Jono El Grande
Jono El Grande | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Jon Andreas Håtun |
Born | 29 July 1973 |
Origin | Norway |
Genres | Progressive rock, Avant garde, Art rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician, Composer, Copy writer |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, Guitar, Keyboards, Kazoo |
Years active | 1994 - |
Labels | Rune Grammofon |
Website | www |
Jono El Grande (born 29 July 1973) is the stage name of Jon Andreas Håtun.
Jono El Grande is an autodidactic Norwegian composer, band leader, guitarist and conductor.[1] He is the leader of the Norway Symphony Orchestra. Jono El Grande claims that his extreme mixture of genres and timbres is a result of his musical vision: moving away from the traditional concept of 'music as a result of social processes'.[2]
Although Jono El Grande is enjoying modest growth on the European avant-garde scene,[3] he is most well known in his own country for his eccentric and amusing performance art/dada-inspired live shows. In 2000, he formed The Jono El Grande Orchestra, renamed Jono El Grande & The Luxury Band in 2005.
Jono El Grande has released six albums, Utopian Dances (Krusedull Prod. - 1999), Fevergreens (Rune Grammofon - 2003),[4] Neo Dada (Rune Grammofon - 2009),[5] "Phantom Stimulance" (Rune Grammofon - 2010), The Choko King (Rune Arkiv - 2011) and "Melody Of A Muddled Mason" (Rune Grammofon - 2015), in addition to contributing with compositions on other projects (both Rune Grammofons anniversary albums Money Will Ruin Everything 1[6] & 2" and on Wire Tapper #21", the avant-garde music magazine The Wire's 21st edition of their CD series). Jono El Grande served as festival composer for Happy Days 2007, presented by Ny Musikk, the Norwegian section of ISCM – International Society For Contemporary Music. He also became a member of Norwegian Society Of Composers fall 2010.[7] He played at the Zappanale #22 (August 2011) and world premiered a new orchestral piece for the Bergen located sinfonietta orchestra BIT20 Ensemble December 2011.[8] In 2014, he wrote and released the classical piece "Til Anbjørg" (For Anbjorg) for his late wife. In November 2014, he world premiered a new piece for Trondheim Sinfonietta at Rockheim in Trondheim.[9]
He is also one of the godfathers of Leah Isadora Behn, the daughter of Princess Märtha Louise of Norway.[10]
In 2017, he married designer and visual artist Ingunn Birkeland.[11]
Early life
Jon Andreas Håtun was born at Bærum Hospital, Norway. At the age of ten, far before he touched his first instrument, he began inventing various band concepts without the intent for performance.[12] In 1988, he bought his first guitar, and in 1989 he formed his first actual band along with three school buddies - a teen-age punk rock combo called Mannes Fatales.[13] They would perform stunt poetry in combination with pre-arranged electric noises. Jono El Grande served as the lead vocalist and lyricist. Mannes Fatales performed three concerts before disbanding in 1990. In the years 1990 - 1992, Jono El Grande assembled a series concept bands intended for one-night performances and recordings and/or rehearsings only: The Terror Duo, Black Satan, The Pez Dispensers, Acetaded Beat, As Drosera in addition to a handful of school bands formed to mark end-of-term celebrations and similar occasions.[14]
From 1991 - 92, Jono El Grande worked as a radio host at the local station Radio Express.[15] Two hours every Sunday for about a year, he played pure Frank Zappa- and art rock-related music. He also guest-hosted the progressive rock radio spot Uhørt in its very infancy. As of 2008, the show still airs on Norway's FM 99,3. After graduating from high school in 1992, Jono El Grande attended art school in Bergen.[16] In 1994 - 95, Jono El Grande worked as assistant decorator at Norsk Film, building props for the movie Pakten (movie)[17] (Waiting For Sunset) with Robert Mitchum. Eventually, in 1995, he quit the job to become a full-time composer.
