Magni Wentzel Explained

Magni Wentzel
Birth Date:1945 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Oslo, Norway
Instrument:Vocals, guitar
Genre:Jazz
Occupation:Musician, composer

Magni Wentzel (born 28 June 1945 in Oslo, Norway) is a Norwegian jazz musician (vocals and guitar), the daughter of musicians Odd Wentzel-Larsen and Åse Wentzel, and known for a number of jazz recordings.[1] [2]

Career

Wentzel started in "Totenlaget Barneteater" (1951). She was trained by opera singers Erna Skaug, Almar Heggen and professor Paul Lohmann in Wiesbaden, took guitar lessons from 1956, and released her debut jazz album That Old Feeling in 1959. Instead of attending the first year of the newly established "Statens operahøgskole" in Oslo, she chose to go on learning classical guitar in Spain (1963), Switzerland and England, and taught jazz song under Tete Montoliu.[1] She played on the Club 7 in Oslo within Geir Wentzel Band, and at the same time she was strongly influenced by Aretha Franklin.[2] She collaborated extensively with a series of Oslo-based musicians, like within the quartets and quintets including Einar Iversen and Egil Kapstad.Peter Gullin dedicated the album Far, Far Away Where Longing Live to her. Later she worked for Opera Mobile, then as the "mother" in The Tales of Hoffmann by Offenbach.[2]

Honors

Discography

Solo albums

Singles

Collaborative works

With other projects
With various artists

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Magni Wentzel Biography . Johs Bergh . 2012-11-05 . Store Norske Leksikon.
  2. Web site: Wentzel, Magni Biography . 21 March 2011 . 2012-11-05 . Norsk Musikkinformasjon MIC.no.