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Rued Langgaard

Rued Langgaard (Danish: [ˈʁuðˀ ˈlɑŋˌkɒˀ]; born Rud Immanuel Langgaard; 28 July 1893 – 10 July 1952) was a late-Romantic Danish composer and organist. His then-unconventional music was at odds with that of his Danish contemporaries but was recognized 16 years after his death.

Rued Langgaard
Photograph from Gerhardt Lynge: Danske Komponister (1917)
Born
Rud Immanuel Langgaard

28 July 1893
Copenhagen, Denmark
Died10 July 1952 (aged 58)
Ribe, Denmark
Resting placeHolmen Cemetery, Copenhagen
NationalityDanish
Occupation(s)Composer and organist
Known forComposing numerous full works at a young age and having a more unconventional style compared to his counterparts.

Life edit

Born in Copenhagen, Rued Langgaard was the only son of composer and Royal Chamber musician Siegfried Langgaard (1852–1914) and Emma Langgaard (née Foss, 1861–1926), both of whom were pianists.[1] At the age of five Rued began taking piano lessons with his mother, and later with his father and a private teacher. His talent emerged quickly, and at seven he was able to play Schumann's Davidsbündlertänze and Chopin's mazurkas. By then he had begun to compose short pieces for the piano and play the organ. At 10 he began to study the organ under Gustav Helsted, organist at the Jesuskirken in Valby, and the violin under Chr. Petersen, formerly of the Royal Orchestra.

At the age of 11 he made his first public appearance as an organist and improviser on the organ at a concert at the Frederikskirken (Marmorkirken) in Copenhagen. When he was 12, he started to study music theory under C. F. E. Horneman and, later, Vilhelm Rosenberg.

Langgaard's first compositions, 2 piano pieces and 2 songs, were published when he was 13, and around that time he was taught counterpoint by the celebrated composer Carl Nielsen for about a month. A year later, his choral work Musae triumphantes was performed at a concert in Copenhagen, marking his public debut as a composer. During his teen years he continued composing and travelled with his parents around Christmas and New Year's Eve, meeting conductors Arthur Nikisch and Max Fiedler.

At 18, Langgaard served as assistant organist at the Frederikskirken (Marmorkirken) in Copenhagen. The following year (1913) his Symphony No. 1 "Mountain Pastorals" received its first performance at a concert in Berlin with the Berlin Philharmonic under the baton of Max Fiedler.[2]

His father died in 1914, and from 1915 to 1917 he was assistant organist at the Garnisons Kirke in Copenhagen. From 1917 onward he applied without success for the post of organist at a large number of churches in Copenhagen. In 1922 a young woman named Valborg Constance Olivia Tetens (she was known as Constance) moved in with Rued Langgaard and his mother in Copenhagen. A year after his mother died in 1926, Langgaard married Constance Tetens.

Although Langgaard was given a state grant from the age of 30, his works and job applications were almost continually rejected by the establishment. Only at the age of 46 did he manage to obtain a permanent job, as the organist at the cathedral in Ribe, the oldest town in Denmark, situated in southwest Jutland. Just shy of his 59th birthday, Rued Langgaard died in Ribe, still unrecognized as a composer.

Music edit

 
Langgaard in later life

Rued Langgaard composed in a late Romantic style, emphatically dramatic and endowed with colossal mood swings. Unquestionably, he was influenced by Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss and, like Strauss, he was a master of orchestration. He was a prolific composer for the large orchestra, writing 16 symphonies as well as other orchestral works.

Music of the Spheres is his best-known and most radical work. It is a symphonic work of great complexity, calling for a large orchestra including organ and a piano on which the strings are played directly rather than via the keys, choir, and a supporting (distant) orchestra including a soprano voice.[3] It was composed during World War I, but only performed twice (in Germany in 1921–1922) during Langgaard's lifetime and lay dormant for almost 50 years before being rediscovered. When it was rediscovered in the late 1960s, it was considered remarkably modern and reflective of the pathfinding style in which Langgaard composed. In 2010 Music of the Spheres received its British premiere at The Proms, conducted by Thomas Dausgaard.[4]

His unorthodox style and sense of drama extended to the titles of his compositions. His fourth and sixth symphonies are known as the Leaf Fall and Heaven Storming. His symphonies Nos. 13 and 16 are named Faithlessness and Deluge of Sun, respectively. Examples of descriptive names for individual movements are Wireless Caruso and Compulsive Energy and Daddies rushing off to the Office (in symphony No. 14, The Morning).

