Lennie niehaus biography

Lennie Niehaus

American saxophonist and composer (–)

Musical artist

Leonard Niehaus (June 1, – May 28, )[1] was an American alto saxophonist, composer and arranger on the West Coast jazz scene. He played with the Stan Kenton Orchestra and served as one of Kenton's primary staff arrangers.[2] He also played with Ray Vasquez and trombonist and Vocalist, Phil Carreon and other jazz bands on the U.S.

West Coast. Niehaus had a close association as composer and arranger on motion pictures produced by Clint Eastwood.[3][4][5][2]

Life and career

Education and active years as a musician

Niehaus was born in St. Louis, Missouri on June 1, to Aaron "Père"and Clariss (Weissman) Niehaus.

His mother was a homemaker. His father, a Russian immigrant, was a violinist who played in an orchestra that accompanied silent films in theaters.

Active as a composer and a muse to Eastwood until late in life, Niehaus died May 28, said Owen Sheeran, his son-in-law. When the crowds thinned out in the s as rock took over the airwaves, Niehaus turned to Hollywood, and ultimately, Eastwood. I had always heard advanced chords, listening to my sister and father play romantic era music. Those we lost in A remembrance.

In the mids, after talking pictures had taken hold, he moved the family to Los Angeles, where he played in Hollywood studio orchestras. His sister was a concert pianist. His father started him on violin at age seven, then he switched to bassoon. At thirteen, Niehaus began alto saxophone and clarinet, about this time he began composing.

In , after graduation from Roosevelt High School, Niehaus started to study music at Los Angeles City College later earning a music education degree from Los Angeles State College in as part of the school's first full graduating class. Niehaus began his professional career arranging for and playing alto saxophone with Phil Carreón and His Orchestra in the Los Angeles area.

Members of the band included saxophonists Herb Geller, trombonist Ray Vasquez, Herbie Steward, and saxophonist Teddy Edwards.[6][7][8][9]

Stan Kenton Orchestra

After completing college in , Niehaus got his start with the Stan Kenton Orchestra and toured with the band for six months out on the road.

  • His association with Kenton was interrupted as he was drafted into the Army in and served at Fort Ord in California. After being discharged in , he rejoined Kenton for five years as the lead alto saxophonist.[3] He composed and arranged extensively for the Kenton band being a feature soloist and having numerous arrangements featured on Kenton's Capitol Records releases.

    He had the longest and most recorded tenure of any of the lead alto players with the group, including such players as Charlie Mariano, Lee Konitz, Gabe Baltazar, and Tony Campise. Niehaus left the Kenton orchestra as an instrumentalist in to pursue music composition in the studio; “I put my horn away and started writing instead.”[10] He continued to serve as a staff arranger for Kenton into the s.

    He would go on during that time to write and arrange music for entertainers acts such as the King Sisters, Mel Tormé, Dean Martin, and Carol Burnett.

    Orchestrating and composing for television and film

    By the age of 33, in , he began orchestrating for television and film composer Jerry Fielding. Niehaus worked with Fielding on approximately seventy TV shows and films like Hogan's Heroes, Charlie’s Angels and McMillan & Wife. Films on this list include Straw Dogs (), Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia () by Sam Peckinpah, the comedy The Bad News Bears (), and the horror film Demon Seed ().

    Lennie Niehaus - Biography - IMDb: Bill Perkins came in and played like Lester. Niehaus wrote the score for Pale Rider , directed by Eastwood, and went on to write the scores for the next 12 films directed by Eastwood, including the box-office hits, Heartbreak Ridge , Unforgiven and the classic The Bridges of Madison County. Louis, Missouri. In Columns.

    After Fielding’s death Niehaus came into his own as a leading film composer; he always did his own orchestrating for his scores, not using any ghost writers.[11]

    In his film scores, Niehaus never forgot his jazz roots. The story of the film City Heat () was set in the s, so he wrote jazz of that period, hiring people like altoist Marshal Royal.

    Bill Perkins came in and played like Lester Young; a jazz violinist sounded like Stéphane Grappelli. There was also a boogie woogie sequence with three pianists - Pete Jolly, Mike Lang, and co-star Clint Eastwood.[12]

    Work with Clint Eastwood

    With Clint Eastwood, Niehaus had probably his most significant professional relationship.

