David Anderson profile picture

David Anderson

About Me

Can be contacted: [email protected]

Dave Anderson a professional double bassist, joined the Louisiana Philharmonic in New Orleans in September of 1996 after winning their Principal Bass audition. Prior to that appointment, he performed and recorded regularly with the Louisville Orchestra and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, among others. Since 1994, he has served as Principal Bassist in the Britt Festival Orchestra in Oregon. He has performed extensively with many diverse ensembles including, the Aspen Festival, Chautauqua (NY) Festival, Colorado Philharmonic (NRO), Colorado Music Festival, the LaSalle Quartet, and as a soloist with Richard Stoltzman, Gene Bertoncini, Nigel Kennedy, Bobby McFerrin, Doc Severinsen and many others. He has served as Bass Instructor for the Music School at Loyola University and also on the Board of Directors of the International Society of Bassists (ISB) as bassist/composer.
Mr. Anderson began his pursuits in composition in 1984, recognizing that the solo repertoire for his instrument was limited. The influence of Frank Proto, one of his finest teachers, also led him to turn to involved composition. Since then, his published work has expanded to other solo instruments, as well as for chamber orchestras and small ensembles. He has published bass duets and quartets, including a bass quartet that was performed to acclaim at the Chamber Music Festival at Indiana University in 1993. Anderson won first prize in the 1995 Allen Ostrander International Trombone Composition Competition, sponsored by Ithaca college, for Elegy for Van, a work for solo bass trombone and brass choir, which he composed as a tribute to the late Lewis Van Haney, former trombonist with the New York Philharmonic. Several years ago, Anderson completed a concerto for Bass Trombone, commissioned by his father, Edwin Anderson, former bass trombonist with the Cleveland Orchestra. His Concerto for Double Bass, Strings & Harp, commissioned by Philadelphia Orchestra Principal Bassist Hal Robinson was premiered at the ISB Convention in June of 1997 and performed on the 1997-98 subscription series of the Philadelphia Orchestra season, Wolfgang Sawallisch conducting. His current work includes a second symphony, as well as several commissions.
Also a prolific electric bassist, Anderson loves playing with pedal steel guitarist, David Easley. The group known as the Anderson/Easley Project perform original music of many genres including free jazz, funk, bop, minimalist and many wonderfully unique approaches to dynamics and expression. Anderson also plays with Algorhythm Method, and SOFA KING BIG SOUL, bands that fuse many different styles including hard rock, funk, blues, jazz, and New Orleans R & B. Anderson has jammed with The Radiators, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Roy Pope, Darryl Brown, and many other great New Orleans musicians including a killer performance with guitarist Brian Stoltz of the Funky Meters as a main highlight of the French Quarter Festival 2002. In 1984-85, Anderson played for and took lessons with the legendary bassist Jaco Pastorius in New York, who firmly encouraged the idea of being able to cross over between classical and jazz.
Here is some of what the Press has said in Anderson’s past:
Review of Anderson’s Quintet for Oboe, Clarinet, Violin, Viola & Bass, Louisville Courier Journal music critic Andrew Adler wrote:
“Anderson’s new work is splendidly fresh and provocative, ingenious in how it distributes material ... the jazzy syncopations and ethnic flavorings reflect a diverse, expertly distilled inspiration. Thoroughly absorbed by yesterday’s performance, the piece offered sustained pleasure.”
Reviews of Anderson’s Bass Concerto:
Houston Chronicle music critic Charles Ward :
“ ... thoroughly appealing ... his rich scoring of the orchestra and expansive solo melodies came from a composer exuberantly in love with music.”
Lesley Valdes, Philadelphia Inquirer:
“ ... a melodious work, whose moods cohere... the thoughtful, the nostalgic, the provocative. Ideas are fertile and cohesive.”
Thomas May, Washington Post:
“Anderson shows a gift for fashioning readily accessible music from unusual combinations of timbres.”
Anderson Easley Project
A unique jazz trio that has a wonderful eclectic style and original repertoire that is always enhanced by the funky gumbo of New Orleans.
AVAILABLE for convention work, jazz gigs, dinner parties, festival performance, concert performance, or any event! Booking contact: [email protected]
Bassist Dave Anderson is an award winning composer and bassist. His works have been performed to acclaim worldwide. A series of interviews are available here:
http://contrabassconversations.com/guests/episodes/dave-ande rson/
Pedal Steel guitarist Dave Easley has collaborated with many musicians such as Brian Blade Fellowship (in which he recorded for producer Daniel Lanois and played a duet with Joni Mitchell), Coco Robicheaux, Anderson/Easley Project, Shannon McNally, Dave Liebman, Kenny Garret, Howard Levy, Charlie Byrd, Seamus Blake, world renowned sarod player, Ashish Khan, sacred steelers, the Cambell Brothers, members of the String Cheese Incident, the Grey Boy Allstars and Tiny Universe, jazz violin virtuoso, George Mason, Raymond Weber, Tony Hall, and Dr. John.
Recent Jazz Review: Jazzin’ By Martin Z. Kasdan Jr - The Anderson/Easley Project at the Jazz Factory
This intriguing group consists of former Louisville Orchestra bassist Dave Anderson (now Principal Bass with the LPO in New Orleans) and pedal steel guitarist Dave Easley, with drumming by Steve Tidwell. While steel guitar is not usually associated with jazz, Easley demonstrated both proficiency and inventiveness in a program of mostly original material. Anderson’s arco intro to the opening number of the second set (sorry, I didn’t hear a title announced) led into a spacey pedal steel segment reminiscent at times of Jerry Garcia’s experimental playing on the instrument on his first, self-titled solo album. Anderson also opened the second piece, “Blues for Frank” with an arco introduction, before switching to pizzicato during the ensemble playing; Jaco Pastorius’ “Teen Town” was cleverly woven onto this song as well. Other highlights included “12-Tone Hip Bop,” dedicated to Charlie Parker and Arnold Schoenberg. Overall, this was a delightful evening of provocative and highly enjoyable music!
Anderson’s bass pieces are available:
http://www.reallygoodmusic.com/rgm.jsp?page=composers2&c ompid=128028
Anderson interview:
http://contrabassconversations.com/2008/04/19/cbc-75-dave-an derson-interview/
Some mp3 files of Anderson’s playing and music:
http://contrabassconversations.com/2008/04/22/eclectic-bass- 2-dave-anderson-music/



