The Daily Telegraph

Don Weller

Saxophonis­t who worked with Stan Tracey and David Bowie

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DON WELLER, who has died aged 79, was a tenor saxophonis­t and one of the most original and well-liked British jazz musicians of his generation; there was no mistaking his full, juicy tone and unique turn of phrase.

Just as important, he had what Humphrey Lyttelton used to call the “here I am!” quality. The very first musical sound to be heard at the opening of the 1986 film Absolute Beginners is a rising ululation of unmistakab­le Weller. One critic observed that it was a pity the ensuing 90-odd minutes failed to live up to it.

Donald Arthur Albert Weller was born at Thornton Heath, Surrey (now part of Croydon), on December 19 1940. On leaving school he worked as a panel beater.

He began private lessons on the clarinet at 14 and later played with the Croydon Orchestra. He also played clarinet in local traditiona­l jazz bands, later switching to the saxophone.

In 1970 he began playing profession­ally, including at Butlin’s holiday camps. He also formed the jazz-rock quartet, Major Surgery, rehearsing once a week for two years in the bassist’s front room before their first gig.

In 1976 Weller began a long associatio­n with the pianist and composer Stan Tracey. It included taking part in bands of all sizes, from a quintet to a 16-piece big band (usually alongside his fellow saxophonis­t Art Themen). In 1978 he formed his own band, the first since Major Surgery, this time in partnershi­p with the drummer Bryan Spring.

Whereas, in the 1950s and even into the 1960s, bands would be more or less permanent items, by the 1970s they would come into being, vanish for a while and then perhaps reappear. The Weller-spring Quartet had such an existence. Its debut album, Commit No Nuisance, came out in 1979, after which little was heard of it, but it continued, on and off, for several years.

In 1981 Stan Tracey’s Octet was sharing a British tour with the Gil Evans Orchestra from the US. On one occasion Michael Brecker, the celebrated American tenor saxophonis­t, became unwell. Don Weller stepped into the breach and performed so impressive­ly that he seems instantly to have become Gil Evans’s tenor man in Britain.

He later toured with Evans, and played on his score for the aforementi­oned Absolute Beginners. The same event led to Evans’s trumpeter, Hannibal Marvin Peterson, touring Britain as guest artist and recording an album (Poem Song) with a revived Weller-spring Quartet.

In the course of his career Weller turned up on recordings by all kinds of unlikely people – Cat Stevens, David Bowie, Tucky Buzzard, Alex Harvey – leading to his being described as “versatile”. The opposite is the case. He never budged an inch from his fully formed and highly personal style, which was presumably what they wanted. When he worked with a great singer, such as Tina May, the combinatio­n of voice and instrument was quite magical.

It was relatively late in his life that Weller began to be recognised as a composer. Although he had been writing music since the days of Major Surgery, the piece that attracted attention was his Pennine Suite. This was commission­ed for the 1995 Appleby Jazz Festival, played by a specially assembled 16-piece band and recorded live. Like his playing, it could not be the work of anyone else

In person, Weller made an imposing figure, tall and taciturn. Whenever possible he dressed for comfort rather than fashion, from the beret on his head to the sandals and comfy socks on his feet. He hated fuss, insisting that he could not play properly in such circumstan­ces. It should all come easy, he said, or it would not come at all.

Don Weller’s wife predecease­d him. He is survived by a son and daughter.

Don Weller, born December 19 1940, died May 30 2020

 ??  ?? His easily recognisab­le playing had a ‘here I am!’ quality
His easily recognisab­le playing had a ‘here I am!’ quality

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