Børre Dalhaug
Børre Dalhaug (born 29 April 1974 in Ålesund, Norway) is a Norwegian jazz musician (drums), music arranger and music instructor.[1]
Børre Dalhaug | |
---|---|
Born | Ålesund, Sunnmøre | 29 April 1974
Origin | Norway |
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer |
Instruments | Drums, percussion |
Labels | Real Records |
Associated acts | The Real Thing |
Website | moremusikarane |
Career
Dalhaug has worked as a musician since 1995 and done around 800 concerts with bands like The Real Thing, Staffan William-Olsson Sextet, Nora Brockstedt, Oslo Groove Company, Bohuslän Big Band among others. He has performed in Pakistan, India, Russia, France, Germany, Finland, Sweden and Denmark and participates on a number of albums.
He released the Spellemannprisen nominated big band album BigBandBlast! (2004),[2] and leads his own big band called «Børre Dalhaugs Bigbandblast» in addition to being a sideman in numerous projects. Børre also works as a composer and arranger. He also has a college degree in computer engineering.
Discography
Solo albums
- 2004: Bigbandblast! (Real Records), «Børre Dalhaugs Bigbandblast» includes Kåre Nymark Jr., Nils-Olav Johansen, Stian Carstensen & Palle Wagnberg[3]
Collaborative works
- Within The Real Thing
- 2000: Deluxe (Real Music Records), with Even Kruse Skatrud and the Norwegian Radio Orchestra
- 2003: New Wrapping (Real Music Records)
- 2006: A Real Christmas (Real Music Records), feat. vocalist Sigrid Brennhaug
- With other projects
- 2000: Oak Road Boogaloo (Real Music Records), within Staffan William-Olsson Sextet
- 2005: Eveneven Big Band (Schmell), with Even Kruse Skatrud & «Eveneven Big Band»
References
- "Børre Dalhaug - Trommeslager" (in Norwegian). Bransjeregister MIC.no. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
- Pettersen, Tomas Lauvland (2005-01-07). "Spellemannspris nominations unveiled" (in Norwegian). Listen to Norway MIC.no. Archived from the original on 2012-03-05. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
- Gorseth, Olav (2004-09-22). "Dødelig presist - Storbandplate produsert lag på lag" (in Norwegian). Bergens Tidende. Retrieved 2012-12-06.