Bluegrass Beyond Borders: A Revisit With Strengeplukk

It’s been five years since we checked in with the Norwegian bluegrass band, Strengeplukk. The group, which is based in Oslo — with the exception of mandolin player Andreas Barsnes Onarheim, who is based in Stavanger on the country’s west coast — was founded in 2015 at the music conservatory in Stavanger, where most of the members were studying to be jazz musicians. “Our former banjo player, Thorbjørn Olsen, was the one to introduce many of us to the genre,” Onarheim says. “And for different reasons, we very quickly became pretty much obsessed with it. Everyone was studying their respective instruments. I was an ex-guitarist who had to pick up the mandolin.”

Last year, Olsen, a founding member, left the band, but they quickly recruited Mikael Jonassen to replace him. Currently, the band’s lineup consists of Jonassen (banjo), Onarheim (mandolin), Jakob Folke Ossum (guitar), Nikolai Storevik (fiddle), and Vidar Starheimsæter (bass).

“Everybody in the band sings, but on our upcoming fourth record, everyone does lead vocals on at least one tune,” Onarheim added.

The personnel shift isn’t the only development since we spoke to the band last. “Our sound has changed, depending on which project we are doing,” Jonassen noted. “We have gone through periods diving into traditional, modern, and progressive bluegrass, as well as doing one EP where we recorded traditional Norwegian folk music arranged for a five-piece bluegrass band. A common denominator has always been our Norwegian lyrics, sung in our own Norwegian dialects. This latest project has all the band members featured on lead vocals, and so the dialect variety is bigger than on the previous albums. Each track is arranged differently depending on the song.”

As before, Strengeplukk continue to cull their influences from a variety of sources. “Like many other bluegrass bands of our generation, we find inspiration in both new and old, and of course not just in bluegrass, but in all kinds of genres,” Onarheim continued. “When we started out, we were coming from jazz, and we quickly got sucked into the virtuoso sounds of artists such as Bryan Sutton, Punch Brothers, and Béla Fleck on the progressive side, as well as more traditional powerhouses like Jim VanCleve (who actually mixed one of our previous records!), Bobby Hicks, and, of course, all of the classic greats.”

The band has toured in their native country every year since they started out, and they now estimate that they’ve played around 300 gigs in total. In addition, they’ve performed annually at Norway’s biggest bluegrass festival — or, as they put it, “pretty much the only festival in Norway.” They’ve also played at several country music festivals.

“Two years ago, we split the bluegrass stage at Norsk Countrytreff with Seth Mulder & Midnight Run, which was a blast,” Jonassen recalled. “Lately, we’ve been booked to play bigger non-bluegrass festivals in Norway, which has been very exciting. Now we’re working on how to translate our tried-and-true single microphone setup onto bigger stages. Last year, Andreas built a wireless in-ear rig that we’re still getting used to.”

“Abroad, we have played at Rotterdam Bluegrass Festival and European World of Bluegrass in the Netherlands, and the Nääsville and Grenna festivals in Sweden. With our very Norwegian lyrics, that’s pretty much it for abroad, but all of us have been to other festivals outside Norway as members of other bands. It’s always fun to see non-Norwegian speakers in the audience try to parse our very Norwegian lyrics, and we definitely feel ready to take on the rest of the world… as soon as we finish our translated lyrics handout book.”

“We hope to get to the States soon,” Onarheim added.

Jonassen mentions that in 2021, they went on a large theater tour with Judy Collins and Jonas Fjeld, a legendary Norwegian singer/songwriter. “They were enjoying international success with their album, Winter Stories, and the band they had played with up until that point was Chatham County Line,” he notes. “Travel restrictions during the pandemic made it easier for them to travel with a Norwegian bluegrass band, and we got the gig. We really hit it off, and had some great weeks with them on the road. Getting that chance was great for us, both as a band and as individual musicians. Since then, the band has collaborated many more times with Jonas Fjeld, and our mandolin player Andreas is now a permanent member of his band.”

Meanwhile, the group continues to reap the admiration and appreciation of audiences back home. “Once people get to hear us, they love it and want to come back,” Onarheim adds. “In our experience, very few Norwegians know about bluegrass, but they will always enjoy quality bluegrass if they go see it.”

As mentioned before, the band’s big news is that they are preparing the release of a new album — their fourth so far — early next year. On August 23, they previewed it with its first single, Før kvelden er forbi. “Our previous record, Nålauget (or Eye of the Needle) was a straight-forward bluegrass album,” Onarheim said. “The next one, which we are really excited about, has a lot more variation to it in that each member has brought more of their own personal flavor in the song writing.”

