Jazz
  Annette Hauber	Production Coordination Ansgar Striepens	Arranger Biboul Darouiche	 Percussion Bob Belden	Arranger Christian Cluxen	Engineer Christian Lettner	 Drums Dominik Arnold	Engineer Ernst Stroer	Percussion Frank Chastenier	Piano Heiner Wiberny	Flute,  Sax (Alto) Hoagy Carmichael	Composer Ines Kaiser	PhotographyAnnette Hauber	Production Coordination Ansgar Striepens	Arranger Biboul Darouiche	Percussion Bob Belden	Arranger Christian Cluxen	Engineer Christian Lettner	 Drums Dominik Arnold	Engineer Ernst Stroer	Percussion Frank Chastenier	Piano Heiner Wiberny	Flute,  Sax (Alto) Hoagy Carmichael	Composer Ines Kaiser	Photography Inge Doldinger	Cover Art, Photography John Goldsby	 Bass John Marshall	Trumpet Johnny Griffin	 Sax (Tenor) Klaus Doldinger	Sax (Soprano), Producer, Composer, Sax (Tenor), Interviewee, Arranger Klaus Osterloh	Trumpet Lucas Schmid	Executive Producer Norbert Ommer	Assistant Engineer Patrick Scales	Bass (Electric) Peter O'Mara	 Guitar Randy Brecker	 Trumpet Reinhold Nickel	Engineer Roberto Di Gioia	Keyboards, Piano Ruth Witt	Engineer Stuart Gorrell	Composer Wolfgang Haffner	Drums Wolfgang Hirschmann	Executive Producer Inge Doldinger	Cover Art, Photography John Goldsby	 Bass John Marshall	Trumpet Johnny Griffin	 Sax (Tenor) Klaus Doldinger	Sax (Soprano), Producer, Composer, Sax (Tenor), Interviewee, Arranger Klaus Osterloh	Trumpet Lucas Schmid	Executive Producer Norbert Ommer	Assistant Engineer Patrick Scales	Bass (Electric) Peter O'Mara	 Guitar Randy Brecker	 Trumpet Reinhold Nickel	Engineer Roberto Di Gioia	Keyboards, Piano Ruth Witt	Engineer Stuart Gorrell	Composer Wolfgang Haffner	Drums Wolfgang Hirschmann	Executive Producer
 
 
  Klaus Doldinger
  Active Decades: '60s, '90s and '00s Born: May 12, 1936 in Berlin, Germany Genre: Jazz Styles: Jazz-Funk, Fusion, Post-Bop
  Klaus Doldinger, best-known for leading the excellent fusion group Passport in the 1970s and '80s, has had a diverse and episodic career. He started out studying piano in 1947 and clarinet five years later, playing in Dixieland bands in the 1950s. By 1961, he had become a modern tenor saxophonist, working with such top visiting and expatriate Americans as Don Ellis, Johnny Griffin, Benny Bailey, Idrees Sulieman, Donald Byrd, and Kenny Clarke, recording as a leader for Philips, World Pacific, and Liberty. However, in 1970, he initiated a long series of fusion-oriented sessions for Atlantic that featured his tenor, soprano, flute, and occasional keyboards with an electric rhythm section. In addition to writing music for films (including Das Boot) and television in Europe, Doldinger has remained active as a player who occasionally explores his roots in hard bop into the late '90s, but because he has always lived in Europe, he remains underrated in the U.S.  ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |