Abendlied, Op. 85, No. 12 (Arr...
#ElfridaAndrée 1841 – 1929
#Symphony No. 2 in A Minor (1879)
I. Mo1:derato
II. Andante
II. Scherzo: Presto
IV. Allegro risoluto
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cfoQHoYo4Y&list=RD_cfoQHoYo4Y

Elfrida Andrée sheds feminine light on fierce Viking in Fritjof Saga. That a woman composed an opera was sensational enough in a genre traditionally dominated by men, but that she also questioned celebrated ‘masculine’ values such as physical strength, courage and belligerence was unforgivable.
https://theaderks.wordpress.com/2026/01/25/elfrida-andree-sheds-feminine-light-on-fierce-viking-in-fritjof-saga/ #MissyMazzoli, #LouiseBertin, #ElfridaAndrée, #SelmaLagerlöf, #FritjofSaga, #AaltoTheater

In 1894, composer Elfrida Andrée and librettist Selma Lagerlöf competed in an opera competition for the opening of the new building for the Royal Opera in Stockholm. Their Fritjof Saga was not sele…
Elfrida Andrée sheds feminine light on fierce Viking in Fritjof Saga
In 1894, composer Elfrida Andrée and librettist Selma Lagerlöf competed in an opera competition for the opening of the new building for the Royal Opera in Stockholm. Their Fritjof Saga was not selected and remained unperformed. Almost a century and a half later, the Aalto Theatre in Essen is staging the world premiere of this one act opera inspired by a Viking saga.
Elfrida AndréeThe Essen opera house is not really in the international limelight, but regularly sticks its neck out with adventurous productions. Two years ago it presented a compelling staging of the then newly rediscovered opera Fausto by Louise Bertin from 1831; last year saw the German premiere of The Listeners by Missy Mazzoli.
Alongside rarely performed operas such as Paul Hindemith’s Cardillac and Leonard Bernstein’s Candide, this season features the one-act opera Fritjof Saga by Elfrida Andrée (1841-1929). This world premiere at the Aalto Theatre, which was built in 1988 by and named after Finnish architect Alvar Aalto, makes a trip to Essen more than worthwhile.
First female organist and telegraphist in Sweden
Elfrida Andrée was born in Visby into a politically liberal family, and was a pioneer in many ways. At the age of fourteen, she moved to Stockholm to train as an organist at the Royal Swedish Academy of Music. She had to take private lessons because women were not admitted to the programme. In 1857, she became the first woman in Sweden to obtain a diploma as an organist. Together with her father, she lobbied for a change in the law that would give women the right to be appointed as organists.
They were successful: in 1861, Andrée became organist at the Finnish Church in Stockholm and in 1856 she moved to Gothenburg Cathedral, where she remained until her death. In 1863, she also helped bring about a change in the law that allowed women to work as telegraph operators. She herself became the first and set a trend: twenty years later, Sweden had more female than male telegraph operators.
While her older sister Frederika (1836-1880) had a beautiful singing voice and became a celebrated prima donna at the Royal Opera, Elfrida developed a broader musical range. She studied composition with Ludvig Norman and Niels Gade and wrote a piano quintet at the age of twenty-four. She submitted it anonymously to the Swedish Society for Art Music, which accepted and published it in 1865. It caused a stir when the ‘man’ behind this composition turned out to be a woman.
Symphonic music
Four years later, her First Symphony was performed in Stockholm, where it received a lukewarm reception. In a letter, Andrée complained that the musicians had deliberately played poorly, sceptical as they were about a symphonic work by a woman. Her family advised her to concentrate on chamber music from then on, but she was not deterred. She would eventually compose three symphonies, two organ concertos (still performed today), an opera, choral works and many chamber music pieces. Her oeuvre comprises over a hundred works.
In 1871, two years after the premiere of her First Symphony, she conducted an orchestra in Gothenburg, again as the first woman in Sweden ever. Around this time, she also formulated her motto: ‘the elevation of women’, freely after the book The Subjection of Women by the English philosopher John Stuart Mill. The fact that she was elected a member of the Royal Academy of Music eight years later – again as the first woman – shows how firmly she had established herself in the Swedish music world. In 1897, she was also the first female conductor to be put in charge of the popular concerts of the Gothenburg Workers’ Institute.
Fritjof Saga
When a composition competition was announced in 1894 for the opening of the new building of the Royal Opera House, Andrée decided to take a chance. She asked fellow feminist Selma Lagerlöf (1858-1940) to write a libretto, and they eagerly set to work. They chose the Icelandic saga Fritjof as their subject, about the love between the Viking Fritjof and the Norwegian king’s daughter Ingeborg. The story originated around 1300 and is set in eighth-century Norway. It was popular throughout Scandinavia, and in 1825 the Swedish poet Esaias Tegnér published a Swedish translation.
