Jón Leifs (1899-1968)
Sinfónia I (Söguhetjur), op. 26; 'Saga Symphony' (1941)
2. Gudrún Osvifrsdóttir: Adagio, ma non troppo, sempre maestoso (conclusion)
3. Björn ad baki Kàra: Allegro molto, ma non troppo, sempre scherzando
Iceland Symphony Orchestra conducted by Osmo Vänskä
Jón Leifs (born May 1, 1899 in Sólheimar, died July 30, 1968 in Reykjavík) was an Icelandic composer. He left Iceland in 1916 to study in Germany at the Leipzig Conservatory. He graduated in 1921 having studied piano, and then devoted his time to conducting and composing. He became successful as a conductor, and also as a writer.
He married Jewish pianist Annie Riethof. They had two daughters, Snót and Líf, and lived in Wernigerode and subsequently in Baden-Baden. His family was harassed by the Nazis. In 1944 he moved to Sweden, and in 1945 he moved back to Iceland. After returning to Iceland he eventually divorced his wife. One of his daughters, Líf, drowned in a swimming accident off the coast of Sweden, and he wrote his string quartet Vita et Mors in her memory.
Most of his works are about Icelandic natural phenomena. In the piece Hekla he depicts the eruption of the volcano Hekla which he witnessed. In the Saga Symphony he musically portrays five characters of famous Icelandic sagas. His last work, Consolation, Intermezzo for string orchestra was written as he was dying. He died of lung cancer in Reykjavík in 1968.
Leifs and his wife are the subjects of the film Tears of Stone / Tár úr steini (1995), directed by the Icelandic director Hilmar Oddsson.
Great! I'll check those videos out!
bartje11 2 years ago
Okay, my respect !
I myself am an old pensioned German clerk only..
Many years ago I also have been a trainer of youth soccer teams. I still am interested to watch and film soccer matches. Therefor I posted some self filmed videos with the "tag" Danone Cup 2009 for example...:)
wskfan 2 years ago
Comments allowed, but ratings disabled...
Why, Editor ?
Almost 1000 uploads ? Wow !
Are you doing anything else in your life ?
wskfan 2 years ago