by Morten Alfred Høirup.
English translation by Rod Sinclair.
In his early 30s, Henrik Jansberg is one of the young
lions of the new pride of Danish folk fiddlers. His band, Jansberg Band, plays
mainly acoustic music composed by Henrik himself, and he already has several
albums to his credit. Henrik Jansberg has won Danish Music Awards, for Danish
Debut Album of the Year and Traditional Danish Folk Artist of the Year. From
Juelsminde on the east coast of Jutland, Henrik has played violin since he was
7. His parents were active folk dancers, so Henrik had the music, and in
particular dance music, around him from the start. He spent his childhood and
early youth surrounded by traditional Danish folk music, on the Århus folk
scene, at the East Jutland Folk Dance Festival and at Roskilde Folk Dance
Festival.
"Some debuts are calculated for success"
- Sing out!, Chris Nickson.
In 2000, Henrik matriculates at the folk department of
the Carl Nielsen Academy of Music Odense (Det Fynske Musikkonservatorium),
graduating in 2004, the year he releases his first album, Signatur.
With his band or solo, Henrik Jansberg has performed and given workshops
internationally: in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Belgium,
Germany, Spain, Scotland, Japan, Taiwan and USA.
The New Music and the Tradition.
Henrik Jansberg was born into the Danish folk music
tradition, he knows his tunes and dances like the back of his hand. What is
remarkable is that from the word go he has made his name as a composer and
innovator within the tradition. That is not the way these things usually work
in traditional Danish folk music circles. Henrik describes his mode of
operation, saying that it is simple; he calls it “Instrument + Theme”:
“What it means is that I toy around with a theme on
the instrument - usually violin but occasionally also viola, mandolin,
mandola, piano or guitar. Sometimes I write the theme down, sometimes I make a
recording. It matures and a B, perhaps a C part, crop up. When I have a whole
tune, I test it with other musicians and that’s where the arrangement is
shaped. For me, my tradition is right there in everything I have ever composed.
I have often gone in to a certain polka form or a circle dance form and created
new tunes to those dances. I have also tried making variations on a tune until
the original is no longer recognisable. Another tradition I have used is to
make suites of melodies – perhaps composing a new tune then combining it with a
traditional melody.”
- How important for you is the teaching of traditional
music?
“I feel that it is extremely important to pass on
your knowledge of the tradition. The more good traditional players who hand on
their skills, the more subtle and refined the music will become. My particular
specialities, the ones I give on, are naturally not the same as other players’.
In the music schools, my main aim is to convey my enthusiasm for the music and
to motivate the youngsters. The bit about the tradition comes later, when they
are no longer strangers to their instruments and the interest in learning has
begun to show in my pupils. I have taken my pupils out to play for dancing:
that is often an open sesame – people can dance to my music! That often takes
the biscuit.”
The Band.
“Jansberg Band impressed the crowd and was
definitely the most humorous act of the night” – Shetland
News, Gavin Morgan.
In recent years, Henrik Jansberg has been working
intensively with his band, Jansberg Band, which numbers some of the most
distinguished Danish folk musicians of his generation. They tour and perform at
festivals in Denmark and abroad. In 2008, they were a hit at the Shetland Folk
Festival, and since they had a camera crew with them in Shetland, we will see
the result in the course of 2009 in the form of a short documentary film about
a young Danish band and their experiences on a little archipelago in the North
Atlantic. Henrik Jansberg:
“Jansberg Band was originally quite simply the
musicians who worked with me on the first album, Signatur.
Since then there have been some changes, but the basis is still the same.
Now after recording Omnivor Jansberg Band is Rasmus
Zeeberg (guitar, mandolin), Rasmus Brylle (percussion), Steffan Sørensen (bass,
violin) and Perry Stenbäck (guitar, mandolin & nyckel harp) plus myself on
fiddle, of course. The distribution of roles is now in place, and that means
that we can begin to play more freely, without losing the tightness, it goes
without saying. I have always dreamed of having a super-talented band that
could fuse the straight, traditional sound with a more rock feeling, keeping to
acoustic instruments.”
- What's the difference for you between performing
with the band and working solo?.
“Solo, I am more traditional, often playing for
dancing. The solo aspect lies in the more direct contact with the dancers via
the music, small variations in melody and timing. I have also worked solo in
the studio, with Danish and Faroese songwriters like Peter Abrahamsen and Stanley
Samuelsen. What is needed then is the ability to hear precisely what the song
requires, and add it in the right amount at the right time. Working with the
band calls for artistic effects on a larger scale: breaks, powerful dynamics,
the sounds of the different instruments, solos and riffs. I love working on all
these levels, they challenge me and I learn from them. I have got to the point
where I believe in my own playing; standing alone on a stage, you are on the
spot in a different way than if you also have to communicate with a band.
Henrik Jansberg and his band are one of young Danish
folk music’s most potent projects and it is not by accident that the band
appeals to a younger audience in Denmark. In the coming years Jansberg Band
will be on tour both in Denmark and internationally, but until you can hear
them live at a music venue or festival near you, you can hear them and learn
more about them, on YouTube and MySpace.