Johannes Eick

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johannes Eick
Born (1964-04-22) 22 April 1964
Eidsfoss, Vestfold
Origin Norway
Genres Jazz
Occupations Musician & composer

Johannes Eick (born 22 April 1964 in Eidsfoss, Vestfold, Norway) is a Norwegian bassist (double bass and electric bass guitar), the son of bassist and vibrafonist Jürgen Eick (b. 1937), and the older brother of musicians Trude Eick and Mathias Eick. As young he played in the band «Kix», with Elin Rosseland (1982–86), but are moust known from cooperations with Karin Krog, John Surman, Vigleik Storaas, Christian Wallumrød, Sidsel Endresen and Hans Mathisen.[1][2]

Career

Eick studied on the Jazz program at Trondheim Musikkonservatorium (1983–86). He was involved in several bands from the first year in Trondheim, including «Horn» and «Third Floor Ten Piece Band» 1983-84, «Visit» 1984-85, «Fair Play» 1987-90, «Nimbus» 1987-89, «Pentateuch» and «Nuku» from 1989 (with the album «Nuku» in 1991), «Airamero» fra 1990 (with an album in 1993), and «Vigleik Storaas Trio» from 1992 (with the albums «Bilder» 1994, «Andre bilder» 1996 and «Subsonic», released in 2002).[1]

In 1983 he converted the double bass from 4 to 5 strings, and constructed at the same time a 5-string electric bass guitar. In 1991 he extended both to 6 strings. He festival debuted in Molde in 1985 with «Elin Rosseland Quintet», and released his first album with her in 1988 («Fair Play»). In 1985-87 he was regional musician in Finnmark with the Quartet «NOOR», and in recent years he has had his base in the Eastern Norway, and has cooperated with Michael Bloch (1991–92), Karin Krog & John Surman, and the quartet «Kalpa» (1992–94) among others.[1]

Honors

Discography (selection)

With Elin Rosseland
With «Nuku» (Bjørn Klakegg, Celio de Carvalho & Trond Kopperud)
  • Det Absolutte Nullpunkt (Curling Legs, 1992)
With «Airamero» (Christian Wallumrød, Per Oddvar Johansen & Trygve Seim)
  • Airamero (Odin, 1993)
With «Vigleik Storaas Trio»
  • Bilder (Curling Legs, 1995)
  • Andre bilder (Curling Legs, 1997)
  • Subsonic (Curling Legs, 2002)[3]
With Hans Mathisen
  • Quiet songs (2002)[4]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.