Else Marie Pade, from Resistance to Recording: The Life and Work of an Electronic Music Pioneer
By (Author) Professor or Dr. Henrik Marstal
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
16th April 2026
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Electronic music
Gender studies: women and girls
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
The first English-language and internationally available book-length study of the pioneering Danish composer Else Marie Pade, her major works and life story.
Credited as the first Danish composer to use electronics to make music, Else Marie Pade (1924-2016) is acknowledged as a pioneer in her field, one of the first generation of electronic music composers. However, her cutting-edge and influential work was under-recognized during her career. Pade is now considered one of the many "forgotten" 20th-century women artists who are in the 21st century finally receiving due recognition.
Starting at the beginning, this study covers the composer's childhood, which was sickly and often spent in convalescence. As a young woman, Pade joined the resistance during the Nazi occupation of Denmark. She was eventually arrested and imprisoned at Frslevlejren. It was after the war that Pade trained as pianist before turning to composition.
Structured in the composer's preferred practice of dodecaphony (i.e. twelve-tone technique) and traditional tonal music (based on the melodic scales consisting of seven tones each), this work focuses on a number of central compositions, including Symphonie magntophonique (1957-1958) which describes a day in the life of an ordinary Dane, as well as the predominantly instrumental electronic pieces Syv cirkler (1958), Et glasperlespil I-II (1960) and Faust (1962), interspersed by interludes and thematic readings of Pades life and work.
Henrik Marstal is Associate Professor at the Rhythmic Music Conservatory, Copenhagen, Denmark, and author of Mercyful Fate's Don't Break the Oath (Bloomsbury, 2022). He is a musician and producer of alternative rock and electronica as well as a columnist. He has been a member of Danish Arts Foundation.