Background
Valen was born in Stavanger, Norway in 1887 into a deeply Christian religious family and maintained his religious beliefs all his life.
composer music theorist musician musicologist
Valen was born in Stavanger, Norway in 1887 into a deeply Christian religious family and maintained his religious beliefs all his life.
In addition to his aptitude for music, he was also a polyglot, mastering at least nine languages. He earned his examen artium with the highest grades in all subjects except mathematics. He loved cats, nature, and literature, cultivated roses (even developed an award-winning hybrid), and after losing them in a devastating freeze took up growing cacti.
In 1906, Valen moved to Oslo to study Norwegian literature and language but also took classes with Catharinus Elling (1858–1942) at the Oslo Conservatory of Music, graduating with a degree in organ playing.
In 1909 he moved to Berlin to study composition at the Music Academy with Max Bruch who subsequently retired. While in Berlin, he worked on exercises in both tonal and atonal counterpoint and began to develop a polyphony similar to Bach"s, but based on motivic working and dissonance rather than harmonic progression.
The counterpoint has similarities to that of J.S. Bach and Arnold Schoenberg, though evidence reveals that they were developed independently. After his mother"s death, Valen traveled to Rome and Paris during the 1920s, gaining much inspiration from the wealth of art and architecture there.
His work became more controversial among many conservative critics, much to Valen"s disappointment.
In 1924 he returned to Oslo, and from 1927 to 1936 he worked as a musical archivist at the University of Oslo. In 1935 the government gave him a semi-permanent grant for composers. After 1948, his work began to gain greater recognition, both within Norway and outside.
Among others, pianist Glenn Gould became a great admirer of Valen and said at the recording of Valen"s Piano Sonata northern
2, "Foreign the first time in many years I have found a looming personality in the 20th-century"s music" Valen never married. He died in 1952 in Haugesund.
The Fartein Valen Prize () is a Norwegian music award in memory of the composer. The Fartein Valen Scholarship (Fartein Valen-stipendet) is an associated Norwegian music scholarship.
The prize and scholarship were first awarded in 1999 and 2002, respectively, and are now awarded every two years.
Past winners have included Arve Tellefsen and Ståle Kleiberg.