Thomas Jensen
Thomas Jensen (Copenhagen, 25 October 1898 – Frederiksberg, 13 November 1963) was a Danish orchestra conductor.
Life and career
Born into a working class household, he studied at the Danish Conservatory of Music.[1] Jensen led several Danish ensembles, including the Danish National Symphony Orchestra (from 1957) and the Aarhus Symphony Orchestra (then known as the Aarhus Civic Orchestra). In Aarhus he built the small orchestra up through broadcasts and tours within Denmark and later to Germany and the Netherlands. He also conducted the Tivoli Concert Hall Orchestra.[1]
Jensen is best remembered (with Erik Tuxen and Launy Grøndahl) as one of the pioneers of the music of Carl Nielsen. He studied cello at the Royal Danish Academy of Music, where his harmony teacher was Nielsen. As an orchestral cellist he took part in the first performances of Nielsen's 4th and 5th symphonies, and also sat in on many rehearsals of Nielsen. Nielsen's daughters held that Jensen was the conductor whose performances came closest to Nielsen's own.[1]
He also played in the orchestra when Sibelius conducted his own music in the Danish capital in 1924 and 1926.[1]
Jensen made his recording debut in 1937 with lighter music by Knudåge Riisager and the year later led Svendsen's Romance, with Carlo Andersen playing the solo violin part. From 1937 to 1943 Jensen recorded over 60 sides of music for HMV, Odeon and Tono.[1] In Aarhus he recorded works by Kuhlau, Tarp, Elgar, Massenet, Møller, Debussy, Tchaikovsky and Smetana. His first recordings of Nielsen date from 1941 (the Suite for String Orchestra) with the Helios overture and orchestral opera extracts in the following year.
In 1952 he received the Ingenio et Arti award from Fredrik IX.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Cane, A. Thomas Jensen and the Nielsen tradition. Classical Recordings Quarterly. Autumn 2014, No 78, p12-18.
- ↑ List of recipients of Ingenio et Arti accessed 25 January 2015.
Cultural offices | ||
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Preceded by no predecessor |
Principal Conductor, Aarhus Symphony Orchestra 1935–1957 |
Succeeded by Per Dreier |