Cover of Tegnér’s translationThe heroic epic also gained a foothold in the rest of Europe. None other than Goethe praised the ‘ancient, powerful, gigantic-barbaric poetry’ and asked Amalie von Imhoff to translate it into German. Several composers were inspired by the saga. The first was Max Bruch, who published his cantata Frithjof in 1864; ten years later, his compatriot Heinrich Hofmann composed the Frithjof Symphony. Another decade later, the symphonic poem Fritjof’s Meeresfahrt by Johan Wagenaar followed. Also two operas were dedicated to him: Frithiof by the Frenchman Théodore Dubois (1892) and Fritjof by the Dutchman Cornelis Dopper (1895).
Strong bearded men on adventurous voyages
Traditionally, the myths and legends about Vikings were characterised by ‘strong, bearded men who embarked on adventurous voyages’, as we read in the Aalto Theatre programme. This certainly applies to Fritjof, who was deeply admired by the German Emperor Wilhelm II: in 1890, he named a coastal defence ship after him and in 1913, he presented the Norwegians with an imposing statue, which towers menacingly over the Sognefjord at a height of 22 metres.
The self-assured Andrée and Lagerlöf had no intention of going along with this glorification of warlike alpha males. After all, both had been ardent advocates of women’s rights, or, as Lagerlöf called it, ‘female ethnicity’, throughout their lives. Their libretto for Fritjof Saga focuses on the women who suffer from the eternal warfare. The ‘Norse heroes’ are critically questioned and get counterplay by two powerful women to boot.
Lagerlöf often drew on Scandinavian sagas and legends in her novels. She was therefore familiar with the story of Fritjof, but gave it her own twist. In addition to the Norwegian king’s daughter Ingeborg, she invented the Finnish king’s daughter and sorceress Guatemi. She is like a ‘little sister’ to Ingeborg, who not only acts as a fellow sufferer, but also as a rebellious counterpart.
‘Female’ values prevail
As in many operas, two men compete for the love of one woman. Ingeborg and Fritjof love each other, but her brother, King Helge, disapproves of a union between the princess and the Viking and sends him on a long journey. When King Ring defeats Helge in battle, he is only willing to make peace on condition that he receives Ingeborg’s hand in marriage.
She agrees to this in order to protect her country and her people. Helge’s wife Guatemi tells Ring that Ingeborg still loves Fritjof, but he marries her nevertheless. When Fritjof returns and does not find Ingeborg, the situation between him and Helge escalates, resulting in great destruction.
Some time later Ingeborg visits her now devastated homeland. Fritjof awaits her and wants to flee together, but to his dismay, she chooses for Ring. Filled with vengeance, he returns to the sea for more raids. Guatemi tries to sink his ship with her magic powers, but Ingeborg prays for him and the storm subsides. During his raids, Fritjof gradually realises that he is not really cut out to sow death and destruction.
campaign image for Fritjof SagaIn the fourth and final act, Ring, Ingeborg, Fritjof and Guatemi meet at the court of Ring and Ingeborg. Guatemi incites Fritjof to take revenge, but he refuses. Ingeborg overhears their conversation and her love for Fritjof is rekindled; King Ring senses this. He is dying and entrusts Ingeborg to Fritjof, so that they may rule his empire together. Thus, the opera concludes with a happy ending: the softer ‘feminine’ values of self-sacrifice, self-awareness and compassion have prevailed.
Andrée and Lagerlöf challenge male values
Andrée and Lagerlöf’s creation of their Fritjof Saga was revolutionary in several respects. That a woman composed an opera was sensational enough in a genre traditionally dominated by men, but that she also questioned celebrated ‘masculine’ values such as physical strength, courage and belligerence was unforgivable. It was a matter of course that the one-act opera would not be chosen to open the new opera house.
This was inaugurated on 19 September 1898 with a cantata by Ivar Hallström, the opera Frondörerna by Adolf Fredrik Lindblad and scenes from the opera Estrella de Soria by Franz Berwald. Later that year, there was a concert performance of Fritjof Saga by amateur musicians from the Gothenburg Workers’ Institute, but it got a lukewarm reception; a staged version has not yet been produced. On Women’s Day, 8 March 2019, the Gothenburg Opera Choir and Orchestra did present a concert performance, with Swedish tenor Markus Pettersson as Fritjof and Swedish soprano Julia Sporsén as Ingeborg.
Aalto Theatre stages belated world premiere
In 1909, Andrée compiled a five-part suite from her opera, which has been recorded on CD several times. These recordings show that she was very familiar with the opera tradition and was able to express both stormy clashes of war and sensual love scenes with great flair. Grand, martial orchestral passages are beautifully counterbalanced by lyrical solos from individual instruments and restrained strings, testifying to underlying tensions.
127 years after its inception, the Aalto Theatre is finally presenting a staged version, in a German translation specially created for this purpose. The website tells us that the production will immerse us ‘in the fairy-tale, fantastical world of popular film sagas, while at the same time a frame story establishes the link with the modern world’. I am curious to see how this will work out in practice. So off to Essen, barely two and a half hours’ drive from Amsterdam.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cg02LxZokM0
Elfrida Andrée: Fritjof-Saga
Aalto Theater Essen, 7 February 2026
Essen Philhormonic / Wolfram-Maria Märtig
The opera runs through 9 April
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