Streneplukk’s three previously albums are Fjellvegen (The Mountain Road) from 2018, Nyslått Blågras (Newly Mowed Bluegrass), a double EP released in 2020, and the aforementioned Nålauget, which appeared last year.

“In a typical Strengeplukk set, we’ll do almost exclusively original songs,” Onarheim mentioned. “The ratio has gradually skewed more towards originals as we have gotten a bigger catalog. That being said, we have been hosting and going to bluegrass jams for a cumulative 50 years, so our bluegrass standard repertoire is, of course even bigger, and we are not strangers to throwing in a few cover songs in a set.”

As before, the band offers its own explanation of why bluegrass has become such a worldwide phenomenon. 

“There are a lot of factors here,” the two agreed. “But here’s a list of things we think contributes to the steady growth of the movement of fans and musicians — that is the bluegrass community. Bluegrass, at its core, is easy to get into for new listeners, the chord structure is simple, melodies are clear and repetitive and also strongly underlined by musicians when they improvise. Joining musicians in a jam has a low threshold, so all that’s needed is just to learn two or three chords. There are a lot of fiddle tunes and songs you can jam along to. Bluegrass musicians and audiences in general are really kind people!”

Du likar det – new single release from Strengeplukk

We have another new bluegrass single this week from Strengeplukk, Norwegian grassers from the city of Stavanger on the country’s southwestern coast. We first discovered their music in 2019 when they were featured in our recurring Bluegrass Beyond Borders column, and are delighted to showcase their most recent release.

The band name loosely translates to “pick the string,” a sentiment we wholeheartedly endorse. This latest single is also in Norwegian, a sure sign of the maturity of the bluegrass scene outside of the United States. In its earliest stages we find new converts singing classic songs in English, emulating artists they admire from recordings of US bands. But as pickers start learning from others in their own region – and language – they begin to write new songs about their own thoughts and experiences, and in their native tongue.

Strengeplukk started playing together in 2015 as guitarist Jakob Folke Ossum, fiddler Nikolai Storevik, and mandolinist Andreas B. Onarheim were exploring their growing interest in the music. Soon Thorbjørn André Bilstad Olsen joined them on banjo and the band was on its way. They are joined by Vidar Starheimsæter on bass.

Du likar det is the title of this new single which translates as You’ll Like It, and is a sort of missionary tale to their fellow Norwegians, encouraging them to catch the bluegrass fever.

Thorbjørn offered this rough translation of the chorus.

you’ll like it when you hear it
you gear up when it’s fast
you’ll like it when you see it
it is almost a sport
just let it happen, just stomp along
so the dirt flies off your boot
it’s not the last time I’ll be singing a bluegrass song
if there’s banjo, I’m sold

It seems they explained it perfectlyand in the driving bluegrass style that never fails to win people over.

Have a listen…

Du likar det is available as a single from popular download and streaming services online. You can learn more about Strengeplukk by visiting their web site.

Track Premiere: Havly from Strengeplukk

Last summer we introduced our readers to Strengeplukk, a Norwegian bluegrass group based in Stavanger, on the southwestern coast of the Scandinavian nation.

This week they are releasing their second EP in 2020, an all-instrumental project called Nyslått Gras, which translates to “freshly cut grass.” On this project, the band attempts the blending of American bluegrass with Norwegian folk music. The four tracks are compositions from fiddler Nikolai Storevik, who has taken a deep dive into both bluegrass and traditional Norwegian fiddle music, in addition to his jazz studies at the University of Stavanger, where the band members first met in 2015.

Storevik says that the merging of the styles wasn’t a simple thing, and that they worked hard to pull it together.

“The two genres are in some ways very similar, but in other ways very different from one another, and it has taken a lot of experimentation to get to this combination of the two genres. The experimentation and will to find new types of musical expressions has led to the establishment of this new sound, made out of old and new traditions.”

Nikolai is joined by Andreas Barsnes Onarheim on mandolin, Thorbjørn André Bilstad Olsen on banjo, Jakob Folke Ossum on guitar, and Vidar Starheimsæter on bass.

Have a listen…

Earlier this summer the band released Blågras, an EP featuring original traditional bluegrass music with Norwegian lyrics. The contrast between that record and Nyslått Gras is quite striking, and taken together show a group of very talented musicians with some very interesting ideas about where our music is headed as it becomes more of an international phenomenon.

Here’s Unik from Blågras.