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My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 15/03/2008
Band Members: Dave Anderson, LPO Principal Bass, FUNK master in thumb slap of New Orleans!Anderson/Easley Project with Dave Easley on pedal steel and Tom Chute on Drums...
Influences: Stanley Clarke, Wooooooton!, Marcus Miller, Roy Pope, Mahler, Shostakovich, Respighi, Jaco, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Dave Brubacker, Frank Proto, Hal Robinson, Mingus, Ed Barker, Rabbath, Glenn Moore, John Paul Jones, Paul Elison, many more!!!
Sounds Like: Contemporary chamber ensemble, Pierre Boulez Paris group, Weather Report, Genesis (early), Grateful Dead, Zappa, Samuel Barber, and King Crimson.
Can be contacted: [email protected]
Hey, Mr. Bass Man Jazz, rock, funk, classical -- you name it and musician/composer Dave Anderson can play it. In fact, the bearded bassist often tops off an LPO concert with a club gig. Tuesday, May 22, 2007 By Chris Waddington
From the open door of the Spotted Cat, an electric bass line floated into the night, punctuated by the clink of bottles and glasses, and washed by psychedelic droning from a pedal steel guitar. The bass player -- a burly, bearded guy with a ponytail -- unfurled musical phrases like a flamenco singer, stretching across bar lines, going someplace deep and primeval.
Even on club-crowded Frenchmen Street -- home to a nightly smorgasbord of New Orleans sounds -- the music stood out as something remarkable. For those in the know, it meant one thing: "Symphony Boy" had left his white tie and tails at home and had come downtown to jam with his club-scene buddies again.
Dave Anderson is "Symphony Boy" -- principal bassist of the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra and a composer whose complex, notated works have gradually earned him an international reputation. Chamber players from New Zealand to New York perform his bass duets and other small-scale pieces. His 1998 "Bass Concerto" was premiered by the Philadelphia Orchestra -- considered one of the world's finest classical ensembles -- and also was played by the LPO and in Houston. His 1995 quintet for winds and strings gets a belated New Orleans premiere this week in two free concerts presented by Musaica, an ensemble formed by LPO players after Hurricane Katrina.
"I don't pay attention to the supposed barriers between musical genres," Anderson said. "Music is music. It's good or it's bad."
That's not just talk from Anderson, a jovial, beer-drinking 45-year-old who grew up in Cleveland, where his father played bass trombone with that city's orchestra. Since moving to New Orleans in 1996, he has played with blues guitarist Walter "Wolfman" Washington and with Brian Stoltz of the Funky Meters, with jazz artists including Bobby McFerrin and Dave Easley, and with roots rockers such as The Radiators.
In his Metairie family room -- Katrina flooded him out of Gentilly -- Anderson drove home the point by picking up the 200-year-old double bass he plays with the LPO. First, he bowed the brooding chords of Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir," making that rock anthem sound like a Bartok transcription of a wailing gypsy tune. Then he snapped the strings so they slapped the bridge in the swinging manner of a jazzman, pointing to a classical score, by David Del Tredici, that called for the same style of playing.
"My composing comes out of my improvisations on bass. And my improvising reflects my work with rock bands, jazz bands and classical groups," Anderson said.
Musicians of all stripes have good things to say about Anderson.
"How many guys have added to the literature for their instrument as a classical composer and can sit in on a funk session and not look lost?" asked Reggie Scanlan, bass player with The Radiators. "Dave can play anything and do it beautifully -- and nobody but other players seems to know about him. That hometown obscurity is why I call him a 'typical great New Orleans musician.' "
Klauspeter Seibel, the German conductor who led the LPO for close to a decade, called the bassist "one of the greatest assets among the LPO musicians," and described his playing as "very sensitive and full of emotion, from extreme tenderness to greatest force."
Seibel conducted the local premiere of Anderson's "Bass Concerto" and remembered it fondly: "You know, the instrument doesn't have too big a variety, but I remember Dave's piece takes every chance. As he is such a good bass player . . . he was not shy to include virtuoso as well as lyrical parts. . . . His great feeling for rhythm helps the classical music as well."
As a child, Anderson listened to his father rehearse classics in the basement, helped him tape Sunday broadcasts of the Cleveland Orchestra, played electric bass, and got to know the rock 'n' roll of the James Gang "because Joe Walsh went to my high school," he said. His dad got him thinking about composition by pushing him to transcribe Brahms and Mahler songs -- the lyric vocal parts -- for his bass.
