Danny Weis

Guitarist Danny Weis (born 28 September 1948 in Huntington Park, California)[1] is best known as a founding member of both Iron Butterfly and Rhinoceros, as well as co-writer of Rhinoceros's only charting single, "Apricot Brandy". Though he left Iron Butterfly after only one album due to internal tensions,[2] his work was an influence in the band for most of their history, since his replacement Erik Brann made a conscious effort to imitate his playing. Weis later recounted "Erik Braunn replaced me in Iron Butterfly, and if I remember correctly, he bought a lot of my equipment, some of my clothes, they tried to clone me basically..."[2]

Weis appeared on Iron Butterfly's first two singles, "Don't Look Down On Me" and "Possession", and their debut LP Heavy. In addition, the later album Live included a performance of "You Can't Win", a song from Heavy for which Weis wrote the music.

After leaving Iron Butterfly, Weis became a founding member of Rhinoceros and played on all three of their albums. "Apricot Brandy", an instrumental he co-wrote with Rhinoceros keyboardist Michael Fonfara, reached No. 46 on the Billboard Hot 100[3][4] and has been used as background music on a number of TV shows.[2]

After Rhinoceros disbanded in 1970, Weis briefly served as a member of The Rascals.[2] He then reunited with several fellow members of Rhinoceros to form the band Blackstone, which broke up after one commercially unsuccessful album.[5]

In 1974 Weis performed lead guitar on Lou Reed's Sally Can't Dance album and continued his lead guitar duties on the subsequent world tour.

In 1979 Weis appeared as the Band Leader and Guitarist of "The Rose Band" in the movie The Rose with Bette Midler.[6]

In December 2006, his debut solo album, an instrumental smooth jazz effort titled Sweet Spot, was released on Marshmellow Records.[7][8]

References

  1. "Danny Weis Biography". MusicMinder.com. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  2. 1 2 3 4 2001 June 2001 Interview with Danny Weis, Official Rhinoceros web site.
  3. Joynson, Vernon (1995). Fuzz, Acid, & Flowers. London: Borderline Books.
  4. Rhinoceros on the singles charts, AllMusicGuide.
  5. Blackstone biography, AllMusicGuide.
  6. Full Cast and Crew for The Rose, IMDb. Retrieved July 24, 2011.
  7. Sweet Spot info, Premiere Jazz.
  8. Sweet Spot review, AllMusicGuide.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.