Blågras is available now from all the popular streaming and download services, and Nyslått Gras will show up on September 3.

Well done, Strengeplukk!

Bluegrass Beyond Borders: Strengeplukk find their niche in Norway

The name Strengeplukk doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue. However the same can’t be said for the music Strengeplukk’s been plying in their native Norway since 2015. Founded by Jakob Folke Ossum (guitar), Nikolai Storevik (fiddle), and Andreas B. Onarheim (mandolin), the band later enlisted Thorbjørn André Bilstad Olsen and Lasse Gjestrud on banjo and bass respectively. Gjestrud left in autumn 2016 and was replaced by Vidar Starheimsæter. Three years later, the band continues to carry on, mining a blend of traditional tunes plucked from the American bluegrass songbook and original compositions utilizing their highly tuned harmonies and instrumental acumen.

The band is based in their hometown of Stavanger, Norway, but for the past three years they’ve toured the country while frequenting the festival scene. To date, they’ve recorded an EP, followed by the release of their debut album Fjellvegen in 2018.

The band members recently agreed to share their influences and insights. Here, in their own words, are their reasons why they became bewitched by bluegrass.

For starters, can each of you share the reasons you were drawn to this particular idiom?

Thorbjørn: For me, it was definitely the banjo. I was struggling with my technique on the guitar, trying to get the style of country and chicken picking. At some point I was trying to learn a guitar arrangement of Foggy Mountain Breakdown, and at that time I figured I’d just borrow a 5-string for the heck of it. Needless to say, I learned to practice through picking up the banjo. Then my focus shifted pretty quickly from country to bluegrass, the latter being the more banjo-heavy genre of the two. I think Doc & Merle’s Home Sweet Home was the first bluegrass album I really wore out on my stereo. After that, I discovered Alison Krauss, Flatt & Scruggs, and Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Will the Circle Be Unbroken was the album that really gave me the feel that bluegrass is a really social and inclusive kind of music. I have been playing the banjo for six years now, and my influences have changed a lot over that time, shifting back and forth between the traditional and the more modern. I always return to the Bluegrass Album Band and the Punch Brothers. I also watch a lot of banjo videos on YouTube, which offers the opportunity to really zoom in on one instrumentalist. I have probably seen every video there is to see that features Noam Pikelny, although I hope someone can please prove me wrong.

Jakob: I was starting my second year at the University of Stavanger, studying jazz guitar, and I was kind of searching for some fresh music to add to my musical repertoire, and also trying to find some new inspiration. I was checking out country and chicken picking stuff on the guitar. I was already playing a lot of jazz music together with Nikolai but I was just starting to get into bluegrass, and he taught me a couple of fiddle tunes. Then the ball just started rolling. When I heard Bryan Sutton, I was simply amazed. Then Tony Rice, Doc Watson, David Grier, and Michael Daves sealed the deal.

Nikolai: I was inspired to look into bluegrass after watching a concert performed by Thorbjørn’s and Andreas’ first bluegrass band. I then started listening to artists like Tony Rice, Sam Bush, Jerry Douglas, Bela Fleck, and Mark O’Connor. Because of my background in Norwegian folk music, and my jazz music studies at the University of Stavanger, it didn’t take long to learn the musical language of bluegrass. Jakob and I jammed a lot together at the time, everything from jazz standards to free improvised music, but we soon started playing more and more bluegrass.

Andreas: Before Thorbjørn introduced me to bluegrass, I didn’t have any relationship to the genre, other than that I knew it existed. He introduced me to everything from Punch Brothers to Bill Monroe. 

Is bluegrass unique in your country?

Thorbjørn: I would say yes, pretty unique. There are probably two handfuls of serious and active bluegrass bands now, and they are all pretty underground, except Øystein Sunde, who is a well known artist among most Norwegians, and responsible for writing many hit songs. He has an album named Kjekt å Ha which actually features Béla Fleck, Mark O’Connor, and Jerry Douglas. These days, there is also an Americana wave in our popular music culture, and hopefully bluegrass isn’t too far away.

Nikolai: There are some bands that are more or less influenced by bluegrass, but only a few that really study the tradition.

Jakob: I think the bluegrass scene in Norway has grown a lot over the past 10 to 15 years or so. The movie O Brother, Where Art Thou probably had some effect.

Is there any connection between bluegrass and the folk music that is native to Norway?