His total production of over 400 works included more than 150 songs, works for piano, organ, and an opera entitled Antikrist (The Antichrist).

Selected works edit

BVN refers to the numbering of works in: Bendt Viinholt Nielsen: Rued Langgaards Kompositioner (Rued Langgaard's Compositions. An Annotated Catalogue of Works. With an English Introduction). Odense University Press, 1991.

Opera edit

  • Antikrist (Antichrist), "church opera" in two acts (or a prologue and six scenes) for soloists, mixed choir, and orchestra
  • Original version: BVN 170; 1921–1923
  • Revised version: BVN 192; 1926–1930

Symphonies edit

  • Symphony No. 1, Klippepastoraler (Cliffside Pastorals) (BVN 32; 1908–1909, rev. 1910–1911)
  • The Second Symphony exists in two versions:
  • Symphony No. 2, (BVN 53; 1912 1914)
  • Symphony No. 2, Vårbrud (Awakening of Spring) (BVN 53; 1912 1914, rev. 1926–1933)
  • Symphony No. 3, Ungdomsbrus (La Melodia) (The Flush of Youth (La Melodia)), for piano and orchestra (BVN 96; 1915–1916, rev. 1925–1933)
  • Symphony No. 4, Løvfald (Leaf-fall) (BVN 124; 1916, rev. 1920)
  • The Fifth Symphony exists in two versions:
  • Symphony No. 5 (BVN 191; 1917–1918, rev. 1919–1920 and 1926)
  • Symphony No. 5, Steppenatur (Sommersagnsdrama) (Steppe Landscape (Summer Legend Drama)) (BVN 216; rev. 1931)
  • Symphony No. 6 "Det Himmelrivende" (The Stormy Sky) (1919-20/1928-30), BVN. 165
  • The Seventh Symphony exists in two versions:
  • Symphony No. 7 (1st version, 1925–26), BVN. 188
  • Symphony No. 7 "Ved Tordenskjold i Holmens Kirke" (By Tordenskjold in Holmen Church (2nd version, 1925-26/1930-32), BVN. 212
  • Symphony No. 8 "Minder ved Amalienborg" (Memories at Amalienborg) (with mixed chorus, 1926–28/1929-1934), BVN. 193
  • Symphony No. 9 "Fra Dronning Dagmars By" (From Queen Dagmar's City) (1942), BVN. 282
  • Symphony No. 10 "Hin Tordenbolig" (Yon Hall of Thunder) (1944–45), BVN. 298
  • Symphony No. 11 "Ixion" (1944–45), BVN. 303
  • Symphony No. 12 "Helsingeborg" (1946), BVN. 318
  • Symphony No. 13 "Undertro" (Belief in Wonders) (1946–47), BVN. 319
  • Symphony No. 14 (Suite) "Morgenen" (Morning) (with mixed chorus, 1947-48/1951), BVN. 336
  • Symphony No. 15 "Søstormen" (Storm at Sea) (with bass-baritone solo and male chorus, 1937/1949), BVN. 375
  • Symphony No. 16 "Syndflod af Sol" (Deluge of the Sun) (1951), BVN. 417

