Featured In
ALBUMBack Home to My Galaxy - EPWalt Weiskopf
Albums by Walt Weiskopf
ALBUMEuropean Quartet: Harmless AddictionWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMEuropean Quartet: Diamonds and Other JewelsWalt Weiskopf, Carl Winther, Anders Mogensen & Andreas Lang
ALBUMEuropean Quartet: Introspection 2.0Walt Weiskopf
ALBUMEuropean Quartet Worldwide (feat. Carl Winther, Andreas Lang & Anders Mogensen)Walt Weiskopf
ALBUMEuropean QuartetWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMFountain of YouthWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMThe Way You Say ItWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMOpen RoadWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMOverdriveWalt Weiskopf
ALBUMSee the Pyramid (feat. Peter Zak, Doug Weiss & Quincy Davis)Walt Weiskopf
Artist Biography
A potent tenor saxophonist and composer firmly in the tradition of John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, Walt Weiskopf was born in Augusta, GA, and grew up in Syracuse, NY. Upon moving to New York City, he joined the Buddy Rich Big Band in 1981 at the age of 21; two years later, Weiskopf signed on with the Toshiko Akiyoshi Jazz Orchestra, concurrently forming his own quartet with brother Joel on trumpet, Jay Anderson on bass, and Jeff Hirshfeld on drums. His debut, Exact Science, appeared in 1989, followed a year later by Mindwalking; Simplicity, released in 1992, topped the European jazz charts for four weeks. After 1993's A World Away, Weiskopf for the first time departed from original compositions to record 1995's Night Lights, a collection of standards; 1997's Song for My Mother, however, returned his own material to the forefront. A graduate of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY, Weiskopf and fellow Eastman alum Ramon Ricker teamed in 1990 to write the books Coltrane: A Player's Guide to His Harmony and The Augmented Scale in Jazz; in 1994, Weiskopf also published Intervalic Improvisation, a player's guide for broadening the scope of modern jazz improvisation. In 1996, he joined drummer Rick Hollander's quartet, and as a headliner returned in 1999 with Anytown. Siren was issued a year later. ~ Jason Ankeny
Hometown
Augusta, GA, United States
Genre
Jazz