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Erik Bergman

Erik Bergman

Erik Bergman has been played on NTS in shows including The Do!! You!!! Breakfast Show w/ Charlie Bones, featured first on 12 March 2021. Songs played include Three Folksongs and Laulusild (1981) • Bridge Of Song.

Erik Valdemar Bergman (November 24, 1911 – April 24, 2006) was an influential composer of classical music from Finland.

Bergman's style ranged widely, from Romanticism in his early works (many of which he later prohibited from being performed) to modernism and primitivism, among other genres. He won the Nordic Council Music Prize in 1994 for his opera "Det sjungande trädet".

Bergman studied at the Sibelius academy in Helsinki and afterwards with Heinz Tiessen in Berlin and with Wladimir Vogel in Ascona. Since 1963 he has taught composition at the Sibelius academy, besides working until 1978 as a choir conductor. Bergman was considered as a pioneer of the modern music in Finland. Because of his training he was considered as a representative of the avant-garde; he developed for example the twelve-tone techniques of Arnold Schönberg learned from Vladimir Vogel. He composed song cycles, cantatas, a violin concerto, pieces for piano and for organ, a guitar suite, a chamber concert for flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, violin, viola, cello, percussion and piano and further chamber works. His “Requiem for a dead poet” (1970) and “Colori ed improvvisazioni” for orchestras (1973) gave him international recognition.

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Erik Bergman

Erik Bergman has been played on NTS in shows including The Do!! You!!! Breakfast Show w/ Charlie Bones, featured first on 12 March 2021. Songs played include Three Folksongs and Laulusild (1981) • Bridge Of Song.

Erik Valdemar Bergman (November 24, 1911 – April 24, 2006) was an influential composer of classical music from Finland.

Bergman's style ranged widely, from Romanticism in his early works (many of which he later prohibited from being performed) to modernism and primitivism, among other genres. He won the Nordic Council Music Prize in 1994 for his opera "Det sjungande trädet".

Bergman studied at the Sibelius academy in Helsinki and afterwards with Heinz Tiessen in Berlin and with Wladimir Vogel in Ascona. Since 1963 he has taught composition at the Sibelius academy, besides working until 1978 as a choir conductor. Bergman was considered as a pioneer of the modern music in Finland. Because of his training he was considered as a representative of the avant-garde; he developed for example the twelve-tone techniques of Arnold Schönberg learned from Vladimir Vogel. He composed song cycles, cantatas, a violin concerto, pieces for piano and for organ, a guitar suite, a chamber concert for flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, violin, viola, cello, percussion and piano and further chamber works. His “Requiem for a dead poet” (1970) and “Colori ed improvvisazioni” for orchestras (1973) gave him international recognition.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Three Folksongs
Tormis, Sibelius, Kreek, Bergman, Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, Paul Hillier
Harmonia Mundi, Harmonia Mundi USA2010
Laulusild (1981) • Bridge Of Song
Tormis, Sibelius, Kreek, Bergman, Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, Paul Hillier
Harmonia Mundi, Harmonia Mundi USA2010