Povl Dissing

Povl Dissing (born 27 January 1938) is a Danish singer, composer, guitarist and harmonica player. He made his album debut with En aften i folkeklubben in 1965. His public breakthrough came in 1973 with the album Svantes viser, a collaboration with poet Benny Andersen, whom he has cooperated closely with since. In 2006, Svantes viser was selected for the Danish Culture Canon.

Povl Dissing
Povl Dissing in 2006
Born (1938-01-27) 27 January 1938
NationalityDanish
OccupationSinger, composer, guitarist
Notable work
Svantes viser

Povl Dissing grew up in Stavnsholt, a small village near Farum north of Copenhagen, and is educated commercial artist from which he made a living before turning to music full time. Originally he played the trumpet and jazz music, but an injuring accident in his early youth made him take up the guitar instead.[1] He sings almost exclusively in Danish and has played and worked with many other notable Danish musicians.[2]

Style

Dissing plays a mixture of blues, folk and rock music and he was among the pioneers in using Danish language in rock in Denmark in the early 1960s.[3] He sings in an unusual and very personal and emotional way, something that caused a lot of animosity towards him in the beginning of his career. However, Svantes viser from 1973 became a public darling in Denmark and his audience grew.[4]

Throughout his career, Dissing has covered and interpreted many traditional Scandinavian and Danish songs and ballads, including Bellman, Grundtvig, Thomas Laub and Henrik Rung, but also contemporary ballads and schlagers. He has also composed music for several contemporary Danish poets, including Halfdan Rasmussen, Vagn Lundbye and in particular Benny Andersen. Many of his songs though, were composed and written by Dissing himself.

Bands and collaborations

Povl Dissing has collaborated and recorded with many notable performers and artists in Denmark and Norway, including musicians Cæsar, Trille, Freddy Fræk, Benny Holst, Peter Thorup, Fuzzy, Irene Becker, Egon Aagaard, John von Daler, Knut Reiersrud, bands The Beefeaters, Burnin Red Ivanhoe and The Brazz Brothers, and poets Halfdan Rasmussen and Benny Andersen.[5]

Apart from music, Dissing has also voiced cartoons and films and narrated audiobooks.[6]

Povl Dissing has two sons, Rasmus and Jonas. They are also musicians and since the early 2000s they have played and toured with Povl on a regular basis in their band Dissing, Dissing, Las og Dissing.[7][8] They have released three studio albums. In 2017, Povl Dissing fell and hit his head, losing hearing on both ears.[4]

gollark: Very slowly.
gollark: I also have a somewhat newer desktop with an SSD and whatnot which I built a while ago, but the GPU died so that's being repurposed as a replacement server.
gollark: Tower *server*, though, so I get entirely unused iLO remote access stuff and a redundant power supply I use one input of.
gollark: My laptop is a £170 (including upgrades) used businessy one with a 7th generation Intel CPU, and my server's a £100 10-year-old HP tower.
gollark: The monitoring page (https://status.osmarks.tk/) actually graphs uptime over... time... which is remarkably useless.

References

  1. "Pludselig tog folk hatten af for mig" [Suddenly people took off their hats for me] (in Danish). Fagbladet 3F. 1 March 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  2. Daniel Øhrstrøm (25 January 2013). "Dissing: Min karriere har været et langt bluesnummer" [Dissing: My career has been a long blues song] (in Danish). Kristeligt Dagblad. Archived from the original on 31 January 2015. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  3. Godal, Anne Marit, ed. (2014-09-29). "Povl Dissing". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Norsk nettleksikon. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  4. "Povl Dissing fylder 80 år - til at begynde med gik publikum deres vej" [Povl Dissing turns 80 - in the beginning the audience turned away] (in Danish). TV2. 27 January 2018. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  5. "Povl Dissing". Discogs. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  6. "Povl Dissing". IMDb. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  7. "Dissing, Dissing las og Dissing" (in Danish). Musik & sang. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  8. "Dissing, Dissing Las og Dissing". Discogs. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
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