* En anglais uniquement
Danny Klein was born in New York City on May 23, 1946, and lived in New Jersey from when he was six to 17 years of age. His earliest musical influences came from listening to the radio:
the Supremes, Motown, and mostly blues music from
Muddy Waters,
Buddy Guy,
Junior Wells, and
Sonny Boy Williams; to the R&B of
King Curtis,
the Rolling Stones, and everyone else in between. The bassist spoke with All Media Guide on May 30, 2002: "[I listened to] New York AM radio, a whole lotta R&B,
Otis and
the Supremes, the Motown thing, the Memphis thing, and the New York thing, and all that, a lot of R&B in those days, a lot of black stuff....I guess before that like in the '50s you'd never hear that, the original artists doing the music, you'd hear
Patti Page covers, you know that kind of thing. But at that time, in the '60s, it started to cross over...also there were shows out of the Bronx...goin' on at night...they'd play some really funky stuff and blues...so that's basically how I got it. We didn't even have a record player in the house 'till my sister got one, we were not a very musical family."
Klein went to WPI, Worcester Poly Tech, west of Boston, MA. "I left Jersey, I would've gone anywhere to get out of Jersey at that point....Worcester was even better than Jersey, I was interested in science and stuff, that was the thing to do was go to college." At WPI from 1964-1966, a school known as "Worcester Tech," he met
J. Geils and
Magic Dick. They formed a jug band, mostly acoustic music with
Geils getting into electric guitar; he asked
Klein if he wanted to play drums or bass. They decided on a washboard bass for
Danny Klein and though the band went through "lots and lots of drummers," they eventually hooked up with ex-Hallucinations percussionist Stephen Jo Bladd and his vocalist,
Peter Wolf. "I took Chemical Engineering....
J. was a mechanical engineering major and
Magic Dick was an electrical engineering major...we never got through it. They never gave me the little funny cap and the train to drive. I said, 'That's what an engineer is,' so I quit. Actually, I went to see
Muddy Waters in N.Y., actually we went on a field trip from school to Jersey and I went to a munitions factory and a fertilizer plant, and then we saw
Muddy Waters in New York....And then I went home and quit school, and went back to Worcester."
The formation of the official
J. Geils Band began a long and historic rock & roll ride starting with 1970's self-titled Atlantic release,
The J. Geils Band, up to 1984's You're Gettin' Even While I'm Gettin' Odd, the only album recorded and released without
Peter Wolf.
The J. Geils Band took a lengthy sabbatical from that 1984 release up to June 19, 1999, when they reunited for their first time on-stage since the breakup, a gig at the Paradise Theater in Boston, documented on a bootleg Jake Geils Band: The Reunion Live, Paradise.
Klein went to chef's school in that interim period, becoming an expert cook, but kept his hand in performing with a band out of Fitchburg, MA, called Soma Crush. They got airplay on the 50,000-watt 93.7 FM station WCGY, owned by sportscaster Curt Gowdy, circa 1992; and opened for
J. Geils and
Magic Dick and their
Bluestime band offshoot the Blood Street Band at a club called Wharfield's, run by classic rock DJ Harvey Wharfield. This writer brought producer
Rob Fraboni to the show as
Fraboni was interested in speaking to
J. Geils about possibly recording for Domino Records, a label distributed by Relativity which had released discs by
Alvin Lee and others.
Having played on a record with
Buddy Guy and
Junior Wells in 1972, the blues was still an integral part of
Danny Klein's life, and
Johnny Copeland guitarist
Ken Pino offered him a job playing bass with Blind Pig recording artist
Debbie Davies. They toured America and Europe twice,
Klein performing on
Davies' 1994 release
Loose Tonight. He and
Pino left to form a blues/R&B group, Stone Crazy, with
Ken Pino's harp-playing brother, Babe Pino, and drummer Steve Shaheen. They cut a lengthy demo as Stone Crazy with Shaheen moving on after the recording. Mark Highlander, formerly with Duke & the Drivers, colleagues and admirers of the J. Geils Band, was the perfect fit for Stone Crazy. They performed a Christmas party at
Aerosmith's nightclub, Mama Kin, taped for television in December of 1998, and recorded some demos but were rudely interrupted by the J. Geils Band reunion tour.
With the tour over,
Danny Klein moved from New Hampshire to Connecticut, built a home recording studio, and the band began cutting new tracks with
J. Geils as the producer.
Seth Justman added keyboards and the first four songs were mixed by
J. Geils in May and June of 2002, generating immediate label interest. Having the luxury of being in both the J. Geils Band and Stone Crazy keeps
Danny Klein doing what he loves best, continuing to put his critically acclaimed licks on music he enjoys. ~ Joe Viglione