Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Bragi Ólafsson

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Name
  
Bragi Olafsson

Role
  
Musician


Education
  
University of Iceland

Music group
  
The Sugarcubes

Bragi Olafsson dgrassetscomauthors1266855634p51432189jpg

Books
  
Sendiherrann, The pets, The Ambassador

Nominations
  
Nordic Council\'s Literature Prize

Albums
  
Life\'s Too Good, The Great Crossover Potential, Here Today - Tomorro, Stick Around for Joy, It\'s‑It

Similar People
  
Einar Orn Benediktsson, Þor Eldon, Bjork, Ray Shulman

Reykjavi k writing jam bragi o lafsson


Bragi Ólafsson (born 11 August 1962 in Reykjavík, Iceland) is a musician and a writer.

Contents

Bragi Ólafsson Bragi var listamannalaunum egar hann skrifai bk fyrir tvalda

Internationally he is best known for his work as a bassist in The Sugarcubes, the avant-garde pop band from Iceland that brought fame to Björk, who went on to solo success with her unique brand of diverse musical genres.

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The Sugarcubes, who favored strange, offbeat melodies, came together in 1986, but the Sugarcubes' members had played together in different combinations in various Icelandic groups before. Bragi and Einar Örn Benediktsson (trumpet / vocals) had released records on Einar's own label, Gramm. In 1986 Bragi also launched his writing career, publishing his first book, a poetry volume called Dragsúgur (Draught).

Bragi Ólafsson Bragi Olafsson Babelio

In 1992 The Sugarcubes disbanded as Björk began her solo career. Bragi, meanwhile, has continued to work on Bad Taste Ltd., the company formed by the Sugarcubes to publish poetry and sign other bands but is no longer a practising musician.

Bragi Ólafsson SEEING THE WORLD THROUGH BOOKS Blog Archive Bragi OlafssonTHE PETS

He enjoys considerable success as a novelist, playwright and poet in Iceland, having twice been nominated to the Icelandic Literature Prize.

Bragi Ólafsson Reykjavk Writing Jam Bragi lafsson YouTube

Books Translated into English

  • The Pets (translation Janice Balfour. Open Letter, New York. 2008)
  • The Ambassador (translation Lytton Smith. Open Letter, New York. 2010)
  • References

    Bragi Ólafsson Wikipedia