Ragnhild Furebotten

Ragnhild Furebotten
Born (1979-03-10) 10 March 1979
Saltdal, Nordland
Origin Norway
Genres Traditional, folk rock
Occupation(s) Musician, composer
Instruments Fiddle, violin, vocals
Labels Ta:lik
Associated acts Hekla Stålstrenga
Website furebotten.com

Ragnhild Furebotten (born 10 March 1979 in Saltdal, Norway) is a Norwegian fiddler, folk musician and composer, and former member of the traditional folk band Majorstuen and present member and founder of Hekla Stålstrenga.[1][2]

Career

Furebotten picked up the fiddle at the age of six, and started her formal musical studies when she attended the Music program at Kongsbakken Videregående Skole in Tromsø, at the age of 16, earning her Examen artium in 1998. This is where she first got in contact with guitarist Tore Bruvoll, with whom she has collaborated since. Later she joined Bruvoll at the Telemark University College (1998–2000). Furebotten got her diploma at the Norwegian Academy of Music (2000–2004), and during her studyies she was an exchange student at The Fyn Conservatory of Music in Odense, Denmark and there she studied under the guidance of the Danish fiddler Harald Haugaard among others. Now residing in Målselv she works as Regional Musician that Culture in Troms (2013), besides being a freelance musicianr.[3]

Furebotten is a mediator of the Northern Norwegian "slåttemateriale" (traditional Norwegian fiddle music), a tradition she knows well, and interpret and express in a completely new and modern way.[1] She is also a fiddler in the Northern Norwegian traditional folk music band Hekla Stålstrenga (established in 2005) who were "Ungkunstnere" (young artists) at the Festival of North Norway in 2006. The Norwegian Folk Music trio Fotefar was also established in 2005. Furebotten var ungkunstner ved Festspillene in Nord-Norge in 2006, samt tildelt Arvid Hanssen award for young artists. In the summer 2007 she made the commissioned work Fot for the festival Kalottspel, and was soloist for the prosjektet Arctic Subsircle the Music Festival of Northern Norway (2008).[1]

Furebotten has released a series of albums with different musical constellations. Within the bvand Majorstuen she was awarded the Spellemannprisen in 2003 for the best traditional folk album of the year, for the debut album Majorstuen. She also partisipated on the albums Jorun Jogga (2004) and Juledrøm (2006) within Majorstuen until she ceased the band. They became the first Norwegian folk music band to receive the official showcase at WOMEX world music trade fair in 2007. The same year she released her debut solo album Endelig Vals within her own R. T. Trio including Frode Haltli and Gjermund Larsen. In 2008 she released the album Hekla stålstrenga together with Tore Bruvoll. Both albums were nominated for the Spellemannprisen in the class traditional folk and traditional dance music. For the solo album Never on a Sunday (2011) she was awarded Spellemannprisen 2011 in the class Traditional folk/traditional dance music, and in 2013 Furebotten appeared at the Oslo World Music Festival[2]

Honors

Discography

Solo albums

Within Ragnhild Furebotten Trio
In duo with Tore Bruvoll
With Helge Sunde, Anders Eriksson, Marius Haltli, Frode Nymo, Torben Snekkestad & Lars Andreas Haug

Collaborations

Within Majorstuen including
Within the trio Fotefar including Lena Jinnegren & Bendik Lund Haanshus
Within Hekla Stålstrenga
With others
With Brynjar Rasmussen

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Furebotten, Ragnhild Biography" (in Norwegian). Folkemusikk.no. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  2. 1 2 Krogh-Sørensen, Kristian. "Ragnhild Furebotten (NO) – never on a Sunday". Oslo World Music Festival. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  3. "Ragnhild Furebotten Biography". Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  4. Pettersen, Tomas Lauvland (24 October 2011). "Never on a Sunday – Review" (in Norwegian). Listen to Norway. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  5. "Fest – Fotefar & Håvard Lund – Review" (in Norwegian). Folkemusikk.no. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  6. "Tore Bruvoll Gitarist – Review" (in Norwegian). MIC.no. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  7. "Plateanmeldelse: Hekla Stålstrenga – "Dyrandé"" (in Norwegian). Verdens Gang. Retrieved 2013-10-05.


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