Weber, Eberhard

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Eberhard Weber

Bassist, composer

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Eberhard Webers distinctive bass playing and compositional skills have earned him critical accolades and invitations to collaborate with a variety of musicians in the worlds of jazz and popular music, including vibraphonist Gary Burton; guitarists Baden Powell, Stephane Grappelli, Pat Metheny and Ralph Towner; saxophonist Jan Garbarek; and songwriter and singer Kate Bush. With the release of his first solo record for ECM in 1973, The Colours of Chloe, Weber differentiated himself from other jazz and fusion bassists by eschewing walking bass lines that recall such American musical forms as rhythm and blues, jazz, and blues. Instead of using the bass to create the rhythm of a musical piece, Weber focused on using his instrument to create a distinctive melody, which has prompted comparisons to contemporary classical and new music, and has classified his music as distinctly European. Weber achieved his distinctive bass sound by adding a fifth string to his electric bass in the early 1970s. Later in that same decade, he added a sixth string in order to expand his aural palette.

Weber began playing cello when he was six years old. Instructed by his father, he played the instrument exclusively until 1956, the year he first heard Bill Haleys Comets, a band that prominently featured the upright double bass on such songs as Rock around the Clock. He began playing upright bass that he was in his high school, and began practicing on the instrument when he was 16 years old. When I started to pick up the bass, it was purely by random chance, Weber told Innerviews online writer Anil Prasad. There was a double bass always standing in the corner never being played. One day, the music teacher said I wish somebody could play this bass. since I started becoming interested in jazzand knowing you couldnt really play jazz on celloI volunteered.

Weber began playing in jazz ensembles and school orchestras before forming a duo with pianist Wolfgang Dauner. We pretty quickly developed a German Bill Evans-style triosimilar to the one with Scott LaFaro and Paul Motian, without playing that well of course, Weber told Prasad. This was very different to what the other people who played in Germany were doing. The pair met when both played at the Dusseldorf Amateur Jazz Festival in the early 1960s, and performed together during the early part of the decade as a duo and a trio with Fred Braceful before forming the band Et Cetera with Dauner. Weber also had opportunities to record with Baden Powell in 1967 and Stephane Grapelli in 1971.

In the early 1970s, Weber worked with Dave Pike, and was coleader of the band Spectrum with Volker Kriegel. He left Spectrum after becoming dissatisfied with the rock-oriented direction of the band. He also wanted to experiment with his new invention, which he called the electrobass, an acoustic, solid-body, long-neck Italian bass that he modified with an electronic soundbox to create a richer bass sound than had ever been

For the Record

Born on January 22, 1940, in Stuttgart, Germany.

Began playing double bass as main instrument, 1956; participated in the Dusseldorf Amateur Jazz Festival, 1961-63; joined jazz group Et Cetera, mid-1960s; added fifth string to electric double bass, 1972; performed with Dave Pike Group, 1972-73; recorded The Colours of Chloe, 1973; coleader of jazz group Spectrum, 1973-74; formed group Colours, 1974; member of the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble, 1975-1987; recorded Pendulum, 1993; recorded Endless Days, 2001.

Addresses: Record company ECM Records, Postfach 600 331, 81203 Munich, Germany.

achieved on traditional versions of the instrument. I realized I could put pick-ups on my double bass, but found out when you play at a certain volume, you suffer from feedback because of resonance from the body, Weber explained to Prasad. So, it was only logical to find an instrument which has no feedback. There was a solid body I saw in an antique shop. It was totally broken but I got it repaired. I added a pick-up and thought From now on, this is my instrument.

Weber released his first solo album, The Colours of Chloe, in 1973, which became one of the most successful and critically acclaimed albums in the history of Webers label, ECM. The success of The Colours of Chloe caused Weber to form a touring ensemble, which he named Colours, and included Rainer Brun-inghaus on piano, as well as Charlie Mariano and Jon Christensen, who was later replaced by John Marshall. He toured the United States with Colours in 1976, 1978, and 1979. It was also in the mid-1970s that Weber began performing with the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble.

