Hans Christian Andersen and Music | Dance, Dance, Doll of Mine |
Hans Christian Andersen is best known for his fairy tales, which were written for children, but on a deeper level grown-ups often find them rewarding. Some of his poems were also written particularly for children, and a few of them, set to music, have become standard works among Danish songs written for children, such as “Hist, hvor Vejen slaar en Bugt ”(“Mother and Child”) and “Pandebeen, Øiesteen” (“Nosey Tip, Rosy Lip”) both with melodies by J.C. Gebauer, and also, especially, “Danse, danse, Dukke min” (“Dance, Dance, Doll of Mine”), set to music by Fini Henriques. The text of this song can be enjoyed in two very different musical arrangements.
[ See Andersen’s original MS for “Pandebeen, Øiesteen, etc.” here and the text here] The text
[See Folkekalender for Danmark in 1857 here] Fini Henriques
[ See Henriques’s original MS for “Danse, danse, Dukke min” here (pdf)] [ See text and music for Fini Henriques’s composition with piano accompaniment here (pdf) (credits)] [ Listen to “Danse, danse, Dukke min” sung by Ellen Gottschalch (1894–1981) with Hans Peder Åse and his orchestra (rec. ?) (RealPlayer)   ( credits) ] Leopold Rosenfeld
[ See text and music for Leopold Rosenfeld’s composition with piano accompaniment here (pdf)] [ Listen to “Danse. danse dukke min” sung by Nina Bols Lundgren - soprano accompanied by Christian Westergaard - piano (RealPlayer)   (credits)] |
Aino Ackté was widely acclaimed for her performances throughout Europe and also at the Metropolitan in New York during the first decades of the twentieth century. She sang predominantly dramatic parts such as the title role in Bizet’s Carmen, Senta in Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman, and Marguerite in Gounod’s Faust. |