"Compared to most of the string instruments, there isn't much classical repertoire for the double bass," Anderson said. "I had to start writing to keep myself interested. And it happens that the past 20 years has seen a huge expansion in bass technique, in part because classical bassists started to look more closely at the innovations of jazz players."
In the mid-1980s, Anderson studied with jazz bassist Jaco Pastorius, the force behind Weather Report's most popular work.
"Jaco showed me new fingerings and talked about harmonies, but he really made me see that jazz and classical music weren't separate -- and that I could play both," Anderson said.
Pastorius drove the young bassist to study the loping funk grooves of New Orleans legend George Porter and also taught him the benefits of active listening. "Ear training for jazz is much more advanced than it is in classical conservatories," Anderson said.
That ear training, essential to an improviser, also has come in handy for Anderson as a composer. "It takes absolute virtuosity to play some bass parts in symphonic music, but a lot of the time, I'm just holding a simple pedal. That means I've been able to listen to the entire orchestra and think about compositions -- how the counterpoint unfolds, how the varied sonorities of the instruments blend -- instead of sweating over some complicated passage for bass," Anderson said.
Bassist Sidney King has known Anderson and his music for 20 years. The two men became friends in the bass section of the Louisville Orchestra -- a group famed for its interest in contemporary composers. Since then, King has commissioned several compositions from Anderson, including the "Quintet for Oboe, Clarinet, Violin, Viola and Double Bass" that will be played in New Orleans this week.
"Over the years, Dave has developed a personal musical language," King said. "He'll fit jazz and rock influences into a classical piece, but it's never a pastiche. He has distilled his influences. His work is appealing, accessible -- the opposite of work from academic composers who are writing for peer review by other university professors. Dave's music can be serious, but he's not afraid to be fun."
The titles of Anderson's bass duets reveal something about his sense of humor. Works such as "Blew Cheese" and "Parade of the Pigs" hardly sound appropriate for an academic résumé. On a live recording of the duets that features Anderson and King, you can hear roars of audience laughter mixed with the applause.
And it doesn't stop there. Friends report that Anderson once outfitted the LPO bass section in T-shirts from Wagner's Meat -- yes, you've seen the slogan -- during a dress rehearsal for a Richard Wagner opera. On another occasion, he drove up and down Canal Street playing his latest composition from car speakers: a thundering rap soundtrack composed from audio samples of flatulence.
King sees Anderson's compositions, his crossover playing and his light-hearted approach to art as part of a broader trend.
"We've been living in an age of specialization -- in all areas, not just in music. You have to stick to one thing to get ahead. But I'm seeing more and more classical musicians break out of that," King said. "I play in a flamenco group. I see violinists and cellists sitting in with bluegrass bands and rock groups. For composers, it's open season -- they are listening to everything, the same way that Bartok tapped into Hungarian folk music or Stravinsky brought elements of jazz and tango into his unique musical language."
It has been happening in New Orleans, too -- and not just with classical players, said pedal steel player Dave Easley, a frequent collaborator with Anderson.
"If I compare Dave to a jazz bass player like Jim Singleton, I hear more similarities than differences," Easley said. "Jim trained as a jazz player, but he loves 20th-century classical composers like Bartok and he has started a string quartet to play his original tunes.
"New Orleans is a great place for cross-pollination, in part because it's the right size city. In a really big place, you'd have enough blues players or jazz players. Everyone can become a specialist. A small town can't support anything unusual because there aren't enough players. New Orleans is just right. Here good musicians meet each other -- and need each other."
For Anderson, New Orleans has been a perfect place to pursue his eclectic interests. He often goes straight from LPO concerts to music clubs, sometimes rushing so much that he ends up wearing white tie and tails when everyone else is in T-shirts and sandals.
"You can't do that in most towns," Anderson said. "When I evacuated after Katrina, I landed a great job with the Minnesota Orchestra, but Minneapolis closes up too early to play two gigs a night. I had to get back here as soon as I could. I was going crazy away from New Orleans."
Record Label: Unsigned Listed indi with : http://www.artistpr.co

