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Iceland's Greatest Classical Composer: JÓN LEIFS (1899-1968)

Jon Leifs

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Page 1: Jon Leifs

Iceland's Greatest Classical Composer:

JÓN LEIFS (1899-1968)

Page 2: Jon Leifs

Jón Leifs was born on May 1st, 1899 in Sólheimar, Svínavatnssókn,Húnavatnasssýsla, Iceland. He studied and composed in Germany from 1916

until 1944, returning to Iceland for the remainder of his life.

Page 3: Jon Leifs

Jón Leifs composed about 70 works and published dozens of papers. His musical genre is uncategorizable, since he consciously rejected influences from other composers or schools. The basis of his music was the Icelandic folk song, a source from which he found rehabilitative power. The Icelandic "part singing at the fifth" was the source of his harmonic language, as well as the accentuated meters. His music reflects Iceland and its ancient history and, when Jón Leifs was composing, Iceland's struggle for independence from the foreign domination which had oppressed its people since the 13th century

Page 4: Jon Leifs

Jón Leifs' Music

"Elegy" Op. 53, written as a tribute to his mother who had died in 1960,

"There are moments of both clear brightness and dim shadows.

Soft string passages stretch out and draw together, lift themselves up

and then bow down in humility to the highest power.

From the beginning the conclusion is clear:

EACH PERSON IS ALONE, ALL ALONE, WITH HIS GOD"

Page 5: Jon Leifs

"Geysir" Op. 51 is inspired by the incredible forces of nature which give rise to the power of the Icelandic geysirs. Jón Leifs was aware also of the vulnerability of human beings when confronted by such powerful forces. This is a reality with which all Icelanders live daily.

Page 6: Jon Leifs

"Three Images" Op. 44, probably has been performed more often than his other works. First comes "The Beauty of the Sky," beginning with deep tones of the countrabass and the high tones of the piccolo. Other instruments join in, gradually, and the piece ends with a magnificent heroic chord that spans six and a half octaves. The second image, "Zigzag", is an energetic scherzo, but it connates cold laughter more than a warm laugh. Finally, "Rocky Cliffs" represents the huge cliffs which riseabove the settlements and the wild landscape alike, preserving the ravages of the history of the land and its people.

Page 7: Jon Leifs

"Symphony Number 1, Saga Symphony" (literally, "Saga Heroes") contains 5 movments, each devoted to an Icelandic saga hero: Njál's Saga, wherein the story is told of Skarphéðinn, son of Njáll, a warrior who unhesitantingly meets his death and achieves great glory; Laxæla Saga, wherein the story of Guðrún Ósvifrsdóttir is told, the most admired woman in the Icelandic sagas, ending her turbulent life in prayer;an episode in Njál's Saga about the coward Björn and the daredevil Kári Sölmundarson; Gretti's Saga, which chronicles the life of Grettir Àgsmundarson,