Kåre Siem Explained

Kåre Siem
Birth Date:8 June 1914
Birth Place:Kristiania, Norway
Nationality:Norwegian
Occupation:Musician and writer
Relatives:Henny Mürer (sister-in-law)

Kåre Siem (8 June 1914 – 23 June 1986) was a Norwegian musician and writer.

Early and personal life

Siem was born in Kristiania, to Sverre Julius Siem and Elida Annette Antonsen. He was married to Evy Christophersen from 1942 to 1959, and to dancer Alice Mürer from 1960.[1]

Career

Siem studied piano with Nils Larsen, Erling Westher and Ivar Johnsen. He made his concert debut as pianist in 1938, and toured widely in Norway and internationally until his playing career was interrupted by an injured elbow. He started writing music for film and theatre, worked as kapellmeister and conductor, contributed to the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation, and was a columnist for the newspaper VG. An active participant in the, he co-edited several songbooks, jointly with Thorbjørn Egner and Yukon Gjelseth. His publications further include the cookbook Kåres nam-nam-bok for kløner og duster (1974) and the memoir books Bingo (1978) and Klokkene ringer for meg (1979). He was a board member of, active in the music copyrights organization TONO, and a board member of .[1] [2]

He died in Oslo on 23 June 1986. A bust of Siem, sculpted by Per Palle Storm, is located in Oslo.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Kåre Siem . Norsk biografisk leksikon. Øystein . Øystå . Øystein Øystå . Helle, Knut. Kunnskapsforlaget . Oslo . Norwegian . 11 April 2019.
  2. Encyclopedia: Kåre Siem . . Bolstad . Erik . Norsk nettleksikon . Oslo . Norwegian . 11 April 2019.