Grieg, Edvard - by H.T. Finck
Grieg, Edvard - by H.T. Finck
Grieg, Edvard - by H.T. Finck
Date Due
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EDVARD GRIEG
BY H. T. FINCK
H-lo
1%U
EDWARD MACDOWELL
America's most original
composer
"Grieg is recognised far beyond his native country as one of the few
masters who have enriched music with new means of melodic and harmonic
expression, and created a national art distinguished by poetic feeling and
the charm of many moods." Georg Capellen.
" He has brought it about that Norwegian moods and Norwegian life
have entered into every music-room in the whole world." Bjornson.
" Grieg's revolt against German classicism was the healthy instinct of a
man who has a message to deliver, and seeks for it the most natural means
of expression." Dr. Wm. Mason.
"Persevere; I tell you, you have the gifts, and— do not let them
intimidate you ! " Liszt to Grieg.
warmth and passion in his melodic phrases, what teeming vitality in his
harmony, what originality and beauty in the turn of his piquant and
ingenious modulations and rhythms, and in all the rest what interest,
novelty, and independence." Tchaikovsky.
"When I had revelled in the music of Chopin and Wagner, Liszt and
Franz, to the point of intoxication, I fancied that the last word had been
said in harmony and melody when, lo
; I came across the songs and
!
pianoforte pieces of Grieg, and once m©re found myself moved to tears of
delight."— H. T. F.
CONTENTS
CHAP.
PREFACE ..... PAGE
vii
....
.
BIBLIOGRAPHY . . 127
TROLDHAUGEN 5°
8 H
ANCESTRY AND CHILDHOOD— OLE BULL 5
only, but while amateurs may fail here and there in tech-
nical proficiency, they usually play with more zeal and
enthusiasm than the average professional ; and it is the zeal
and enthusiasm of the player and singer that stir the
listener's soul most deeply and make him eager to become
a musician too.
What Edvard heard stimulated him to renewed dili-
gence in his practice, and his mother was seldom too far
away to hear and correct the errors perpetrated by his
* Already a year before this he had gone on voyages of discovery.
In view of his future greatness as an originator in the world of
harmony, it is extremely interesting to read what he has written
regarding that year; he speaks of "the wonderful mysterious
satisfaction with which my arms stretched out to the piano to dis-
— —
cover not a melody that was far off no it must be a harmony.
; ;
First a third, then a chord of three notes, then a full chord of four,
—
ending at last with both hands. Oh, joy a combination of five, the
!
after her death, and her son remembers some of her poems.
.
" Because more than any- other thou wast the glory of our
land, because more than any other thou hast carried our
people with thee up towards the bright heights of art,
because thou wast more than any other a pioneer of our
young national music ; more, much more, than any other,
the faithful, warm-hearted conqueror of all hearts, because
thou hast planted a seed which shall spring up in the
future, and for which coming generations shall bless thee,
with the gratitude of thousands upon thousands — for all this,
in the name of our Norse memorial art, I lay this laurel
wreath on thy coffin. Peace be with thy ashes !
When Edvard Grieg spoke these words, and for the last
time gazed upon the features of his friend and benefactor,
he was thirty-seven years old. When he first became
acquainted with him he was, as already stated, a lad of
12 EDVARD GRIEG
about fifteen. The great violinist had returned from
America for a temporary sojourn in his native town. He
became a frequent visitor at the Grieg mansion, and he
promptly discovered the gifts of Edvard, who improvised
for him at the piano, and told him about his dreams and
hopes of himself becoming a musician.
To cite Grieg's own words " When he heard I had
:
II
" And so on " seriously imagining that the boys did not
;
—
" That must sound very pretty let me hear it ; " and when
the boy had finished, he said, with his gentle smile " Very:
1 EDVARD GRIEG
largely his own; in part, it was, perhaps, national. "We
Norwegians, especially, usually develop too slowly to show
in the least at the age of eighteen what we are good for."
