A highly regarded Danish jazz bassist,
Jesper Lundgaard is known for his warm, understated style and deft approach to modern jazz and standards. Since arriving on the scene in the 1970s,
Lundgaard has appeared on numerous albums with such leading jazz players as
Paul Bley,
Doug Raney, and
Chet Baker. He has also led his own intimate sessions including 1994's This Bass Was Made for Walking, 2002's Two Basses with
Mads Vinding, and 2013's
Love & Peace: The Music of Horace Parlan.
Born in 1954 in Hillerød, Denmark,
Lundgaard initially started out on the guitar, then switched to the bass around age 16. In the late '70s, he studied music at Århus University and gigged locally, playing often in pianist Bent Eriksen's trio. It was during this period that he met and played with a bevy of performers including Danish notables like
Jesper Thilo,
Thomas Clausen, and
Niels Jørgen Steen, along with American players including
Dexter Gordon,
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis,
Harry "Sweets" Edison, and many others. In 1978, he joined the
Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra for a three-month tour, after which he followed
Jones and settled in Copenhagen. Along with
Lundgaard's continued association with
Jones, he took a job in the house band at La Fontaine Jazz Club and worked throughout the city playing with names like
Teddy Wilson,
Benny Carter,
Mose Allison, and
Stanley Turrentine. In 1979, he made his recording debut on
Duke Jordan's Time on My Hands for the
Steeplechase label.
Over the next decade, the bassist found himself an in-demand live and session player, recording albums with artists such as
Frank Foster,
Chet Baker,
John McNeil,
Warne Marsh, and
Kirk Lightsey, to name a few. Also during the '80s, he was a member of the Radiojazzgruppen,
Ernie Wilkins' big band,
Thad Jones' big band, and the
DR Big Band. He also performed regularly with
Doug and
Jimmy Raney,
Paul Bley, and
Duke Jordan. As a leader,
Lundgaard made his recording debut in 1994 with This Bass Was Made for Walking. He followed it up with co-lead sessions like 1995's Playing in the Breeze alongside trumpeter
Thomas Fryland and guitarist
Jacob Fischer, and 1999's Fine Together, with
Fischer and saxophonist Anders Lindskog.
Lundgaard also formed the Repertory Quartet with saxophonist
Bob Rockwell, issuing a number of albums like 1995's Turn Out the Stars: The Music of Bill Evans, 1996's Plays Ellington/Strayhorn, and 1998's Plays Mingus/Pettiford.
Away from performing,
Lundgaard stayed active teaching and holding master classes in various conservatories in Denmark, Rotterdam, Zürich, and Helsinki. In 2002, he joined drummer
Alex Riel and pianist
Kenny Werner for Celebration (an album marking
Riel's 60th birthday), and then followed up with albums with
Svend Asmussen,
Jan Lundgren, and Thomas Claussen. He joined fellow bassist
Mads Vinding for 2005's Two Basses, and led his own trio for 2007's Plays Cornelis.
Lundgaard then backed tenor player
Scott Hamilton for 2011's Scott Hamilton Meets Jesper Thilo, as well as for the saxophonist's 2013 outing Swedish Ballads & More with Jan Lundgren. In 2015,
Lundgaard issued the trio date 60 Out of Shape, featuring pianist
Enrico Pieranunzi and drummer
Riel. ~ Matt Collar