Malika Makouf Rasmussen
Malika Makouf Rasmussen | |
---|---|
Born |
Algiers, Algerie | 27 February 1965
Origin | Norway |
Genres | Contemporary, world |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer, writer |
Instruments | Percussion, guitar, bass guitar, vocals |
Labels | New Music |
Website |
www |
Malika Makouf Rasmussen (born 27 February 1965 in Algiers, Algerie) is a Norwegian/Algerian/Franch musician (percussions, bass, guitar, keyboards and voice), composer and music producer.[1]
Early life
Rasmussen was born 1965 in Algiers, Algeria, to Algerian-Norwegian parents. Her family left Algeria and stayed in Budapest, Hungary, for a year before in 1970 they ended in Norway. Rasmussen started to play classical guitar at the age nine and later picked up the electric bass. When fifteen she went to stay in Paris for a year with her father. She resided in Fredrikstad after returning to Norway, and was involved in different bands there. She studied music at Sønstevold Institute of Music and at nineteen she graduated from Greåker Music College.[2]
Career
Rasmussen started her professional career in Paris, France (1985). During this period she was inspired by the creative friction emerging when people of different backgrounds are put together, and she found the way back to what she has described as her roots and began to develop a musical expression within the then new genre termed world music. When she returned to Oslo in the 1990s, she worked as a session musician and initiated several of her own band projects beside musical and cultural studies at Telemark University College and the Norwegian Academy of Music.[2][3]
She has toured widely in Europe and Africa, and has performed at a number of festivals and concert halls around the world, like the Harare International Music and Film Festival, Olympia Paris, Tune In (Stockholm), Great Bear (New York), MELA (Oslo), Vanløse Kulturhus (Copenhagen).[2]
Rasmussen has collaborated on numerous recordings and has released four solo albums, Exit Cairo (2006) including with Bugge Wesseltoft and Mari Boine,[4] On Club (2008), Urbanized (2010) and So Easy So High (2012). Today (2016) she plays a number of instruments and is working on a master of philosophy at the University of Oslo.[3]
Honors
- 2009: Gammleng-prisen in the Open category
Discography
Solo albums
- 2006: Exit Cairo (New Music)
- 2008: On Club (New Music)
- 2010: Urbanized (New Music)
- 2012: So Easy So High (New Music)[1]
Collaborations
- With Schoultz & Makouf
- 1998: Touch (Self release)
- With Mari Boine
- 2006: Idjagieðas (In The Hand of the Night) (Composer)
- With Queendom
- 2002: Queendom (music producer)
- With Team Maroon
- 2003: The R.I.S.E. (music producer)
- With Modern Rhythmic Team
- 2003: Desert Dance 2001 Dualisme (music producer)
- With Women's Voice
- 2004: Women's Voice (music producer)
- With Miriam Aziz
- 2007: We're Inside Out (Rock Pixie Records) (music producer)
- 2009: Transito (Rock Pixie Records/New Music) (music producer)
- With Line Peters
- 2008: Tell Me How the Story Goes (New Music) (music producer)
- 2009: Mindfight (music producer)
- With Women's Voice International Music Network
- 2009: Dodoma (music producer)
- With Cuantum Force
- 2011: Soul Particles (Charles Mena) (music producer)
Single albums
- With Charlott Schoultz
- 1998: By Mistake[4]
References
- 1 2 "Malika Makouf Rasmussen". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
- 1 2 3 Kjøll, Georg; Forsgren, Arne (8 April 2015). "Malika Makouf Rasmussen". Store Norske Leksikon. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
- 1 2 Rasmussen, Malika Makouf (20 November 2015). "Malika Makouf Rasmussen: – Kjære venn, er du trygg?". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2016-02-19.
- 1 2 "Malika Makouf Rasmussen". Rockipedia.no. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
External links
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Anneli Drecker |
Recipient of the Open class Gammleng-prisen 2009 |
Succeeded by Alfred Janson |