There were other " foreigners " at the Conservatory who
" made immense strides forward ; " among them, by an
1 EDVARD GRIEG
Returning to the North, he enjoyed a Norwegian summer
at the country home of his parents at Landaas. In the
following season he gave his first concert in Bergen, at
which his Conservatory string quartet was produced, beside
the piano pieces of opus i, and the Four Songs for Alto,
opus 2. With the net receipts, which were encouraging,
he purchased a number of scores of orchestral and chamber
music, and now, for the first time, applied himself diligently
to score-reading, an important branch of his art to which
the Leipsic Conservatory appears to have paid insufficient
attention after the departure of Schumann. In the spring,
1863, he took up his sojourn in Copenhagen, which, being
a much larger city than Bergen, offered better opportunities
to an aspiring musician, and which, moreover, was the home
of the head of the Scandinavian school, the famous Niels
W. Gade.
It has often been said that Gade was at one time the
teacher of Grieg. This is not strictly true, for Grieg never
took lessons of him; yet he frequently asked the older
master's opinion of his new works, and admits that he
may have profited more by his hints than by the Conserva-
tory course at Leipsic. Shortly after arriving in the Danish
capital (in May 1863), Grieg met Gade at Klampenborg, a
popular summer resort near Copenhagen, and was asked if
he had anything of his own composition to show. Now,
while it is true that Schubert and Mendelssohn had written
—
two of their masterworks the " Erlking," and the " Mid-
—
summer Night's Dream " overture, as lads most of the
other masters, if asked that question at Grieg's age (he was
not quite twenty), would have been obliged to answer as
—
he did that he had nothing of importance to show.
" Very well then," retorted Gade, "go home and write a
symphony." This suggestion caused Grieg to pull himself
together, and a fortnight later he had actually composed
and orchestrated the first movement of a symphony, which
he submitted to Gade, who was much pleased with it, and
LEIPSIC CONSERVATORY—GADE 19
being made. And while they all regard the German nation
as their first and most esteemed teacher, no one should be
* This juvenile symphony was afterwards completed, but has
never been published in its entirety. In a conversation with the
Rev. W. A. Gray, reported in the Woman at Home for January,
1894, Grieg said that old Lumbye conducted it one evening (he
thought it was in 1864) at a symphony concert at the Tivoli. The
second and third movements are now accessible in print as opus 14,
"Two Symphonic Pieces" for piano, four hands.
20 EDVARD GRIEG
surprised at their wishing to have a national musical lan-
guage of their own, without becoming faithless to the
teachings of their mistress. . . .
islands on the He
spoke with special emphasis of
coast.
the eagerness with which he had devoured all myths, folk-
tales, ballads, and popular melodies ; and all these things,
he said, have made my music'
'
Grieg, the next sonata you must really make less Norwegian."
Grieg was in a defiant mood, and retorted :
" On the contrary,
"
Professor, the next will be more so
!
:
11
'No, Grieg; that won't do. You must go home and
write something better.'
11
I was quite disheartened by this verdict. Soon after,
however, I obtained an unexpected revenge. I arranged
the overture as a duet for the pianoforte and sent it to
Stockholm, where, just then, the Academy of Music had
announced a prize for the best overture. I was awarded
the prize by the judges, of whom Gade was one. He must
either have forgotten the piece in the intervening time, or
have been in a very bad temper on the day when I showed
it him."
IV
CHRISTIANIA—MARRIAGE—LISZT
If Grieg's " Jeg elsker dig " (" I love thee ") is one of the
most impassioned and popular of all love songs, there is a
reason for it. The date of its composition is 1864 ; in
that year he became engaged to his cousin, Miss Nina
Hagerup, love for whom had inspired him to set to music
H. C. Andersen's heartfelt lines. Three years, however,
elapsed before he was able to marry her. Miss Hagerup's
mother had no high opinion of her prospective son-in-law
" He is a nobody," she said to a friend ; " he has nothing,
and he writes music that nobody cares to listen to." The
singer Stenberg (one of the best interpreters of Grieg's
lieder) advised her to waitand see, predicting that Edvard
would become famous.*
There was no opposition to the marriage ; it was simply
the old story the composer was too poor to support a
:
3. Grieg Humoresken,
: for piano, opus 6.
4. Grieg Songs.
:
CHRISTIANI A— MARRIAGE—LISZT 3
" The song was sung for the first time by the students at
their torchlight procession for Welhaven, in 1868."
In the same week that this amusing episode occurred, a
letterwas written that was destined to prove a great aid to
Grieg in his struggles. On December 29, 1868, Franz
Liszt wrote to him, from Rome, the following letter, in
French :
[' very fine '] when he came across one of the best passages.
'Ei wie keck Nun horen Sie mal, das gefallt mir.
! Noch
einmal bitte (How bold that is Look here, I like that.
!
' !
ich spiele was Sie wollen, ich bin nicht so Very well, '
( '
I'll play whatever you like, I am not like that*' ) and forth- ;
thank you, after this I do not want to.' But now comes
the best part of the story. Liszt exclaimed, Nun, warum
'
nicht, geben Sie mal dann werde ich es thun.' (' Why
her,
not? Then give it me, I'll do it '.) Now you must bear
in mind, in the first place, that he had never seen or heard
the sonata, and in the second place that it was a sonata
with a violin part, now now below, independent of
above,
the pianoforte part. Andwhat does Liszt do ? He plays
the whole thing, root and branch, violin and piano, nay,
more, for he played fuller, more broadly. The violin got
its due right in the middle of the piano part. He was
literally over the whole piano at once, without missing a
note, and how he did play With grandeur, beauty,
!
