Английская Википедия:Elsa Stuart-Bergstrom

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Шаблон:Short description Elsa Marianne Stuart-Bergstrom (26 April 1889 – 19 May 1970) was a Swedish author,[1] composer,([2] and music critic who wrote several biographies, composed about 60 songs[3] as well as orchestral works, and sometimes published under the pseudonyms Kaimen or E.M.S.[4]

Stuart-Bergstrom was born in Stockholm to Hanna Mariana Hjerpe and Johan Magnus Stuart.[5] Hanna was a housekeeper and seamstress for Stuart; they married in 1906. Stuart-Bergstrom lived with her aunt, Tekla Rydbergi Soderkoping, for much of her childhood. She graduated from the Wallinska Skolan in Stockholm, then studied art and literary history at Stockholm University.[6] She studied music at the Stockholm Conservatory with Lennart Lundberg and Kerstin Stroemberg,[1] and with Felix Saul, a local cantor.[3]

In 1932, Stuart-Bergstrom married Richard Bergstrom, a Swedish Customs clerk, and they moved to Skara, where she lived the rest of her life.[6] She lectured on the radio and worked as a music critic for Stockholm newspapers as well as for the Musical Times (London), sometimes using the pseudonym Kaimen[7] or E.M.S.[3] Stuart-Bergstrom was a member of the Stockholm Foreign Press Association.[8]

Stuart-Bergstrom's papers are archived at the Swedish Music and Theater Library (Musikverket).[9] Her composition manuscripts are stored at the Diocesan and National Libraries of Skara,[6] Her publications include:

Books

Music

  • about 60 songs
  • “Song in folk tone” (voice and piano; text by Bengt E. Nyström)[3]
  • “Spelare-Jan” (voice and piano; text by Bengt E. Bystrom)[3]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control