Vilde Frang
0 sources
Vilde Frang
Summary
Vilde Frang is a human[1]. She was born in Oslo[2]. She was born on August 19, 1986[3]. She worked as a classical violinist[4]. She ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (252 views/month, #7,262 of 1,000,298).[5]
Key Facts
- Vilde Frang was born in Oslo[2].
- Vilde Frang was born on August 19, 1986[3].
- Vilde Frang held citizenship in Norway[6].
- Vilde Frang's professions included classical violinist[4].
- Among Vilde Frang's employers was Norwegian Academy of Music[7].
- Vilde Frang's education included a stint at Barratt Due Institute of Music[8].
- Vilde Frang received the Spellemannprisen in classical music[9].
- Vilde Frang received the The Prince Eugen Culture Prize[10].
- Vilde Frang received the The Norwegian soloist award[11].
- Vilde Frang received the Spellemannprisen in classical music[12].
- Vilde Frang received the Echo Klassik[13].
- Vilde Frang received the Spellemannprisen in classical music[14].
- Vilde Frang is recorded as female[15].
- Vilde Frang's instance of is recorded as human[16].
- Vilde Frang's genre is classical music[17].
- Vilde Frang's record label is recorded as Warner Classics[18].
- Vilde Frang's Commons category is recorded as Vilde Frang[19].
- Vilde Frang's family name is recorded as Q122835528[20].
- Vilde Frang's given name is recorded as Vilde[21].
- Vilde Frang's official website is recorded as http://www.vildefrang.com[22].
- Vilde Frang studied under Kolja Blacher[23].
- Vilde Frang studied under Ana Chumachenco[24].
- Vilde Frang studied under Stephan Barratt-Due[25].
- Vilde Frang studied under Henning Kraggerud[26].
- Vilde Frang's instrument is recorded as violin[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
-
Type: Person[28]
-
Country: NO[29]
-
Began / founded: 1986-08-19[30]
-
Genre(s): classical[31]
-
Community tags: classical, violinist[32]
-
MusicBrainz ID: 79bf9915-6328-4813-8ecb-d7fec7da0272[33]
Body
Origins and Family
Born in Oslo[2], Vilde Frang… she was born on August 19, 1986[3].
Education
Vilde Frang was educated at Barratt Due Institute of Music[8]. Studied under Kolja Blacher[23], a violinist[34], b. 1963[35], of Germany[36], specialised in violin performance[37]; Ana Chumachenco[24], a music educator[38], b. 1945[39], of Italy[40], awarded the Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany[41]; Stephan Barratt-Due[25], a musician[42], b. 1956[43], of Norway[44], awarded the Arts Council Norway Honorary Award[45]; and Henning Kraggerud[26], a violinist[46], b. 1973[47], of Norway[48], awarded the Spellemannprisen in classical music[49].
Career and Affiliations
Vilde Frang worked as a classical violinist[4]. Among her employers was Norwegian Academy of Music[7].
Recognition
Awards received include Spellemannprisen in classical music[9]; The Prince Eugen Culture Prize[10], a cultural prize[50], in Sweden[51], founded in 2005[52]; The Norwegian soloist award[11], an award[53], in Norway[54], founded in 2005[55]; Echo Klassik[13], a music award[56], in Germany[57], founded in 1994[58]; Classic Brit Awards[59], a group of awards[60], in United Kingdom[61], founded in 2000[62]; and Spellemann Awards for best international success of the year[63].
Why It Matters
Vilde Frang ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (252 views/month, #7,262 of 1,000,298).[5] She has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[64] She is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[65]
FAQs
Where was Vilde Frang born?
Vilde Frang's place of birth was Oslo[2].
What did Vilde Frang do for work?
Vilde Frang worked as classical violinist[4].
Where did Vilde Frang go to school?
Vilde Frang was educated at Barratt Due Institute of Music[8].
What awards did Vilde Frang receive?
Honors received include Spellemannprisen in classical music[9], The Prince Eugen Culture Prize[10], The Norwegian soloist award[11], and Spellemannprisen in classical music[12].