—
have the capability, and do not let them intimidate you ')
!
* Svendsen, who was three years older than Grieg, was a native
of Christiania, and ranks as one of the leading Norwegian com-
posers. Unlike Grieg, the bulk of whose work is for pianoforte and
solo voice, he wrote chiefly chamber music and orchestral composi-
tions ; the latter belong to the genre of programme music, and there
is more or less national colouring, notably in the four "Norwegian
Rhapsodies" and the "Norse Carnival." To Svendsen Grieg
dedicated his second violin sonata.
V
IBSEN AND "PEER GYNT"
The rulers of Scandinavia have set a noble example to
other countries by their treatment of native men of genius.
In the year of Grieg's birth the Danish Government granted
Gade a stipend which enabled him to continue his education
at Leipsic, and subsequently he received one for life.
Norway aided Svendsen and Grieg in the same way; in
1874 it was their good luck to be honoured and rewarded
each with an annuity of 1600 crowns (about ^88) a year
for life. As a pound buys much more in Norway than in
England, this was a larger sum than it may seem. It
enabled Grieg to give up teaching and conducting, and to
devote himself to composing and making his works known
at home and abroad. So he left Christiania, after a sojourn
of eight years, and returned for the time being to his native
city,where he devoted himself to one of the most important
tasks of his life— the writing of the music to " Peer Gynt,"
which brought him into close association with another of
the remarkable group of great men produced in modern
—
Norway Henrik Ibsen.
If it is remarkable that a town of the size "of Bergen
should have given to the world so many notable men of
genius —
Holberg, the social reformer and founder of
modern Danish literature the poet Welhaven, the painter
•
—
soon for performance on the stage. Will you write the
required music ? Let me tell you as briefly as possible how
I project the structure of the play.
" The first act will be retained entire, with the exception
of some of Peer Gynt's monologue on
the dialogue.
pages 23, 24, and 25 [224-227]* I should like to have
treated either melodramatically or partly as recitative.
The scene at the house where the wedding is celebrated
[page 227] must be made, with the aid of the ballet, much
more effective than it is in the book. For this it will be
necessary to compose a special dance-melody, which is heard
softly to the end of the act.
" In the second act, the scene in which the three dairy-
maids appear [pages 244-46], must be treated musically as
the composer sees fit, but the devil must be at large in it
The monologue [pp. 246-8] I have conceived as being
accompanied by harmonies, that is, as a melodrama. The
same is true of the scene between Peer and the woman in
green [pp. 248-50]. A sort of accompaniment must also
be provided for the episodes in the hall of the Dovre king,
in which, however, the dialogue is to be considerably cur-
tailed. Also the scene with the hunchback, which is given
entire, must have music. The bird- voices must be sung;
chimes and a choir singing a choral are heard far away.
" In the third act I need harmonies —
but sparsely for —
the scene between Peer, the woman, and the trolljunge
[pp. 272-75]. Likewise I have soft music in view for
pages [281-84].
" Nearly all of the fourth act is to be omitted at the per-
formance. In its place I have imagined a great musical
tone-painting which suggests Peer Gynt's gadding about in
the wide world; American, English and French melodies
might appear therein, and recur as motives. The chorus
of Anitra and the girls [pp. 30S-9] is to be heard behind
the curtain, sustained by orchestral music. Meanwhile the
curtain rises and the spectators see, as in a dream, the
tableau as described [p. 325], in which Solvejg, as a middle-
aged woman, sits in the sunshine in front of the house and
sings. After she has finished her song the curtain falls
slowly, the music is continued by the orchestra and pro-
ceeds to portray the storm at sea with which the fifth act
begins.
" The fifth act, which at the performance will be called
the fourth or a postlude, must be considerably reduced.
Beginning with pages [346-49], a musical accompaniment
is called for. The scenes on the boat and in the ceme-
tery will be omitted. Solvejg sings [p. 366] and the post-
lude accompanies the speech of Peer Gynt which follows,
42 EDVARD GRIEG
afterwhich it passes into the choruses [pp. 367-69]. The
scenes with the button-maker and the Dovre king will be
abbreviated. The churchgoers [p. 389] sing on their way
through the woods. Chimes and distant choral song are
suggested by the music as the action proceeds, until Solvejg's
song concludes the piece ; whereupon the curtain drops,
while the choral again resounds nearer and louder.
" Such, approximately, is my plan, and I now beg you to
let me know if you are willing to undertake this work. If
you consent, I shall at once communicate with the director
of the Christiania Theatre, give him a copy of the modified
text, and ensure in advance a performance of the play. The
royalty I shall insist on will be 400 Spcciesthaler, to be
divided between us in equal parts. I take it for granted
that we can also count on performances of the play in
Copenhagen and Stockholm. But I beg you to treat the
matter for the present as a secret, and to let me have an
answer as soon as possible.
