Trisno

Trisno
Background information
Birth name Trisno Ishak
Born July 18, 1978 (1978-07-18) (age 33)
 Singapore
Genres Jazz, R&B, Blues
Occupations Singer
Musician
Songwriter
Years active 2000 – present
Labels Unsigned

Trisno Ishak, more popularly known as Trisno, was born on July 18, 1978 in Singapore. He is a musician and a teacher. In 2000, Trisno came to fame as the lead singer of Urban Xchange, which later evolved to Parking Lot Pimp. Trisno has performed alongside Stacy Orrico, Jamie Cullum, Jay Sean, Missy Higgins and Ben and Joey of The Click Five. He has also collaborated with Grammy Award winner John Lennon, Grammy Award nominee Brian McKnight, Mr. Cheeks from The Lost Boyz, Malaysian hip-hop duo Too Phat, Malaysian singer Camelia, Singaporean rapper Sheikh Haikel and Taiwanese popstar Evonne. With his sizzling buttery voice, Trisno has captivated local and international audience. Coupled along with his versatility in music and adept talent at working the crowd, he is described as "the guy who was born to be a performer".[1]

Contents

Early years

Trisno was born into a musically inclined background. His mother, Dahlia Ahmad, was a recording artist at EMI records. Dahlia’s sister and brother, Hamidah Ahmad and Eddie Ahmad were also recording artists and recorded a duet titled Mawarku (translated in English as My Rose), which was a major hit in the 1970s.[2] This song has been popularised by Siti Nurhaliza and group 2 by 2 from Malaysia.

Early on in his life, Trisno was exposed to the musical world. His mother brought him to her jazz performances across the region when his father, Ishak Ahmad, was often overseas. Backstage, Trisno would never fail to catch a glimpse of his mother singing and performing in front of the masses. From then on, his musical journey began.

Growing up, Trisno listened to music from genres ranging from jazz to motown to Latin. His early influences include Spyro Gyra (jazz), Shakatak (jazz-funk), Frank Sinatra (vocal jazz) and Julio Iglesias (Latin). Mostly disguised as a toilet singer, his talent was only first spotted at the age of 14. His stepfather, Redwan Ali, exposed him to musicians such as David Sanborn, Miles Davis, Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock. Trisno learnt the importance of music from educational perspective such as music notation, song composition and studio works. Trisno continued learning music and has become adept at piano, acoustic guitar, bass guitar and electric guitar. He obtained 8th grade in bass guitar at Yamaha Music School.

Urban Xchange

As Trisno served his national service, there he met music producer Terry Lee. Under the direction of Terry Lee, Trisno first featured on “Serenade Volume 3” with the song My Lady, My Bonnie, My Wifey in an album compilation of Asian-American artists, released in the United States. Together with Terry Lee and five others namely Vanessa Fernandez and Munir Alsagoff, they formed Urban Xchange. Urban Xchange was formed in 2000. The group was signed to a major worldwide label, Universal Music Group, after scoring a Coca-Cola endorsement deal for the “Life Tastes Good” campaign set for Asia. The debut album was released in the year 2001 titled How Did We Get Here?,[3] which includes songs such as Stupid,[4] which was featured on high rotation on local radio and MTV. The second album,[5] self-titled, was shortly released in 2002, featuring hit single Buzzin.[6]

In 2001, MTV named Urban Xchange as artist of the month, and they featured on Hollywood’s blockbuster movie, Rush Hour 2 Official Soundtrack titled I wanna be like Jackie Chan.[7] Two years on, in 2003, Urban Xchange won the Best Regional English Album at the AIM awards in Malaysia,[8] and were nominated for Best/Favourite Singapore Artiste in MTV Asia Awards 2003. The group performed alongside Europe’s classical pop quintet Wild, British R&B popstar Jay Sean, Australian folk singer Missy Higgins and America’s celebrated legend Richard Marx in EMI Rainbow of Sound Showcase 2004 in Bangkok.

Urban Xchange also appeared in Elle Singapore January 2002 edition as 'Hot Musicians' to look out for in 2002.[9] Urban Xchange's achievement and fame in local and regional scene was rooted in "its fusion of sounds"[10] Pivotal to their success also was key figure Hans Ebert, who was vice president of Universal Music Asia Pacific and then,joining EMI Recorded Music Southeast Asia as advisor to chairman in September 2002.[11] When Urban Xchange was reborn as Parking Lot Pimp, Hans maintained close affiliation and support for the new band.

