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Larry Klein (born 1956) is an American musician, songwriter, record and soundtrack producer and head of Strange Cargo, an imprint with Universal Music Group.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
Klein began his career as a bassist, playing with jazz artists Willie Bobo and Freddie Hubbard.[1][3] He went on to perform with other jazz artists such as Carmen McRae, Joe Henderson, Bobby Hutcherson, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Bobby McFerrin, and Dianne Reeves.[1][4] As a bass player he has worked with artists such as Bob Dylan, Robbie Robertson, Peter Gabriel, Don Henley, Lindsey Buckingham, and Randy Newman.[1][3]
Klein has produced albums for musicians such as Joni Mitchell, Herbie Hancock, Shawn Colvin, Madeleine Peyroux, Melody Gardot and Tracy Chapman.[3][4] Klein has won Grammys for his work on Mitchell's Turbulent Indigo and Both Sides Now; and Hancock's River: The Joni Letters.[8]
Klein grew up in Monterey Park, California.[9] When Klein was in the junior high school, his mother enrolled him in The Community School for the Performing Arts, an after-school music program sponsored by the University of Southern California.[1][3][9] Klein studied music composition and music theory through the program and began playing in rock bands.[9] By the time he was 17, Klein became interested in the technical challenges jazz music presented to him.[9][10]
After graduating from high school early and enrolling at California State University, Klein began to work with various jazz and Latin music groups.[1][3][11] He also toured as a sideman while a student at California State.[1][3][11] His first job as a touring musician was with Freddie Hubbard.[9] He also played with artists such as Carmen McRae, Wayne Shorter, Willie Bobo and Joe Henderson during this period.[1][3][10][11] After five years of touring, Klein landed a year residency as the bass player for the TV program, The Merv Griffin Show.[3][11] As a bassist, Klein has worked with Robbie Robertson, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Dianne Reeves, Neil Diamond, Warren Zevon and others.[3]
In 1982, Klein began working as a bassist on Joni Mitchell's Wild Things Run Fast.[9][10] The two became romantically involved and married the same year.[10] It was during his marriage with Mitchell that Klein established himself as a music producer.[10]
In 1985, Klein co-produced Mitchell's Dog Eat Dog.[10] He secured his first solo production with The Cars' bassist Benjamin Orr's 1986 solo album The Lace.[1][3][4][9][11] Two years later, in 1988, Klein produced both Joni Mitchell's Chalk Mark in a Rain Storm and The Innocence Mission's self-titled album.[2][10] He also produced Mitchell's 1991 album Night Ride Home and Shawn Colvin's Fat City in 1992.[2][10]
Klein and Mitchell's marriage dissolved during 1994 while in the midst of making Mitchell's Turbulent Indigo album.[4][10] The two continued to work through their eventual divorce, and Turbulent Indigo won the 1995 Grammy for Best Pop Album.[8][10]
Klein continued to work as a bassist during his marriage with Mitchell, most notably working on Don Henley's Building the Perfect Beast, Peter Gabriel's So and Robbie Robertson's self-titled debut.[12] He also played with Tracy Chapman on her self-titled debut.[2]
Klein became known for his work with female artists during his marriage with Mitchell.[7] In 1997, he produced Mary Black's Shine.[2] In 2000, he reunited with Mitchell to produce her Both Sides Now, which won the 2000 Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.[2][8] Klein also produced Julia Fordham's Concrete Love and Mitchell's Travelogue in 2002.[2] In 2004, Klein produced Madeleine Peyroux’s Careless Love.[2]
In 2005, Klein met Brazilian singer Luciana Souza while she was performing at the Los Angeles Philharmonic.[13] The two married in August 2006.[14] He produced Souza's 2007 album The New Bossa Nova.[2][14] Klein also produced Herbie Hancock's River: The Joni Letters, a musical homage to ex-wife Joni Mitchell, in 2007.[15] River: The Joni Letters won the 2007 Grammy for Album of the Year.[8]
In 2009, Klein was nominated for Producer of the Year (Non-Classical) at the 52nd Grammy Awards for his work on Melody Gardot's My One and Only Thrill.[16]
Klein continued his work with Herbie Hancock on Hancock's The Imagine Project.[17] The Klein-produced album won the 2010 Grammy for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals.[18]
In 2011, Klein partnered with the Universal Music Group and Decca Label Group to create the imprint label Strange Cargo.[3][19] The imprint’s first signing was Thomas Dybdahl.[19] The label has released albums by Thomas Dybdahl, Adam Cohen, and Rebecca Pidgeon.[1][11][19]
Klein produced Rebecca Pidgeon's Slingshot and Curtis Stiger's Let's Go Out Tonight in 2012.[2] In 2013, he produced Thomas Dybdahl's What's Left is Forever, Madeleine Peyroux's The Blue Room, Florence K's I'm Leaving You and Alfie Boe's Trust.[2][20][21]
Klein has won four Grammys: Best Pop Album in 1995 for Joni Mitchell's Turbulent Indigo, Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for Mitchell's Both Sides Now in 2001, Album of the Year and Best Contemporary Jazz Album for Herbie Hancock's album, River: The Joni Letters in 2008.[1][2][3][22][23]
Klein has professional credits for film soundtracks such as Raging Bull, Grace of My Heart, Sweet November, Brokeback Mountain and the theme song for the television series, Felicity.[3][11]
Klein and Joni Mitchell were married in November 1982.[1][2][3] They divorced in 1994.[1][2][3] In 2006, Klein married Luciana Souza.[1][14] Klein and Souza have one son, Noah.[1]
Bob Dylan, Herbie Hancock, Björk, Jazz, Norah Jones
Miles Davis, Norah Jones, Christina Aguilera, Tina Turner, John Williams
The Band, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Martin Scorsese, The Last Waltz
U2, Ray Charles, Green Day, Frank Sinatra, Jazz
London, Larry Klein, Tom Lord-Alge, Starship (band), San Francisco
Rodney Crowell, Roy Orbison, Country music, Columbia Records, Steve Winwood
Burt Bacharach, Elvis Costello, New York, Martin Scorsese, Joni Mitchell
Alternative rock, Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States, Ambient music