- Born
- Died
- Birth nameBerthold Heinrich Kämpfert
- Nickname
- Fips
- Internationally renowned bandleader Bert Kaempfert was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1923. A student at the Hamburg School of Music, he was hired by bandleader Hans Busch and played with that orchestra before enlisting in the German Navy during World War II, where he served as a musician. After the war he started his own band, in addition to working as an arranger and producer for the recordings of other singers and bandleaders (in 1961 he hired a little-known band to back up singer Tony Sheridan on his album "My Bonnie". That band was The Beatles).
Kampfert had his own hit recording career, beginning with what is probably his signature work, "Wonderland By Night", in 1960. He also had a major hit with the instrumental "Red Roses for a Blue Lady" in 1965--although he did not, as is often thought, write the music for it, he did have a hugely successful songwriting career, some of his most famous compositions (he wrote the music, others wrote the lyrics) being hits for other artists, such as "Strangers in the Night" for Frank Sinatra, "Wooden Heart" for Joe Dowell, "Spanish Eyes" for Al Martino, "Danke Schoen" for Wayne Newton, among others. He also wrote the scores for several films, including A Man Could Get Killed (1966) and the Elvis Presley film G.I. Blues (1960). Musicians such as Bobby Hackett, Pete Fountain and Johnny Mathis recorded "tribute" albums of Kaempfert's music. He was an early proponent of what came to be known as "world music", often using songs and musical styles from Africa (one of his biggest hits was called "Afrikaan Beat"). Although his record sales began to decline in the 1970s, he kept up a strong schedule of live concerts, and made a hugely successful appearance at London's Royal Albert Hall in 1974.
A heavy cigarette smoker, he died of a stroke at his home in Majorca, Spain, on June 21, 1980. He was 56 years old.- IMDb Mini Biography By: frankfob2@yahoo.com
- SpouseHannelore Winkler(August 14, 1946 - June 21, 1980) (his death, 2 children)
- A talented composer as well as performer, he wrote many songs that have since become standards, including "Strangers in the Night", "Danke Schoen", and "Spanish Eyes".
- Although almost all of his best-known recordings featured a trumpet lead, it is ironic that Kaempfert, although a talented multi-instrumentalist, could not play trumpet. The trumpet solos on his recordings were by either Charles Tabor or Fred Moch, both of whom received credit for doing so on Kaempfert's albums.
- One of the icons of "elevator/dentist office/supermarket music," he was one of the top-selling instrumental artists of the 1960s. In addition to having a number-one U.S. single with "Wonderland By Night" in 1960, his best-selling albums, all released in the U.S. by American Decca (now MCA) include: "The Magic Music of Far Away Places," "Blue Midnight," "Three O'Clock in the Morning," "Strangers in the Night," "That Happy Feeling," "Warm and Wonderful," "My Way of Life," "Christmas Wonderland," and, perhaps inevitably, "Bert Kaempfert's Greatest Hits."
- Was producer of The Beatles' first recordings in 1961, for Polydor, when they were still making a name for themselves on the small German nightclub circuit.
- Jackie Gleason, a fan of Kaempfert's, invited him to make his US TV debut on Gleason's show in 1967. The episode itself, telecast Christmas week of that year, drew some of the highest ratings in the show's history.
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