Parking Lot Pimp

In 2005, Urban Xchange evolved into Parking Lot Pimp,[12] boasting psychedelic and space rock. It was composed of four members of Urban Xchange - Trisno, Vanessa, Terry and Munir, as well as new edition Jeremy Green, who is an American rapper. The shift in music genre and band image was primarily because of boredom of Urban Xchange and hip-hop.[13] Their album Welcome to our frequency[14] was released in 2005. They were named MTV Advance Warning Artiste.[15] In 2005 and 2006, Parking Lot Pimp featured on American Online Music (AOL). This album featured hit song Blow[16]

Solo

Trisno has sung at various bars including J bar, Blue Bar Bistro and Indochine, and performs regularly at the annual MOSAIC music festival. He has numerous credentials to his name from collaborations, features and performances. Trisno is also currently working on his first solo album.

In the first Singapore edition of Don't Forget The Lyrics!, held by MediaCorp in 2008, Trisno was the guide vocalist. Later on, in 2009, he performed alongside Singapore's premiere fusion outfit Novo Bloco.[17] for the Gilles Peterson's Worldwide Festival held in Zirca (Singapore).

Credentials

Collaborations (group and solo)


Performances (group and solo)


Features (group and solo)

Teaching career

Trisno continues to share his passion for music with youths in schools and institutions through teaching. His students are taught from a variety of music specialisation subjects such as music production, strum & sing guitar classes, rap mission, vocal classes and world-music/hip hop acid production. Some of the schools that he has taught in are Saint Gabriel Secondary School, Pierce Secondary School and Canberra Secondary School.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Candice Chia, 2001. So who’s not cool? The New Paper, 29 May p24.
  2. ^ a b Hasleen Bachik, 2002. Urban Xchange sudah langkah jauh. Berita Harian, 7 November p12.
  3. ^ How Did We Get Here? Accessed on 1 July 2008
  4. ^ Stupid music video Accessed on 1 July 2008
  5. ^ Urban Xchange Accessed on 1 July 2008
  6. ^ Buzzin music video Accessed on 1 July 2008
  7. ^ I wanna be like Jackie Chan Accessed on 29 June 2008
  8. ^ a b Hasleen Bachik, 2003. Anak Seni S’pura bersinar di AIM. Berita Harian, 28 April. p12.
  9. ^ Elle Singapore, 2002. People: Hot List. Elle Singapore magazine, January. p58
  10. ^ Angelia Teo, 2002. Cultural exchange. Harper's Bazaar Singapore magazine, March. p78
  11. ^ Ebert Joins Cheng at EMI in Southeast Asia Accessed on 7 July 2008
  12. ^ a b Parking Lot Pimp - AOL Music Accessed on 1 July 2008
  13. ^ Germaine Lim, 2004. Parking Fine. LIME magazine, November. p70,71.
  14. ^ Welcome to our frequency Accessed on 1 July 2008
  15. ^ a b Skye Tan, 2005. New name, new frequency. The New Paper, 26 May p26.
  16. ^ Blow music video Accessed on 1 July 2008
  17. ^ a b Novo Bloco Accessed on 24 August 2009
  18. ^ Tommy Wee, 2002. Cultural Xchange. Life! The Straits times, 7 December. p6.
  19. ^ Not That Type of Lady music video Accessed on 1 July 2008
  20. ^ Jill Alphonso, 2005. The right Frequency. Life! The Straits Times, 27 May p12.
  21. ^ John Lennon - Peace, Love and Truth Accessed on 1 July 2008
  22. ^ Channel NewsAsia, 2006. "SoundwaveS" opens at Esplanade with mix of pop and ethnic music Accessed on 1 July 2008
  23. ^ Lunchbox at the Esplanade. Relax... It’s Trisno Accessed on 1 July 2008
  24. ^ Tribute to country legends Accessed on 1 July 2008
  25. ^ MOSAIC Music Festival 2008
  26. ^ Ronald Rajan, 2001. Local band for Coke’s ad. Project Eyeball, 1 May p6.
  27. ^ Yeoh Wee Teck, 2001. Rushing into the big time?. The New Paper, 19 July p20.
  28. ^ Tommy Wee, 2001. Fair Xchange. Life! The Straits Times, 3 October. p3.
  29. ^ Jill Alphonso, 2004. Maksim's moxie. Life! The Straits Times, 17 April. p2.