"Your devoted friend,
"Henrik Ibsen."
VI
48 EDVARD GRIEG
attack, but that soon wore off, and he and Henry chatted
away in German like two old friends. He speaks English
some, but not so much as his wife, who speaks it well,
although she says she doesn't. Her sister, who resembles
her quite strongly, makes up the rest of the household.
Grieg calls her his second wife,' and I could see they
'
not at all the place for him to live, for it rains a great deal
here, and it is usually either damp and cold or damp and
warm —a bad thing for one who is not robust. Norway
presents curious climatic contrasts, even in places not
very far apart, like Bergen and Christiania. Our guide-
book says regarding Bergen that the climate is exceedingly
mild and humid, resembling that of the west coast of
Scotland. The frosts of winter are usually slight and of
short duration, the thermometer very rarely falling below
15-20 Fahr., and the average rainfall is 72 inches (in the
Nordfjord about 35 inches, at Christiania 26 inches only).
There are good reasons, to be sure, why the Griegs should
be attached to their villa. It is beautifully situated on an
inner branch of the fjord, which here looks like a lake, and
has several islands dotting its surface. It must be lovely
here in sunny weather —
yesterday it was persistently cloudy
GRIEG AT HOME— PERSONAL TRAITS 49
Henry, for his wife doesn't sing any more except at home.
Some years ago she did much to make his songs famous.
Her voice is no longer fresh and young, but one forgets
that in the magic of her singing, it is so wonderfully shaded
and phrased, so full of feeling and sympathy. It fairly
made the chills run over me. She sings the pathetic songs
beautifully, but still better are the dramatic ones, or those
which are gay and full of the national colour,' although
'
11
He told us some interesting things about the first
TROLDHAWGEN"
GREIG AT HOME— PEE SON AL TRAITS 51
sonal acquaintance with Grieg, and have talked with him on several
occasions, but our conversations were not about music, but about
political and national topics. You know that he is an ardent Nor-
wegian. He has always stood by the left during the Dreyfus
;
'
56 EDVARD GRIEG
crisp and buoyant execution of the rhythmical passages. I
heard him play the concerto and the different violin
sonatas. Of the latter he seems to like the second
(Opus 1 3) the best. I also heard him perform his Ballade *
in G
minor, a composition that he wrote with his heart's '
whole concert
! '
It is too much
! — too much — I cannot !
I cannot
In his pen-and-ink portrait of Grieg the same writer
refers particularly to his eyes — " eyes superb, green, grey,
in which one seems to catch a glimpse of Norway, its
64 EDVARD GRIEG
"My dear Master,
Allow me to thank you for the charming and noble
"
manner in which you referred to my answer to your kind
invitation, and I beg you to be so good as to hear me a
few moments more concerning the affair.
" The French translator of my answer to you asked my
permission to print it in the Frankfurter Zeitung. In the
indignation of the moment (it was just after the verdict in
the trial at Rennes) I consented. There is only one point
of view from which I regret this, namely, the thought of
having possibly hurt your feelings in neglecting to first get
your consent, which would deeply mortify me. But I
hope you can readily understand the situation. In writing
my answer I was in the country, in the hospitable home of
the poet Bjornson, whose whole family, like my wife and
myself, are Dreyfusards. In this way, the whole thing fol-
lowed naturally. I remember having asked the German
translator, who was present, Do you believe, really, that
any good will result from the printing of the letter ? and '
1
de me recevoir dans votre ville par coups de pied dans la
partie la moins noble de mon individu if I dare to come
'
1903-
CONDUCTOR AND PIANIST 65
Chceur de Nonnes.
PEER GYNT,
Musique pour le
l re suite d'Orchestre (Op. 46)
poeme dramatique de Ibsen.
ED. GRIEG.
I. Le matin.
II. La mort d'Aase.
III. La danse d'Anitra.
IV. Chez le Roi des Montagnes (LesCobolds ponrsvivent PeerGyni)
Sous la direction de M. Ed. GRIEG.
LE CREPUSCULE DES DIEUX R. WAGNER.
Scene finale {Mori de Brunnhilde).
Brunnhilde: M rae
Ellen GULBRANSON,
Sous la direction de M. L. LAPOETE.
PIANO PLEYEL
VIII
" The music began, deep silence prevailed, and Nils got
ready for the dance. Airily he moved over the floor,
marched in time with the music, his body half bent for-
ward and rocking to right and left ; now and then he
crossed his legs, stood up straight again, assuming the
attitude of a thrower, and then marched as at first, bent
over. The fiddle was played with a sure hand, the melody
became gradually faster and more fiery. Nils inclined his
head more and more backwards, and all at once he hit the
cross-plank of the ceiling with his foot, so hard that dust
and whitewash fell on the spectators. Everybody laughed
and shouted, and the girls stood as if they were breathless.
