Tim Weisberg
Tim Weisberg | |
---|---|
Birth name | Jules Timothy Weisberg |
Born | 1943 Hollywood, California, U.S. |
Genres | Pop, rock, easy listening |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Flute |
Years active | 1970–present |
Labels | A&M |
Website | timweisberg |
Jules Timothy Weisberg (born 1943) is an American flutist, vocalist, and record producer.
Career[]
In school he wanted to play drums, but instruments were chosen in order of the students' last names, and when Weisberg got his chance, his choice was bassoon or flute.[1] He chose the latter because it was easier to carry and seemed easier to learn.[1] He was a fan of soul music, which had been using the flute in the 1960s.[1] He studied classical music before playing soul, jazz, and pop.[1] His first experience recording was on The Monkees' album The Monkees Present in 1969.[1]
While working as a studio musician, his debut album was released with a version of "Nights in White Satin" by The Moody Blues.[1] In 1972 he recorded with The Carpenters and two years later appeared on the television programs The Midnight Special and Don Kirshner's Rock Concert.[1] His song "A Hard Way to Go" appeared in Woody Allen's movie Annie Hall.[1] He had a hit song, "Power of Gold", on Twin Sons of Different Mothers (1978), an album recorded with Dan Fogelberg.[1] They collaborated again in 1995 on No Resemblance Whatsoever.[1] Weisberg sued Fogelberg in 1997 for alleged breach of contract and fraud.[2]
Weisberg has performed with David Benoit,[3] Dave Mason, David Arkenstone, and, Eddie Rabbitt.
Other appearances[]
- He appeared on the TV show, The Midnight Special, hosted by Bobby Womack (Season 2, Episode 42), on July 12, 1974.[4]
- He appeared in an ABC TV interview with Dan Fogelberg, in which they discuss their collaboration for the No Resemblance Whatsoever album.[5]
Performances[]
- Winter Park Jazz Festival, Winter Park, Colorado, July 19, 1998.[6]
- Bonnie Raitt - Tim Weisberg concert at Greek Theatre, University of California, Berkeley, September 14, 1980.[7]
- Tom Waits opened for a concert by Tim Weisberg at Ebbett's Field, Denver Colorado, May 17–19, 1973[8]
- Monterey Jazz Festival, Monterey, California, 1970[9]
Awards and honors[]
- Twin Sons of Different Mothers was Certified Platinum by RIAA.
Discography[]
- Tim Weisberg (A&M, 1971)
- Hurtwood Edge (A&M, 1972)
- Dreamspeaker (A&M, 1973)
- 4 (A&M, 1974)
- Listen to the City (A&M, 1975)
- Live at Last! (A&M, 1976)
- The Tim Weisberg Band (United Artists, 1977)
- Rotations (United Artists, 1978)
- Twin Sons of Different Mothers with Dan Fogelberg (Full Moon/Epic, 1978)
- The Best of Tim Weisberg: Smile! (A&M 1979)
- The Tip of the Weisberg (Nautilus, 1979)
- Night-Rider! (MCA, 1979)
- Party of One (MCA, 1980)
- Travelin' Light (MCA, 1981)
- High Risk (Cypress, 1985)
- Outrageous Temptations (Cypress, 1989)
- Naked Eyes (Fahrenheit, 1994)
- No Resemblance Whatsoever with Dan Fogelberg (Giant, 1995)
- Undercover (Fahrenheit, 1997)
- Time Traveler: A Three Decade Journey (Fahrenheit, 1999)
- Another Byte (DreamSpeaker Music, 2015)
As guest[]
With David Benoit
- Digits (Bluemoon 1990)
- Lost and Found (Rhino, 1994)
- Fuzzy Logic (GRP, 2002)
- Full Circle (Peak, 2006)
- Earthglow (Heads Up, 2010)
- Conversation (Heads Up, 2012)
- 2 in Love (Concord, 2015)
With others
- The Carpenters, A Song for You (A&M, 1972)
- Dan Fogelberg, Nether Lands (Epic, 1977)
- Dan Fogelberg, Live: Greetings from the West (Epic, 1991)
- Lani Hall, Sun Down Lady (A&M, 1972)
- Paul Horn, Paul Horn & the Concert Ensemble (Ovation, 1970)
- Inner Circle, Ready for the World (Capitol, 1977)
- Dave Mason, Dave Mason (CBS, 1974)
- The Monkees, The Monkees Present (Rhino, 1994)
- Pousette-Dart Band, Never Enough (Capitol, 1979)
- Terry Reid, Seed of Memory (ABC, 1976)
- David Riordan, Medicine Wheel (Capitol, 1974)
- Daniel Valdez, Mestizo (A&M, 1974)
Singles[]
- 1971 - Long Ago and Far Away/A Hard Way To Go (A&M 1318)
- 1972 - Fog and Spice/For Those Who Never Dream (A&M 1330)
- 1972 - Our Thing/Thyme Cube (A&M 1397)
- 1973 - Killing Me Softly with His Song/Tibetan Silver (A&M 1427)
- 1973 - Do Dah/A Night for Crying (A&M 1493)
- 1974 - Streak Out/Night for Crying (A&M 1520)
- 1975 - Dion Blue/The Visit (A&M 1680)
- 1976 - Gonna Fly Now (Theme from Rocky)/Just for Fun (UA XW933)
- 1977 - Cascade/Gene Jean (UA XW1083)
- 1978 - Every Time I See Your Smile/So Good to Me (UA 1227)
- 1978 - (w/Dan Fogelberg) Tell Me to My Face/Hurtwood Alley (Full Moon 50605) also released by: UK/Full Moon, Australia & Netherlands/Epic
- 1979 - (w/Dan Fogelberg) Power of Gold/Lahaina Luna (Full Moon 50606) also released by: UK/Full Moon, Canada & Japan/Epic
- 1979 - Midsummer's Dream/Moonchild (MCA 40135)
- 1980 - Magic Lady/I'm The Lucky One (MCA 41307)
- 1981 - What's Going On/Page One (MCA 51042)
- 1981 - Sleepwalk/Paula (MCA 51163)
- 1985 - You've Got to Know/Hang Time (Desert Rock 001)
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j Eder, Bruce. "Tim Weisberg". AllMusic. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ "This Day in Music". Billboard. 22 August 2006. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ Blackwell, Morrice (2001). "Featured Artist: Tim Weisberg". Album Review. JazzReview.com. Archived from the original on March 20, 2002. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
- ^ "The Midnight Special". listing. TV.com. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ "Dan Fogelberg - ABC Interview with Tim Weisberg video". YouTube.com video. ABC Television. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
- ^ "Winter Park Jazz Festival". poster. wplbo.com. 1998. Archived from the original (JPG) on July 18, 2011. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ "Bonnie Raitt - Tim Weisberg" (JPG). handbill. wolfgangsvault.com. 1998. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ "Performances: 1970 - 1975". listing. tomwaitsfan.com. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
- ^ Rice, Ager (December 6, 1973). "Tim Weisberg's "Color"". Downbeat.
External links[]
- Living people
- 1943 births
- People from Hollywood, Los Angeles
- Jazz musicians from California
- American jazz flautists
- A&M Records artists
- Epic Records artists
- MCA Records artists