Bruno K. Öijer

Swedish poet
  • Carl Emil Englund-priset
    1991
  • De Nios Vinterpris
    1995
  • Bellmanpriset
    1999
  • Sveriges Radios Lyrikpris
    1999
  • De Nios stora pris
    2002
  • Erik Lindegren-priset
    2002
SpouseMaya Eizin Öijer

Bruno Keats Öijer (born 26 November 1951 in Linköping, Sweden) is a contemporary Swedish poet.

Biography

Öijer was born in Linköping in 1951. His first collection of poems, Sång för anarkismen (lit. Song for Anarchism) was published in 1973.[1]

Öijer is perhaps most appreciated as a stage performance poet, and he has made notable appearances in front of large audiences.[2] During the 1970s, he was a part of poetry group Vesuvius.[1]

In 1986, Öijer, along with Bryn Settels, released the LP shade coming. He has on several occasions collaborated with the Pork Quartet, which played with him, among other things, when performing "Sketches for one of the speech of death" on television. On June 6, 2003, he performed in conjunction with the group Kent's concert at Stockholm Stadium. Öijer's poems have also been toned by several Swedish composers. These include Molly Kien, Håkan Larsson, Martin B Svensson, Tomas Winter, Hans Ek, Henrik Strindberg, Ylva Skog, Joakim Sandgren and Kim Hedås.[3]

One of his appearances was that in Stockholm on June 6, 2003, at the occasion of the national day concert by Kent.

Bibliography

  • Sång för anarkismen (lit. Song for Anarchism, poetry collection, 1973)
  • Fotografier av undergångens leende (lit. Photographs of the Smile of Destruction, poetry collection, 1974)
  • c/o Night (poetry collection, 1976)
  • Chivas Regal (novel, 1978)
  • Spelarens sten (lit. The Gambler's Stone, poetry collection, 1979)
  • Giljotin (lit. Guillotine, poetry collection, 1981)
  • Medan giftet verkar (lit. While the Poison Takes Effect, poetry collection, 1990)
  • Det förlorade ordet (lit. The Lost Word, poetry collection, 1995)
  • Dimman av allt (lit. The Mist of It All, poetry collection, 2001)
  • Svart som silver (lit. Black as Silver, poetry collection, 2008)
  • Och natten viskade Annabel Lee (lit. And the Night Whispered Annabel Lee, poetry collection, 2014)

External links

  • Öijer fan-page

References

  1. ^ a b "Bruno K. Öijer". Wahlström & Widstrand (in Swedish). Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  2. ^ Bäckström, Per. Aska, Tomhet & Eld. Outsiderproblematiken hos Bruno K. Öijer, Lund: Ellerström (Ph.D.-thesis), 2003.
  3. ^ "Swedish Music | Sökresultat". 2014-05-03. Archived from the original on 2014-05-03. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
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