MUSICIAN

Jens Johansson

1963 - Today

Photo of Jens Johansson

Icon of person Jens Johansson

Jens Ola Johansson (born 2 November 1963 in Stockholm) is a Swedish keyboardist and pianist. In the early 1980s he and his brother Anders (drums) played on Yngwie Malmsteen's Rising Force. Johansson is the son of the Swedish Jazz pianist Jan Johansson. Johansson has also worked with the guitar player Allan Holdsworth. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jens Johansson is the 1,441st most popular musician (down from 1,359th in 2019), the 783rd most popular biography from Sweden (down from 753rd in 2019) and the 18th most popular Swedish Musician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jens Johansson by language

Loading...

Among MUSICIANS

Among musicians, Jens Johansson ranks 1,441 out of 3,175Before him are Ralph Siegel, Henry Jackman, Jim Keltner, Ismaël Lô, Ivan Král, and Rudolf Firkušný. After him are Jörg Michael, Peter Tägtgren, José María Ventura Casas, Bob Ezrin, Dominic Miller, and Blind Blake.

Most Popular Musicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1963, Jens Johansson ranks 275Before him are Jørn Andersen, Clint Mansell, Olha Bryzhina, Claudio Chiappucci, Jan Arnald, and Dario Marianelli. After him are Jörg Michael, Ivan Capelli, Nina Ananiashvili, Vladimir Solovyov, Yoko Kanno, and Koichi Wakata.

Others Born in 1963

Go to all Rankings

In Sweden

Among people born in Sweden, Jens Johansson ranks 783 out of 1,879Before him are Gustaf Skarsgård (1980), Margaretha Krook (1925), Nils Karlsson (1917), Bengt Berndtsson (1933), Uschi Digard (1948), and Gustaf Weidel (1890). After him are Lennart Samuelsson (1924), Axel Cadier (1906), Peter Tägtgren (1970), Bertil Antonsson (1921), Stellan Nilsson (1922), and Frithiof Mårtensson (1884).

Among MUSICIANS In Sweden

Among musicians born in Sweden, Jens Johansson ranks 18Before him are Åse Kleveland (1949), Jan Johansson (1931), Tor Aulin (1866), Anders Johansson (1962), Ola Brunkert (1946), and Karin Dreijer (1975). After him are Peter Tägtgren (1970), Max Martin (1971), Quorthon (1966), Tim Sköld (1966), Esbjörn Svensson (1964), and Mic Michaeli (1962).