Tore Johansen

Tore Johansen

Tore Johansen, 2009.
Background information
Born (1977-12-23) 23 December 1977
Bodø, Nordland
Origin Norway
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician, composer
Instruments Trumpet
Labels Inner Ear
Website www.torejazz.no

Tore Johansen (born 23 December 1977 in Bodø, Norway) is a Norwegian Jazz musician (trumpet), the younger brother of drummer Roger Johansen (b. 1972), and known from cooperations with Chick Corea, Karin Krog, Kenny Wheeler, Steve Swallow, Lars Jansson, Hal Galper, Siri Gellein and Jan Gunnar Hoff.[1]

Career

As a teenager Johansen attended «Bodø Jazz Quintet» together with his drummer brother Roger Johansen and saxophonist Atle Nymo. In 1994 he and started his first band together with his brother and Terje Venaas (double bass) and Einar Thorbjørnsen (piano), and joined «Bodø Big Band» (1994–96) led by saxophonist Henning Gravrok.[1]

He is educated on the Jazz program at Trondheim Musikkonservatorium where he later became Lecturer. He has played with the Swedish saxophonist Nisse Sandström and has many appearances with Karin Krog. He has also, in different settings, including performances with the Swedish pianist Lars Jansson and the Finnish alto saxophonist Jukka Perko. The cooperation with US pianist Hal Galper led to recordings at Norwegian radio NRK P2, in the program Jazzklubben (2004), from the Jazz clubb Blå in Oslo. He also toured with Trondheim Jazz Orchestra and Chick Corea in the U.S., Scandinavia and Japan among other places. This was documented on an album at Midtnorsk Jazzsenters's label, MNJ Records. Other collaborators in recent years, includes the trumpeter Kenny Wheeler in 2008 and bassist Steve Swallow in 2009.[1]

Johansen often cooperate with musicians from Northern Norway, e.g. with Bjørn Alterhaug (double bass), Jan Gunnar Hoff (piano), Finn Sletten (drumes) and Ole Morten Vågan (bass). With Ole Morten Vågan he was part of guitarist Hallgeir Pedersen's Trio at Moldejazz in 2002. This project was extended to a Quartet including his brother Roger Johansen (drumes). They contributed to different other projects, such as with Northern Norwegian folk artist Terje Nilsen at Trondheim Jazz Festival in 2006, and the nonet «Lars Gullin Tribute» with among others John Pål Inderberg (bariton saxophone) and Lars Sjösten (piano).

Johansen has also worked extensively in a duo format with pianist Vigleik Storaas, documented on his own release Rainbow Session (2007). This release is available on the Johansen brothers' recently established record label, «Inner Ear».

Honors

Discography

References

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Awards
Preceded by
Øystein B. Blix
Recipient of the Stubøprisen
2005
Succeeded by
Hallgeir Pedersen
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.