Jan Erik Mikalsen Explained

Jan Erik Mikalsen
Birth Date:1979 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Kristiansund, Møre og Romsdal
Origin:Norway
Genre:Contemporary music
Occupation:Composer

Jan Erik Mikalsen (born 6 May 1979 in Kristiansund, Norway) is a Norwegian composer of contemporary music, living in Oslo.[1]

Biography

Mikalsen studied at the Grieg Academy in Bergen and the Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen, and is a member of the Norwegian Society of Composers. He has composed a number of works performed and commissioned by orchestras like Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony Orchestra, Norrköping Symphony Orchestra, Kringkastingsorkesteret, Oslo Sinfonietta, Bodø Sinfonietta, Thomas Bloch, Reykjavik Chamber Orchestra, Quartet Artis Wien, Stavanger Samtidsensemble, Orchestre de Flutes Francais, Manger Musikklag, Ingrid Torvund, Tori Wrånes and Bård Ask. He has participated in festivals such as Présences Festival, Pablo Casals Festival, Ultima Oslo Contemporary Music Festival, Casa Da Musica, Performa 13, Young Nordic Music and Nordic Music Days.[2]

Mikalsen also won the award from the Kavlifondet, and the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra's Nordic / Baltic Composers Workshop 2004–2005 with the work Ghouls & Moons premiered by the same orchestra under the main series, on October 20, 2005. His collaboration with visual artist Bård Ash during 2013 and 2014 has resulted in a number of works, including Notio Viri Placet shown in Bergen, London, Paris and Oslo.[1]

In January 2010 Björn Nyman and Kringkastingsorkesteret premiered the work Clarinet Concerto at stage 2, in The Norwegian Opera and Ballet in Oslo. In 2014 the commissioned work Music for solo flute and sinfonietta was premiered by Elisabeth Kristensen Eide and Bodø Sinfonietta. January 20, 2012, the work Parts II for Orchestra was premiered by the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, as one of four works in the finals of Toru Takemitsu Composition Award competition (referee Salvatore Sciarrino). The same composition won the Edvardprisen in 2012. The work Wagner Prelude was commissioned by Queen Sonja International Music Competition in 2013 and premiered in the main hall in Den Norske Opera by the opera orchestra during the final concert. In autumn 2014 Kringkastingsorkesteret premiered the commissioned work Songs for Orchestra. The BIT20 Ensemble commissioned the work Too much of a good thing which was premiered in autumn 2014 a new commissioned work for solo piano and sinfonietta in Bergen. The work was again performed under the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival in England that year. Mikalsen was awarded Intro composer for the period 2014–2016. The composition Songs for Orchestra won the 2015 International Rostrum of Composers (IRC), organized by the International Music Council, and it will be broadcast in some 30 countries around the world.[3] September 2017 saw the Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra premiering Mikalsen's latest orchestral work, Just for You for Piano Solo and Orchestra, featuring Ellen Ugelvik as piano soloist and conductor Lars-Erik Ter Jung.[4]

Honors

Parts II for Orchestra received a 3rd place at the Toru Takemitsu Composition Award in Tokyo judged by Salvatore Sciarrino

Winner of the Edvardprisen for the work Parts II for Orchestra premiered by Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra

Winner of the 62nd International Rostrum of Composers (IRC) in the general category for the composition Songs For Orchestra[3]

Production

Selected works

Orchestral works

Works for sinfonietta

Chamber music

Duo works

Solo works

Works for video and exhibitions

Discography (in selection)

Lights Out, with the Norwegian Radio Orchestra

Black Spaces, with pianist Kristian Lindberg the piece "Angels Stories"

Nine solos for nine violinists, Guro Kleven Hagen

Saan, with Oslo-Filharmonien/Kringkastingsorkestret/POING, nominated for the contemporary Spellemannprisen[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jan Erik Mikalsen - Komponist . Biography . Norwegian . MIC.no . 2015-05-19 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304063453/http://www.mic.no/symfoni/kontakt.nsf/pub/per2004042911110243324788 . 2016-03-04 .
  2. Web site: Bio from Music Norway . musicnorway.no . 2016-12-06.
  3. Web site: Norwegian Jan Erik Mikalsen wins International Rostrum of Composers in Tallinn . News.err.ee . 2015-05-15 . 2015-05-19.
  4. Web site: The Oslo Philharmonic on the premiere of Just for You . ofo.no . 2017-10-18.
  5. Web site: Disse kan vinne Spellemann 2017 . 9 January 2018 . no. Ballade.no . 2018-02-27.