Peter Bjørnskov

Peter Bjørnskov also known as just Bjørnskov (born in Horsens, Denmark in 1981) is a Danish singer, songwriter and record producer. He is part of the songwriting team Startone Music with Sune Haansbæk and Lene Dissing. He has also released solo singles. Prior he was part of Danish band Neeva.[1]

In Neeva

He started his career as a drummer in the Danish pop rock band Neeva, with Kenneth Potempa as the lead singer. The band released their debut album Where to Start on 22 September 2008 and had a radio hit with "Star of Me".

Songwriter and producer

Peter Bjørnskov has written many songs for a number of artists that took part in Dansk Melodi Grand Prix as follows:

  • 2010: "Breathing" sung by Bryan Rice (lyrics and music by Peter Bjørnskov)[2]
  • 2011: "Sleepless" sung by Anne Noa (co-written by Bjørnskov, John Gordon and Lene Dissing)[3]
  • 2012: "Reach for the Sky" sung by Kenneth Potempa (co-written by Bjørnskov and Lene Dissing and Sune Haansbæk
  • 2013: "Unbreakable" sung by Mohamed Ali (co-written by Bjørnskov and Morten Friis, Michael Parsberg and Lene Dissing)[4]
  • 2017: "One" sung by Ida Una (co-written by Bjørnskov and Lene Dissing)

Peter Bjørnskov has also written for Sanne Salomonsen, Ankerstjerne, Kato, Electric Lady Lab, Thomas Ring and The Fireflies.

Discography

Albums

As part of Neeva
  • 2008: Where to Start
Solo
Year Album Peak positions Certification
DEN
[5]
2014 Nu 15

Singles

Solo
Year Single Peak positions Album
DEN
[5]
2012 "En anden"  
2013 "Lysår"  
"Vi er helte" 40
2014 "Usynlig"  
"Venner for evigt"
Featured in
Year Single Peak positions Album
DEN
[5]
2011 "Nattog"
(Ankerstjerne featuring Bjørnskov)
8
2013 "Dimitto (Let Go)"
(Kato and Safri Duo featuring Bjørnskov)
1
gollark: Yes, they could probably just put basically anything in there and it would be hard to do anything about it.
gollark: No, I mean it would be hard to do in the various open source OSes.
gollark: > Maybe you've never thought about this, but if there are 100 devs working for free you'd only need to hire 50 devs to compromise all their code.That's, um, still quite a lot given the large amounts of developers involved, and code review exists, and this kind of conspiracy could *never* stay secret for very long, and if you have an obvious backdoor obvious people are fairly likely to look at it and notice.
gollark: Those are increasingly not working because of better security in stuff, which is probably good.
gollark: There is actually a wikipedia page for that.

References

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