Andreas Peter Berggreen
Andreas Peter Berggreen (March 2, 1801 – November 8, 1880) was a Danish composer, organist, and pedagogue.
Berggreen was born and died in Copenhagen. He initially studied law before pursuing a career in music, studying under Christopher Ernst Friedrich Weyse. In addition to Weyse, Berggreen was also heavily influenced by the German musician Johann Abraham Peter Schulz.
Berggreen was the organist at Trinitatis Church in Copenhagen from 1838 and taught singing at Metropolitanskolen from 1843. In 1859 he was appointed a song inspector by the Danish government.
Apart from several pieces of incidental music, a cantata, solo piano works, and songs, he published the folk song collections Melodier til Salmebog (1853) and Folk Sange og Melodier (1842–71). The latter comprises eleven large volumes, and includes folk songs in Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, German, English, French and Italian. Volume 8 (1868) features Slavic folk music in four sections: Russian; Polish; Bohemian and Moravian; and Sorbian.
Musical compositions[]
- Songs with Accompaniment of Guitar (1823)
- Cantata for Rege's Tohundredaarsfest (1823)
- Cantata for Prince Ferdinand and Princess Caroline Formælingsfest (1829)
- The picture and bust (opera in 1832)
- Socrates (1835 play)
- Tordenskiold (1832 play)
- Queen Margrethe (1833 play)
- "Songs for school"
- Several church compositions
- romances and songs
- hymns
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andreas Peter Berggreen. |
- 1801 births
- 1880 deaths
- 19th-century classical composers
- 19th-century Danish composers
- 19th-century male musicians
- Danish classical composers
- Danish classical organists
- Danish male classical composers
- Danish Romantic composers
- Male organists