Geir Rognø

Geir Aimar Rognø (born 31 March 1963 in Bergen, Norway) is a Norwegian musician (bass), known from the band "Hot Cargo" with the Bergen Guitarist Ole Thomsen.[1]

Geir Rognø
Background information
Birth nameGeir Aimar Rognø
Born (1963-03-31) 31 March 1963
Bergen, Norway
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsBass

Career

Roognø has played with musicians such as Jan Eggum, Dag Arnesen, Ole Thomsen, Mads Eriksen, Jan Teigen, Thor Endresen, Egil Eldøen, Rune Hauge and Kim Fairchild, and bands like Pål Thowsen Band, "Hot Cargo", "Gruv", "Funkaholics", "Little Big Band" and "Kjersti Misje Band" plus a number of international artists. He is known from numerous TV projects.[2] Rognø started with Jazz fusion in the 1980s in the band Little Big Band. Inspired from The Crusaders and "Spyro Gyro", Dave Grusin and Herbie Hancock, this was a band in the forefront of Norwegian fusion music. He evolved a slap hand technique with inspirations from Stanley Clarke and Larry Graham. In the 80s, he worked as a freelance musician, with many jobs for theater.[1]

Honors

  • Håndverkeren which is awarded annually to a musician who performs "music craft" in an exemplary manner, by Scandinavian Entertainment Service[3]

Discography

With T.T. Jug, including with Tormod Kayser, Tord Søfteland and Jon Søfteland Sæbø
  • 1982: Ungdommens Radioavis Rockemønstring (Philips), with various artists, "Dusty Freak"
with Ole Thomsen
  • 1992: Hot Cargo (NorCD)
with Jan Eggum
  • 2001: Ekte Eggum (Grappa)
  • 2005: 30/30 (Grappa)
gollark: NO STEALTH PINGS
gollark: Yes, but there are probably libraries for it.
gollark: The distinction is that in C or whatever arrays are basically just pointers but vectors are proper resizable lists which handle the whatevering of memory.
gollark: Also C.
gollark: C++ and Rust also call them vectors.

References

  1. "Vi improviserer" (PDF) (in Norwegian). DKS-Hordaland.no.
  2. "Papa Slide Blues Band" (in Norwegian). Skaanevik-blues.com. Archived from the original on 15 March 2010.
  3. "Storkonsertenes forbannelse" (in Norwegian). Ballade.no.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.