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Hauk Buen
Hauk
Buen is a Norwegian national treasure. Hauk won the Norwegian National
Competition in Hardanger fiddle in 1962 and 1963, as well as many
other prizes and honors in Norway. Hauk was the subject of an hour-long
program on Norwegian television in 1983. In 1992 he won the Spelemannspris (Norwegian equivalent of the Grammy) for best folk music recording.
Hauk's concert appearances include the Edinburgh Folk Festival; South
Bank Summer Music Festival in London, England; Sofia, Bulgaria; Festival
'91 in Chartres, France; two concerts with the Israel Philharmonic
Orchestra in Jerusalem; National Museum of Natural History in Washington,
D.C.; 1994 Winter Olympics, Lillehammer, Norway; Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York; New England Conservatory of Music, Boston. Hauk
will be teaching a workshop in Hardanger fiddling from the Telemark
region of Norway at AmeriKappleik, plus performing in several solo
and group concerts.
Leif Rygg
Leif
Rygg is famous throughout Norway as one of the most accomplished
virtuosos of the Hardanger fiddle today. He has won the Norwegian
National Competition three times, as well as innumerable smaller
competitions, and is in high demand as a concert player. He teaches
at the Ole Bull Academy in Voss as well as teaching and performing
professionally for Hordaland county as a member of their folk music
group. He has also performed in a number of foreign music festivals
and performed at the Nordic Fest in Decorah, Iowa, leading a troupe
of musicians and dancers from Voss. Leif will be teaching a workshop
in Hardanger fiddling from the Voss region of Norway at AmeriKappleik,
plus performing in several solo and group concerts.
Vidar Lande
Vidar
Lande is recognized not only as one of the best Hardanger fiddle
players in Norway, but as an award-winning researcher and collector
who has accumulated a vast store of tunes and knowledge from his
home area of Bygland in central Setesdal. Vidar is in demand as a
judge in fiddling competitions and has performed throughout Norway
and the USA, including Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion
radio program. He has taught at the University of Oslo, and currently
teaches folk music at the Telemark Høgskulen in Bø and
also at the two-year program in folk music at Rauland in Telemark.
He has produced six CDs, including two of his own playing, and was
also featured on the CD, "Norway: Fiddle Music from Agder," from
the UNESCO Collection of Musics and Musicians of the World. He is
also the author of three landmark collections of Hardanger fiddle
transcriptions. Vidar is a three-time recipient of the Norwegian
state traveling grant for artists, and winner of the Norwegian Folk
Music Association's prize for 2002. Vidar will be teaching a workshop
in Hardanger fiddling from the Setesdal region of Norway at AmeriKappleik,
and will be performing in concerts and presenting a lecture on Norwegian-American
fiddlers in the USA.
Bernt Balchen, Jr.
Bernt Balchen, Jr. has been one of the primary contributors to the
revival of the Hardanger fiddling tradition in the U.S. He wrote
and produced a three-volume set of instructional videos and accompanying
manuals for the Hardanger fiddle in English, the first such purely
in English and by far the most comprehensive in any language. He
has frequently taught at the annual workshops of the Hardanger Fiddle
Association of America. Bernt has been the leader of the Laget for
Folkemusikk (Folk Music Association) in Oslo for the past dozen years
and is one of the founding members of the Norwegian Traditional Music
and Dance Association. His playing has been recorded by Norwegian
National Broadcasting (NRK) radio. Bernt will be teaching a workshop
in Hardanger fiddling from the Valdres region of Norway at AmeriKappleik
plus performing.
Karin Code
Karin
Loberg Code, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, has spent two
years living in
Norway studying and performing for concerts
and local dance groups
in Oslo. She is a regular fiddler at
dance workshops in this country.
Karin has focused primarily
on the music of Hallingdal and Valdres.
Elizabeth Foster
Elizabeth
Foster, of Bainbridge Island, Washington, lived in
Gol, Norway, for
four years where she taught piano, violin,
and hardingfele in the
local music schools. While there she
learned from various fiddlers
in the area and played in the
Hemsedal Spelemannslag and the Hallingdal
Låtelag. Elizabeth
has led and taught various Scandinavian
music groups in the
Seattle area since the early 1980's.
Toby Weinberg
Toby
Weinberg, of the Boston area, is the leader of the hardingfele
group
there, as well as a performer and teacher at workshops throughout
the United States. In 2001, he led the group to Norway to perform
at the Porsgrund Kappleik, where he also placed. Toby's main focus
is the traditions of Telemark, and he will offer instruction on hardingfele
and seljefløyte.
Torgeir Straand
Torgeir
Straand, from Bø, Telemark, is among the most brilliant
of the younger generation of hardingfele players. As a teenager
he apprenticed himself to Anund Roheim, the greatest Norwegian-American
hardingfele player of the last half of the 20th century. Anund,
who had spent most of his life in Montana, had retired and returned
to his home town of Bø, where he met Torgeir and taught
him almost his entire repertory. Anund Roheim died in Bø in
1999. Torgeir will play a concert in memory of Anund Roheim,
performing many of Anund's favorite tunes and talking about his
life as a fiddler.
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