    Lennie niehaus biography Both found they had a passion for jazz music. Early in Dick Meldonian recommended him to Stan Kenton who invited him to audition as a replacement for Art Pepper. The genuine article since I wrote jazz of that period using people like altoist Marshal Royal.

    The two men had first met when serving together in the U.S. Army at Fort Ord during - Both found they had a passion for jazz music. Niehaus had already orchestrated scores for films starring Eastwood like Tightrope (), also produced by Eastwood. But it was not until Eastwood's eleventh film as director, Pale Rider (), that Niehaus actually wrote the first entire score for one of his films.

    Niehaus then wrote the musical scores for the following twelve films up to Blood Work (), and orchestrated the music for the next six features that Eastwood completed, from Mystic River () to Gran Torino (). Niehaus won the BMI Film & TV Awards for Heartbreak Ridge (), Unforgiven (), The Bridges of Madison County (), and Space Cowboys ().

    Lennie niehaus In Features. Clint Eastwood, who produced and directed, reportedly once played for beer and tips in an Oakland, California bar. Article Talk. Those we lost in A remembrance.

    The most substantial collaboration between Niehaus and Eastwood which related directly to jazz was the biographical film on Charlie Parker, Bird. Besides a Golden Globe for Eastwood as best director, an Academy Award for best sound and many others, the score by Niehaus was nominated for a BAFTA Award, and won 2nd place at the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, shared between Niehaus and Charlie Parker, due to a production process that had managed to electronically isolate Parker's saxophone solos from the original recordings and backed them with modern stereo recordings.

    Other awarded film scores

    Lennie Niehaus wrote the music for another jazz related feature, the TV movie Lush Life, in which Forest Whitaker, who played Charlie Parker in Bird, also starred as a jazz saxophonist. Niehaus won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition for a Miniseries, Movie, or a Special.

    In he was nominated again for Oprah Winfrey Presents: Mitch Albom's For One More Day.

    Further works and educational publishing

    His work includes Spiritual Jazz Suite, four pieces arranged for brass quartet, three sets of Christmas Jazz suites (4 pieces in each) and a Christmas Jazz Medley arranged for saxophone quartet.

    On this CD his chops are as great as ever. Categories : births deaths American bassoonists American jazz alto saxophonists American male saxophonists Jewish American musicians Cool jazz saxophonists American male jazz musicians West Coast jazz saxophonists American film score composers American male film score composers American television composers 21st-century American saxophonists 21st-century American male musicians 21st-century American Jews 20th-century American saxophonists. Harris, Dynaflow , pg. Lennie Niehaus in the late s.

    His educational publishing includes a book of classical saxophone duets, a beginning/intermediate/advanced method books for the understanding of jazz technique, and a book of jazz saxophone duets exemplifying jazz styles. After many years of not playing his alto saxophone at all, Niehaus returned to performing, reportedly in top form.[13][14][15] He played saxophone as leader of his octet on his album, Sunday Afternoons At The Lighthouse Cafe ().[16]

    Later life and death

    In addition to his film scores and orchestrations, Niehaus spent his final years playing with jazz combos in the Los Angeles area.

    He died in Redlands, California at the age of Although a cause of death was not disclosed, his son-in-law said that it was likely heart-related.[2]

    Selected discography

    • Volume 1: The Quintets (, 7" & 10"; , Contemporary )
    • Volume 2: The Octet, No.

      1 (, 7" & 10"), Contemporary); LP reissue on Zounds!

    • Volume 3: The Octet, No. 2 (, Contemporary )
    • Volume 4: The Quintets and Strings (, Contemporary )
    • Volume 5: The Sextet (, Contemporary )
    • Zounds! (, Contemporary ); reissue of The Octet, No.

