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bio
Eivind’s own group OVERSEAS, with saxophonist Tony Malaby, drummer Kenny Wollesen and pianist Jaocb Sacks, has become a mainstay in NYC’s progressive jazz scene, performing regular gigs at hotspots like Barbès, Nublu, 55Bar, Knitting Factory and Zebulon; they have also toured Europe. His collaboration with Aaron Jennings in Opsvik & Jennings has led to two albums "Fløyel Files" (2005) and "Commuter Anthems" (2007) the latter released by the terrific record label; Rune Grammofon. Guitars, double bass, concertina, drums, pump organ, lap steel, banjo and various recording techniques and software manipulations creates a musical story that’s both filmatic and folky. WIRE magazine has described their music as “Ambient without wandering, sweet but not sickly, quirky yet never wacky” Born in 1973 in Oslo, Norway, Eivind started out playing the drums at a very early age. In his teens he gradually switched to bass while also spending lots of time experimenting with recording on a 4 track tape recorder. All through the 90's Eivind played with a diverse array of Oslo-based jazz/experimental groups, performing at festivals and in clubs all over Europe with musicians like Paal Nilssen-Love and Christian Wallumrød. He also received a degree in classical bass from the Norwegian State Academy of Music. The most famous project from this time was the free improvising band "the Quintet" which featured the older legends Bjørnar Andresen and Calle Neuman along with the youngsters Ketil Gutvik, Paal Nilssen-Love and Eivind. They played all the major festivals in Norway and released a live cd on BP/Universal records, all to great critical acclaim. “Norwegian bassist Eivind Opsvik made the most imaginative album trilogy of 2005” ”Eivind
Opsvik has an unusual gift for writing small, poignant pieces of music.
The color and mood of his music, along with its rhythmic patterns, bleed
over into pop, and the sound has a sheer, weightless quality” "Opsvik's
own bass has an aching sound, with his lines plumbing the depths to
find almost folk-song-like melodies" |
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