My Blog

New Anderson Easley Project Video

Check out this video of Anderson Easley Project.... it is just funny pics, but the sounds is a new track of Blew Cheeze live in KC... a killer funk jam!!!! Has some cool references near the end that u...
Posted by on Sat, 07 Mar 2009 05:44:00 GMT

WOW! Stanley Clarke, Marcus Miller and Victor Wooten

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrav_MSMjNs
Posted by on Fri, 13 Jun 2008 08:05:00 GMT

Led Zeppelin - Jimmy Page - TAVARESOM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gy05Ne_Zi1U Here is Page as a kid!!!
Posted by on Fri, 13 Jun 2008 07:38:00 GMT

Anderson Interviews and mp3 files

Contrabass Conversations - Dave Anderson
Posted by on Thu, 12 Jun 2008 07:18:00 GMT

Jason Heath plays Capriccio No. 2 by David Anderson

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kb9vt9xBSow
Posted by on Tue, 10 Jun 2008 21:11:00 GMT

Jaco Pastorius - Foregin Fun(Fixed)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzBMW1LoPp0Berlin 76 I tried to post this again.
Posted by on Tue, 10 Jun 2008 20:52:00 GMT

Article About Anderson

Hey, Mr. Bass ManJazz, rock, funk, classical -- you name it and musician/composer Dave Anderson can play it. In fact, the bearded bassist often tops off an LPO concert with a club gig.Tuesday, May 22,...
Posted by on Tue, 10 Jun 2008 14:19:00 GMT

Dave "Symphony Boy" Anderson Jamming with the Radiators

I had a blast jamming with the Radiators at Tipatinas on their 30th anniversary.Here is a Youtube link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxQqjggXSo0
Posted by on Fri, 04 Apr 2008 21:40:00 GMT

My bass pieces published now

Many of my bass pieces are now available here:http://www.reallygoodmusic.com/rgm.jsp?page=composers2& compid=128028CHECK IT OUT!!!!!
Posted by on Mon, 31 Mar 2008 08:06:00 GMT