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Laci Boldemann

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Name
  
Laci Boldemann

Role
  
Composer

Education
  
Royal Academy of Music


Laci Boldemann Laci Boldemann 9786136443775 6136443775 9786136443775

Died
  
August 18, 1969, Munich, Germany

Children
  
Cecilia Boldemann, Marcus Boldemann

People also search for
  
Karin Boldemann, Cecilia Boldemann, Marcus Boldemann

Laci Boldemann, Modern, Contemporary Sweden Piano ‎– SLT 33184


Laci Boldemann (24 April 1921 in Helsinki – 18 August 1969 in Munich) was a Swedish composer of German and Finnish descent.

Contents

Life and career

Boldemann studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London from 1937 to 1939, both conducting (with Henry Wood) and piano, where he continued his studies in Stockholm at the outbreak of war in 1939 with Gunnar de Frumerie.

In 1941 his citizenship forced Boldemann to join the German army and fight in the Soviet Union, Poland and Italy; he was later imprisoned in the USA and returned to Sweden via France and Germany. After returning to Sweden in 1947, he joined the Swedish Composers’ Society and served as Secretary and Treasurer (1963—1969). He was also on the board of the Swedish Performing Rights Society and the Joint Council of Artists and Writers.

The stimulation of literature played an important part in Boldemann’s work. Music drama, art songs and fun songs for children, as well as vocal works with an orchestral accompaniment, were genres in which he composed.

His instrumental work is characterised by both lyrical freshness and percussive propulsion, in a traditional rather than avant garde style.

Orchestral music

  • Symphony (1959–61)
  • La Danza, Symphonic overture (1949)
  • Sinfonietta for strings (1954)
  • Concert works

  • Piano Concerto (1956)
  • Violin Concerto (1959)
  • Chamber music

  • String Quartet (1957)
  • Instrumental

  • Little suite on nursery rhymes for piano (1961)
  • Small ironic pieces for piano op. 19 (1942–45)
  • Vocal

  • Lieder der Vergänglichkeit, cantata for baritone and strings (1951)
  • Four epitaphs for soprano and strings (1952)
  • Notturno for soprano and orchestra (1958)
  • Songs

  • 50 songs, including the nursery rhymes Mice in moonlight (1961)
  • Works for the stage

  • Opera Svart är vitt(Black is white-said the emperor), 1965
  • Recording

  • Laci Boldemann, Swedish Society Discofil, 1988. (Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Dag Achatz(fp.), Solveig Faringer(sop.), Naohiro Totsuka(cond.) )
  • References

    Laci Boldemann Wikipedia