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'''Karl ''Helmer'' Alexandersson''' (born 16 November 1886, in [[Stockholm]] - died 24 December 1927 in Stockholm), was a [[Sweden|Swedish]] [[composer]] and [[violin]]ist. He was the brother of the actress [[Karin Alexandersson]]. |
'''Karl ''Helmer'' Alexandersson''' (born 16 November 1886, in [[Stockholm]] - died 24 December 1927 in Stockholm), was a [[Sweden|Swedish]] [[composer]] and [[violin]]ist. He was the brother of the actress [[Karin Alexandersson]]. |
Revision as of 14:53, 31 May 2020
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (April 2013) |
Karl Helmer Alexandersson (born 16 November 1886, in Stockholm - died 24 December 1927 in Stockholm), was a Swedish composer and violinist. He was the brother of the actress Karin Alexandersson.
Biography
Alexandersson attended the Royal College of Music in Stockholm, then studied the violin under Johan Lindberg, counterpoint under Johan Lindegren, and instrumentation under Jean Paul Ertel in Berlin. His musical career had a promising beginning: he received several scholarships, and he was commissioned to write the official march of the Olympic Games in Stockholm 1912. His second symphony, premièred by George Schnéevoigt in 1919, was a success. After writing orchestral music to several Swedish films he devoted more of his time to writing music for silent films, and he played in person, along with, among others, Hilding Rosenberg in the orchestra pit at the Red Mill cinema in Stockholm. He died in poverty in 1927, and the funeral was funded by the City.
Compositions
- Film music
- Arrangement
- 1921 - "Värmlänningarna"
- Orchestral Music
Recordings
- Overture, Symphony No. 2, Uppsala Kammarorkester, conducted by Paul Mägi, Sterling 2008.
References
- Helmer Alexandersson[permanent dead link] on Svensk Musik
External links
- Orphaned articles from April 2013
- 1886 births
- 1927 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- Swedish male classical composers
- Male film score composers
- Male violinists
- Musicians from Stockholm
- Romantic composers
- Royal College of Music, Stockholm alumni
- Swedish classical composers
- Swedish classical violinists
- Swedish film score composers
- 20th-century classical violinists
- 20th-century male musicians
- 19th-century male musicians
- Swedish composer stubs