Bubi Aderhold

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Kurt Horst Erich "Bubi" Aderhold (born February 28, 1924 in Lüneburg ; † August 17, 2008 in Bergisch Gladbach ) was a German jazz musician ( clarinet , tenor, later baritone saxophone , also flute and alto flute).

Live and act

At the age of 15, Aderhold first completed an apprenticeship as a clarinetist with music director Paul Huhn. After a 7-month stay at the Vogt Conservatory in Hamburg, he continued his education until he was called up in 1942 at the Braunschweig State Music School . This was followed by a series of concerts with Joe Wick and his dance orchestra, which was on the way to look after the Allied troops in Germany. With other musicians in this band, he switched to Kurt Edelhagen's orchestra in 1948 , first to play for the Bavarian Radio in Nuremberg and then for the Südwestfunk in Baden-Baden . Shortly after Edelhagen moved with his orchestra to Westdeutscher Rundfunk in 1957 , he was primarily used there on the baritone saxophone and increasingly doubled it with the flute. He stayed with Edelhagen until his death in 1982. This was followed by freelance work at Ferdy Klein and Peter Herbolzheimer .

In the field of jazz, Aderhold was involved in 92 recordings between 1948 and 1991. He is on numerous jazz recordings, a. a. heard by Dusko Goykovich and the Francy Boland Orchestra (1976). As part of Peter Herbolzheimer's big band, he played with Dizzy Gillespie in 1985 ; as a long-time member of the Edelhagen Big Band, he took part in numerous radio and recordings, performances, festivals and tours (1964 in the Soviet Union , 1965 in Lebanon , 1966 in Cairo and Alexandria ) and played with the Edelhagen Orchestra in 1972 at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Munich .

In addition, he also worked as a studio musician for about Berry Lipman , for Herbert Grönemeyer ( Zwo ) and Wolfgang Niedecken ( musical beats ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Liner Notes for Kurt Edelhagen Rhapsody in Jazz (1954)
  2. Tom Wohlert: Musicians, Doers, Machos, Mafiosi: From Amateur Musicians to Cologne's Studio Scene , 2010, p. 86
  3. See Tom Lord Discography
  4. Tom Wohlert: Musicians, Macher, Machos, Mafiosi , 2010, p. 137