Robert Normann Explained

Robert Normann
Birth Name:Robert Uno Normann
Birth Date:27 June 1916
Birth Place:Borge, Østfold, Norway
Death Place:Kvastebyen, Sarpsborg, Østfold
Genre:Jazz
Occupation:Musician
Instrument:Guitar, banjo, accordion, tenor saxophone

Robert Uno Normann (27 June 1916 – 20 May 1998) was a Norwegian guitarist and considered a jazz guitar pioneer.[1]

Career

Normann was an autodidact performer on the accordion and tenor saxophone, and eventually on the guitar as his main instrument. He was one of the swing era's most sought guitar soloists in Norway, and was also a pioneer of electric guitar. His first electric guitar was enabled in 1939 by constructing a pickup of copper wire, magnets and pitch, stolen from public phones, Normann told in an interview with Jon Larsen.[1]

BackgroundNormann began his musical career as a wandering street and backyard musician at age 12. He was a professional musician in 1937. On Oslo jazz scene he performed in several swing jazz groups. He played with Freddy Valier in 1938, String Swing in 1939–42, Gunnar Due in 1939–41, and simultaneously led his own quartet. In this period he also played tenor saxophone and was with the Pete Brown Big Band from 1945 and various random jazz groups. He played concerts with his own solo section and could be heard at the revue theaters "Edderkoppen" and Chat Noir for several years. He also played with Frank Ottersen, and later Willy Andresen. He got several career offers from international artists, including from Benny Goodman and Barney Kessel, that he turned down.[2] In 1988 the jazz recordings of Normann were for the first time collected and reissued on the label Hot Club Records (produced by Jon Larsen, who also wrote biographical articles about Normann). After his death, the old recordings were taken over by his family (Normann Records).[3]
Style of playNormanns play can mislead people into thinking that Django Reinhardt was the inspiration, but by his own account he never listened recordings with the Belgian guitarist, but to American musicians Teddy Wilson and Leon Chu Berry, and various accordionists. From 1955, he was less active in the jazz context, for example because of significant alcohol problems.[1]
Television recordingsNormann was one of the first that started with trick recordings in Les Paul style.[3] In his repertoire you find concertos for accordion, arranged and performed on guitar. Normann was presented for the Norwegian audience through break programs produced for NRK in 1971 and 1974. As a studio musician Normann is currently registered with the participation of close to 1300 productions,[4] and in the period from 1968 to 1982 he was responsible for several musical productions for Riksteatret. He has composed music to multiple folk texts, among others by Alf Prøysen, and has also composed music for film and theater and small pieces of music inspired by jazz and traditional Norwegian folk music.[1]
RetirementNormann retired as an active musician in 1982, and devoted his time to small scale farming and inventions. Inspired by the re-release of his recordings by Hot Club Records, produced by guitarist Jon Larsen, Normann entered the studio again in 1992, for the last time with the music he called "Syv stubbær for én gitar og trommer" (Seven pieces for the guitar and drums). His latest bass player Håkon Nilsen was deceased, and Normann replaced him by placing a microphone oktavboks of the three lowest guitar strings. The one time so wital giant withdrew gradually from the outside world, and lived his last years in isolation in Kvastebyen, Skjeberg, Østfold, hence the characteristic "the jazz version of Greta Garbo" by Knut Borge.[5]
The organization Friends of Robert NormannRobert Normanns Venner (Friends of Robert Normann) was founded in 1999 with the purpose of collecting and disseminating information about Normann's artistic work. The association was previously located in Sarpsborg, Østfold, but is currently under Normann Records, operated by the Normann family with Wenche Normann as manager.

Plays on Riksteatret

Discography

Solo recordings

Recordings with different early jazz groups are released on the label Jazz Hot & Swing – Jazz in Norway 1920–1940
Later radio recordings of small groups and his own solos

Collaborations

With Inger Jacobsen with Robert Normanns Kvartet
With Alf Prøysen
With Sigbjørn Bernhoft Osa

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Robert Uno Normann Extended Biography . Norwegian . Bjørn . Stendahl . . . 13 February 2009 . 2013-10-20.
  2. Web site: Robert Uno Normann Biography . OnlineGitar.no . 5 June 2012 . 2013-10-20.
  3. Web site: Robert Uno Normann Biography . Jon . Larsen . Jon Larsen . . 2013-10-20.
  4. Web site: Robert Normann Discography . Official website . 2013-10-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928194111/http://www.robertnormann.no/disco.html . 28 September 2007 . dmy-all .
  5. Web site: Vår egen Django . Norwegian . Knut Reidar . Andresen . . 21 January 2010 . 2013-10-20.