Jump to content

Kirsten Bråten Berg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Kirsten Braten Berg)
Kirsten Bråten Berg
Kirsten Bråten Berg performing in 2020
Background information
Born1950 (1950)
Arendal, Norway
GenresFolk
Occupation(s)Musician, silversmith, government scholar
InstrumentSinger
AwardsSpellemannprisen for traditional music
1988 Min kvedarlund
Gammlengprisen for vocal music
1991
Spellemannprisen for music for children
1993 Våre beste barnesanger 2
Radka Toneff Memorial Award
1997
Knight First Class of The Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav
2005

Kirsten Marie Bråten Berg (born 7 January 1950 in Arendal, Norway) is a Norwegian traditional folk singer, silversmith and government scholar. She is currently living in Valle in the Setesdal area of southern Norway. She trained as a silversmith at the Torleiv H. Bjørgums Vocational College (Oslo Yrkesskole an Torleiv H. Bjørgums) in Setesdal and then set up her own workshop there, in Nomeland.

She began singing traditional Norwegian folk songs in the 1970s and since the late 1970s has given concerts and made recordings, winning Spellemannprisen awards (the Norwegian equivalent of the Grammy award) in 1979 and 1988. She met the bass player Arild Andersen in 1990 and became a member of his group in 1992.

Bråten Berg's interest in the Norwegian folksong tradition has led her to meet and learn from older Norwegian musicians and people or from recordings of their music-making. Alongside figures such fiddler Hallvard Bjørgum, she exemplifies those Norwegian folk musicians trying to carry their tradition into modern times.

In 2005, she was made a Knight First Class of The Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in recognition of her work as a performer and ambassador of Norwegian culture.

She has also collaborated with West African musicians on the CD From Senegal to Setesdal.

Honors

[edit]

Memberships

[edit]

She is foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music.[1]

Select discography

[edit]
  • 1979: Slinkombas
  • 1980: Kirsten Bråten Berg
  • 1982: Slinkombas og bas igjen
  • 1984: SetesDalarna
  • 1988: Min kvedarlund
  • 1991: Joletid
  • 1992: Sagn 1992
  • 1993: Suede et Norvège
  • 1993: Arv
  • 1993: Våre beste barnesanger 2
  • 1993: Cohen på norsk
  • 1996: Pilgrimen
  • 1997: Frå Senegal til Setesdal
  • 1999: Smak av himmel, spor av jord
  • 2000: Runarstreng
  • 2001: Syng du mi røyst
  • 2005: Stemmenes skygge (Heilo), with Marilyn Mazur and Lena Willemark
  • 2007: Stev for dagen, with Astri Rysstad and Kari Rolfsen
  • 2010: Songen
  • 2012: Nordic Woman
  • 2021: Kvitravn, with Wardruna

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Ledamöter". Kungl. Musikaliska Akademien (in Swedish). Retrieved 12 November 2024.
[edit]
Preceded by Recipient of the Radka Toneff Memorial Award
1997
Succeeded by