Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Klaus Weiss R.I.P.

13 views
Skip to first unread message

Marcus A. Woelfle

unread,
Jan 6, 2009, 3:38:53 PM1/6/09
to
Klaus Weiss, one of Germany's foremost drummers died December 11, 2008 in
Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm.
Strangely no obits yet, but there's a biography in English from
http://www.jazzrecords.com/klausweiss/

Best,
Marcus
Klaus Weiss
A profile by Mike Hennessey

It is said that you can judge the quality of a man by the company he keeps
and, on that basis alone, drummer Klaus Weiss can make valid claim to
pre-eminence in his particular field of endeavour. Because Klaus Weiss has
kept some pretty distinguished musical company in the course of a career
which has spanned four decades.

His musical associates have included Benny Bailey, Cecil Bridgewater, Don
Byas, Philip Catherine, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Jerry Dodgion, Klaus
Doldinger, Kenny Drew, Booker Ervin, Wilton Gaynair, Herb Geller, Dusko
Goykovic, Johnny Griffin, Friedrich Gulda, Slide Hampton, Billy Harper,
Hampton Hawes, Clifford Jordan, Herbie Mann, Howard McGhee, Don Menza, Tete
Montoliu, George Mraz, Sal Nistico, Walter Norris, Horace Parlan, Bud
Powell, Jerome Richardson, Tony Scott, René Thomas, Mal Waldron, Leo Wright
and Attila Zoller.

In the post-war years, when American jazz musicians began touring Europe in
increasing numbers and playing with local rhythm sections, they found their
biggest problem was to find drummers who had a good sense of time and were
both sensitive and supportive.

When Klaus Weiss began his professional career in 1958, good drummers in
Europe were still very few and far between. Weiss, however, found favour
with visiting jazz stars because, as Johnny Griffin observed, "he is one of
the few European drummers with that distinctive American feeling."

Born in Gevelsberg, Westphalia, on February 17, 1942, Klaus Weiss taught
himself to play drums and began his professional career at the age of 16 as
a member of the Jazzopators, a group which accompanied American trumpeter
Nelson Williams and also singer Inez Cavanaugh.

From 1962 to 1965 he worked with Klaus Doldinger and during this time he had
a spell in Paris, where he worked in the famous Blue Note club with Bud
Powell, Johnny Griffin and Kenny Drew.

In 1965 he formed a trio which backed American saxophonists Don Byas and Leo
Wright and Jamaican Wilton Gaynair. That same year Weiss toured with a group
that included Sal Nistico and Dusko Goykovic and also played some dates with
Don Menza.

The following year Weiss's trio, now with pianist Rob Franken and bassist
Rob Langereis, toured with Booker Ervin. That same year Weiss won the
International Jazz Competition in Vienna.

After a spell with the Erwin Lehn Big Band (1967 - 68), Klaus Weiss moved to
Munich, joined the Bayerischer Rundfunk Jazz Ensemble led by Joe Haider and
appeared many times at Munich's celebrated Domicile club. In the late
sixties and early seventies, he became increasingly active as a studio
musician. In 1971 he worked with a multi-national quartet which featured
American bassist Jimmy Woode, Dutch saxophonist Ferdinand Povel and Austrian
pianist Fritz Pauer, and in the autumn of that year toured with an all-star
orchestra which included Slide Hampton, Don Menza, Herb Geller, Fritz Pauer,
Philip Catherine and Chuck Findley.

This ensemble recorded an album, I Just Want To Celebrate, at the Domicile
jazz club in Munich for the MPS label in November 1971 and, in his liner
note, Friedrich Gulda wrote: "The formula is: Get a good dozen of the best
musicians from both sides of the Atlantic, get some top arrangers to write
the charts, rehearse (not too little, not too much), put the aggregation on
the bandstand in a sympathetic club . and then set the whole affair afire
with your drumming.
Simple, uh?
"Well, it isn't. Because such a venture requires of its leader more than
purely musical capabilities: it involves nerve-wrecking preparations. Like
phone calls to musicians who never seem to be at home or just moved to
another apartment; bribing the customs officer into letting you have the
arrangements before the job, not after.convincing the club owner that
although soft lights may be good for business, they are bad for reading
music.etc.,etc.
"Very few people have the determination and the nerves to go through all
this and much more..Klaus Weiss has."

