Kirsti Huke
Kirsti Huke | |
---|---|
Birth name | Kirsti Huke |
Born |
Melhus, Sør-Trøndelag | 6 March 1977
Genres | Jazz, experimental |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals |
Years active | 1998 to present |
Associated acts | The 3rd and the Mortal, Goat the Head |
Website |
www |
Kirsti Huke (born 6 March 1977 in Melhus, Norway) is a Norwegian singer, and composer, she was best recognized as lead singer for Norwegian doom metal/experimental band The 3rd and the Mortal in the final line-up.
She is also known from collaborations with musicians such as Egil Kapstad, Erlend Skomsvoll, Tore Brunborg, Ola Kvernberg, Vigleik Storaas, Håvard Wiik, Håkon Mjåset Johansen, Erik Nylander and Steinar Raknes.[1]
She is the younger sister of the author Marte Huke.
Career
Huke got her education at Heimdal videregående skole (1993–96) og Jazz program at Trondheim Musikkonservatorium (1996–2001), wherere she work as Assistant Professor (2016). Her own Kirsti Huke Quartet (established in 1998) also included Håvard Wiik (piano), Håkon Mjåset Johansen (drums) and Steinar Raknes (bass). In 2002 Wiik and Johansen were replaced by Vigleik Storaas (piano) and Erik Nylander (drums).[2]
The K.H. Quartet has performed a varied standard repertoire at several jazz festivals, most recently at Nattjazz 2006 in Bergen, and released the album Deloo (2007), followed up by Kirsti Huke (2009) with critical acclaim.[3] Worth mentioning is also the jazz Philharmonic interaction with Trondheim Symphony Orchestra and Egil Kapstad Quartet at "Trondheim Jazzfestival" 2001, arranged by Erlend Skomsvoll, where Håkon Mjåset Johansen plays the double bass.[2]
In 2006 Huke started as the lead singer of the indie pop rock band "-phy" (initiated in 1997) along with guitarist Petter Vågan, drummer Vigdis Sjelmo and bassist Ellen Ersfjord. The band launched the album Tree House in 2011.
Huke has toured with Trondheim Voices, and contributed to the "Grand Telemark" with Wetle Holte and Espen Gundersen, "The 3rd and the Mortal", Tom Steinar Lund's "Diner" and Per Borten's band "Moving Oos" with Siri Gjære, which released the album Peace & Love in 2007.[4]
Discography
- As band leader
- 2007: Deloo – (Grappa Music)
- 2009: Kirsti Huke – (Fairplay Records)
- 2015: Rags & Silks (Name Music & Publishing), with Ola Kvernberg and Erik Nylander
Collaborations
- 2001: Love Seriously Damages Health (Bergland Prod.), with Siri Gjære
- 2002: Memoirs (Voices Music & Entertainment), with The 3rd and the Mortal
- 2006: Survival Kit (Bergland Prod.), with Siri Gjære
- 2007: Peace & Love – (Kong Tiki/Playground Records), with Moving Oos
- 2008: Grand Telemark – (Sonne Disk), with Grand Telemark
- 2009: The Wonder – (Sonne Disk), with Grand Telemark
- 2010: Improvoicing (MNJ Records), with Trondheim Voices
- 2011: Scent Of Soil – (Hubro), with Tore Brunborg, Petter Vågan, Rune Nergaard & Gard Nilssen
- 2011: Tree House – (Crispin Glover Records), with "-phy"
- 2013: Vi Vil Ut På Byen! (Øra Fonogram), with Tullkattesnutene
Other appearances
- 2007: Ingen Andre (MBN Records), with Ulf Risnes
- 2007: City of Glass (Voices Of Wonder Records), with The Soundbyte/Paul Irgens
- 2008: Katalysator (EMI Records), with Åge Aleksandersen
- 2008: Sinecure (Crispin Glover Records), with Bitch Cassidy
- 2009: New Violators (Fairplay Entertainment), with New Violators
- 2009: Åge-boks 2 (Odeon Records), with Åge Aleksandersen
- 2009: The Roaring Silence (Sandforest Records), with V Before U
- 2010: Doppelgängers (Aftermath Music), with Goat The Head
- 2010: While We Wait (The Record), with The Project
- 2011: Migrations (MNJ records), with Trondheim Jazz Orchestra & Øyvind Brække
- 2011: Scent Of Soil (List of Hubro albums|Hubro Music), with Scent Of Soil
- 2012: Small Town (Columbia, Sony Music Norway), with Hans Bollandsås
- 2012: Hurricane (Sonne Disk), with Wetle Holte
- 2013: Sidewalk Comedy (MNJ records), with Trondheim Jazz Orchestra & Eirik Hegdal
- 2014: Yesterday Song (MusikkLosen), with Terje Bjørklund
- 2014: Vokal (NorCD), with Elin Rosseland
- 2015: Texum (2015), with Texum
References
- ↑ "Kirsti Huke Discography - Discogs.com".
- 1 2 "Kirsti Huke med vid horisont - Norsk Musikkinformasjon MIC.no". (in Norwegian)
- ↑ "Kirsti Huke: "Kirsti Huke Kvartett" - VG.no". (in Norwegian)
- ↑ "Moving Oos - Peace and Love Review - MusikkNyheter.no". (in Norwegian)
External links
- Official website
- -phy Official Website
- Kirsti Huke & Stian Carstensen - A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square (JazzLAB) on YouTube