Henrik Klingenberg

Henrik Klingenberg

Henrik Klingenberg in 2016
Background information
Also known as Henkka
Born (1978-10-21) 21 October 1978
Origin Kemi, Finland
Genres Power metal
Progressive metal
Melodic death metal
Thrash metal
Groove metal
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Keyboards, keytar, vocals
Years active 1995–present
Labels Nuclear Blast
Associated acts Sonata Arctica
Requiem
Silent Voices
Mental Care Foundation
Graveyard Shift
Website www.sonataarctica.info/site07/

Henrik "Henkka" Klingenberg (born 21 October 1978 in Mariehamn, Åland, Finland) is a keyboardist, keytarist and singer. He joined the Finnish power metal band Sonata Arctica in late 2002 and currently resides in Kemi, Finland, when not on tour.

Keyboardists he has listed as his favourites include Kevin Moore, Jon Lord, Jens Johansson and Matt Guillory. He claims that his musical inspiration is taken from life itself.[1][2][3]

Career

Although his main involvement is with Sonata Arctica, he is also a member of the band Silent Voices and a thrash/groove metal band called Mental Care Foundation (in which he is the vocalist rather than the keyboardist). He has also recently started a melodic death metal side project called Graveyard Shift as vocalist with his former Sonata Arctica bandmate Jani Liimatainen.[1][2][3]

Before joining Sonata Arctica, he had participated in a large enough number of bands that he does not list on his bio page on the official Sonata Arctica website. His most well-known previous band was a progressive power metal band called Requiem, with whom he recorded two albums and contributed keyboards.[1][2][3]

Henrik plays a shoulder-mounted controller keyboard (formerly the Roland AX-1, then the Roland AX-7, then AX-1 again and now the Roland AX-Synth) and a Kurzweil, Korg Karma or Korg Triton synthesizer. Recently he started to use Korg M3 instead of the Korg Karma. August 2009 in Lowlands his gear was just painted Roland AX-1 and Korg M3 and no racks. This seems to be his live gear from now on. He is endorsed by Korg and Roland (updated 16 September 2009) On a European leg of 2009 Henkka started using new Roland AX-Synth (painted violet) instead of his old AX-1 (updated 24 December 2009)[1][2][3]

In February 2012 he released his first solo album, ...And the Weird Turned Pro, in which fellow Sonata Arctica bandmates Elias Viljanen and Pasi Kauppinen play the guitar and the bass, respectively (though Kauppinen was still not a member of the band). They are also joined by Finnish drummer Jari Huttunen.[1][2][3]

Personality

Sonata Arctica chose Klingenberg to join after spending time drinking with him and another candidate, since they wanted the newcomer to fit in with the other band members' socially as well as musically.[1][2][3]

During live shows, Henrik's Keytar allows him to add more energy and movement to the band's performances and he often wanders the stage whilst playing, in the same way that guitarists often do. On the Sonata Arctica live DVD For the Sake of Revenge, Henrik smashed his hand painted Roland AX-7 several times into the floor of the stage in an event that was referred to as 'The End of this Keyboard' (a reference to the band's song 'The End of this Chapter'). This act mirrored the instrument-destroying antics of The Who as well as being a cliché of rock and metal music and it showed Henrik to be a more traditional rock or metal performer.[1][2][3]

In the documentary Men of the North in the Land of the Rising Sun, Henrik is shown wearing a traffic cone on his head, which has become a trademark of sorts for fans.[1][2][3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Anthony Morgan (interview with Henrik Klingenberg) (April 2007). ""Paid in Full" – Sonata Arctica keyboardist Henrik Klingenberg dreams success for fifth studio album Unia". Lucem Fero. Everything influences me – everything that happens in life influences your personality, and I just think of my playing as an extension of who I am.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Henrik Klingenberg biography". Metal from Finland.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Spotlight Report (7 March 2014). "Interview: Sonata Arctica's Henrik Klingenberg". Spotlight Report.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.