Born in Ratibor, Germany on April 29, 1930, this prolific arranger and orchestrator moved from Europe to the United States in 1959 and began an association with the
Verve label, where his arrangements were featured on albums by
Frank Sinatra and
Antonio Carlos Jobim (1967's Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim -- the first of two collaborative albums by the pair),
Astrud Gilberto,
Bill Evans,
Wes Montgomery,
Stan Getz,
Cal Tjader, and other leading artists. Having worked with producer
Creed Taylor on numerous
Verve albums during the '60s,
Ogerman continued his partnership with
Taylor following the establishment of the A&M-affiliated CTI label, arranging albums including
Jobim's classic
Wave, released in 1967 as only the second album under the CTI imprint.
Over the following decades and into the 21st century,
Ogerman served as arranger, orchestrator, and/or conductor on albums by the likes of
George Benson,
Michael Brecker,
Danilo Perez, and
Diana Krall, winning a Grammy for arranging the title track of
Krall's 2009 bossa-themed
Quiet Nights. (A repeated Grammy nominee,
Ogerman had previously won the award for arranging guitarist
Benson's "Soulful Strut" from 1979's
Livin' Inside Your Love.)
Ogerman was also noted for his arrangements backing pop artists, his original scores for primarily German films of the '50s and '60s, and his work as a classical composer -- or, in the case of 1982's Cityscape co-billed to saxophonist
Brecker, as composer, arranger, and conductor of a successful classical-jazz hybrid concerto.
Claus Ogerman died on March 8, 2016 in Germany at the age of 85. ~ Dave Lynch