Ole Børud
Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ole Arnold Børud (born 6 December 1976) is a Norwegian singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and audio engineer. He is known both for his solo recordings and as a member of the groups Arnold B. Family, Schaliach, Extol, and Fleshkiller.
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Born | Hamar, Norway | 6 December 1976
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Relatives | Arnold Børud (father) Anne Marie Børud (mother) Thomas Børud (brother) Hilde Stavnem Børud (spouse) Lisa Børud (niece) |
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Years active | 1981–present |
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Website | facebook |
Børud, son of the gospel singers Arnold Børud and Anne Marie Børud, began performing music at age five as part of Arnold B. Family, a group which would compete in the Melodi Grand Prix three times. At age twelve, he released a Christian children's music album. He later ventured into heavy metal, first in the two-man project Schaliach and then in Extol. He also briefly joined the hardcore punk band Selfmindead. Since the early 2000s, he has also recorded several solo albums in West Coast, pop, funk, and jazz styles: Chi-Rho (2002), Shakin' the Ground (2008), Keep Movin (2011), Someday at Christmas (2012, in collaboration with Samuel Ljungblahd ), Stepping Up (2014), Outside the Limit (2019) and Soul Letters (2022).
He re-joined Extol in 2012, and in 2016 he co-founded a heavy metal side-project, Fleshkiller. Børud has also performed for Torun Eriksen and Sofian, and collaborated with Larvik Stroband and the Oslo Gospel Choir. In 2008, he contributed to the hymn compilation, Takk, gode Gud, for alle ting: 20 sanger fra Barnesalmeboka. He has regularly appeared on various Norwegian television shows, including Det store korslaget and Stjernekamp, and in 2017 provided backing choral vocals in Jowst's performance of "Grab the Moment" in the 2017 Eurovision contest.
Musical career
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Arnold B. Family and childhood career
Born Ole Arnold Børud in Hamar, Norway,[1][2] he started his musical career at the age of five years as a singer in his family's Christian pop group Børud-gjengen, later renamed Arnold B. Family.[3][4][5] Highly popular within Norway, Arnold B. Family participated three times in the national finals for the Eurovision Song Contest, landing in the top ten all three times.[6] The group took second place in 1995 for its song "La oss feire livet" ("Let Us Celebrate Life").[6] For the group's recording of Livslyst (1995), Børud experimented with rapping.[7]
In 1987, Børud was featured as part of the children's choir for the musical "Det Gode Landet" by Eyvind Skeie and Sigvald Tveit.[8] In 1988, at age twelve, he made a solo debut with the Christian children's album Alle Skal Få Vite Det!.[9][10] Børud has said that he no longer remembers much about the recording sessions.[9] Almost thirty years later, in 2017, his niece Lisa Børud sang the song "Kjærligheten seirer" ("Love Wins") from the album when she competed in the talent show Stjernekamp.[9]
Heavy metal and hard rock
In the 1990s, Børud ventured into heavy metal, teaming up in 1995 with Peter Dalbakk to form a short-lived doom metal project called Schaliach, for which he played guitar, bass and drums. The group released one album, Sonrise, in 1996.[11] He briefly was part of the band Antestor.[12][13] He joined Extol in 1996, where he played guitar and bass and provided background singing.[14][15] After recording two albums with the group, Burial and Undeceived, he left to further pursue his solo career in 2001, but briefly rejoined the group to record its third album, Synergy.[16][17] In 2012, he rejoined the group, which reformed as a trio, and helped record its fifth, self-titled release.[18] In the early 2000s, he also served for a brief period as a guitarist for the hardcore punk band Selfmindead.[19][20] On 12 February 2016, Peter Espevoll of Extol announced that Børud had formed a new side-project, Fleshkiller, with his former Schaliach bandmate Dalbakk.[21] Børud himself later announced that drummer Andreas Skorpe Sjøen also joined the band.[22] In January 2017, it was announced that Dalbakk left the band and was replaced by Elisha Mullins.[23] The first studio album, Awaken, debuted 15 September 2017.[24] Børud also was featured as a vocalist and guitarist on the progressive death metal band Cognizance's single "Malignant Domain", released 22 August 2019.[25][26] On 21 April 2023, Børud guest featured on the song and accompanying music video for "Mouthless Embassy" by Kallias.[27] Extol again reformed in 2023, with Børud included in the lineup, and released a pair of singles, “Labyrinth of Ill” and “Exigency”, on 12 October 2023.[28]
As a solo artist