Noisily the fiddler played on and on, with more and more
fiery and challenging strains. Nils could not resist them ;
fiddle !
" There are many legends of a similar kind.
"
74 EDVARD GRIEG
" Everywhere in the North we find among the people
tunes that are ascribed to the devil, the Nix, or the sub-
terranean spirits. The player offered up a lamb to the
river, and thus induced the Nix to teach him such tunes.
But when he subsequently played them, he was unable to
stop, but played on and on like a madman, until some one
could come by cutting his fiddle strings." *
to the rescue
It is necessary to know about such legends if one would
understand the spirit and meaning of Norwegian music in
all its phases. A quarter of a century ago an English
critic, brought up on Handel and Mendelssohn, inveighed
NORWEGIAN FOLK-MUSIC 75
navian '
music, but only of Norwegian. The national
characteristics of the three peoples —the Norwegians, the
—
Swedes and the Danes are wholly different, and their
music differs just as much." It differs very much as the
scenery does ; the Norwegian is bolder, rougher, wilder,
grander, yet with a green fertile vale here and there in
which strawberries and cherries reach a fragrance or flavour
hardly attained anywhere else in the world.
Concerning Grieg's relations to the national music of
NORWEGIAN FOLK-MUSIC 77
7 8 EDVARD GRIEG
German music a mere " dialect." As a matter of fact, the
Germans were enriching the world-language of music with
precious new material and this is precisely what Grieg has
;
Grieg had done most of his work when Strauss began, he is,
of course, the originator, and Strauss the disciple.
From every point of view that interests the music-lover,
Grieg is one of the most original geniuses in the musical
world of the present or past. His songs are a mine of
melody, surpassed in wealth only by Schubert's, and that
only because there are more of Schubert's. In originality
of harmony and modulation he has only six equals Bach,
:
near his home, the whole countryside was full of the folk-
songs which he had loved from childhood —
songs of the
ploughman and the reaper, of rustic courtship and village
merrymaking. Half unconsciously he began to weave
them into the texture of his composition ; borrowing here a
phrase, there a strain, there an entire melody, and gradually
fashioning his own tunes on these models ; . they find
. .
8o EDVARD GRIEG
"My object in arranging this music for the pianoforte
was to attempt to raise these folk-tunes to an artistic level
by harmonising them in a style suitable to their nature. It
isobvious that many of the little embellishments character-
istic of the peasant's fiddle and his peculiar manner of
bowing cannot be reproduced on the pianoforte, and had
therefore to be left out. By way of compensation the
piano has the advantage of enabling us to avoid excessive
monotony by virtue of its dynamic and rhythmic capacities
and by varying the harmony in case of repetitions. I have
endeavoured to trace the melodic lines clearly, and to make
the outlines of forms definite and coherent."
While noting these interesting facts, it is of the utmost
importance, if we would be just to Grieg, to guard against
the egregious and all too prevalent error of supposing that
the essence and substance of his art are borrowed from the
Norse folk-music. Writers on musical topics have taken
strangely little trouble to study this question, as is illus-
trated by the fact that so scholarly a critic as Philip Goepp
could write, not long ago " The wealth of harmonic in-
:
Among his seventy [72] works, there are, beside two [3]
volumes of pianoforte arrangements of popular tunes, only
three (notably op. 30, 35, and 64) in which he has incor-
porated Norwegian melodies; all the others are his own.
1
Solvejg's Lied is obviously a conscious imitation of the
'
too, that the pedanL, and philistines would scarify him for
the very things that were newest and most valuable in
him, wherefore his exhortation " Do not let them intimi-
:
more I play them the more I love them, and always I find freshness
and beauty. Grieg is a great man. '
recitals have not yet given Grieg's songs the attention they deserve
— to their own detriment. Some, however, have discovered these
NORWEGIAN FOLK-MUSIC 85
is recognised far beyond his native country as one of the few masters
who have enriched music with new means of harmonic and melodic
expression, and created an admirable home-art distinguished by
poetic feeling and the charm of many moods (Stimmungsreiz). For
this reason the study of nis Lyrical Pieces for piano, in particular,
'
'
92 EDVARD GRIEG
literature ; a melody rivalling Schubert, the greatest of all
melodists, at his very best. Yet how few know this sublime
march ! What a pitiable spectacle to see the millions eating
acorns when they might have ambrosia And the most !
J
" His incidental music to Bjornson's Sigurd Jorsalfar '
* A
French admirer of Grieg, Henry Maubel (Maurice Belval)
seems to consider " Bergliot," with its " harmonies noires d'une
plenitude admirable," the composer's masterwork. See the pages
(71-73) he devotes to it in his "Prefaces pour des Musiciens."
(Paris Fischbacher.)
