Terje Rypdal has long had an unusual style, mixing together elements more commonly found in new age and rock than in jazz; yet he is also an adventurous improviser. Associated with the ECM label since the early '70s,
Rypdal's playing is definitely an acquired taste, using space and dense sounds in an unusual manner. Classically trained as a pianist,
Rypdal was largely self-taught on guitar and originally most influenced by
Jimi Hendrix. He attended Oslo University, where he was taught the Lydian chromatic concept of tonal organization by its author,
George Russell.
Rypdal played with
Russell for a time and started an association with
Jan Garbarek in the late '60s. He formed the group
Odyssey in 1972, and has led various small groups since the mid-'70s. An important guitarist and composer in Norway,
Terje Rypdal gained a cult following in the United States. He recorded steadily for ECM since 1972 (using such sidemen at times as
Garbarek, pianist
Bobo Stenson, trumpeter
Palle Mikkelborg, bassist
Miroslav Vitous, drummer
Jack DeJohnette, and cellist
David Darling). His two earlier sessions (for the Karusell label in 1968, and a notable 1969 Baden-Baden, Germany, concert put out by MPS) are more difficult to find. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide