Artist

Agneta Baumann

Genre: Jazz ,Vocal
Origin: U.S.A
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Born in Kalmar, Sweden, in 1944, Baumann participated in both her school choir and its jazz band during childhood. Once her studies ended, she performed regularly in hotels and restaurants, where she cultivated a following as an engaging live act. Although pop formed the core of her initial focus, she grew increasingly attentive to jazz vocalists such as Billie Holiday, Carmen McRae, Anita O’Day and Sarah Vaughan. A period of non-musical employment followed, yet from the mid-1960s she achieved recognition as a member of the Golden Girls, a Motown Records-style ensemble based in Copenhagen. In 1968 she launched her own career as a solo singer and bandleader, and by the close of the decade she was performing widely across Sweden, Scandinavia and northern Europe. During the late 1970s, collaborations with pianist Knud Jørgensen and bassist Bengt Hanson further solidified her standing as a jazz vocalist.

After her husband’s death in 1986, Baumann withdrew from public performance for several years, returning to the stage only in 1995. Now devoted exclusively to jazz, she built a steady audience in Stockholm and soon regained popularity in the same regions where she had previously succeeded as a pop artist three decades earlier. Her first jazz recording appeared in 1996; the following year she was awarded a scholarship by Laila and Charles Gavatin’s Foundation for Jazz Music. Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s she appeared at festivals in Copenhagen, Helsinki, Krakow, Moscow and Warsaw while continuing to anchor her work in Stockholm. Among the musicians who have accompanied her are bassists Hans Backenroth and Palle Danielsson, pianists Gösta Rundqvist and Lasse Bagge, trumpeter Bosse Broberg, tenor saxophonist Anders Lindskog and drummer Johan Löfcrantz. Baumann’s fluid tone and poised, occasionally stately phrasing lend themselves especially to ballads, where her reading of lyrics remains both supple and emotionally resonant.