Nancy Dalberg

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Nancy Dalberg (born Nancy Hansen, 6 July 1881 28 September 1949) was a Danish composer. Born into a wealthy family, she studied under notable composers such as Johan Svendsen and Carl Nielsen, the latter becoming a good friend and a significant figure in her life. In addition to the orchestral works mentioned, she wrote around fifty songs, including three for voice and orchestra.[1]

Nancy Dalberg was born at the estate Mullerup [da] on the Danish island of Funen (Fyn), where she was raised in a manor house. Her father, Christian D. A. Hansen, was a well-off manufacturer as the founder of Chr. Hansen, a factory for chemical products for the food industry, which is still one of Denmark's leading companies. The family was always well-off financially, which meant that Nancy didn't have to worry about her income, which her music most of the time couldn't promise.[citation needed]

From a young age she was steered toward a musical career, partly due to her acquaintance with the composer Hilda Sehested, who was twenty years her senior and from the nearby Broholm estate. As was customary, she received private piano instruction from Ove Christensen, making her debut in 1907. Unfortunately her father refused her wish to study at the Royal Conservatory in Copenhagen.[1]

Following her marriage in 1901 and relocation to Copenhagen, she continued her piano studies with Ove Christiansen. Unfortunately, apart from her father's hindrance, her promising career was never to be because she suffered chronic tenosynovitis. From 1909 to 1911, she studied music theory and composition under Johan Svendsen, shortly with Fini Henriques and from 1913 onwards with Carl Nielsen, who became a significant figure in her life. Nielsen played in the ensemble at the first private performance of Dalberg's debut string quartet in 1914 at her home. He also conducted the premieres of three of her orchestral works: Scherzo for String Orchestra Op. 6, the Symphony in C-sharp minor (1917), and Capriccio for Orchestra (1918). Nielsen trusted her technical skills and allowed her to orchestrate parts of his operas Aladdin and Springtime on Funen (Fynsk Foraar).[citation needed]

Most of her works were written between 1914 and 1935. Among these was Marianne Sinclair's song, intended for an opera based on Selma Lagerlöf's Gösta Berling's Saga. However, since the opera rights had already been granted to another party, the project was abandoned. Her chamber music includes several small pieces for violin and piano, as well as for cello and piano, but it is her three string quartets that have received the most recognition.[2]

She was the first Danish woman composer to write a symphony.[3] It was premiered to critical acclaim although it was noted with surprise that Dalberg was a woman.[2] The two strongest influences that can be heard in her music are those of Svendsen and Nielsen although she writes entirely with her own voice.[citation needed]

Nancy Dalberg is often remembered more for her role as Nielsen's assistant than for her own compositions. This may be attributed to the traditional female role she was compelled into by her social environment and seemingly accepted. Her works were not evaluated on their own merits but often viewed as skillful enough that even a man might have produced them.[2] Additionally, caring for her mentally ill husband increasingly drained her energy in the last two decades of her life. In this respect, her fate mirrors that of her fellow female composer Tekla Wandall. However, unlike Wandall, there was no social necessity forcing Dalberg to pursue music. She stopped composing during the 1930s.[citation needed]

Her chamber music has received the most attention and one of her three string quartets, her Second String Quartet in G minor, Op.14 has entered the repertoire of many Scandinavian ensembles and was recorded on a Dacapo CD in 1999. (Dacapo 8.224138) The parts and score to this work were republished by Edition Silvertrust in June 2007.[citation needed]

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