:
94 EDVARD GRIEG
admiration for the original and ingenious orchestral effects
which fill the work. The spirit of the piece is unmis-
takably Norse, and its humour is mixed with that melan-
choly which seems inseparable from the rugged physiognomy
of nature in the north country."
" Holberg Suite" — In 1884 the Scandinavians celebrated
the two-hundredth birthday of Ludwig Holberg, the founder
of modern Danish literature, who has been called the
Moliere of the North, although, as A. E. Keeton has
remarked, " his purpose and aims were of much deeper
import than can be ascribed to the brilliant and satiric
comedy writer of France." Gade contributed to this jubilee
an orchestral Suite, " Holbergiana," while Grieg commemo-
rated his fellow-townsman with his Holberg Suite for string
orchestra " in ye olden style." Dr. Hanslick's comments
on this composition are of interest, the more so as that
Viennese critic seldom had a good word for his con-
temporaries :
music at " beer and garden concerts " is Wagner's. But the proper
place for Wagner's music is in the opera-house, and for Grieg's at
high-class concerts. Prof. Nikisch's audience (the most highly
cultivated in Berlin) re-demanded one of the " Peer Gynt " pieces,
and Dr. Hanslick thus summed up the impression made by this
music at a Philharmonic concert in Vienna " The audience had
:
bestowed such lavish applause on Grieg that I feared for the fate of
the following number. ..." If conductors everywhere followed
the example of Hans Richter and Nikisch, it would be money in
the pockets of their guarantors. Too many conductors seem to aim
at "enticing" music lovers to stay at home by playing chiefly
ponderous works that are in no danger of being re-demanded. At
any rate, we need a change from the wearisome monotony of
symphonies, symphonic poems, and overtures and for such a
;
The second violin sonata Niecks does (or did) not like
so well as the but the full-blooded Griegites like it
first,
better, for the same reason that the Wagnerites like " Tristan
and Isolde " better than " Lohengrin " ; there is more of
the essence of Grieg in it. The first sonata is, as Schjel-
derup remarks, the work of a youth who has seen only
the sunny side of life, while the second is the gift to
the world of a man who has also shivered in the cold
mists of night, and has learned the meaning of grief and
disappointment.
" The tragic nature of his home overwhelms the artist.
For this reason the second sonata is in a deeper sense much
more Norwegian even than the first ; for a Norway without
tragedy is not a complete Norway, but only a part of the
varied impressions which this mighty dreamland gives to
him who can understand the language of nature."
Although betraying everywhere a complete mastery of the
art of orthodox construction, the composer allows himself
a freedom of style which is a token of his modernity and
originality.
While Grieg composed a master-song like " I love thee "
at almost as early an age as the biographic dates of
Schubert's " Erlking " and Mendelssohn's overture to
" Midsummer Night's Dream," his genius nevertheless
matured and deepened gradually, as is strikingly shown by
the third of his violin sonatas, ^n v>s 45, dedicated to the
painter L^riu.cu —
a work, &> ^avwcnce Gilman remarks,
" built greatly upon great lines . . . The mood, the
emotion, are heroic here are virility, breadth, a passionate
;
last movement, with its richly canorous theme for the solo
instrument against arching arpeggios in the accompaniment,
is superb in breadth and power." Even more enthusiastic
98 EDVARD GRIEG
than this American critic is the French, Ernest Closson,
who writes regarding this sonata :
"
must be classed with the most inspired scores ever
It
written. It is, in our opinion, the work of Grieg which
most truly deserves to be called grand. From beginning to
end it is a marvel of inspiration, intelligence, independence.
The people is here, once more, largely placed
art of the
under tribute but with harmonies of a boldness and
[?],
a delicacy that are admirable. Finally, there is, what con-
tributes not a little to the grandeur just referred to, a
simplicity, an austerity, a sort of classicism within modernity
in the final movement. Had Grieg composed nothing but
this sonata it would suffice to hand his name down to
posterity."
In the sonata for violoncello and piano (op. 36), which
is dedicated to the composer's brother, there is also much
that is fascinating —
so much that one regrets that Grieg
did not write more for that warm-toned instrument. The
well-known Boston violoncellist, Wulf Fries (whom Rubin-
stein chose as his associate in America), was so fond of this
sonata that he wanted more of the same kind, and wrote to
the composer, who replied "I, too, am ill.
: Allow me
therefore to express myself briefly ; and in Norwegian, —
which I hope you still understand. Unfortunately, I have
written nothing whatever for 'cello since the sonata in A
minor. What has appeared of mine, later than that, for
this instrument is arranged by the late Goltermann. They
are chiefly small pieces. Publisher : C. F. Peters, in
Leipsic."*
Last, but far from least, among the chamber-music
works we must mention the splendid quartet, opus 27.
