Valborg Aulin
Laura Valborg Aulin was a Swedish pianist and composer. Two works by Aulin, String Quartet E Minor, Op. 17 and String Quartet F Minor are the most important Swedish music compositions in that genre from the 1880s.
Life
Both of Aulin's parents, Lars Axel Alfred and Edla Aulin née Holmberg, were musical. Her mother, Edla Aulin had hoped for a career as a singer, but bad health had stopped her career. Aulin's father was a classics scholar, holding a doctorate in Greek, on the poet Callimachus. He also held a position at a Stockholm secondary school, where he taught classical languages. While he was a student at Uppsala University, Aulin's father developed an understanding and appreciation of chamber music, eventually becoming a keen amateur violinist, eventually leading to a position in the Mazer String Quartet Society, playing Viola and Violin.Aulin's musical career began when she started taking piano lessons from her grandmother and by age 12 was taking lessons from Hilda Thegerström. Aulin eventually came to the notice of Albert Rubenson, the then current director of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music. An enrolment at the academy followed when Aulin was 17, to study composition with Rubenson. Aulin was also tutored at the Royal College of Music, Stockholm by Herman Behrens and Ludvig Norman. Norman was an important supporter of Aulin for most of her life and when Norman died in 1885, she composed the Pie Jesu Domine for choir and orchestra. In 1880, Aulin held her first public performance at Söderköping, and went on tour with her brother Tor Aulin to Norrland. Aulin studied piano and composition for 5 years before winning a Jenny Lind Mendelssohn Travelling Fellowship to attend piano tutorials abroad. In 1886, Aulin travelled to Copenhagen to receive study from Niels Wilhelm Gade for a year and in 1887, travelled to Paris for three years to receive composition study from female pianist E. Bourgain as well as Jules Massenet, Ernest Guiraud and Benjamin Godard. In Paris, Aulin created two works, Tableaux Parisiens for orchestra and Procul este for solo voice, choir and string orchestra.
Upon returning to Sweden, Aulin began a career as a teacher, pianist and composer. As a teacher, she supplemented her income by teaching piano, counterpoint, composition and harmony. At the same time Aulin was composing and between 1887 and 1901 she gave recitals of her compositions. As a pianist she often played with her brother, Tor Aulin, and others to form the Aulin Quartet, playing favourites like Camille Saint-Saëns Piano Quartet and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart G Minor quartet.
Besides many lieder and pieces for solo piano, her compositions included two string quartets and organ music.
At the age of 43, Aulin decided to move from the capital, that place where grew up in, to Örebro, a city some 125miles to the west. There Aulin began working as a teacher, organist, pianist and arranging concerts although she ceased composing. The reasons for her departure has never been determined, although the move has been viewed with much speculation. The American Scholar posits that the reasons she possibly became fed up with the constant challenges faced by her regarding the musical culture in Stockholm, particularly since Aulin was female and also that she had certain difficulties with her mother. The Swedish Musical Heritage posits the same reasons. Other reasons suggested by The Swedish Art Music Society include the fact that the Aulin Quartet gradually ceased to perform and that the early death of the composer Ludvig Norman along with other members of her support structure. This combined with a lack of friends may have been one another reason.
Either way, Aulin's work was performed less and less, and would be forgotten. It was only in 1991 that Quartet No. 2 was given its next performance.
Compositions
Aulin's work consists of two types of work, piano compositions and compositions for voice and piano, that both provide works for less experienced musicians and professional musicians. This is evidenced by dedications to singers such as the Swedish opera singer Dina Edling and music teacher Hilda Thegerström.With the exception of Grande sonate sérieuse pour le piano , Sonata for piano opus 14, the piano compositions have a single movement. These compositions are mood pieces in which the title already defines the pieces character. The prominence of single movement works is puzzling as Aulin was an accomplished pianist and was more than capable of playing longer compositions. Swedish Musical Heritage has posited that the possible reason was that Aulin wanted more of here work published as smaller works selling better than larger works.
Aulin's compositions for solo voice and piano tend to be artistic songs rather than romances. Most of the text that is attached to the compositions were poems written by Karl Alred Melin. It is unknown whether Melin was a poet as he is entirely unknown. The other pieces of text were principally written by the composer Ludvig Norman. Other people of interest was the Swedish poet Carl David af Wirsén and the Finish-Swedish lyricist and poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg.
The work with the last effects are the two string quartets. Aulin wrote the last quartet when she was 29 years old and it has often puzzles musical historian and biographers of Aulin's life why she didn't return to writing quartets in later life.
Orchestral works in several movements
- Tableaux Parisiens, orchestral suite op. 15, 1886
Mixed choir a cappella
- Three songs for mixed choir a cappella opus 5
- Two choirs a cappella for mixed voices opus 24
Mixed choir and instruments
- Christmas song for mixed choir and organ accompaniment opus 23
Mixed choir and orchestra
- Pie Jesu Domine, Missa sollemnis opus 13
- Veni sanctu spiritus , hymn opus 32
Mixed choir with solo voice(s) and orchestra
- Herr Olof, ballad for tenor solo, choir and orchestra op. 3, 1880
- Procul este, lyrical poem for soprano solo, choir, orchestra and harp op. 28, 1886
Female choir and instruments
- Three choirs for female voices with piano accompaniment
Voice and piano
- Carina, 1891
- Der Todtengräber
- Det finns en gosse och han är min, 1884
- Four songs from Heine's 'Buch der Lieder' opus 9
- För länge se'n
- Kom!, 1881
- Roddaren, 1881
- Saknaden, 1886
- Skärgårdsvisa
- Säg ej så,
- Two songs for one voice and piano opus 19,
- Vid Rånö ström opus 18, 1890
- Ynglingen, 1881
Uncategorised works
- Borta. Gone
- Der Totengräber. For bass and piano.
- Där kärlek i hjertat bott en gång. Where love in Hjertat lived once
- Hvad du sörjer öfver och är så blek. What you mourn upon and are so pale
- O! du sommartid.
- Saknaden. Missing,
- Vid Rånö ström op. 18.
- Skärgårdsvisa, 1892. For a long time now
- Säg ej så
- Var det en dröm?.
- Vårsång.
- För länge se´n, latest 1896. For a long time now
- Four song from Heine's Buch der Lieder for voice and piano, dedicated to Charlotte Asplund op. 9.
- * 1. Deine weissen Lilienfinger. Your white lily fingers.
- * 2. Es fällt ein Stern herunter, also separate for bass and piano. A star drops down
- * 3. Ich stand in dunklen Träumen, also separate for bass and piano. I stood in dark dreams
- * 4. Der Mond ist aufgegangen The full moons rays found me
- Vaggsång, dedicated to Fritz Arlberg op. 10. Lullaby
Violin and piano
- Album leaf 1989
- Elegie opus 8 no. 3 1880-1890
- Sonata for piano and violin
Uncategorised work
- Ballad and Noveletta.
- Albumblad, originally for piano. Transcription by the composer.
Piano
- 5 Tone poems for piano opus 7 1882
- 7 pieces for piano opus 8 1884
- Album leaf opus 29 1898
- Grande sonate sérieuse pour le piano , Sonata for piano opus 14 1885
- Miniature
- Suite for piano
- Three fantasy pieces for piano opus 30 1898
- Valse élégiaque 1892?
Organ
- Meditation
String Quartet
- Qvartett
- String quartet in E minor opus 17
Other works for strings
- Var det en dröm?, originally for song and piano. Arrangement for strings with obligato violin. Was it a dream?