
Hans Abrahamsen (born 23 December 1952) is a Danish composer born inKongens Lyngby nearCopenhagen. HisLet me tell you (2013), a song cycle for soprano and orchestra, was ranked by music critics atThe Guardian as the finest work of the 21st-century.[1] His operaThe Snow Queen was commissioned and premiered by theRoyal Danish Theatre in 2019.
His interest in composition and piano began after hearing his father playing piano. His first attempts at "little melodies" were designed to be played with the only two fingers on his right hand that were capable of playing the instrument. After realizing that he would not be able to progress, he shifted his focus to the French horn.
From 1969 to 1971, he studied horn, music theory, and music history at theRoyal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen. While at the conservatory, his music was inspired by his mentorsPer Nørgård andPelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen. In the 1980s, he continued his studies attending seminars withGyörgy Ligeti.[2]
Abrahamsen is considered to have been part of a trend called the "New Simplicity", which arose in the mid-1960s as a reaction against the complexity and perceived aridity of the Central Europeanavant-garde, particularly the circle around theDarmstadt School.[3][4] Abrahamsen's first works conformed to the tenets of this movement. For Abrahamsen, this meant adopting an almost naive simplicity of expression, as in his orchestral pieceSkum ("Foam", 1970).
Around this time, he was also involved with a group called theGruppen for Alternativ Musik, which was designed to allow musicians to "perform new music in alternative forms," and "to develop socially and politically committed music."[5] These ideals can be seen in his Symphony in C which was originally titledAnti-EEC Sats (Anti-EEC Movement). The title was changed "after the composer came to the realization that ' music cannot be against.'"[5] His style soon altered and developed into a personal dialogue with Romanticism which can be seen in his orchestral workNacht und Trompeten.[5] In 1982, he found early success when this piece was performed by theBerlin Philharmonic. The conductor of that performance, notable composerHans Werner Henze, soon became a champion of Abrahamsen's music.[2]
From 1990 to 1998, Abrahamsen completed only one work, a short song. According to the composer, “[he] couldn't find the way to make what [he] wanted.” The prevailing attitudes about complexity in music caused him to be "paralyzed by the white paper." Coming out of his hiatus, he began working on new arrangements ofJohann Sebastian Bach. The orchestrations of these arrangements included many nods to minimalist composers foreshadowing aesthetic changes in Abrahamsen's music.[2]

After his return to composition, his music was radically changed. It combined his early artistic attitudes with newer artistic goals with a modernist stringency and economy into a larger individual musical universe.[5]
Notable works since his return to composition include apiano concerto written for his wife Anne-Marie Abildskov, and the extended chamber workSchnee ("Snow"), where the paring-down of material appears to reach a new extreme.Schnee has also received attention for its construction from both arch-shaped and straight-line processes that unfold over the work's duration and for innovative details such as its inline, composed retuning intervals.[6]
Abrahamsen'slet me tell you, a song cycle for soprano and orchestra based on the novella of the same name byPaul Griffiths, was premiered on 20 December 2013 by theBerlin Philharmonic, with soprano soloistBarbara Hannigan (to whom the work is dedicated), conducted byAndris Nelsons.[7]Franz Welser-Möst led theCleveland Orchestra in the U.S. premiere in January 2016.[8] Abrahamsen won the $100,000 2016Grawemeyer Award for this work.[9]
TheCity of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra gave the British premiere of the song cycle in 2014.[10] The same year CBSO co-commissioned from Abrahamsen a concerto for piano left hand.Left, alone received its world premiere in Cologne in January 2016, performed by pianistAlexandre Tharaud, for whom the concerto was composed. Four months later, Tharaud gave the British premiere for the CBSO, conducted byIlan Volkov.[11][12] Abrahamsen has written that being "born with a right hand that is not fully functional" has given him "a close relationship with the works written for the left hand byRavel and others."[13]
His first operaSnedronningen (The Snow Queen) is a free adaptation of thefairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen. It was premiered at theDanish Opera House on 13 October 2019[14][15] and received its first performance in English (by Bayerische Staatsoper) at the National Theater in Munich on 21 December 2019.[16]
He is foreign member of theRoyal Swedish Academy of Music.[17]