Christan Griego provides us with his thoughts
on jazz trombone artist Craig Klein.
I met Craig Klein while he was on the Come By Me tour with Harry
Connick Jr. He called saying that he would be in Madison,WI and
wanted to try some of the jazz trombones we were making. We got
together and after a few weeks of work, we found a good fit and
got him on the road with his new Edwards. He introduced me to
the other trombonists in the group and Lucien Barbarin soon fell
in love with an Edwards jazz bone and made the plunge into modularity
via a .508 bore horn. Craig did more than introduce me to his
fellow workers, he played me some music that changed the way
I viewed the trombone in music. "Brass band music is the
roots of New Orleans music," Craig explained to me as he
gave me a Storyville Stompers CD. Listening to the music kept
a constant smile on my face. The trombone sounds were inventive
and kept me wanting more.
Craig Klein and Lucien Barbarin
Craig introduced me to the Storyville Stompers, Nightcrawlers,
and Mulebone, which have all found their way into my car and
home CD players. I have not tired of listening to these CD's
and enjoy them daily. A few months back Craig let me know of
a new group Bonerama that consists of five trombones, sousaphone,
and drums. You can find there website here. After you recover
from the shock of opening the CD and get the disc into the
player you will be pleasantly surprised by the upbeat music that will
hit your ears. Where Brass band music meets Rock is a way to
try and describe it. You can purchase the Bonerama CD from
the website as there is a link to a Louisiana music shop in New Orleans
that can take care of your needs. For information about some
of the other groups, check out www.neworleansnightcrawlers.com,
which has free MP3 files on the site.
Craig Klein, Lucien Barbarin, Mark Mullins, David Miller, and
Brian O'Neil are the current trombonists on tour with Harry
Connick Jr. Everyone able should try to catch them in concert
if they come to your area. The musicians are treated in many
ways as equals on stage and are given a lot of artistic license
to shine in their individual ways. The soundman mixes the band
incredibly and I have never been disappointed in the performances
that I've seen.
Craig just found a new T302 and made his older Edwards a back
up horn. His new horn has a new satin finish that is probably
the most beautiful Edwards I've put together to date. You
can count on seeing more of this finish in the future.
Craig Klein is an Edwards Performing Artist/Clinician. If you
are interested in booking him for a clinic or performance, you
can reach Craig at craig@neworleansnightcrawlers.com.
Loving His Job...
Arabi Trombonist Takes Music on the Road
Article appears courtesy of The Times–Picayune
© 2000 - The Times-Picayune. Reprinted with permission.
When Craig Klein of Arabi attends a Harry Connick Jr. concert,
you might say he has one of the best seats in the house – onstage,
in the band, playing the trombone. For the past two years, Klein,
39, has been one of the 16 members of Connick's big band
touring to promote the Come by Me album. He's been to Australia
and Japan, Europe and throughout the United States. When Klein
returns home to his wife and four children, he's anything
but idle. The prolific musician, who also plays tuba, counts
membership in at least six local bands, including the Storyville
Stompers and the New Orleans Night Crawlers, which recently released
its third CD. Klein, an East Jefferson High School graduate who
grew up in Metairie, also plays with Harry Connick Sr.'s
band at Tipitina's in the French Quarter. He works about
30 gigs per month and is called out frequently to play on recordings
of artists including Bruce Hornsby, Tori Amos and The Neville
Brothers.
Craig Klein and Lucien Barbarin
A trombone player since the third grade, Klein grew to be a
teen who hung out at Preservation Hall while his buddies headed
to Pat O'Brien's. He credits his introduction to
serious music to his uncle, Gerry Dallmann, also a professional
trombone player. "Through my uncle I met a lot of old New
Orleans musicians," Klein said. "They brought me
to see things like the second lines in the Treme neighborhood.
That's real New Orleans street music; there's nothing
else like it." Klein graduated with a degree in marketing
from Southeastern Louisiana University in 1984, began selling
real estate and playing music on the side. His break came in
1990.
Harry Connick Jr. had a hit with the soundtrack from the movie
When Harry Met Sally, and was looking to put a big band together
to tour for six months, Klein said. Some New Orleans musicians
recommended Klein for a spot, and one day, Klein got a call from
Connick and his musical director. "They said ‘You
can send a tape or play something over the phone,' " Klein
said. "I told them to hold on." Klein grabbed his
trombone and played a few bars of a favorite New Orleans song. "And
when I picked up the phone, they said ‘OK, you got it.'" The
international tour lasted four years, during which the band recorded
Connick's Christmas CD, among others. It was a turning
point in Klein's career. "Playing with Harry is like
nothing else, it's a whole ‘nother level," Klein
said. "He demands perfection, and he's very talented,
almost geniuslike."
Connick writes his own arrangements on a computer program, sometimes
introducing the pieces to his band only hours before they perform.
On stage, each musician has his own computer with his own music,
instead of stacks of sheet music. When Connick begins a concert,
he'll tell the band the first two songs they'll play.
The rest he decides along the way, depending upon the feel of
the audience, Klein said. "The order of the show is never
set. We have about 60 songs – and usually play half that
in a two hour concert. Harry just calls out what he wants to
do or plays a few keys on the piano – and you just go from
there. It's the highest level of concentration I've
ever experienced," Klein said. Despite the implied glamour
of touring internationally, Klein said he doesn't want
or get celebrity treatment from his family or friends. "It's
just a job, I'm just lucky to be doing it," he said. "To
be able to play music is a blessing. It's something not
many people really do.
"There's a small community of musicians in the world," he
said. "It's rewarding to be a part of that and to
play for people who appreciate it. If you can communicate through
music, that's pretty rewarding."
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