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=== Early Life and Education === |
=== Early Life and Education === |
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Andrée was born on 19 February 1841 in [[Visby]] to the doctor Andreas Andrée and Lovisa Lyth, both of whom were actively involved in musical pursuits.<ref>{{cite web|title=Elfrida Andrée|url=http://www.voiceoflyrics.com/compo/andree_e.html|website=Voiceoflyrics.com|accessdate=8 December 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Visionary who set Gothenburg in motion|publisher=Göteborgs Symfoniker |url=https://www.gso.se/en/discover/composers/elfrida-andree-1841-1929/|accessdate=20 November 2024 }}</ref><ref name=”:0″ /> Luckily for Elfrida, Andreas believed in education for all his children, not just his sons. Both her and older sister, Frederika, received excellent instruction, especially in music.<ref name=”:0″ /> When she was fourteen, she enrolled at the Conservatory in [[Stockholm]], where she studied both organ and composition.<ref name=”:0″ /> She was the pupil of [[Ludvig Norman]] and [[Niels Wilhelm Gade]]. |
Andrée was born on 19 February 1841 in [[Visby]] to the doctor Andreas Andrée and Lovisa Lyth, both of whom were actively involved in musical pursuits.<ref>{{cite web|title=Elfrida Andrée|url=http://www.voiceoflyrics.com/compo/andree_e.html|website=Voiceoflyrics.com|accessdate=8 December 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Visionary who set Gothenburg in motion|publisher=Göteborgs Symfoniker |url=https://www.gso.se/en/discover/composers/elfrida-andree-1841-1929/|accessdate=20 November 2024 }}</ref><ref name=”:0″ /> Luckily for Elfrida, Andreas believed in education for all his children, not just his sons. Both her and older sister, Frederika, received excellent instruction, especially in music.<ref name=”:0″ /> When she was fourteen, she enrolled at the Conservatory in [[Stockholm]], where she studied both organ and composition.<ref name=”:0″ /> She was the pupil of [[Ludvig Norman]] and [[Niels Wilhelm Gade]]. |
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=== Activism === |
=== Activism === |
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=== Compositions === |
=== Compositions === |
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Andrée’s two organ [[symphony|symphonies]] are still being played today. Her other compositions include the [[opera]] ”Fritiofs saga” (1899, [[libretto]] by [[Selma Lagerlöf]]), several works for [[orchestra]] including two symphonies, a [[piano quartet]] in A minor (1870) and a [[piano quintet]] in E minor (published in 1865), a [[piano trio]] in G minor (1887) (and another published posthumously in C minor), a [[string quartet]] in D minor from 1861 and another in A major, pieces for [[violin]] (including sonatas in E flat and B flat major) and for [[piano]], two Swedish [[mass (music)|masses]], an 1879 choral ballade “Snöfrid”, and ”[[lied]]er.”<ref>{{Cite web|title=Elfrida Andrée (1841-1929)|url=https://musictheoryexamplesbywomen.com/composers/elfrida-andree-1841-1929/|access-date=2021-02-18|website=Music Theory Examples By Women|language=en-US}}</ref> The composer was rediscovered in the 1980s by the Swedish musicologist Eva Öhrström. |
Andrée’s two organ [[symphony|symphonies]] are still being played today. Her other compositions include the [[opera]] ”Fritiofs saga” (1899, [[libretto]] by [[Selma Lagerlöf]]), several works for [[orchestra]] including two symphonies, a [[piano quartet]] in A minor (1870) and a [[piano quintet]] in E minor (published in 1865), a [[piano trio]] in G minor (1887) (and another published posthumously in C minor), a [[string quartet]] in D minor from 1861 and another in A major, pieces for [[violin]] (including sonatas in E flat and B flat major) and for [[piano]], two Swedish [[mass (music)|masses]], an 1879 choral ballade “Snöfrid”, and ”[[lied]]er.”<ref>{{Cite web|title=Elfrida Andrée (1841-1929)|url=https://musictheoryexamplesbywomen.com/composers/elfrida-andree-1841-1929/|access-date=2021-02-18|website=Music Theory Examples By Women|language=en-US}}</ref> The composer was rediscovered in the 1980s by the Swedish musicologist Eva Öhrström. |
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==Recordings== |
==Recordings== |
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Revision as of 01:14, 4 February 2026
Swedish organist, composer and conductor (1841–1929)

Elfrida Andrée (19 February 1841 – 11 January 1929) was a Swedish organist, composer, and conductor.[1] Her sister was the singer Fredrika Stenhammar.
Life and career
Early Life and Education
Andrée was born on 19 February 1841 in Visby to the doctor Andreas Andrée and Lovisa Lyth, both of whom were actively involved in musical pursuits.[2][3][1] Luckily for Elfrida, Andreas believed in education for all his children, not just his sons. Both her and older sister, Frederika, received excellent instruction, especially in music.[1] When she was fourteen, she enrolled at the Conservatory in Stockholm, where she studied both organ and composition.[1] She was the pupil of Ludvig Norman and Niels Wilhelm Gade, and was the first woman to pass organ examinations in Sweden.[4]
Activism
In Sweden at the time Andrée was ready begin her career, unmarried women over the age of twenty-five were barred from holding permanent positions as church organists.[5] Both Elfrida and her father repeatedly lobbied the Swedish parliament to change the law, and eventually succeeded in 1861.[1] An activist in the Swedish women’s movement,[6] she was one of the first female organists to be officially appointed in Scandinavia.
Career
Andrée began work in Stockholm in 1861 and became the organist at Gothenburg Cathedral in 1867, where she remained the organist until her death.[7] In 1897 she was named leader of the Gothenburg Workers Institute Concerts, establishing her reputation as the first Swedish woman to conduct a symphony orchestra. For her services, she was elected to the Royal Swedish Academy of Music. She died in Gothenburg.[8] During her career, she won the Litteris et Artibus award in 1895, as well as the Idun “Women’s Academy” Fellowship in 1908.[9]
Compositions
Andrée’s two organ symphonies are still being played today. Her other compositions include the opera Fritiofs saga (1899, libretto by Selma Lagerlöf), several works for orchestra including two symphonies, a piano quartet in A minor (1870) and a piano quintet in E minor (published in 1865), a piano trio in G minor (1887) (and another published posthumously in C minor), a string quartet in D minor from 1861 and another in A major, pieces for violin (including sonatas in E flat and B flat major) and for piano, two Swedish masses, an 1879 choral ballade “Snöfrid”, and lieder.[10] The composer was rediscovered in the 1980s by the Swedish musicologist Eva Öhrström.[4]
Recordings
A 1996 recording on the Caprice label features Andrée’s piano quintet, along with a piano sonata, the string quartet in D minor, and vocal music. Both her symphonies were released on CD and download, the First in C major (1868) on the Nilento labe, the Second in A minor (1897) on the Sterling label. The same CD as the Second Symphony also contains her Fritiof Suite, based on the Icelandic Saga of the same name.
Andrée was Composer of the Week on BBC Radio 3, starting 10 November 2025.[11]
References
External links
Further reading