Nikolai: In my Masters thesis in music performance, the goal was to write music that contained elements from both Norwegian folk music and bluegrass. So I had to study the history of both genres. There is no direct connection between the genres until more recently, when some Norwegian folk musicians began picking up some bluegrass in their music. There is a historical connection to the extent that both genres have roots in European folk music. A fairly small part of the Norwegian folk music is influenced by the folk music on the British Isles, so there is a little connection there. Other than that, the folk music from the British Isles and the Norwegian folk music have both been influenced by folk music and dance trends from the European continent throughout history. There is little documentation of the impact Norwegian folk has had on the folk music from the British Isles and vice versa, but there might be some, considering that Norway and Great Britain have been connected through trade. When it comes to the impact Norwegian folk has had on the American folk music, it is not very likely there has been any at all, considering that the Norwegian fiddlers that emigrated to the US didn’t settle in Appalachia, but rather in states like Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and North and South Dakota. It should be mentioned though that the West Norwegian fiddle style and the old-time fiddle style do have some technical similarities in that they both use a lot of drone notes. The tunes are in major keys, and the dance music has a lot of rhythmical drive. I think the biggest difference in the melodic language between the genres lies in the African influence on American folk music — blues, pentatonic scales, syncopated rhythms, and, of course banjos — something which Norwegian folk music hasn’t had at all. 

What has been the audience reaction to yourmusic?

Thorbjørn: It is mostly very positive. People usually think it is exciting and new, as well as familiar and relatable. And they very much like the one-mic setup!

Andreas: The reaction is often, “I never knew I liked bluegrass this much.”

Nikolai: Norway has a high number of bands and artists relative to its number of inhabitants, and because of that, it’s hard to stand out. But because bluegrass is still so unique in Norway, I believe we have successfully introduced the genre to a lot of new people. Many are fascinated and intrigued by the upbeat tempos, the unusual lyrics about jealousy and murder, and the three-part harmonies. And many people like how we combine traditional bluegrass tunes, more Norwegian folk music-inspired tunes, and also more progressive tunes. This leads people to compare our music to genres that are more common in Norway, like Norwegian folk music, country, singer-songwriter styles, jazz, and Irish folk music. In that way, more people relate to the music.

Jakob: I also feel that the audience is very positive towards our mix of musical genres in our music. This is probably a result of our diverse musical backgrounds, coming from genres such as jazz, rock, country, jazz fusion, and Norwegian folk music.

Where have you performed? Have you been to the States?

Thorbjørn: As of now, we have covered a large part of southern Norway, as well as Longyearbyen (Svalbard). We have also been to Copenhagen, Prague, and at the festival previously known as European World of Bluegrass (EWOB) in Voorthuizen, Netherlands. 

Nikolai: We have also been touring many of the same cities along the western coast of Norway for three years in a row now, so the route has become a tradition!

Jakob: We haven’t been to the States yet, unfortunately. As the lyrics in one of Andreas’ songs – Over Dammen (translated: Across the Pond) goes: “To Kentucky, to Tennessee, that’s the dream, that’s where we want to be, but for that we need money.” So, if we go to the states, this song will become invalid, and we won’t be able to play it anymore. We would really like to go soon.

Have you had a chance to play with any notable musicians from the bluegrass world?

Thorbjørn: Last year we got to jam with Jeff Scroggins & Colorado at the Norwegian bluegrass festival, Strenger i Gress, where they spent the week tutoring and performing. This year, at the same festival, I picked a handful of tunes together with Thomas Haglund, who was Jimmy Martin’s fiddler from ‘76 to ‘78. Also, our bass player, Vidar, got to jam with Sierra Hull, Pete Rowan, Rob Ickes, and Trey Hensley on stage when we attended luthier Rosta Capek’s and Ivana Capkova’s wedding in the spring of 2018. 

Nikolai: Jakob and I have been lucky enough to get to jam with the musicians of Special Consensus as well. That session, and the sessions with Jeff Scroggins & Colorado, have been some of my best musical experiences so far. Hoping for many more!

Jakob: I also got to pick a few tunes with Brennen Leigh and Noel McKay at this years Strenger i Gress festival. Great musicians and really inspiring!

To sum up, why do you think bluegrass has such worldwide appeal?

Nikolai: I think the reason for the genre’s popularity among musicians is because the music can be performed on different skill levels, and it can still provide a feeling of challenge, a sense of achievement, and a joy of playing together with other people.

Andreas: The music is theoretically easy to understand, and amateurs and professionals can jam together, without any difference in skill levels being a problem. The one-mic setup, which we use, also gives the “wow-factor” to the audience. People say that it makes our performance look playful and action-packed.

Jakob: Besides, how can one not like the banjo?!

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