Bass player
Jerry Scheff is a native of San Francisco, and originally he got his start playing in jazz clubs in the Bay Area at the age of 15. Following a three-year stint as a musician in the U.S. Navy,
Scheff joined jazz guitarist
Barney Kessel in Los Angeles. After achieving a successful debut as a jazz string bassist, he decided to seek out session work instead in the pop/rock world, in which there were ample opportunities for work in the Los Angeles of the early '60s. With his appearance on "Along Comes Mary," a hit by vocal group
the Association, the demand for
Scheff's services increased considerably. In the following years, he worked for
the Everly Brothers,
Nancy Sinatra,
Johnny Rivers,
Neil Diamond,
Sammy Davis, Jr.,
Johnny Mathis, and
the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, among others. In 1971,
Scheff recorded bass parts for
the Doors'
L.A. Woman, leading to his distinctly recognizable contribution to the hit record "Riders on the Storm."
About this time,
Scheff became a member of
Elvis Presley's touring band, and he can be seen performing in the documentary films Elvis: That's the Way It Is (1970) and Elvis on Tour (1972) and in the TV concert Aloha from Hawaii (1973). Though
Scheff had been no fan of
Elvis prior to meeting "
the King,"
Presley's artistry won him over in short order, and
Scheff would continue to work with
Presley until his death. Afterward,
Scheff worked with
Bob Dylan on the acclaimed album
Street Legal (1978) in addition to session work with
Johnny Cash and
Richard Thompson; in the '70s and '80s he toured with
Elvis Costello,
Sam Phillips, and
John Denver.
Scheff also appeared with
Roy Orbison and friends on the TV concert A Black and White Night (1987). All of
Scheff's three sons are musicians, with son
Jason Scheff holding down the bass guitar spot in the band
Chicago since 1985.
Jerry Scheff lives in Scotland and continues to tour and record. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis