Ørnulf Gulbransen

Ørnulf Gulbransen (born 19 December 1916 in Kristiania (Oslo), Norway – deceased 20 February 2004 in Oslo) was a Norwegian Classical musician (flute), married 1945 to the violinist Elsa Lilian Gustavsen (b. 1921).[1]

Ørnulf Gulbransen
Ørnulf Gulbransen at left, at a practice with in Universitetets Aula, 1953.
Background information
Born(1916-12-19)19 December 1916
Kristiania (Oslo)
OriginNorway
Died20 February 2004(2004-02-20) (aged 87)
Oslo
GenresContemporary, classical music
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsFlute

Career

Gulbransen had for more than 50 years a leading position in Norwegian music. He was known as an outstanding flautist and flute teacher both in Norway and internationally.[2] He had an immenses influence as a soloist, chamber musician and professor at the Norwegian Academy of Music, and was a catalyst for the growth and progress on the Norwegian music scene over the last half century.[1]

Gulbransen debuted in 1938, as solo flutist in Filharmonisk Selskaps orkester (1941–71) and primarius in Den Norske Blåsekvintett (1955–72). He gave extensive education, including at Oslo Musikkonservatorium, Ingesund College of Music (Musikhögskolan Ingesund) and the Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen. He was assigned Professor at the Norwegian Academy of Music (1975–84). For his educational efforts, he was awarded the Lindemanprisen 1985.[1] In the years 1974–91 he was additionally regular instructor for the Canadian National Youth Orchestra. After retirement in 1984 he continued teaching music at the Barratt Due Institute of Music. His recordings included the Brandenburg concertos by J.S. Bach with Rudolf Serkin and Pablo Casals.[2]

Honors

Discography

  • 1964: J.S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 & No. 5 (Columbia Masterworks Series/Sony Classical 1990), feat. Rudolf Serkin with Members of the Marlboro Festival Orchestra, conducted by Pablo Casals
  • 1966: J.S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 (Columbia Masterworks Series/Sony Classical 1990), feat. Rudolf Serkin with Members of the Marlboro Festival Orchestra conducted by Pablo Casals
  • 1976: J.S. Bach: Chromatic Fantasy, Italian Concerto & Goldberg Variations (Aria) (Columbia Masterworks Series/Sony Classical 1990, 2002), feat. Rudolf Serkin with Members of the Marlboro Festival Orchestra conducted by Pablo Casals
  • 1991: Ørnulf Gulbransen, Flute – Radio Performances 1960–1976 (Simax Classics)
  • 1993: Edvard Fliflet Bræin: Orchestral Works (Simax Classics), feat. Eva Knardahl & Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sverre Bruland & Karsten Andersen
  • 1994: Carl Gustav Sparre Olsen & Johann Kvandal: Norwegian Music For Flute (Simax Classics)
gollark: Not every cheesecake is an octagon, as they say.
gollark: So no.
gollark: I have an RSS reader to make work, i.e. not download 100KB worth of data on every refresh.
gollark: You could try being Google and making a thing to input data which gives extra info like:time taken to submit responsecan't think of anything else
gollark: Ah.

References

  1. Øien, Per (13 February 2009). "Ørnulf Gulbransen Extended Biography". Norsk Biografisk Leksikon (in Norwegian). Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  2. Wekre, Frøydis Ree (12 March 2004). "Ørnulf Gulbransen Extended Biography" (in Norwegian). Norsk musikkinformasjon MIC.no. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.