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One of the most gifted jazz trumpeters of her generation, Canada's
Ingrid Jensen has earned accolades for her forward-thinking post-bop jazz. Influenced by the progressive style of artists like
Woody Shaw,
Art Farmer, and
Kenny Wheeler,
Jensen arrived on the international jazz scene in the early '90s and won a Juno Award for her 1994 debut Vernal Fields. Often playing with her husband, drummer
Jon Wikan, and sister, saxophonist
Christine Jensen, she has issued a handful of highly regarded albums, like 2005's At Sea and 2011's Spirals, that display her love of harmonically adventurous improvisation and atmospheric group interplay.
Born in 1966,
Jensen grew up in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada. Introduced to music at a young age, she played trumpet throughout elementary school but became more serious about jazz in her teens. After high school, she further honed her skills studying jazz on scholarship to the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Graduating in 1989, she moved to Europe where she toured with the
Vienna Art Orchestra and taught at Austria's Bruckner Conservatory. Following a tour with
Lionel Hampton, she returned to the States, where in 1994 she joined the all-female big band DIVA. Also that year, she signed a recording contract with Enja and released her debut album, Vernal Fields, featuring altoist
Steve Wilson, tenor saxophonist
George Garzone, pianist
Bruce Barth, bassist
Larry Grenadier, and drummer
Lenny White. Well-received, the album showcased her harmonically sophisticated, motivic style of playing and earned her the Juno Award for Best Traditional Jazz Album. Two more highly regarded albums followed on Enja with 1997's
Here on Earth and 1999's
Higher Grounds.
Over the next few years,
Jensen continued her work with DIVA and played with artists like
Virginia Mayhew,
Maria Schneider, and
Dena DeRose. In 2003, she issued her third album as leader, the funky organ-jazz production Now as Then, on the Justin Time label. Featured on the album were keyboardist
Gary Versace and her longtime collaborator, drummer
Jon Wikan (whom
Jensen married the following year). At Sea followed in 2005 and once again featured
Wikan, along with keyboardist
Geoff Keezer, bassist
Matt Clohesy, and guitarist
Lage Lund. With 2007's Flurry,
Jensen introduced her cooperative Nordic Connect ensemble with her sister
Christine Jensen on saxophone,
Wikan on drums,
Mattias Welin on bass, and
Maggi Olin on keyboards. The group returned in 2011 with Spirals. Also that year, the trumpeter played on her sister's Juno Award-winning Treelines.
Along with various teaching and leading workshops,
Jensen has worked on projects with pianist Ellen Rowe, drummer
Terri Lynne Carrington's Mosaic Ensemble, vocalist
Dianne Reeves, pianist
Helen Sung, and others. In 2015, she paired with pianist
Jason Miles for the loosely
Miles Davis-inspired
Kind of New. The following year, she collaborated with her sister and guitarist
Ben Monder on Infinitude. In 2018, she celebrated the music of late British trumpeter
Kenny Wheeler on
Invisible Sounds: For Kenny Wheeler. ~ Matt Collar