Børud's first solo release as an adult, Chi-Rho (2002), featured a pop rock sound and consisted of covers of various Christian music performers such as Whiteheart, Dogs of Peace, and Rebecca St. James.[29] However, Børud considers his subsequent release, Shakin' the Ground, his true solo debut, as it was the first featuring original music.[17] In 2011, he released Keep Movin, which peaked at no. 27 on the Norwegian charts and no. 15 on the Swedish charts.[30][31] That same year, he performed live with Santa Fe and the Fat City Horns, a concert which was later released on DVD in 2013.[32] In 2013 he collaborated with Samuel Ljungblahd for a Christmas album, Someday At Christmas.[33] The album charted at no. 39 in Norway and no. 13 in Sweden.[30][31] That year Børud also released a best-of compilation, The Best.[34] His next studio release was Stepping Up, released on 24 November 2014.[35] On 18 January 2019, Trine Rein featured Børud on her single "Where Do We Go".[36] Outside the Limit, Børud's next studio album, was released on 20 September 2019.[37] Three singles have been released for Outside the Limit: "Good Time", released on 16 November 2018,[38][39] "Fast Enough",[40] released on 1 February 2019,[41] and "Outside the Limit", released 28 August 2019.[42] His latest studio album, Soul Letters, was released on 11 February 2022.[43] Three singles were released accompanying the album: "Just for a Little While",[44] on 10 September 2021, "At My Best",[44] on 15 October 2021, and "Love Remedy", on 7 January 2022.[45]
Additional work and performances
Børud has performed for Torun Eriksen and Sofian, and collaborated with Larvik Stroband and the Oslo Gospel Choir.[3][46][47] He was a member of Oslo Kristne Senter for the releases Sangen Fra Våre Hjerter (1996) and Live Campmeeting 2 (1998),[48][49] and he joined the choir Ungfila on the 2005 release Highest of High.[50] In 2008, he collaborated with Kåre Conradi and Ingelin Reigstad Norheim along with girls from the Jeløy Church's Children's and Youth Choirs to release Takk, gode Gud, for alle ting: 20 sanger fra Barnesalmeboka, a compilation album of 20 hymns.[51] The same year, he collaborated on another hymn compilation, Søndagsskolen Synger, with Ann Kristin Wenneberg, Marianne Bondevik, Hans Esben Gihle, and Voxkids.[52] He appeared on the show Det store korslaget on Norway's TV 2 in 2010, and in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017, Børud sang in the backing chorus for Jowst's song "Grab the Moment".[10] In 2018, he competed in Stjernekamp, during which he performed a duet with Lisa Børud.[10][53] He was eliminated in the show's semi-finals.[53] On 13 April 2020, Børud was featured along with Kine L. Fossheim on the single and music video "Together We Stand".[54] The song was released by Gospel Explosion, a choral project led by Leif Ingvald Skaug. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, Skaug began holding online choir rehearsals, in which individuals from 70 different countries participated. Many of these choral members then collaborated long-distance to create the song.[54][55]
Børud's career also includes session music and music production.[56] In 2000, he played guitar and bass on the Frisk Luft album Lifetime Friends, on which he also was a technician.[57] In 2009, he produced Vakkert!, an album by Askim Barnegospel.[58] He provided guitar, arrangements, and programming for the 2010 release Mitt Valg by his niece Lisa Børud.[59] The 2018 song "Chopin", by no:Hege Bjerk, was produced by Børud,[60] and Børud also contributed backing vocals and vocal production to the subsequent 2020 release by Bjerk, Kan me stoppa tiå.[61]
Musical style and influences
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Per Albrigtsen of Østlands-Posten called Børud one of the foremost artists in the funk and soul genres.[46] From Shakin' the Ground onward, Børud adopted a Westcoast style that mixes together funk, r&b, and soul; Stepping Up is described as jazz pop in the vein of Steely Dan and Stevie Wonder.[67] Outside the Limit was thought to hearken back to the 1970s and was compared to Chicago, Donald Fagen, Nikki Corvette, Al Jarreau, Phil Collins, Bruno Mars, Toto, and even Daft Punk.[68][69] Other noted influences include Pages, Seawind, Gino Vannelli, Quincy Jones, George Duke, Earth, Wind and Fire, and Prince.[17][70] Børud's brief foray into rap on the Arnold B Family album Livslyst was compared to Flava to da Bone.[7]
Schaliach was described variously as doom metal,[11] death metal,[12][71] melodic death metal,[12] death-doom,[72] gothic metal,[12][71] black metal,[71] and progressive metal.[73] The sole album from the band was noted for its "huge" sound, Metallica-influenced guitar style, and strong classical influences, which were likened to a "metal symphony".[11] The band Extol, during Børud's tenure in the late-1990s and early 2000s, performed a highly technical mixture of death metal and progressive metal, incorporating other extreme metal styles as well as hardcore punk, orchestral music, jazz, and folk music.[78] In reference to Extol, Børud stated in one interview that his influences "could be a lot. Anything from Death to Yes to Steely Dan to Jason Falkner and so forth."[79] Similarly, the "thrashy death metal" of Death and 1970s prog of Yes were cited by Børud as influences for Fleshkiller.[80]
Discography
- Alle Skal Få Vite Det! – 1988
- Chi-Rho – 2002
- Shakin' the Ground – 2008
- Keep Movin – 2011
- Someday at Christmas (with Samuel Ljungblahd) – 2012
- Stepping Up – 2014
- Outside the Limit – 2019
- Soul Letters – 2022
Additional recording credits
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The following is a list of recording credits and additional composition, vocal, and instrumental credits by Børud. The latter exclude performance credits as part of Børud's solo career or band memberships, which are included in their respective discography lists.
