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Grade 3

Learn More About Edvard Grieg


Grade 3, Unit 4, Lesson 5


If you had to compose music that sounded like the United States, what music would you include? Would you make it sound like the “Star-Spangled Banner”? Or, would it sound like pop music from the radio? It wouldn’t be very easy, would it?

This is exactly what Edvard Grieg tried to do for his own country: Norway. Grieg was born in Bergen, Norway in 1843 and died in 1907. As a young child, he took piano lessons from his mother. He began composing when he was nine years old. Because he loved music so much, he went to school to study music all the time when he was fifteen.

For a while, Grieg composed music that sounded like music from other countries in Europe. Then Grieg decided to start composing music that sounded like his own country. He listened to the folk songs people sang and played. He traveled around Norway and talked to musicians. Once he knew many folk songs, he put folk melodies into his compositions. The “Norwegian Dance” is one example of this.

Grieg was a composer during the Romantic time. Sometimes Romantic composers tried to make their music sound like a picture. His piece called “The Hall of the Mountain King” is about a journey a person named Peer Gynt takes to an underground kingdom where trolls live and work for an evil king. In this piece, you can hear the hammers of the workers as they pound away. The tempo even speeds up when Peer Gynt tries to escape!

To learn more about Edvard Grieg and to hear examples of his music, click here.

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