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Pauli í Sandagerði, born in Tórshavn 1955, is a science teacher. His musical education was built up bit by bit, under various teachers. His earliest interest was in playing the piano, but with time, working with choirs and composing superseded this, and it is as a composer that he is best known.

He has written music of various types: folk songs, rock music, songs (lieder), choir music, sonatas, oratorios, music for the piano, chamber- and orchestral music in a modern (classical) form. His main interest however, is writing songs.

In recent years Pauli has been choir master for several very good choirs. One of these choirs, Cantabile (girls), is perhaps the busiest choir in the Faroe Islands. Cantabile has been very well received in many countries from Norway to Greece, and on tours the choir has worked with a number of famous opera singers and orchestras from many countries.

Pauli í Sandagerđi has been one of the pioneers in Faroese musical composition.

 

His first big work - Sonata for piano and flute in 1976 - was very well received; for example, William Heinesen wrote "...It was obvious that in this there was creative imagination and poetic depth.... It is great joy that such music is being created in this country, where we have excellent songs and choir music of our own, but until now had no Faroese instrumental music." And in 94 Deeside Piper and Herald wrote: "Perhaps most impressive was the extract from Sandagerđi's mass, Jesus and the Macedonian, which had a sound and musical atmosphere of epic proportions.."

In recent years Pauli  has received numerous expressions of appreciation as well as some prices in different competitions. Latest he took the first price for his, Tango non Argenti, in a competition arranged by the Jacob Gade Festival in Denmark in 2002.

Although few of Pauli í Sandagerði's works have been published, many of them have been played at concerts and on radio in many countries; for example, in Norway, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, England, Scotland, USA, France, Japan and Greece.
However the increasing number of commissions from many countries indicate the growing interest for Sandagerđi's music - and almost every year you can find some of his works recorded on CD by various artists.

The music which Pauli has composed is very varied and also varied within each category, but in most of the detail in each composition - no matter what kind of music it is - there is a trace of heritage of the Faroese song from the sea and the land, the church and the dance.