Edvard Hagerup Bull (10 June 1922 – 15 March 2012[1]) was a Norwegian composer.[2]
He was born in Bergen. He grew up in Jar outside Oslo in a musical and politically active family, the son of Sverre Hagerup Bull and his wife Aldis Jebsen.[3] His paternal grandfather was politician and judge Edvard Hagerup Bull. During September 1955 he married Anna Kvarme.[4][5]
Bull studied at the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo and at the Conservatoire de Paris where he won the 1952 Prix de Composition Musicale. He was awarded the prize for musical composition from the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris. He had additional training with the Austrian-born musicologist, Josef Rufer. Other teachers include Jean Rivier and Olivier Messiaen. His teacher Darius Milhaud described him as "a musician with a solid technique and a truly very enthralling, vigorous and highly imaginative personality".[6]
Edvard Hagerup Bull became a notable composer. He wrote two operas and thirty orchestral works and chamber music.[6]
Selected works
edit- Den standhaftige tindsoldat, 1948–49
- Sinfonia di Teatro 1950
- Escapades, orkestersuite, 1952
- Marionettes sérieuses, 1960
- Epilogue for strykere, 1961
- Münchhausen, 1961
- Accents for klaver, 1968
- Fløytekonsert, 1969
- Fyrtøiet, 1973–74
- Den grimme ælling, 1972–77
- Variantes multi-métriques for klaver, 1975
- Chant d'Hommage à Jean Rivier for orkester, 1976
- Prélude con Fuoco for klaver, 1978
- Den Grimme Ælling (Opera) 1972–77
- Fyrtøyet (Opera) 1973–74
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References
edit- ^ "Edvard Hagerup Bull er død - Ballade.no". www.ballade.no. Archived from the original on 2012-10-01.
- ^ Edvard Hagerup Bull – komponist (Store norske leksikon)
- ^ "Edvard Hagerup Bull - 2". 25 February 2020.
- ^ Edvard Hagerup Bull genealogy
- ^ Den trønderske slekten Bull (Store norske leksikon)
- ^ a b Biography Archived 2008-12-05 at the Wayback Machine at the Music Information Centre, Norway (in English and French)