Sveinung Hovensjø

Sveinung Hovensjø
Born (1950-12-05) 5 December 1950
Lillehammer, Oppland
Origin Norway
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician and composer
Instruments Bass guitar, ukulele and guitar
Labels ECM
Kirkelig Kulturverksted

Sveinung Hovensjø (born 5 December 1950 in Lillehammer, Norway) is a Norwegian jazz musician (bass and guitar), known as one of the most used studio musicians in Norway, and thus known from numerous recordings, but most of all from the collaboration with guitar legend Terje Rypdal (1974–78).[1][2]

Career

Hovensjø grew up at Toten, started at a young age in "Prototypes" in Gjøvik, played with the dance band "Bruno" during the 1960s, participated at the 1969 Kongsberg Jazz Festival with the Geir Wentzel soul bandsoul band, and made his record debut with Earl Wilson in 1970. There after he moved to Oslo where he joined the music scene around Club 7, and played within Christian Reim Trio (1977–79). He also played with Jazz greats like Terje Rypdal, Jan Garbarek, Susanne Fuhr among others. Later he played within the Trio de Janeiro, The Gambian/Norwegian Friendship Orchestra, Son Mu, Tamma, Moose Loose og Talisman Group, and with Claudio Latini, Celio de Carvalho and Miki N'Doye.[1]

Honors

Discography

With Terje Rypdal
With "Talisman"
With "Trio de Janeiro"
With other projects

References

  1. 1 2 "Hovensjø, Sveinung Biography" (in Norwegian). Norsk Musikkinformasjon MIC.no.
  2. Sveinung Hovensjø (in Norwegian). Store Norske Leksikon.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.