Wydawnictwo: Lawo Classics
Nr katalogowy: LWC 1254
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: maj 2023
EAN: 7090020182766
Nr katalogowy: LWC 1254
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: maj 2023
EAN: 7090020182766
Nasze kategorie wyszukiwania
Epoka muzyczna: współczesna
Obszar (język): norweski
Instrumenty: wiolonczela, kontrabas
Rodzaj: etiuda, sonata, duo
Epoka muzyczna: współczesna
Obszar (język): norweski
Instrumenty: wiolonczela, kontrabas
Rodzaj: etiuda, sonata, duo
Feidje: Chamber Works
Lawo Classics - LWC 1254
Kompozytor
Asmund Feidje (b. 1948)
Asmund Feidje (b. 1948)
Wykonawcy
Ernst Simon Glaser, cello
Bjorg Lewis, cello
Dan Styffe, double bass
Marius Knudsen Flatby, double bass
Hakon Thelin, double bass
Jon Wien Sonstebo, viola
Glenn Lewis Gordon, double bass
Kolbjorn Holthe, violin
Christian Krogvold Lundqvist, vibraphone
Kenneth Ryland, double bass
Ernst Simon Glaser, cello
Bjorg Lewis, cello
Dan Styffe, double bass
Marius Knudsen Flatby, double bass
Hakon Thelin, double bass
Jon Wien Sonstebo, viola
Glenn Lewis Gordon, double bass
Kolbjorn Holthe, violin
Christian Krogvold Lundqvist, vibraphone
Kenneth Ryland, double bass
Utwory na płycie:
Etüde für Violoncello solo (1989)
Sonnet No. 8 for Women's Choir (2010)
1905 – Duel for String Quartet (2005/2017)
Contrabbacchus per contrabbasso solo (1990)
Kort mote (Brief encounter) for Chamber Ensemble (1991)
Fragment for Double Bass Quartet (2000)
Pas de deux for Chamber Ensemble and String Orchestra (2010/2017)
Sonnet No. 8 for Women's Choir (2010)
1905 – Duel for String Quartet (2005/2017)
Contrabbacchus per contrabbasso solo (1990)
Kort mote (Brief encounter) for Chamber Ensemble (1991)
Fragment for Double Bass Quartet (2000)
Pas de deux for Chamber Ensemble and String Orchestra (2010/2017)
ASMUND FEIDJE – COMPOSER After seven years of violin studies during his childhood, Asmund Feidje founded the Norwegian experimental rock band RAIN in 1967. In 1969, the group was employed by the National Theatre in Oslo to take part in the pop musical Din egen vri (Your own thing). Ever since then, Feidje has worked primarily with theatre music, both individually and in collaboration with the other members of RAIN. He was permanently employed at the theatre in 1973, playing in numerous productions over a wide range of styles, yielding him countless experiences within several musical genres. He also played with the Terje Rypdal Ensemble, and would later co-found the contemporary music ensemble Octoband. Since the end of the 1970s he has focused more and more on composition, taking a year off in 1989/90 to study in Salzburg with the Polish contemporary composer Bogusław Schaeffer, professor of composition at the Mozarteum. He has subsequently composed chamber music for soloists and various ensembles while maintaining his work for the stage, for which he has composed music for more than 150 productions, including for all the major Norwegian theatres, for radio theatre, and for film and TV. Many of these productions in collaboration with Carl Jorgen Kionig, his colleague from RAIN, who, from the 1980s and onwards, became one of the leading theatre directors of Norway. He has also composed music for several ballet companies at home and abroad, including for the Finnish and Icelandic national ballets. He has enjoyed a close working relationship with choreographer Solvi Edvardsen, collaborating on the ballet Access for the Norwegian National Ballet, which premiered on the main stage at Oslo’s prestigious new opera house (The Norwegian Opera & Ballet) in 2010. In 2002, they were commissioned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to create the ballet Beyond Borders in New Delhi with leading Indian and Norwegian dancers, marking 50 years of aid to India. Asmund Feidje has been represented at a number of festivals, including the ImPuls Dance Festival in Vienna, the Avignon Festival, the San Marino Festival, the Bergen International Festival and the Ibsen Festival. Feidje has received the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation’s Bla fugl (Blue Bird) prize (for artists who have given extraordinary service to radio theatre), and he also won two Edvard Prizes (named after Edvard Grieg) and awarded to Norwegian composers and writers annually.