Viva voce:
25 October 2023
Supervisor(s):
Håkon Austbø, Professor, UK, UiS
Per Dahl, Professor, UK, UiS (co-supervisor)
Assessment committee:
Einar Røttingen, Professor, UiB
Kathleen Coessens Antwerpen, Associate Professor, Belgia
Mine Doǧantan-Dack, Professor, University of Cambridge, UK
Finn Mortensen (1922-1983) was one of Norway’s most central composers and influential modernists in the decades following the Second World War. Nevertheless, his music is little studied among both researchers and performers. The dominant contemporary view that Mortensen was, as the renowned Norwegian musicologist Finn Benestad put it, “[t]echnically competent and emotionally cold” (Benestad 1959), and a composer more occupied with the constructivist than the expressive and emotional sides of music has largely remained a prevailing paradigm. This perception was not improved by Mortensen’s tendency to always talk about his music in purely technical, compositional terms and to remain silent about the stylistic, aesthetic and emotional content on the few occasions he reluctantly commented on his music. In addition, his scores, characterised by an ascetic notational style, contain very few expressive marks, dynamic nuances, tempo modifications, or other signs that could reveal aesthetic or emotional intentions.