1995 - 1999
In 1995, Jono El Grande formed his first group called Menü Bizarra, which performed only three concerts before it was disbanded later the same year.[18] This band led to the performance art group Menü Tizz Aura, which performed dada shows in Oslo on both theatrical scenes as well as television shows.[19] He then formed the group Grande Corpse, which never performed live. Grande Corpse played only at a few rehearsals in 1996, a project related to the never performed opera A Gangrene Hangover.[20] He also formed The Gringo Quartet, which held one show only at Volapük Cultural Forum in 1997.[21] After this he formed Vidunderlige Vidda, also called Vidda, with one of the members from Menü Tizz Aura in 1997, Stein Stölen Bjerkaker. Vidda reached some local success the following years.[22] After disbanding Vidda late in 1998, Jono El Grande performed solo with electronic works. He then released music from the whole period 1995 - 1999 on his debut album Utopian Dances in December 1999.[23]
Discography
Albums
Title | Year | Label |
---|---|---|
Utopian Dances | 1999 | Krusedull Prod. |
Fevergreens | 2003 | Rune Grammofon |
Neo Dada | 2009 | Rune Grammofon |
Phantom Stimulance | 2010 | Rune Grammofon |
The Choko King | 2011 | Rune Grammofon/Rune Arkiv |
Melody Of A Muddled Mason | 2015 | Rune Grammofon |
Fevergreens
Fevergreens is an album by El Grande, released 2003, with the following contents:
- "Prologue"
- "Awake, Wonderful and Lavish"
- "I'm Not a Star I'm Just Lost in Space"
- "Good Gracious"
- "Cuban Serum"
- "Rumba for a Slightly Excited Ape"
- "Cha!"
- "The Frenzied Butterflies"
- "Centrifuge in d minor"
- "Tango on the Crest of Reality"
- "Ante's Inferno"
- "Ariaph Orahri"
- "Isle of View"
- "Epilogue - Encore"
EPs
Title | Year | Label |
---|---|---|
Der Tod der Gegenwartsmusik (Music Cassette) | 2016 | Kassettkultur |
Merciless Mediocrity | 2023 | Cosmic Anthill |
Contributions
- Money Will Ruin Everything (Rune Grammofon - 2003) (Jono El Grande contributes with the composition "Tango On The Crest Of Reality".)
- Money Will Ruin Everything 2 (Rune Grammofon - 2008) (Jono El Grande contributes with the composition "Evas Horse Dance".)
- The Wire Tapper#21 (The Wire Magazine - 2009) (Jono El Grande contributes with the composition "Neo Dada".)
- Classic Rock Presents Prog CD - Dec 2011 (Jono El Grande contributes with the composition "Neo Dada".)
Bands
- Menü Tizz Aura (1995–96)[24]
- The Gringo Quartet (1996)
- Grande Corpse (1996–97)
- Vidunderlige Vidda (The Wonderful Mountain Plateau) (1996–98)
- The Jono El Grande Orchestra (2000–05)
- Jono El Grande & The Luxury Band (2005 - 2016)
- Norway Symphony Orchestra (2017 -)
Musical highlights
- Oslo City Suite I-IV
- Tango on the Crest of Reality
- Centrifugue in D minor
- The Death of Contemporary Music
- Finnish Dance of Cysts
References
- ^ Artikkel fra TONO
- ^ Interview at Smuglesning (2009), Norway
- ^ Reviews on Neo Dada at Rune Grammofon
- ^ Allmusic Guide on Fevergreens
- ^ Allmusic Guide on Neo Dada
- ^ Article about Money Will Ruin Everything (2003), Mic, Norway Archived 2007-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Norwegian Society Of Composers' annual report 2010[permanent dead link ].
- ^ BIT20 Ensemble's homepage Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Zappa og Nordheim | Trondheim Sinfonietta". Archived from the original on 2015-04-14. Retrieved 2015-04-14.
- ^ "Dette er Leah Isadoras faddere".
- ^ Article in Dagbladet
- ^ Interview in Aftenposten, Oslo 2006 Archived 2011-10-04 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Article in Ballade/Mic, Norway Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jono El Grande official website Archived 2012-07-10 at archive.today
- ^ Jono El Grande official website Archived 2012-08-03 at archive.today
- ^ Data from Bergen Art School (KIB)
- ^ The Internet Movie Database
- ^ Interview, AlarmPress Archived 2011-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Progressive Rocks
- ^ [Inner sleeve details from latest release The Choko King]
- ^ Jono El Grandes official list of bands Archived 2012-04-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Interview, AlarmPress Archived 2011-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ ProgArchives
- ^ Biography from Mic (Music Information Centre, Norway) Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine