The Scotsman

Tabita Berglund on conducting the music of Gierr ‘goat’ Tveitt

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

For Norwegian conductor Tabita Berglund, getting to work can be a bit of an expedition. “I live in a tiny place in the mountains,” she explains, “five hours north of Oslo, two hours south of Trondheim, where the temperatur­e last week dipped to minus 30C. It’s one of the coldest places in Norway, but there’s a tiny airport here that is the secret to everything. I just take my kick sledge, strap my suitcases on, and I’m in the airport in ten minutes.”

Living in such snow-clad isolation certainly hasn’t stopped the 34-yearold fulfilling, since 2021, her first profession­al responsibi­lities as principal guest conductor of the Kristiansa­nd Symphony Orchestra in southernmo­st Norway, nor hampered a burgeoning internatio­nal career which has already seen her debut this year with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and direct the Orchestre de Lyon.

And fingers crossed it won’t deter Berglund getting to Scotland later this month, for her delayed debut with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. A previous attempt, in December 2022, had to be ditched. “That may have been one of those Covid casualties,” she recalls. So was a planned appearance last April with the RSNO, although she had already impressed them in 2020 as lastminute replacemen­t for scheduled conductor Carlos Miguel Prieto.

Her Glasgow and Perth concerts will feature Dvorak, Tchaikovsk­y and 20th century Norwegian eccentric Gierr Tveitt. “Tveitt was kind of bonkers,” she says. “In Norway they call him ‘stubborn goat’.”

Velkomne med Aera is a mere four minutes long and one of the few Tveitt folk-inspired works which survived a farm fire that destroyed most of his scores. “He had no copies, very little of his music was printed, so he lost almost everything,” Berglund says. “Yet what we have here might be the most beautiful piece ever written.”

“Norwegian conductors have a responsibi­lity to celebrate Norwegian music. If we don’t, who will?”

As for Dvorak’s Cello Concerto, it is an opportunit­y for Berglund to play mischief with her musical past. Prior to graduating in 2019 from Norway’s national conducting programme, Dirigentlø­ftet, she had been a cellist. One of her cello teachers was Truls Mørk, who just happens to be the soloist on this occasion.

“It’s the first time Truls and I have worked together in this way,” she says. “I actually learnt this piece as a player with him. It’ll be interestin­g to see if he’ll accept what I want to do with it, as opposed to what he once wanted me to do with it. We’ll figure that out.”

The reason Berglund turned to conducting was, itself, something she hadn’t initially figured out. “I was quite happy as a performer, but after finishing my cello masters I felt something was missing, so applied for this crash course at the [Norwegian] Academy, among other things to better my score reading. The audition was the first time I had

ever actually conducted, but – boom – somehow I just knew how to do this.”

The Dirigentlø­ftet course – establishe­d in 2018, inspired by the German Dirigentfo­rum, and borrowing wisely from the groundbrea­king Finnish system spearheade­d by Jorma Panula – provided Berglund with the perfect opportunit­y to turn her instinctiv­e desire into a profession­al reality. “You do very little analysis, very little theory; you just learn by doing it.”

Which is also what her post in Kristiansa­nd has provided. “The boost you get from an orchestra that believes in you, that says ‘we want to build a relationsh­ip with you’, that’s a trust I will be eternally grateful for. It’s like they’re telling me to just experiment, develop, do what you want.”

With Berglund’s three-year Kristiansa­nd contract ending this year, and her internatio­nal profile on the increase, what next? “I’ve exciting news coming up, but I’m not allowed to say until later this month”. Whatever and wherever it is, her kick sledge awaits.

“Tveitt lost almost everything,yetheremig­ht be the most beautiful piece ever written”

Tabita Berglund makes her debut with the BBC SSO at the City Halls, Glasgow, 22 February and at Perth Concert Hall, 23 February, see www. bbc.co.uk/bbcsso

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 ?? ?? Tabita Berglund started conducting in 2019 after a career as a cellist
Tabita Berglund started conducting in 2019 after a career as a cellist
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