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Vilhelm Krag

For others with the same name or surname, see Krag (surname).

Portrait of Vilhelm Krag

Vilhelm Krag (24 December 1871 – 10 July 1933) was a Norwegian poet, author, journalist and cultural personality. Known for coining the term Sørlandet to describe a region of Norway, he was the son of Peter Rasmus Krag and younger brother of the novelist Thomas Krag.

His first volume of poetry, which came out in 1891, included many of his best-known poems: "Fandango", "Der skreg en fugl" (A bird cried), "Liden Kirsten" (Little Kirsten), "Majnat" (May night), "Mens jeg venter" (While I'm waiting), "Moderen synger" (The mother sings) and "Og jeg vil ha mig en hjertenskjær" (And I will have me a sweetheart).

Edvard Grieg set Krag's lyrics to music in his Opus 60, published in 1894. In the early 20th century works by Krag were recorded in America by Florence Bodinoff, George Hamlin, Nathalie Hansen, Eleonora Olson, Ernestine Schumann-Heink, Aalrud Tillisch, and Carsten Woll.

References

    External links

    • Works by or about Vilhelm Krag at Internet Archive
    • Vilhelm Krag texts set to music at the LiederNet Archive
    • Vilhelm Krag recordings and translations
    • Vilhelm Krag at the Internet Archive
    • English translation of Fandango

    Articles in Norwegian

    • Vilhelm Krag at the Great Norwegian encyclopedia
    • Vilhelm Krag at the Norwegian biographical encyclopedia

    Poetry Collections

    • Digte (1891)
    • Sange fra Syden (1893)
    • Nye Digte (1897)
    • Vestlandsviser (1898)

    Vilhelm Krag at the National Jukebox

    • Im Kahne (Mens jeg venter) and The mother sings (Moderen synger)
    • Og jeg vil ha mig en hjertenskjær

    Vilhelm Krag at the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project

    • Majnat

    Art song

    • Der skreg en fugl: video
    • Der skreg en fugl: sheet music