Other orchestral works edit

  • Drapa (On the Death of Edvard Grieg, 1907–09), BVN. 20
  • Heltedød (Death of a Hero) (1907–08), BVN. 24
  • Sphinx (Tone Poem) (1907–13), BVN. 37
  • Saga blot (A Thing of the Past) (1917–19), BVN. 140
  • Symfonisk Festspil (Symphonic Festival Play) (1917–20), BVN. 166
  • Prelude to "Antikrist" (original version, 1921–23), BVN. 170:1
  • Music for "En Digters Drøm" (A Poet's Dream) (1923–26), BVN. 181
  • Musernes Dans paa Helikon (The Dance of the Muses on Helicon) (Concert Ouverture, 1925/1939), BVN. 185
  • Prelude to "Fortabelsen (Antikrist)" (Perdition (Antikrist)) (1921-23/1926-30), BVN. 192:1
  • Prelude to "Komedien om Enhver" (Comedy of an Everyman) (1921-23/1936), BVN. 232
  • The Danish National Radio (Fanfares, 1948), BVN. 351
  • Mistèrio "Dødssejleren" (The Phantom Ship) after Liszt (1931–32)

Concertante works edit

  • Concerto (in one movement) for Violin and Orchestra (1943–44), BVN. 289
  • Interdikt for Organ and Orchestra (1947–48), BVN. 335
  • Søndagssonate (Sunday Sonata) for Violin, piano, organ and orchestra (1949–50), BVN. 393
  • "Fra Arild" (From Arild), concerto for piano and orchestra freely adapted from compositions by Siegfried Langgaard (1935–37)

Voice and orchestra edit

  • Drømmen (The Dream) (Sinfonia interna) (1915-16/1945), BVN. 98
  • Hav og Sol (Sea and Sun) (with soprano or mezzo-soprano; version with chorus by Mike Cholewa after the composer's sketches, 1915/1940s), BVN. 102
  • Music of the Spheres (Sfærernes musik), for soprano, mixed choir, organ, orchestra, and "distant orchestra" (BVN 128; 1916–1918)
  • From the Abyss (Fra dybet), for mixed choir and orchestra (BVN 414; 1950, rev. 1952)

Chamber music edit

  • String Quartet No. 1 (BVN 68; 1914–1915, rev. 1936)
  • String Quartet No. 2 (BVN 145; 1918; rev. 1931)
  • String Quartet No. 3 (BVN 183; 1924)
  • String Quartet No. 4, Summer Days (Sommerdage) (BVN 215; 1914–1918, rev. 1931)
  • String Quartet in A-flat major (BVN 155; 1918)
  • String Quartet No. 6 (BVN 160; 1918–1919)
  • String Quartet No. 5 (BVN 189; 1925, rev. 1926–1938)
  • Violin Sonata No. 1, "Viole" (1915/1945), BVN 94
  • Violin Sonata No. 2, "Den store Mester kommer" (Behold the Master Cometh) (1920–21), BVN 167
  • Violin Sonata No. 3 (1945–49), BVN 312
  • Violin Sonata No. 4, "Parce nobis, Jesu!" (1949), BVN 376
  • Septet, for winds (BVN 95; 1915)
  • Humoreske, sextet for winds and drum (BVN 176; 1922–1923)

Recordings edit

In recent years, many of his works have been recorded, including recordings by Danacord of his complete symphonies on seven CDs.[5] This cycle, with the Artur Rubinstein Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Ilya Stupel, was followed by a second cycle recorded by Dacapo with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Thomas Dausgaard.[6] Both cycles have had their share of critical recognition.

Other works of Langgaard currently available on CD include Music of the Spheres,[7] Messis (Organ drama in three evenings), Antichrist (Church opera in six scenes), Duo Lys Pa Himlen, piano concertos, The End of Time, and various works for solo instruments.[8] Some secular and religious choral works, performed by Ars Nova Copenhagen, can be found the CD Rose Garden Songs.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ "Rued Langgaard – Long Biography – Music Sales Classical". www.musicsalesclassical.com. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  2. ^ Mellor, Andrew (25 September 2014). "Introducing your next great musical discovery: Rued Langgaard". www.gramophone.co.uk. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  3. ^ Sfærernes musik, BVN 128 (Langgaard, Rued)
  4. ^ Hewett, Ivan (5 August 2010). "Rued Langgaard: return of a visionary composer". The Daily Telegraph.
  5. ^ "Rued Langgaard – The Complete Symphonies". Danacord.dk. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  6. ^ "Dacapo Records – Rued Langgaard". Dacapo-records.dk. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  7. ^ "Classical Lost And Found: Rued Langgaard's Mystical Musical Universe". NPR.org. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  8. ^ "Langgaard, Rued – Classical: Music". Amazon.co.uk. 9 September 2009. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  9. ^ "Dacapo Records – Rued Langgaard". Dacapo-records.dk. 17 March 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2021.

