Artist's albums
Plays Monk
2000 · album
Good Morning Susie Soho
2000 · album
Winter in Venice
1999 · album
From Gagarin's Point of View
1999 · album
Intromotion
1997 · album
E.S.T. Live
1995 · album
When Everyone Has Gone
1993 · album
Live in Gothenburg
2019 · album
Live in London
2018 · album
301
2012 · album
Retrospective - The Very Best of E.S.T.
2009 · compilation
Leucocyte
2008 · album
E.S.T Leucocyte
2008 · album
e.s.t. Live in Hamburg
2007 · album
E.S:T. Tuesday Wonderland
2006 · album
Viaticum Platinum (Live)
2005 · album
Viaticum
2005 · album
Seven Days of Falling
2003 · album
Strange Place for Snow
2002 · album
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Biography
How to sum up the legacy of e.s.t. in words? As a jazz band, they created some of the most popular, enduring, forward-thinking and simply enjoyable music the genre has seen for many years. Over the course of a dozen albums, both studio and live sessions, Esbjörn Svensson (p), Dan Berglund (b) and Magnus Öström (dr) captured the hearts and minds of music lovers around the globe with their innovative and imaginative approach to the classic piano trio setting. And yet they were so much more than just a ‘jazz’ band – their music confounded the expectations of audiences, blew away preconceptions about where the boundaries between genres lie, and introduced countless non-jazz listeners around the world to the idea that instrumental, improvised music could be as intelligent, interesting, satisfying and accessible as more traditionally popular styles. Their tunes could encompass the energy and hypnotic thrall of dance music, the drive and riotous power of rock, or the meditative solemnity of quiet chill-out electronica. Esbjörn Svensson’s tragic death in June 2008, at the age of just 44, shocked the music world. Jazz had lost an ally, an ambassador. Unwilling to squeeze themselves into a particular box or niche, e.s.t.’s was a universal sound that had something any listener could connect with, regardless of where they’d come to it from.