Throughout the 1980s, Weber was a member of tenor and soprano saxophonist Jan Garbareks band. Webers 1982 release, Later That Evening, included keyboardist Lyle Mays, guitarist Bill Frisell, and Oregon saxophonist Paul McCandless. In 1984, Weber released Chorus, an album featuring Garbarek. Structured as a seven-part musical composition, the album prompted a WNUR critic to state: This is not an album to set the world on fire, but it will put it out nicely afterwards. Though Weber has done wonderful things with both live and studio multi-tracked bass, this is still my favorite of his albums. Highly recommended. Weber also increased his international audience in the 1980s through his musical contributions to the Kate Bush albums The Dreaming, Hounds of Love, and The Sensual World. She called me once when I was in Hamburg, Weber told Prasad. I couldnt even believe it was her. The hotel had a message from Kate Bush and I called her back. She told me she loved ECM music in general and my music in particular. She wanted me to participate in one of her albums. She sent me a tape of the two tracks she wanted me to play on and asked me to think about countermelodies.

For Webers 2001 album, Endless Days, the bass player requested that his guest musiciansincluding McCandless, pianist Rainer Bruninghaus, and drummer Michael DiPasqua play everything, as long as it doesnt sound like jazz, resulting in an album that more resembles classical chamber music, with McCandless performing tenor saxophone on only one song, and performing oboe, English horn, and bass clarinet on the remaining songs. The presence of DiPasqua on Endless Days is notable for ending the drummers 14 years of retirement, and provided the occasion for 52nd Street critic Don Williamson to note: While Bruninghaus often fades into the overall scenic perspectives that Weber establishes, especially on the chordless descending notes of Nuit Blancheor while McCandless and Bruninghaus create a long-toned orchestral effect on The Last Stage of a Long Journeyits DiPasqua who fills in the finishing touches with a limited martial beat or with splashes and shimmers. The ethereality of the works finally are tethered once DiPasqua defines their rhythmic bases. Williamson noted that DiPasqua was convinced to join the project after hearing Webers tapes of the albums compositions, and regarded the album as further evidence of Webers professional accomplishments, which he described: Far removed from the crusty Ken Burns concept of jazz, Eberhard Webers advancement of the form depends upon a European view that values reflection as much as impetuousness, omnivorous absorption of numerous styles as much as adherence to a rigid form and logic as much as creativity. Endless Days confirms the uniqueness of Webers style as he develops an even broader imaginative expansion.

Selected discography

The Colours of Chloe, ECM, 1973.

Yellow Fields, ECM, 1975.

Following Morning, ECM, 1976.

Silent Feet, ECM, 1977.

Fluid Rustle, ECM, 1979.

Little Movements, ECM, 1980.

Later That Evening, ECM, 1982.

Chorus, ECM, 1984.

Orchestra, ECM, 1988.

Pendulum, ECM, 1993.

Endless Days, ECM, 2001.

Sources

Books

Kernfield, Barry, editor, The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Second Edition, Grove Dictionaries, Inc., 2002.

Larkin, Colin, editor, The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, MUZE, Inc., 1998.

Online

Eberhard Weber, All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (October 24, 2002).

Eberhard Weber, VH1.com, http://www.vh1.com/artists (October 29, 2002).

Eberhard Weber: Chorus, WNUR, http://www.wnur.org/jazz/artists/garbarek.jan/ecm1288.html (October 24, 2002).

Eberhard Weber: Endless Days, 52nd Street, http://www.52ndstreet.com/justjazz/weber_endlessdays.html (October 24, 2002).

Eberhard Weber: Endless Days, Pop Matters, http://www.popmatters.com/music/reviews/w/webereberhard-endless.html (October 24, 2002).

Eberhard Weber: Foreground Music, Innerviews, http://www.innerviews.org/inner/weber.html (October 29, 2002).

MusicWeb Encyclopedia of Popular Music, http://www.musicweb.uk.net/encyclopaedia/w/W42.HTM (October 24, 2002).

Bruce Walker