External links edit

  • "Rued Langgaard". A Danish composer presented in text, pictures, music and speech. Retrieved 6 March 2005.
  • Profile and works at Edition S
  • Very short Naxos biographical note on Rued Langgaard
  • Danacord entry to Rued Langgaard, "a white duckling who became an ugly swan".
  • Free scores by Rued Langgaard at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)

rued, langgaard, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rued Langgaard news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Rued Langgaard Danish ˈʁudˀ ˈlɑŋˌkɒˀ born Rud Immanuel Langgaard 28 July 1893 10 July 1952 was a late Romantic Danish composer and organist His then unconventional music was at odds with that of his Danish contemporaries but was recognized 16 years after his death Rued LanggaardPhotograph from Gerhardt Lynge Danske Komponister 1917 BornRud Immanuel Langgaard28 July 1893Copenhagen DenmarkDied10 July 1952 aged 58 Ribe DenmarkResting placeHolmen Cemetery CopenhagenNationalityDanishOccupation s Composer and organistKnown forComposing numerous full works at a young age and having a more unconventional style compared to his counterparts Contents 1 Life 2 Music 3 Selected works 3 1 Opera 3 2 Symphonies 3 3 Other orchestral works 3 4 Concertante works 3 5 Voice and orchestra 3 6 Chamber music 4 Recordings 5 References 6 External linksLife editBorn in Copenhagen Rued Langgaard was the only son of composer and Royal Chamber musician Siegfried Langgaard 1852 1914 and Emma Langgaard nee Foss 1861 1926 both of whom were pianists 1 At the age of five Rued began taking piano lessons with his mother and later with his father and a private teacher His talent emerged quickly and at seven he was able to play Schumann s Davidsbundlertanze and Chopin s mazurkas By then he had begun to compose short pieces for the piano and play the organ At 10 he began to study the organ under Gustav Helsted organist at the Jesuskirken in Valby and the violin under Chr Petersen formerly of the Royal Orchestra At the age of 11 he made his first public appearance as an organist and improviser on the organ at a concert at the Frederikskirken Marmorkirken in Copenhagen When he was 12 he started to study music theory under C F E Horneman and later Vilhelm Rosenberg Langgaard s first compositions 2 piano pieces and 2 songs were published when he was 13 and around that time he was taught counterpoint by the celebrated composer Carl Nielsen for about a month A year later his choral work Musae triumphantes was performed at a concert in Copenhagen marking his public debut as a composer During his teen years he continued composing and travelled with his parents around Christmas and New Year s Eve meeting conductors Arthur Nikisch and Max Fiedler At 18 Langgaard served as assistant organist at the Frederikskirken Marmorkirken in Copenhagen The following year 1913 his Symphony No 1 Mountain Pastorals received its first performance at a concert in Berlin with the Berlin Philharmonic under the baton of Max Fiedler 2 His father died in 1914 and from 1915 to 1917 he was assistant organist at the Garnisons Kirke in Copenhagen From 1917 onward he applied without success for the post of organist at a large number of churches in Copenhagen In 1922 a young woman named Valborg Constance Olivia Tetens she was known as Constance moved in with Rued Langgaard and his mother in Copenhagen A year after his mother died in 1926 Langgaard married Constance Tetens Although Langgaard was given a state grant from the age of 30 his works and job applications were almost continually rejected by the establishment Only at the age of 46 did he manage to obtain a permanent job as the organist at the cathedral in Ribe the oldest town in Denmark situated in southwest Jutland Just shy of his 59th birthday Rued Langgaard died in Ribe still unrecognized as a composer Music edit nbsp