- Pronunciation of Veslemøy
- Halvorsen composed this piece in 1898,1 and it premiered in 1899 at a farewell concert for Halvorsen by the symphony orchestra he directed in Bergen.2 (He was moving to direct music at Norway’s new national theatre in Christiania.)3
- The piece was inspired by Haugtussa, a cycle of poems by Norwegian novelist, poet and playwright Arne Garborg (1851-1924).4
- One English title for Haugtussa (1895) is “Woman of the Underground People.”5 The character Veslemøy is a young girl who can communicate with the supernatural world.6
- Edvard Grieg also set portions of Garborg’s Haugtussa cycle in his song cycle Haugtussa Op.67, “The Mountain Maid.”7
Sources
- Øyvin Dybsand, “Halvorsen, Johan,” Grove Music Online (2001), accessed October 17, 2019, https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000012262.
- Øyvin Dybsand, liner notes to Johan Halvorsen: Orchestral Works Vol. 2, Marianne Thorsen, Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Neeme Järvi, Chandos 10614, CD, 2010.
- Dybsand, “Halvorsen, Johan,” Grove Music Online.
- Dybsand, liner notes to Johan Halvorsen: Orchestral Works Vol. 2.
- “Arne Evensen Garborg,” Encyclopædia Brittanica (January 21, 2019), accessed October 17, 2019, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Arne-Evensen-Garborg.
- Cheryl Christensen, “Grieg in the ‘World of Unborn Music:’ Edvard Grieg’s Creative Journey Through Language in Haugtussa, Op. 67,” The Grieg Society (August 2015), accessed October 17, 2019, http://griegsociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Paper-Cheryl-Christensen-2015_text1.pdf.
- “Haugtussa, Op.67 (Grieg, Edvard),” IMSLP, accessed October 17, 2019, https://imslp.org/wiki/Haugtussa%2C_Op.67_(Grieg%2C_Edvard).
Cut IDs
14841