HEDVIG MOLLESTAD TRIO (nor)

HEDVIG MOLLESTAD TRIO (nor)

Tzschirnerplatz 3-5, 01067 Dresden, Germany, Tzschirnerplatz 3, 01067 Dresden, Deutschland, Directions

Wed 16.09.2026 20:00

Der wohl kompromissloseste und unterhaltsamste Prog-Jazz der Welt

Sieben gefeierte Alben innerhalb eines Jahrzehnts, euphorisch aufgenommenen Tourneen durch Europa und Nordamerika – seit seiner Gründung 2009 hat das HEDVIG MOLLESTAD TRIO um die namensgebende norwegische Gitarristin den Jazz vom Kopf gewaltig auf die Füße gestellt.

Gemeinsam mit Bassistin Ellen Brekken und Drummer Ivar Loe Bjørnstad vereinte Mollestad die unmittelbare Energie des Hard Rock mit der harmonischen Raffinesse des Jazz zu einer hochexplosiven Mischung, für die Musikjournalisten Begriffe wie „Stonerswing“, „Doomjazz“ oder „Jazz Sabbath“ prägten.

Nach dem triumphalen Album "Ding Dong. You're Dead" (2021) gönnte Hedvig Mollestad dem Trio jedoch eine vierjährige Pause. Untätig war die hochkreative Bandleaderin in dieser Zeit keineswegs: Sie realisierte fünf große Auftragsarbeiten, veröffentlichte zwei Alben unter eigenem Namen, gründete das Power-Impro-Trio Weejuns mit Ståle Storløkken und Ole Mofjell, war Artist in Residence beim Moldejazz-Festival und komponierte neue Musik für den Stummfilm „Limité“ (Brasilien, 1931).

Doch im Trio, mit dem alles begann, steckt Hedvig Mollestads Herzblut. Und so meldete die Band sich 2025 mit dem großartigen Album "Bees In The Bonnet" und dem wohl kompromisslosesten und zugleich unterhaltsamsten Prog-Jazz der Welt endlich wieder zurück: Fetter, ausdrucksstarker Gitarrensound, gewaltige Riffs, donnernde Drums und ein schmutziger, verzerrter Bass – das Trio hat die Verbindung aus präziser Riffkunst und offener Improvisation perfektioniert und klingt so abenteuerlich wie ansteckend. Deutlich hört man dem HEDVIG MOLLESTAD TRIO die große Freude an, wieder zusammen zu spielen und mit telepathischer Chemie, nuancierter Klangdichte und erhebender Energie die Grenzen zwischen Progressive Rock, Jazz und schwerer Psychedelia einfach davonzufegen.

Das HEDVIG MOLLESTAD TRIO sind:

Hedvig Mollestad Thomassen (Gitarre)

Ellen Brekken (Bass)

Ivar Loe Bjørnstad (Drums)

Performers

  • Jazzclub Tonne
    Jazzclub Tonne

    Mehrfach wöchentlich bringt die Tonne Top-Musiker:innen auf die Livebühne des Clubs und präsentiert dem Publikum Künstler:innen, die die internationalen Szene prägen, ebenso wie Musiker:innen, die in Dresden leben und hier den Ton angeben.