Langgaard in later life Rued Langgaard composed in a late Romantic style emphatically dramatic and endowed with colossal mood swings Unquestionably he was influenced by Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss and like Strauss he was a master of orchestration He was a prolific composer for the large orchestra writing 16 symphonies as well as other orchestral works Music of the Spheres is his best known and most radical work It is a symphonic work of great complexity calling for a large orchestra including organ and a piano on which the strings are played directly rather than via the keys choir and a supporting distant orchestra including a soprano voice 3 It was composed during World War I but only performed twice in Germany in 1921 1922 during Langgaard s lifetime and lay dormant for almost 50 years before being rediscovered When it was rediscovered in the late 1960s it was considered remarkably modern and reflective of the pathfinding style in which Langgaard composed In 2010 Music of the Spheres received its British premiere at The Proms conducted by Thomas Dausgaard 4 His unorthodox style and sense of drama extended to the titles of his compositions His fourth and sixth symphonies are known as the Leaf Fall and Heaven Storming His symphonies Nos 13 and 16 are named Faithlessness and Deluge of Sun respectively Examples of descriptive names for individual movements are Wireless Caruso and Compulsive Energy and Daddies rushing off to the Office in symphony No 14 The Morning His total production of over 400 works included more than 150 songs works for piano organ and an opera entitled Antikrist The Antichrist Selected works editBVN refers to the numbering of works in Bendt Viinholt Nielsen Rued Langgaards Kompositioner Rued Langgaard s Compositions An Annotated Catalogue of Works With an English Introduction Odense University Press 1991 Opera edit Antikrist Antichrist church opera in two acts or a prologue and six scenes for soloists mixed choir and orchestra Original version BVN 170 1921 1923 Revised version BVN 192 1926 1930 Symphonies edit Symphony No 1 Klippepastoraler Cliffside Pastorals BVN 32 1908 1909 rev 1910 1911 The Second Symphony exists in two versions Symphony No 2 BVN 53 1912 1914 Symphony No 2 Varbrud Awakening of Spring BVN 53 1912 1914 rev 1926 1933 Symphony No 3 Ungdomsbrus La Melodia The Flush of Youth La Melodia for piano and orchestra BVN 96 1915 1916 rev 1925 1933 Symphony No 4 Lovfald Leaf fall BVN 124 1916 rev 1920 The Fifth Symphony exists in two versions Symphony No 5 BVN 191 1917 1918 rev 1919 1920 and 1926 Symphony No 5 Steppenatur Sommersagnsdrama Steppe Landscape Summer Legend Drama BVN 216 rev 1931 Symphony No 6 Det Himmelrivende The Stormy Sky 1919 20 1928 30 BVN 165 The Seventh Symphony exists in two versions Symphony No 7 1st version 1925 26 BVN 188 Symphony No 7 Ved Tordenskjold i Holmens Kirke By Tordenskjold in Holmen Church 2nd version 1925 26 1930 32 BVN 212 Symphony No 8 Minder ved Amalienborg Memories at Amalienborg with mixed chorus 1926 28 1929 1934 BVN 193 Symphony No 9 Fra Dronning Dagmars By From Queen Dagmar s City 1942 BVN 282 Symphony No 10 Hin Tordenbolig Yon Hall of Thunder 1944 45 BVN 298 Symphony No 11 Ixion 1944 45 BVN 303 Symphony No 12 Helsingeborg 1946 BVN 318 Symphony No 13 Undertro Belief in Wonders 1946 47 BVN 319 Symphony No 14 Suite Morgenen Morning with mixed chorus 1947 48 1951 BVN 336 Symphony No 15 Sostormen Storm at Sea with bass baritone solo and male chorus 1937 1949 BVN 375 Symphony No 16 Syndflod af Sol Deluge of the Sun 1951 BVN 417 Other orchestral works edit Drapa On the Death of Edvard Grieg 1907 09 BVN 20 Heltedod Death of a Hero 1907 08 BVN 24 Sphinx Tone Poem 1907 13 BVN 37 Saga blot A Thing of the Past 1917 19 BVN 140 Symfonisk Festspil Symphonic Festival Play 1917 20 BVN 166 Prelude to Antikrist original version 1921 23 BVN 170 1 Music for En