Hildegunn Øiseth

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Hildegunn Øiseth (born December 5, 1966 in Kongsvinger , Norway ) is a Norwegian jazz musician ( trumpet , flugelhorn and bukkehorn ).

Act

Øiseth studied at the Swedish Academy of Music . After graduation, she was part of the Bohuslän Big Band between 1990 and 1999 , with whom she was involved in Lars Jansson's albums . Then she settled in South Africa until 2001, where she played in the band Uhambo (two albums); She also performed in Malaysia, Pakistan and the Middle East.

Øiseth was a lecturer at The Groove Valley JazzCamp in Beiarn in 2007 and released her debut album Hildring in 2009 , where she focused on the traditional bukkehorn . She also played the traditional Norwegian instrument bukkehorn made from the horns of a goat via electronics. The following album, Stillness (2011), received critical acclaim; there she worked alternately with Mats Eilertsen , Thomas Strønen and the pianists Torbjørn Dyrud and Eyolf Dale . The album Valencia (2013) was created with Tommy Kotter, Peter Janson and Anders Kjellberg , on which it becomes clear that she represents a “distinctive trumpet voice of the Scandinavian jazz world”. She is also touring with her world music project Rabalder , which brings together musicians from different parts of the world, and is the band leader of the Norwegian-Palestinian collective Sharaka .

She is also a member of the Trondheim Jazz Orchestra , belongs to Marilyn Mazurs Shamania and to the Scandinavian band Nordic Beat , with which the album Notice was created in 2008 . Since 2012 she has represented Norway in the Jazz Baltica Ensemble at the JazzBaltica Festival .

Discographic notes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Hildegunn blåser jula inn. NRK , accessed August 3, 2019 (Norwegian).
  2. Hildegunn Øiseth Hildring Hildring - Review. Vuelie.no, accessed August 3, 2019 (Norwegian).
  3. Sterke egenstemmer på cd - Hildegunn Øiseth med strålende trompetspill - Stillness Review. In: Dagbladet . Retrieved August 3, 2019 (Norwegian).
  4. Hildegunn Øiseth Valencia. In: Nordic music. Retrieved August 3, 2019 .