Gunnar Berg (11 January 1909 – 25 August 1989) was a Swiss-born Danish composer. A leading exponent of serialism in Denmark, he is considered to have written the first Danish serial piece, his Cosmogonie for two pianos, in 1952.[1]
Biography
editEarly life and education in Switzerland
editThe son of a Swedish mother and a Danish father,[2] Gunnar Berg was born in St. Gallen, Switzerland on January 11, 1909. His father died when he was five years old. He lived in Cophenhagen from the years 1921 to 1924 during which time he battled severe illness and spent most of his time in sanatoriums.[3]
Berg began studying the piano at the age of 14. He spent a short time in Paris before settling again in Copenhagen again in 1928. In 1931 he made the decision to devote his life to music and he managed to earn a place studying music at the Salzburg Festival in the summer of 1932. He later returned to that program for further studies in 1935. He studied privately with Knud Jeppesen who aided him in matriculating to the Royal Danish Academy of Music in 1936. There the composition program mirrored Danish tastes for the style of Carl Nielsen for which Berg had no interest. His compositions from the mid to late 1930s displayed his interest in emulating the work Béla Bartók, Igor Stravinsky, and other modernist composers from Central Europe. Unhappy with the school's lack of interest in musical modernism, he completed his first year at the conservatory and then dropped out.[3]
Berg continued to his education privately by studying music theory with Hilding Rosenberg and piano with Herman David Koppel from 1938 to 1943. He pursued further piano instruction with Elisabeth Jürgens from 1944 through 1947. Concerts of his compositions which utilized free atonality were given in Copenhagen in 1945 and 1947, but were reviewed poorly by music critics. He gave a series of piano recitals at refugee camps in Denmark during World War II.[3]
Life in Paris
editAfter the war, Berg moved to Paris in 1948 where he pursued further studies for a brief period with Arthur Honegger. In Paris he found acceptance in the avant-garde music scene and was finally able to find a community which shared musical point of view; a circle which included Honegger, Olivier Messiaen, John Cage, Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen.Serialism began to make its mark already in the newcomer's Pièce for trumpet, violin and piano from 1949, and henceforth Berg uncompromisingly yet in his very own fashion would remain faithful to the complex expressive mode of musical modernism, from now on always composing within the theoretical and aesthetic framework of serialism. In 1950 he attended the first Salzburg Global Seminar (then known as the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies).[3]
In 1952 traveled to Darmstadt with the French pianist Béatrice Duffour where they studied at the Darmstädter Ferienkurse. He was the first Dane to enroll in this program. He married Duffour in the summer of 1952 after this course ended. In 1953 a concert of his music was given in Paris, after which he toured Europe with his wife in concerts of avant-garde music sponsored by France's Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs. His Essai accoustique III' (1954) was well received and he was nominated for the Nordic Council Music Prize. He also had success with his ballet Mouture which received multiple stagings in the Netherlands in 1956.[3]
Later life in Denmark and Switzerland
editBerg and his wife moved to Denmark in 1957 where they frequently gave lecture-recitals on avant-garde music at folk high schools; making them among the first musicians to perform that genre of music in Denmark. Musicologist Jens Rossel stated that "Berg was a respected but isolated figure in Danish musical life with neither position nor pupil. Still, in 1965 Denmark's Ministry of Culture awarded Berg a lifelong artist grant and made his a Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog.[3]
The Berg family settled in the town of Horsens on the eastern part of the Jutland penninsula in 1966. Béatrice died there ten years later, and in 1980 Berg relocated to Switzerland where he lived the rest of his life. While his music was not often performed, his music received more interest in Sweden than in earlier years. He was nominated for the Nordic Council Prize a second time for his Aria (1981). He continued to compose or revise earlier works into the year 1987.[3]
Gunnar Berg died in Bern, Switzerland on August 25, 1989 at the age of 80.[3]
Legacy
editWorking Group Gunnar Berg - Agneta Mei Hytten, Erik Kaltoft and Jens Rossel - was formed after Gunnar Berg's death in 1989 by composer Tage Nielsen (1929-2003), editor and former head of the music section of DR, Mogens Andersen (1929-2008), pianist Erik Kaltoft and Jens Rossel with a view to raising awareness and understanding of Gunnar Berg's music.
The working group placed the largest part of Gunnar Berg's manuscripts and things left behind at the Royal Library in Copenhagen, released two double-CDs with historical recordings of Gunnar Berg's piano music on Danacord Records and coordinated the various actitivites in the centennial of Gunnar Berg's birth.
In 2009 the centennial of Gunnar Berg's birth was celebrated with concerts, radio programmes, CD-releases, writings, printed scores, and exhibitions in Denmark, Switzerland, France, Germany, Austria, United States, Ukraine and China. These activities has caused a significant change in the understanding of and respect for his artistic oeuvre - being far from a cold speculative, mathematic game.
References
edit- ^ Rossel, Jens (2008). "Gunnar Berg (1909-1989)". Edition S.
- ^ Hall, Catriona, ed. (1986). "Gunnar Berg". International Music & Opera Guide. London: Tantivy Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0900730436.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Rossel, Jens (2002). "Berg, Gunnar (Johnsson)". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.02769.