Nordic orchestral repertoire. Grieg found the march so
successful that he offered to rework Halvorsen's composition as a piano piece
and the arrangement was published by Wilhelm Hansen in 1895.
It is through his music for Peer Gynt more than
anything else that Grieg's name is known throughout the world. The incidental
music for Ibsen's play was first heard at the first performance of the play at
the Christiania Theatre on 24th February, 1876, when it won
immediate success. A month later Grieg had his piano arrangements of individual
numbers published by Lose in Copenhagen. These arrangements were issued in
several volumes, with two or three pieces in each. Only four were for piano
solo, the rest for piano duet, as well as for voice and piano. Just before the
performance of Peer Gynt at the Dagmar Theatre in Copenhagen in January
1886, Wilhelm Hansen published a new edition of Grieg's piano arrangements,
with arrangements by Holger Dahl of eight new numbers.
Grieg's own arrangement of Dance of the Mountain
King's Daughter, Op. 23, No. 9, was not included in the new collection, but
he reworked the piece for piano solo in connection with the publication of the
second Peer Gynt Suite, Op. 55. The dance was originally the fifth and
last piece in the suite and this version was published by Peters in January
1893. The publication was temporarily recalled by Grieg himself, after he had
had the opportunity to conduct the suite in Leipzig.
He became convinced that the Dance of the Mountain
King's Daughter should only be played in the theatre:
I have now heard the piece… I have even conducted it,
and with due respect and love for all trolls, in the final analysis we must
show no mercy and cut it out.
The incidental music for Sigurd forsalfar, Bjornsterne
Bjornson's historical drama, was written in 1872. The orchestral version of the
original music was published by Lose in Copenhagen in 1874 and at the same time
Grieg arranged three pieces for the piano. In 1892 he revised the work and the
revised orchestral score and piano arrangements of these three pieces were
issued by Peters in 1893 as Opus 56. In comparison with the earlier
version, Opus 22, Grieg has made considerable harmonic changes. The
third piece, Homage March, has also been expanded in the new version,
with a new introduction of five bars and a new trio section of 120 bars, in
addition to twelve new bars added to the march itself.