The orthodox conception of a quartet is that it should
address itself solely to the intellect, making as little appeal
* The " Grieg Katalog " of Peters also contains a list of various
other arrangements of Grieg's pieces for diverse instruments,
including the organ.
EDWARD GKIEG, MAY, 1904
From a photograph byKarl Anderson, Christiania
"
this sonata, " if you look at the first movement, you will
find that the first part contains, beside the principal
subject, five or six, one may say independent, groups every
one of which is distinguished by a phrase or motive of its
own." That, certainly, does look dark for Grieg and, ;
stress .Grieg
. . is a true poet and has added another string
. . .
to our lyre."
f That Mr. Niecks should have made the above cited stricture
is the more surprising since he himself admits on another page that
a work may be " beautiful and truly artistic " without being written
in what he is pleased to call " a strictly logical style." " Even in
—
the larger forms," he adds, " a looser what we may call a novelistic
— treatment has its raison d'etre." Now, here was a truly luminous,
in fact an epoch-making thought in musical aesthetics, which it is a
great pity Mr. Niecks did not develop, for his own benefit and that
of his academic colleagues. The plain truth is, that the critics in
general, in estimating a composer's rank, attach a great deal too
much importance to questions of form. If it were really true that,
"
The third violin sonata (opus 45) was the last work in
sonata form written by Grieg. For pianoforte he wrote only
one cyclic composition, the juvenile sonata. Herein he
followed the romantic spirit of the times, which demanded
shorter, more concentrated pieces. It is well known that
even the conservative Brahms wrote pianoforte sonatas only
in the earliest stage of his career (op. 1, 2, 5); thereafter
he composed ballads, rhapsodies, fantasias, intermezzi, and
other short pieces. Chopin wrote no operas, oratorios, or
symphonies, and only a few sonatas, yet Saint-Saens has
said of him that he " revolutionised the divine art and paved
the way for all modern music." Among the minor pro-
fessionals there are, to be sure, still quite a number who
are capable of " shrugging their shoulders " and exclaiming,
" Yes, that humming bird is very beautiful, but of course
itcannot be ranked as high as an ostrich. Don't you see
how small it is ? " Such men, if they happen to be writers
for the press, will devote columns to every new elephan-
tine " tone-poem " by the unmelodious Richard Strauss,
while ignoring entirely a collection of ravishing new-
melodies like those in one of Grieg's last works, " The
Mountain Maid," op. 67. However, the number is
growing of those who do not fancy a painted house to be
"
the rustic, exciting, fascinatingly h crmonised " Springdans
(28); the plaintive " Elegie," another sample of the
Norwegians' art of making every harmonic voice melodious ;
the doleful tune of the " Shepherd Boy ; " the whirling,
boisterous " Peasant March " (31); the altogether delight-
ful " March of the Dwarfs," a striking musical embodiment
of Norse folklore; the " Notturno " (33) with exquisitely
dreamy harmonies; and, the quaintest arid most daring of
Grieg's audacities, the " Bell-Ringing, ''
a most ingenious
imitation on the piano of the shrill overtonal dissonances of
a church bell. This piece seems to have amazed even
some of the Griegites, one of whom remarks that " the
succession of parallel fifths in the piece entitled Glokken-•
klang is too much even for the fin de Steele ear of a hearer
'
XI
VOCAL COMPOSITIONS
When Hans von Biilow called Grieg the " Chopin of the
North," he doubtless had in mind the great refinement of
style, the abhorrence of the commonplace, the rare melodic,
harmonic, and rhythmic originality, and the " exotic
nationalism which these two masters have in common.
Chopin, no doubt, excels Grieg in some points, in others
Grieg excels Chopin, notably in his rare faculty for orches-
tral colouring, and in his gift to the world of 1 2 5 songs
which only two or three masters have equalled. Chopin's
seventeen songs deserve much more attention than they
have so far received ; but they are a mere episode in his
career, whereas Grieg has in his " Lieder " given us his very
life blood. Much as I admire his instrumental works, it is
in his lyric songs that I consider him most frequently at his
very best. If I devote less space to them than to the instru-
mental works it is because they share the characteristics of
Grieg's other compositions, which have been sufficiently
dwelt on in the preceding pages, wherefore little remains
but the agreeable task of calling attention to the best by
affixing our stars and double stars of commendation. Before
taking the songs in hand, a few longer scores for singers
call for notice.
" At theCloister Gate"—Shortly after returningfrom Rome,
where Liszt had done so much to encourage him, Grieg
composed a work which he called " At the Cloister Gate,"
and dedicated it to that far-sighted master. It appeared
ii2 EDVARD GRIEG
in print as opus 20, and is a setting of a scene from
Bjornson's " Arnljot Gelline," for soprano and alto solo,
female chorus, and orchestra, The text is a dialogue be-
tween a nun and a girl who knocks for admission at the
gate of a convent late at night. The girl relates that she
is from the Far North ; she had a lover, but he slew
her own father ; she fled, and in passing the cloister she
heard women's voices singing the " Hallelujah." " Me-
thought they sang of peace; it soothed my soul. Unlock, . . .
