The decisive role that Norwegian folk music played for Edvard Grieg can be felt in almost all of his works. The Norwegian Dances op. 35 of 1880, presented here in an Urtext edition, are arrangements for piano four hands of old folk tunes that Grieg took from a collection published by the musician and researcher Ludvig Mathias Lindeman. For this Henle Urtext edition, all the extant autographs in the Grieg Archive in Bergen, Norway were consulted along with the contemporary first editions. The co-editor here is the Norwegian pianist and Grieg specialist Einar Steen-Nøkleberg, who is also responsible for the fingerings.
Content/Details
- Allegro marcato d minor op. 35,1
- Allegretto tranquillo e grazioso A major op. 35,2
- Allegro moderato alla Marcia G major op. 35,3
- Allegro molto D major op. 35,4
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Preface
Edvard Grieg (1843 – 1907) often used elements of Norwegian folk music in his works, appropriating not just melodies but also typical harmonic inflections and rhythmic patterns from folk dance into his musical language. By so doing he forged an artistic independence that differentiated him both from his Romantic-era predecessors Schumann and Mendelssohn and also from the … more
Critical Commentary
About the composer

Edvard Grieg
Most important Norwegian composer of the nineteenth century and promoter of Norwegian folk music. His lyrical character pieces in particular are well known.
1843 | Born in Bergen on June 15, the son of a merchant and British consul; early piano lessons with his mother, who was a pianist. |
1858–62 | Studies at the Leipzig Conservatory. |
1862 | Concerts in Norway. |
1863 | Copenhagen, with the support of Niels W. Gade. |
from 1864 | Interest in Norwegian folk music, which finds its way into his compositions. |
1866 | Breakthrough with a concert of Norwegian music. Conductor of the Philharmonic Society. |
1867 | The first of a total of ten volumes of Lyric Pieces for piano, Op. 12, with relatively simple piano settings. |
1868/69 | Composition of the Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16, which is based on Schumann’s piano concerto. |
1869 | “25 Norwegian Folk Melodies and Dances,” Op. 17, for piano. |
1873 | Begins work on the opera “Olav Trygvason,” Op. 50, after Bjørnson, which is never completed. |
1874 | Composition stipend from the state. |
1874/75 | Composition of incidental music to Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt,” Op. 23, the basis for the Peer Gynt Suites. |
1876 | Attends the premiere of Wagner’s “Der Ring des Nibelungen” in Bayreuth. |
1880–82 | Conductor of the “Harmonien” musical society in Bergen. Thereafter he accepted no other positions. |
1883 | Visit to Bayreuth; he hears Wagner’s “Parsifal.” |
1884 | Composition of “From Holberg’s Time,” Op. 40, his most popular work. |
from 1885 | He moves into his villa “Troldhaugen” (near Bergen). Composition and revision of older works in spring and summer, concert tours in fall and winter. |
1891 | Composition of the “Lyric Suite,” Op. 54, orchestrated in 1905. |
1907 | Death in Bergen on September 4. |