Jon Christensen

For the former member of the United States House of Representatives named Jon Christensen, see Jon Lynn Christensen. For the American journalist and environmental historian named Jon Christensen, see Jon Christensen (historian).
Jon Christensen

Playing with Thomas Morgan (b) and
Jakob Bro (g) 2015
Photo Hreinn Gudlaugsson
Background information
Birth name Jon Ivar Christensen
Born (1943-03-20) 20 March 1943
Oslo
Origin Norway
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician, composer
Instruments Drums, percussions
Website www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Jon_Christensen.html

Jon Ivar Christensen (born 20 March 1943 in Oslo, Norway) is a Norwegian jazz musician (drums and percussion), married to actress, minister and theater director Ellen Horn (born 1951),[1][2] and the father of singer and actress Emilie Stoesen Christensen (born 1986).[3]

Career

In the late 1960s Christensen played alongside Jan Garbarek on several recordings by the composer George Russell. He also was a central participant in the Jazz band, Masqualero, with Arild Andersen, and they reappeared in 2003 for his 60th anniversary.[4] He appears on many recordings on the ECM label with such artists as Keith Jarrett, Jan Garbarek, Bobo Stenson, Eberhard Weber, Ralph Towner, Barre Phillips, Arild Andersen, Enrico Rava, John Abercrombie, Michael Mantler, Miroslav Vitous, Rainer Brüninghaus, Charles Lloyd, Dino Saluzzi and Tomasz Stanko.[5] He, along with Jan Garbarek and Palle Danielsson, was a member of the legendary Keith Jarrett "European Quartet" of the 1970s which produced five excellent jazz recordings on ECM Records.[1][2]

Honors

Discography (in selection)

As leader

As sideman

With Yelena Eckemoff
  • 2015: Everblue (L & H Production) featuring Arild Andersen, Tore Brunborg
With George Russell
With Steve Kuhn
With Jan Garbarek
With Bobo Stenson
With Terje Rypdal
With Ketil Bjørnstad
With Keith Jarrett
With Ralph Towner
With Karin Krog, Steve Kuhn and Steve Swallow - quartet
  • 1975: We Could Be Flying (Polydor, 1975)
With Eberhard Weber
With Enrico Rava
With Radka Toneff Quintet
  • 1977: Winter Poem (Zarepta)
With Terje Rypdal and Palle Mikkelborg
With Masqualero (Arild Andersen)
  • 1983: Masqualero (Odin Records)
  • 1986: Bande a Part (ECM)
  • 1988: Aero (ECM)
  • 1989: Re-Enter (ECM)
With Blow Out
With Miroslav Vitous
With Rainer Brüninghaus
With Mike Nock
With John Clark, David Friedman and David Darling
  • 1981: Faces (ECM)
With Harry Pepl and Herbert Joos - trio
  • 1988: Cracked Mirrors (ECM)
With John Abercrombie
With Charles Lloyd
With L. Shankar
  • 1989: M.R.C.S. (ECM)
With Sidsel Endresen
With Knut Riisnæs
  • 1992: Knut Riisnæs - Jon Christensen Featuring John Scofield - Palle Danielsson (Odin Records)
With Anouar Brahem
With Misha Alperin
With Lars Danielsson, David Liebman and Bobo Stenson - quartet
  • 1997: Live At Visiones (Dragon Records)
With Tomasz Stańko
With Dino Saluzzi
With Jacob Young
With Carsten Dahl and Arild Andersen - trio
With Carl Petter Opsahl and Tord Gustavsen
  • 2008: Love, The Blues (Park Grammofon)
With Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and Håkon Kornstad trio
  • 2011: Mitt Hjerte Altid Vanker – I Live at Oslo Jazzfestival (Compunctio)
  • 2011: Mitt Hjerte Altid Vanker – II Live at Uppsala Sacred Music Festival (Compunctio)

References

External links

Awards
Preceded by
No award in 1966
Recipient of the Buddyprisen
1967
Succeeded by
Jan Garbarek
Preceded by
Bjarne Nerem
Recipient of the Jazz Spellemannprisen
1977
Succeeded by
Laila Dalseth
Preceded by
Frode Thingnæs,
Henryk Lysiak,
Sveinung Hovensjø
Recipient of the Studio Gammleng-prisen
1984
Succeeded by
Marius Müller,
Nils Petter Nyrén,
Svein Dag Hauge
Preceded by
Masqualero
Recipient of the Jazz Spellemannprisen
1992
Succeeded by
Radka Toneff
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, January 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.