I see them raised high with stones, by the marge of restless oceans,
that the dead men's spirits, when they wearied of their quiet
graves, might rise up through the mounds and gaze on the
tossing billows, and be refreshed by storms, immensity, liberty,
action."
Songs. — " His lovely and too little known songs are
unique in their delicate voicing of the tenderest, most
elusive personal feeling, as well as in their consummate
finesse of workmanship," writes one of the least sympathetic
critics of Grieg. Here, indeed, we are on ground where a
difference of opinion is simply inconceivable among those
who really know these Lieder, which surprisingly few do.
* Ibsen also once spoke to Grieg of an opera libretto called " Olaf
Liliekrands," which he had partly written: "It was originally
intended for another musician, but I would sooner give it to you
than to any one else. In a year's time it shall be finished and
placed at your disposal." But Grieg never received it. How could
he write an opera if the poets thus left him in the lurch ? To be
sure, his life-long invalidism made it practically impossible for him,
as before intimated, to undertake and carry out so arduous a task
as an operatic score. To cite his own comment, made in a private
communication " Leider hat meine Gesundheit grossere Arbeiten,
;
n6 KDVARD GRIEG
With a few exceptions, the professional singers have hereto-
fore neglectedthem, partly because of an exaggerated fear
of their unusual melodic intervals, which a few days of
study would enable them to master. When, after regaling
myself with Grieg's songs, I attend some of the public re-
citalsand note the commonplace programmes in vogue, I
feel like one who sees people walking in a brook-bed
gathering pebbles, blind to the diamonds and rubies they
might pick up in their place.
As the four numbers of opus i are least in merit among
Grieg's pianoforte pieces, so his opus 2, containing four
Songs for Alto, is the least interesting of his groups of
Lieder. Yet Prof. Hugo Riemann, in his " History of
Music since Beethoven," declares that " some of Grieg's
first works (i.e., the songs opus 2) speak a mighty tone-
language which suggests Schubert in his greatest moments."
This is altogether too high praise. I myself believe that
Grieg in some of his songs equals Schubert at his best
indeed, I think he should and will be ranked ultimately as
second to Schubert only ; but it is in his later works that
he rises to such heights, not in the earliest ones, in which
he was still a little afraid to rely on his own wings.* Grieg
has written songs as superior to those of opus 2 as Wagner's
"Tristan" is superior to his "Rienzi."
The number of Grieg's Lieder is 125 ; among these there
are fewer that fall below par than in the list of any other
song- writer. "Less would have been more" can never be
said of the greatest of living composers ; his critical con-
science did not allow him to write unless he had something
all its life, sings at last. " The Minstrel's Song " em-
bodies the favourite Norse legend of the river sprite teach-
ing the magic love-compelling art of song in return for the
singer's salvation. Grieg's music starts with a tune in the
true " Legendenton," and develops into a miniature music
drama. " A Lovely Evening in Summer 'twas " presents a
bright contrast to that minstrel lover (who loses his beloved
as well as his soul) ; its fifteen bars are a vial containing
some of that concentrated quintessence of melody and love
of home, for the distillation of which Grieg has the best
recipe. And what shall I say of the "First Primrose"?
Songs of flowers and love and spring there are innumerable,
but none more fresh, more spontaneous, dewy, fragrant,
heartfelt, than this. Why it is never sung in public sur-
passes comprehension. It seems destined to become the
most popular of Grieg's songs.
Volume V. of the Albums begins with " From Monte
Pincio," which is, from some points of view, the greatest of
Grieg's songs ; musical word-painting there is here rivalling
Liszt's " Loreley." Of course it is music of the future ;
the next generation will know and sing and love it. This
Album also includes Solvejg's despairing " Cradle Song
(towhich reference was made in Chapter IX.), and the heart-
rending "At the Bier of a Young Woman," in which there
are nine bars (the twelfth to the twentieth) that are like a
vision of heaven. Few indeed are the song collections in
";
* Reference was made in Chapter VI. to the fact that Grieg was
one of the pilgrims to Bayreuth in 1S76. He wrote a series of
articles on the Nibelung Festival for the Bergensposten newspaper, in
which he was, as he says, "at the same time wildly enthusiastic
and severely critical." " Without being aWagnerite, I was at that
time what I am now an adherent, nay, a worshipper of the might
:
Brahms " (this will anger those who know Grieg and fail
to enlighten those who do not); "Songs and Song-
128 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Writers," by the author of the present volume G. T.
;
ML 410