Work | Artist | Released | Credit |
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Fred | Ivar Skippervold | 1983 | Group backing vocals[81] |
Livslyst | Arnold B Family | 1995 | Producer[82] |
Sangen Fra Våre Hjerter | Oslo Kristne Senter | 1996 | Guitar, mixer[48] |
Krig | Mia | 1997 | Guitar, backing vocals, engineer[83] |
Burial | Extol | 1998 | Engineer[84] |
Solfa | Solfa | Producer, engineer[85] | |
Live Campmeeting 2 | Oslo Kristne Senter | Guitar, technician[49] | |
Livet Er Her Og Nå | Kai Robert Johansen | Guitar, backing vocals, engineer[86] | |
Jesus Revolution | Stephan Christiansen | Engineer, mixer[87] | |
Hvil Deg | Britt Kvaran Elli | 1999 | Guitar, bass[88] |
The Gospel According To... | Stephen Ackles | Electric and acoustic guitar, bass, percussion, backing vocals[89] | |
Undeceived | Extol | 2000 | Producer, mixer[90] |
Ceylon Sailor | The Loch Ness Mouse | Technician[91] | |
Lifetime Friends | Frisk Luft | Guitar, bass, technician[57] | |
"All I Ask of Yo" | Vada | Producer[92] | |
Come to Me | Arnold B Family | 2001 | Guitar, bass on "Come to Me", mixer, arranger[93] |
"Human Frailtie's Grave" | Extol | Producer[94] | |
Chi Rho | Ole Børud | 2002 | Producer, recorder, mixer[95] |
Jesus Revolutionaries | Stephan Christiansen | 2003 | Producer, arranger, electric and acoustic guitar, bass[96] |
En Mektig Vind | Bjørn Aslaksen | 2004 | Electric and acoustic guitar[97] |
I'll Never Find Another You | Frisk Luft | Guitar, bass, drums, keyboards, technician, and co-producer[98] | |
Så Takknemlig | Lisa Børud | Guitar[99] | |
Prayers & Observations | Torun Eriksen | 2005 | Backing vocals[100] |
"Die a Little" | David Bakke | Backing vocals[101] | |
Elin Børud | Elin Børud | Guitar, backing vocals[102] | |
Hard as a Rock | The Schmucks | Mixer[103] | |
I Dag | Lisa Børud | 2006 | Guitar[104] |
Jesusfossen | Askim Barnegospel | 2007 | Guitar[105] |
Shakin' the Ground | Ole Børud | 2008 | Producer, mixer[106] |
Fri | Jon-Ragnar Grandahl | Guitar, choir, technician, bass on "Ord"[107] | |
Bli Med | Lisa Børud | Guitar, backing vocals, programmer, arranger, music writer on "The Party"[108] | |
Vakkert! | Askim Barnegospel | 2009 | Producer[58] |
Emmy & Ella | Emmy & Ella | 2010 | Arranger;[109] guitar, bass, synthesizer on "Jag tror på Gud"[110] |
Mitt Valg | Lisa Børud | Guitar, arranger, programmer[59] | |
Keep Movin | Ole Børud | 2011 | Producer[111] |
"God Made Me Beautiful" | Emmy & Ella | 2012 | Music writer[112] |
"Barrytown" | Lars-Erik Dahle featuring Ole Børud | 2013 | Engineer[113][114] |
Extol | Extol | Engineer, post-production[115] | |
The Psalmist | Samuel Ljungblahd | 2015 | Backing vocals, vocal production[116] |
"Sommer'n Er Her" | Mathias & Pernille featuring Oliver | 2016 | Producer[117] |
"Barrytown [Waveform Five Mix]" | Lars-Erik Dahle featuring Ole Børud | 2017 | Engineer[118] |
Awaken | Fleshkiller | Producer[119] | |
"Chopin" | Hege Bjerk | 2018 | Producer[60] |
Witness | Samuel Ljungblahd | 2019 | Lead vocal producer[120] |
"Broken People" | Commandment 11 | 2020 | Composer, lyricist[121] |
Kan me stoppa tiå | Hege Bjerk | Vocals, vocal production,[61] producer on "Chopin'"[60] | |
"Come, Let Us Adore Him" | Redeemed | Guitar[122] | |
"Byen vår" | Amanda Rusti, Winona Løver, and Malekko | 2021 | Producer[123] |
"Angels" | Redeemed, Jens Andreas Kleiven | Guitar[124] | |
"Heaven is on My Side" | The Doodo | 2022 | Composer[125] |
"Kom Igjen" | Lisleby Barnesgospel | Composer[126] | |
Revisited Sessions | Ole Børud | 2024 | Producer[127] |
"High Life Dream" | Dane Donohue | Rhythm and lead guitar, keyboards[128] | |
"Lonely Day in Paradise" | Dane Donohue | Lead guitar, keyboards[128] | |
"Månestrålevakker" | Håkon Audun | 2025 | Producer[129] |
References
Further reading
External links
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