      1 with a further octet recording

    • I Swing for You (, EmArcy )
    • The Lennie Niehaus Quintet: Live at Capozzoli's (, Woofy WPCD96)

    With Stan Kenton

    • Popular Favorites by Stan Kenton (Capitol, )
    • The Kenton Era (Capitol, –54, [])
    • Contemporary Concepts (Capitol, )
    • Kenton in Hi-Fi (Capitol, )
    • Kenton with Voices (Capitol, )
    • Rendezvous with Kenton (Capitol, )
    • Back to Balboa (Capitol, )
    • The Ballad Style of Stan Kenton (Capitol, )
    • The Stage Door Swings (Capitol, )
    • Kenton Live from the Las Vegas Tropicana (Capitol, [])
    • Sophisticated Approach (Capitol, ) as arranger
    • Adventures in Standards (Capitol, ) as arranger
    • Stan Kenton!

      Tex Ritter! (Capitol, ) with Tex Ritter as arranger and conductor

    • Stan Kenton / Jean Turner (Capitol, ) with Jean Turner as arranger
    • Kenton / Wagner (Capitol, )

    Selected television and film scores

    See also

    References

    1. ^Barnes, Mike (June 1, ).

      "Lennie Niehaus, Alto Saxophonist and Frequent Clint Eastwood Collaborator, Dies at 90".

    2. Item 1 of 15
    3. Item 8 of 15
    4. Lennie Niehaus obituary: jazz saxophonist dies at 90 - Legacy.com
    5. Item 1 of 3
    6. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 5,

    7. ^ abcSandomir, Richard (June 10, ). "Lennie Niehaus, Who Set Eastwood's Films to Music, Dies at 90". The New York Times. Retrieved July 30,
    8. ^ ab"Artist Biography: Lenny Liehaus," by Scott Yanow, AllMusic (retrieved December 17, )
    9. ^The Encyclopedia of Jazz in the Seventies, by Leonard Feather and Ira Gitler, Horizon Press (); OCLC&#;
    10. ^The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz
      &#;&#;&#;&#;1st ed.

      (2 vols.), Barry Kernfeld, Stanley Sadie (eds.) (); OCLC&#;
      &#;&#;&#;&#;1st ed. (1 vol.), Barry Kernfeld (ed.) (); OCLC&#;
      &#;&#;&#;&#;2nd ed. (3 vols.), Barry Kernfeld (ed.) (); OCLC&#;

    11. ^The Kenton Kronicles: A Biography of Modern America's Man of Music, Stan Kenton, by Steven D.

      Harris, Dynaflow (), pg. ; OCLC&#;

    12. ^"Interview: Lennie Niehaus" (Part 1), JazzWax, November 9,
    13. ^Beyond Alliances: The Jewish Role in Reshaping the Racial Landscape of Southern California, George J. Sanchez, Bruce Zuckerman (eds.), Purdue University Press (), pg. 39; OCLC&#;
    14. ^"Lennie Niehaus," by Marcia Hillman, The New York City Jazz Record, Issue , May
    15. ^Marble, Steve.

      Obituaries. Los Angeles Times. "Lennie Niehaus, L.A. jazz pioneer and longtime Clint Eastwood composer, dies at 90" JUNE 9, PM

    16. ^Who's Who in Entertainment, 3rd ed., –,New Providence, New Jersey: Marquis Who's Who (); OCLC&#;
    17. ^Contemporary Theatre, Film, and Television. A biographical guide featuring performers, directors, writers, producers, designers, managers, choreographers, technicians, composers, executives, dancers, and critics in the United States, Canada, Great Britain and the world, Vol.

      40, Detroit: Gale Group (); OCLC&#;

    18. ^The Heritage Encyclopedia of Band Music: Composers and Their Music (2 Vols.), by William Harold Rehrig (born ), Westerville, Ohio: Integrity Press ()
      &#;&#;&#;&#;3rd. Vol. Supplement (); OCLC&#;
    19. ^The Penguin Encyclopedia of Popular Music,Donald Clarke (ed.) New York: Viking Press (); OCLC&#;
    20. ^The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 4th ed.

      (8 Vols.), Colin Larkin (ed.), Muze (), Grove's Dictionaries
      &#;&#;&#;&#;"Niehaus, Lennie" OCLC&#;
      &#;&#;&#;&#;"Contemporary Records" OCLC&#;
      &#;&#;&#;&#;"Bird"OCLC&#;
      &#;&#;&#;&#;"Manne, Shelly" OCLC&#;

    21. ^"Lennie Niehaus: Composing for Clint,"Archived April 2, , at the Wayback Machine by Don Heckman, JazzTimes, September

    External links