  • Hedvig Mollestad Trio
    Hedvig Mollestad Trio

    Hedwig Mollestad Thomassen is a Norwegian guitarist, composer, and improviser active in both the hard rock and jazz scenes. She leads her own trio with bassist Ellen Brekken and drummer Ivar Joe Bjørnstad, and has collaborated with jazz and rock artists. Her sound is comprised of hard rock and heavy metal elements -- in particular the influence of Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin -- and the skronky jazz sounds of improvisers such as Sonny Sharrock, James Blood Ulmer, and Pete Cosey, evidenced by the albums All of Them Witches in 2013 and Black Stabat Mater three years later. 2019's Smells Funny was recorded live in studio to capture the band's live energy. A year later, Ekhidna showcased Mollestad apart from her trio, leading a quintet that included Elephant9 drummer Torstein Lofthus, and Portuguese trumpeter Susana Santos Silva. In November she issued Tempest Revisited performed by a septet. Thomassen was born in Ålesund, Møre og Romsdal, Norway in 1982. She began playing guitar at the age of ten on her mother's nylon-string instrument. While she had no "formal" musical education to speak of, her learning ground was her father's extensive jazz and rock & roll record collection. Still in high school, she translated a biography of Jimi Hendrix for a school project. She immersed herself not only in his groundbreaking work, but also in the guitar styles of everyone from Jimmy Page to Sonny Sharrock, Fred Frith to Pete Cosey, and John McLaughlin to Carlos Santana. Before forming her trio, she collaborated with a wide swath of musical personalities and ensembles including the Bronco Busters, Sweet Potatoes, Vom, and her own early Mollestad Trio. Her recording career began as a guest on the Cumshots' (environmental activist musicians Kristopher Schau and Ole Petter Andreassen) fourth album, A Life Less Necessary, in 2009. She also immersed herself in improvising and playing jazz, and won the Jazztalentprisen for Young Jazz Talent of the Year at the Molde International Jazz Festival in Norway that same year. She formed the Hedwig Mollestad Trio with Brekken and Bjørnstad immediately after. In 2010, she appeared as a guest soloist on Jarle Bernhoft's cassette-only offering 1:Man 2:Band. Her trio's debut album, Shoot!, appeared on Rune Grammofon in 2011, and was widely acclaimed for its bracing mix of hard rock, metal, and free jazz. Later that year she appeared as a soloist on the Trondheim Jazz Orchestra's Migrations, on the Jon Eberson Group's The Coarse Sand & The Names We Wrote, and Hilde Marie Kjersem's Let's Let Go. In 2012, Mollestad (on guitar and Hammond B-3) became a member of Andreassen's rangy, revolving, progressive supergroup El Doom & The Born Electric. The band's members also included Ståle Storløkken, Eberson, brothers Håvard and Brynjar Takle Ohr on drums and guitar, respectively, bassist Nikolai Hængsle Eilertsen, and Mikael Lindquist on Mellotron. They issued a self-titled album on Rune Grammofon. Her own trio played at the Steinkjerfestivalen that summer. The Hedwig Mollestad Trio's sophomore recording, All of Them Witches, was released in 2013 to universal acclaim in jazz, avant-garde, and indie rock circles. She also recorded a studio album with the Trondheim Jazz Orchestra entitled Ekko that year, and she appeared with them live. In June of 2014, the HM3 issued its third album, Enfant Terrible. The band's sound continued to evolve through its live performances as Mollestad and her band embraced more improvisational music and free jazz. Its rock dynamism remained inherent, however. In 2016, the double-length Evil in Oslo and the studio set Black Stabat Mater, were both released by Rune Grammofon. After its release, the group's focus began to shift again, moving toward avant-jazz, even as they opened for Black Sabbath and guitarist John McLaughlin on festival stages across Europe. In 2018, Mollestad's trio issued Smells Funny for Rune Grammofon, a reappraisal of hard rock that showcased the guitarist's growing reputation for original riffs and deep, unwieldy, emotional solos. For 2020's Ekhidna, Mollestad stepped away from the comfort of her longstanding trio for the first time. She assembled a quintet from friends on the Norwegian scene including Elephant9 drummer Torstein Lofthus, Portuguese trumpeter Susana Santos Silva, jazz keyboardists Marte Eberson and Erlend Slettevoll, and percussionist Ole Mofjell. The expansive approach that seemingly married the aesthetics of Black Sabbath to John McLaughlin's early brand of fusion landed on critics' year-end lists across the globe. The guitarist returned with her reunited trio for 2021's Ding Dong. You're Dead. just nine months later, showcasing a different dynamic: In addition to exclusively playing riff-heavy jazz fusion, Mollestad offered more nuanced originals with a wider dynamic range. Brekken added an acoustic bass guitar and upright to signature electric bass, while drummer Bjørnstad revealed his more nuanced jazz chops alongside his propulsive rockist drumming. In November, Mollestad issued Tempest Revisited, her third release in 18 months. The studio recording's roots date back to 1998 as her label Rune Grammofon (still in its infancy) released Electric, the collected electronic works of Arne Nordheim, one of Norway's greatest composers. That same year, parts of The Tempest, arguably his most well-known work, were chosen to be performed at the opening of Parken, a new arts and culture venue in Ålesund, Mollestad's birthplace. In 2018, in celebration of its 20th anniversary, they asked Mollestad to perform the work. Inspired equally by the score and her own connection to the mountainous region's sometimes-extreme weather conditions, she electrified the audience. A year later she entered a recording studio with a three-piece horn section that included saxophonists Amalie Dahl (who also played flute), Martin Myhre Olsen, and Mona Krogstad, along with keyboardist Marte Eberson, bassist Trond Frønes, and drummer Ivor Loe Bjørnstad. Using Nordheim's score and the memory of that performance as her muses, she released her most gentle and lyrical outing to date, Tempest Revisited. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi

  • Hedvig Mollestad
    Hedvig Mollestad

    Hedvig Mollestad Trio:

    A Sonic Odyssey of Jazz-Rock Fusion

    Hedvig Mollestad Trio is not your average band. Their music defies genre boundaries, captivating audiences with its uncompromising blend of jazz, rock, and everything in between. Often described as "Jazz Sabbath," their sound is a lovechild of Mahavishnu Orchestra and Black Sabbath, with a touch of Terje Rypdal and King Crimson thrown into the mix. But labels aside, what truly sets this trio apart is their ability to make you throw your hands in the air and grin from ear to ear, or nod along with a cold beer in hand, feeling like life is at its peak.

    Their live performances are legendary, exuding an energy that's infectious and a joy that's palpable. As Rolling Stone aptly puts it, "The Hedvig Mollestad Trio delivers avant-guitar adventure with an exuberant sense of occasion, live and on record. Feel free to come as you are."

    Whether you're a jazz aficionado, a rock enthusiast, or simply someone who loves great music, Hedvig Mollestad Trio invites you to join them on their sonic odyssey – A journey as bone-crunchingly powerful as it is graciously poetic.