Digters Drom A Poet s Dream 1923 26 BVN 181 Musernes Dans paa Helikon The Dance of the Muses on Helicon Concert Ouverture 1925 1939 BVN 185 Prelude to Fortabelsen Antikrist Perdition Antikrist 1921 23 1926 30 BVN 192 1 Prelude to Komedien om Enhver Comedy of an Everyman 1921 23 1936 BVN 232 The Danish National Radio Fanfares 1948 BVN 351 Misterio Dodssejleren The Phantom Ship after Liszt 1931 32 Concertante works edit Concerto in one movement for Violin and Orchestra 1943 44 BVN 289 Interdikt for Organ and Orchestra 1947 48 BVN 335 Sondagssonate Sunday Sonata for Violin piano organ and orchestra 1949 50 BVN 393 Fra Arild From Arild concerto for piano and orchestra freely adapted from compositions by Siegfried Langgaard 1935 37 Voice and orchestra edit Drommen The Dream Sinfonia interna 1915 16 1945 BVN 98 Hav og Sol Sea and Sun with soprano or mezzo soprano version with chorus by Mike Cholewa after the composer s sketches 1915 1940s BVN 102 Music of the Spheres Sfaerernes musik for soprano mixed choir organ orchestra and distant orchestra BVN 128 1916 1918 From the Abyss Fra dybet for mixed choir and orchestra BVN 414 1950 rev 1952 Chamber music edit String Quartet No 1 BVN 68 1914 1915 rev 1936 String Quartet No 2 BVN 145 1918 rev 1931 String Quartet No 3 BVN 183 1924 String Quartet No 4 Summer Days Sommerdage BVN 215 1914 1918 rev 1931 String Quartet in A flat major BVN 155 1918 String Quartet No 6 BVN 160 1918 1919 String Quartet No 5 BVN 189 1925 rev 1926 1938 Violin Sonata No 1 Viole 1915 1945 BVN 94 Violin Sonata No 2 Den store Mester kommer Behold the Master Cometh 1920 21 BVN 167 Violin Sonata No 3 1945 49 BVN 312 Violin Sonata No 4 Parce nobis Jesu 1949 BVN 376 Septet for winds BVN 95 1915 Humoreske sextet for winds and drum BVN 176 1922 1923 Recordings editIn recent years many of his works have been recorded including recordings by Danacord of his complete symphonies on seven CDs 5 This cycle with the Artur Rubinstein Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Ilya Stupel was followed by a second cycle recorded by Dacapo with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Thomas Dausgaard 6 Both cycles have had their share of critical recognition Other works of Langgaard currently available on CD include Music of the Spheres 7 Messis Organ drama in three evenings Antichrist Church opera in six scenes Duo Lys Pa Himlen piano concertos The End of Time and various works for solo instruments 8 Some secular and religious choral works performed by Ars Nova Copenhagen can be found the CD Rose Garden Songs 9 References edit Rued Langgaard Long Biography Music Sales Classical www musicsalesclassical com Retrieved 2 October 2018 Mellor Andrew 25 September 2014 Introducing your next great musical discovery Rued Langgaard www gramophone co uk Retrieved 2 October 2018 Sfaerernes musik BVN 128 Langgaard Rued Hewett Ivan 5 August 2010 Rued Langgaard return of a visionary composer The Daily Telegraph Rued Langgaard The Complete Symphonies Danacord dk Retrieved 8 May 2010 Dacapo Records Rued Langgaard Dacapo records dk Retrieved 8 May 2010 Classical Lost And Found Rued Langgaard s Mystical Musical Universe NPR org Retrieved 2 October 2018 Langgaard Rued Classical Music Amazon co uk 9 September 2009 Retrieved 8 May 2010 Dacapo Records Rued Langgaard Dacapo records dk 17 March 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2021 External links edit Rued Langgaard A Danish composer presented in text pictures music and speech Retrieved 6 March 2005 Profile and works at Edition S Very short Naxos biographical note on Rued Langgaard Danacord entry to Rued Langgaard a white duckling who became an ugly swan Free scores by Rued Langgaard at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rued Langgaard amp oldid 1216810163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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