- Øystein Baadsvik
-
Øystein Baadsvik (born 1966) is a tuba soloist and chamber musician.
Contents
Biography
He began playing the tuba at the age of fifteen at his school in Trondheim, Norway, and won first prize at eighteen in a Norwegian national competition for soloists.
He studied under the tuba player Harvey Phillips and with Arnold Jacobs. Øystein Baadsvik’s international career began in 1991 when he was awarded two prizes at Concours International d’Exécution Musicale in Geneva.
Øystein Baadsvik is known for his master classes and tuba clinics which are frequently held in numerous universities throughout the United States including The Juilliard School, Indiana University, Cleveland Institute of Music, Shepherd School of Music at Rice University, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Texas Christian University, and the University of Kentucky. In addition, every October, a tour of various colleges and universities occurs, coinciding with Octubafest, a yearly celebration of tuba music.
Fnugg
In addition to Baadsvik's notable performance schedule, a cult-like following has begun thanks to postings of his performances on YouTube. One of Baadsvik's most well-known works is Fnugg (Norwegian for something small or a snowflake).
Fnugg was originally written for solo Tuba and features a variety of unique performance skills, including "lip beats" and multiphonics. It was later modified, with a major addition for either brass band or concert band and was titled Fnugg Blue. His YouTube performance of Fnugg Blue was very theatrical in nature, with dancing and clapping from the audience.
CDs
- Tuba Works - 1992 (Simax)
- Tuba Carnival - 2003 (BIS)
- Danzas - 2006 (BIS)
- Kalevi Aho tuba concerto - 2007 (BIS)
- Prelude, Fnugg, and Riffs - 2007 (BIS)
- 20th Century Tuba Concertos - 2008 (BIS)
- 21st Century Tuba Concertos - 2009 (BIS)
- Ferry Tales - 2010 (BIS)
External links
This article about a classical musician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. This article on a musician who plays a brass instrument is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.