Hannes Zerbe
Hannes Zerbe (born 17 December 1941) is a German jazz composer and pianist.
Life[]
Zerbe was born in Litzmannstadt. After studying electrical engineering, he studied piano and musical composition at the Hochschule für Musik "Hanns Eisler" and the Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber. He has been a professional musician since 1969.
From 1985 to 1987, he was a master student for composition with Paul-Heinz Dittrich at the Akademie der Künste der DDR. Zerbe has organised and led international workshops and tours in the fields of jazz and improvised music since the late 1970s.
Zerbe was a member of the group (with Conny Bauer, Christoph Niemann and Peter Gröning) and the quintet Osiris (by with , and ). In 1979, he founded his large-scale "Hannes Zerbe Blech Band"[1] with which compositions by Hanns Eisler were also performed. From 1980, he also played in a duo with the tuba player Dietrich Unkrodt, and from 1995 in a duo with the clarinettist . Furthermore, Zerbe was involved in text-music projects with actors, directors and singers (for example Lauren Newton), including Bert Brecht, Ingeborg Bachmann, Kurt Schwitters and Heiner Müller.[2]
He has worked with other contemporary jazz musicians (including Willem Breuker, , ), Charlie Mariano, , , Klaus Koch and Gebhard Ullmann. Since 1996, he has led the Berlin "Jazzorchester Prokopätz",[3] which performs compositions by Eisler, Weill, Breuker and Zerbe in big band format. Experiences with this workshop line-up flowed into the "Hannes Zerbe Jazz Orchester", founded in 2011. In a duo with the saxophonist Dirk Engelhardt, he also improvises on poems by Gottfried Benn.[4]
Among other works, Zerbe wrote a Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra and Reflections on Eisler's Winter Battle Suite. He also composed for film.[5]
Zerbe is also involved in political contexts. With his ensemble and with the actor Rolf Becker in the cultural programme of the Rosa Luxemburg Conference of the left-wing daily newspaper junge Welt, he arranged the performance of Das Floß der Medusa – Requiem für Che Guevara by Hans Werner Henze.[6]
Recordings[]
- Blech Band (Amiga 1984)
- Rondo a la Fried (BVHaast 1992)
- Ochsenkarren with Unkrodt and the (1994)
- Brecht: Alles wandelt sich with Gina Pietsch (vocals) and Jürgen Kupke (clarinet) (1991)
- Jazzorchester Prokopätz (2005)
- Peter Hacks: Was träumt der Teufel with Gina Pietsch (Ohreule 2009)
- Hannes Zerbe Jazz Orchester Eisleriana (2011 )
- Hannes Zerbe Jazz Orchester Erlkönig (2013 JazzHausMusik)
- Hannes Zerbe/Jazz Orchestra Berlin: Kalkutta (2017 JazzHausMusik)
Radio play music[]
- 1992: Peter Groeger (Kinderhörspiel – DS Kultur) : König und Besenbinder – direction:
Further reading[]
- ISBN 3-15-010528-5. (ed.), unter Mitarbeit von : . Reclam, Stuttgart 2003,
- Jürgen Wölfer: Jazz in Deutschland. Das Lexikon. Alle Musiker und Plattenfirmen von 1920 bis heute.[7] Hannibal, Höfen 2008, ISBN 978-3-85445-274-4.
References[]
- ^ "Hannes Zerbe Blech Band" on AllMusic
- ^ Helmut Sachse, Hannes_Zerbe on Sens Critique
- ^ "Jazzorchester PROKOPÄTZ" on bigbanddirectory
- ^ Besprechung Eisleriana (Rondo)
- ^ Hannes Zerbe on Music Brain
- ^ junge Welt, 18 December 2019, p. 5.
- ^ Jazz in Deutschland : das Lexikon ; alle Musiker und Plattenfirmen von 1920 bis heute on WorldCat
External links[]
- Official website
- Homepage von 'Prokopätz'
- Hannes Zerbe discography at Discogs
- 20th-century classical composers
- German jazz composers
- German jazz pianists
- 1941 births
- Living people
- People from Łódź
- 20th-century jazz composers