Those observations say a lot about the other attributes of Klaus Weiss. He
is an industrious and painstaking organizer who has always recognized that
while spontaneity is a crucial element in jazz performance, also
indispensable is the creation of an atmosphere in which the musicians can
perform free of tension and stress, an atmopshere in which mutual
inspiration and stimulus can flourish. And that takes, as Gulda noted, a lot
of perseverance, determination and dedication.

In the first half of the 1970s, Klaus Weiss worked with the Horst Jankowski
Sextet, the trio of former Mingus saxophonist Bobby Jones and the Eugen
Cicero Trio. From 1975 to 1977 he toured with Mal Waldron and with the Dusko
Goykovic Big Band and then, between 1978 and 1983, Weiss led a quintet which
featured various guest soloists, including Sal Nistico, Roman Schwaller,
Clifford Jordan and Andy Scherrer. He also played with Catalan pianist Tete
Montoliu, with Eddie "Lockjaw Davis" and with the WDR and NDR big bands.

In the 1980s toured with Clifford Jordan and Horace Parlan, played with
multi-instrumentalist Jerome Richardson and toured with his new quintet. In
1984 he recorded a big band album, "Lightnin' " which was nominated for the
Süd West Funk Jazz Prize.

In 1991 Klaus Weiss formed a new trio with pianist Rob van Bavel and bassist
Thomas Stabenow and also put together the Saxophone Connection group (with
Roman Schwaller, Andy Scherrer, Dado Moroni and Thomas Stabenow) which
recorded a fine album for L&R Records (Bellaphon).

In a highly varied career, Klaus Weiss has made 17 albums under his own
name, with formations ranging from trio, quartet, quintet and sextet to full
orchestra, and has appeared on numerous other albums as a sideman.

Weiss's musical philosophy is that good jazz music - which means jazz played
by consummate professionals who have a powerful rapport with one another and
the same sense of musical direction - is a highly durable music. He says:
"Count Basie's music will still be up to date 50 years from now."

Perhaps one of the most perceptive comments about Klaus Weiss's drumming
comes from Belgium's Jean Warland, one-time bassist with the celebrated
Clarke-Boland Big Band whose drummer was, of course, the legendary Kenny
Clarke.

In the liner note to Weiss's 1988 album, A Taste Of Jazz, (which, for me,
along with the 1991 L. .A. Calling, is one of the most impressive of a
highly attractive collection), Warland said of Klaus:
"Every time I have the possibility of playing with him, it feels as if we
were simply continuing a conversation we had left off a few weeks or months
ago.As a bassist, I always enjoy working with him. because his drumming
relieves you of all worries and cares - the rhythm is simply there. There
are no unnecessary fills, only a well-balanced drum and cymbal sound which
expresses Klaus Weiss's admiration of Kenny Clarke. In other words, Klaus
Weiss is a drummer in the great jazz tradition."

And, reviewing L. A. Calling in the American magazine Cadence, Dave
McElfresh wrote that Klaus Weiss "exhibits a power and personality more
exuberant than most of his peers on the instrument."

It is significant that Klaus himself defines his approach to drumming as
directly derived from some of the great American drummers which he began
listening to in the early 1950s.
Says Klaus: "For me, the essence of great jazz drumming was epitomized by
those giants, like Big Sid Catlett, Klook, Blakey, Buddy and Philly Joe.
These have all been listening drummers, each with his own personality, but
having in common a great ability to swing, to generate excitement, and to
stimulate the soloists. And besides their sound and way of playing, I got
really interested in the American drum rudiments because, as I discovered at
the time, all great American drummers know and use those essential
rudiments - but few of the European drummers in the fifties seemed to have
assimilated these elements - at least, to my ears."

There speaks Klaus Weiss, a most accomplished musician who happens to be a
drummer - and who is still one of the most swinging and sympathetic drummers
in Europe today.


0 new messages