VIKTOR KRAUSS | download bio

Those who know Bassist/Composer Viktor Krauss primarily by his supporting roles with Lyle Lovett, Bill Frisell, Jerry Douglas, and scores of others, might  be surprised by the eclectic range of the original music on his second recording, aptly entitled II.  On the other hand, listeners familiar with Krauss’ remarkable 2004 solo debut, Far From Enough (Nonesuch), and attuned to the finer details of his recording and touring credits—with everyone from Carly Simon, Elvis Costello, John Fogerty, Film Composer - James Newton Howard, and Graham Nash to Chet Atkins, the Chieftains, and Joan Baez—will find II quite consonant with that eclectic track record. 
 
Although II is clearly kin to Far from Enough, it is less a sequel than a bolder expression of Krauss’ ebullient and multifaceted musical personality. From the low rumble acceleration into the gleaming guitar-driven glide of the opener Hop, through six more richly textured instrumentals  and three stunning vocal turns by Lyle Lovett, Shawn Colvin, and Ben Taylor, II reflects Krauss’ restless  curiosity and masterful ability to integrate his interests in film scores, jazz, rock, R&B, and pop.
 
“I wrote Hop in 1996,” recalls Krauss, born in Champaign, Illinois, in 1969, and now a Nashville  resident. “I was perhaps influenced by the feeling of Tennessee as it turns grey in winter. Now I get visions of a  jet moving down a runway, and when the full drum kit comes in, we’ve lifted off, and now we’re  coasting. It could be my favorite thing I’ve ever recorded.” 
 
Such vivid visual imagery comes easily to someone who listened obsessively to evocative instrumental  music and motion picture soundtracks as a child.  As a toddler, Krauss’ favorite record was Paul Winter’s The Winter Consort, and, he says, “I had always played with toys while listening to movie soundtracks. They dictated what I did with my Lego set.” He remembers the John Williams score for Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which he bought when he was nine, as “the first record I ever really wanted—I wore that out for years.” 
 
By then, young Viktor was already playing piano, and he took up trumpet in the fourth grade. He was  drawn to the “ominous” look and sound of the double bass at a middle-school concert, and by his early  teens, when R&B, soul, and rock became consuming passions, he was ready to move beyond the  instrument’s conventional school-orchestra role. Inspired by Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Police,  and, especially Led Zeppelin, Krauss began writing his first genre-bridging music.  
 
At the University of Illinois, Krauss studied bass performance; wrote music for bowed Fender bass,  delay/echo, and voice, and a 12-tone “serial” piece for electric 12-string guitar; and played in an original  satire-rock band often compared to Frank Zappa. Shortly after graduating with a degree in music  composition, with an emphasis on electronic and tape music, and minor in voice, Krauss launched his  professional career, recording and touring with Peter Rowan and the Free Mexican Air Force (1992–’93)  and, in 1994, striking up the long-term musical relationship with Lyle Lovett that has  encompassed many  tours and such recordings as Step Inside This House, Songs from the Movies, Live in Texas, My Baby  Don’t Tolerate, and Lovett’s latest, It’s Not Big, It’s Large
 
By 2003—his résumé brimming with credits that include multiple recordings and tours with Bill Frisell (Nashville, Gone, Just Like a Train, Good Dog, Happy Man, The Sweetest Punch, East/West, All Hat, Floratone) contributions to Mindy Smith’s One Moment More, slide guitarist Jerry Douglas’ Restless on the Farm, Lookout for Hope, and Best Kept Secret, John Fogerty’s Deja Vu All Over Again; and composing credits  for the films Twister and Dr. T. and the Women—Krauss was ready to step out with his own recording.  Far From Enough, which reached No. 6 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz chart, featured Frisell,  Douglas, and drummer Steve Jordan, with Alison Krauss adding viola and vocals.  A new interpretation of the  Robert Plant classic Big Log was also featured on this recording.  
 
For II, Krauss wanted to explore a sound that achieves a hybrid of his favorite two genres of music, music for film as well as "classic rock."  In order to obtain these elements, Viktor tapped guitarist Dean Parks and drummer Matt Chamberlain as his core band. “Dean is not only a complete chameleon on his instrument but also the  ‘composer’s guitarist’ of the film-score world,” Krauss says, “and my love of soundtrack music made that  a perfect fit. Matt is most often thought of as a rock guy, and that’s my headspace, as well. I call those two guys ‘the  insurance policy.’” Bill Frisell adds his distinctive guitar sounds to two tracks, and classical Indian singer Shweta Jhaveri colors three with her atmospheric vocals.  
 
Notorious for his extensive collection of vintage gear (especially effects pedals and analog synthesizers),  Krauss made extensive use of his home studio in Nashville before and after four days of recording at  L.A.’s Sunset Sound Factory. “The whole process was one of construction,” he explains, “because this is  a record about parts and colors. The music was notated, but I wanted Dean and Matt to bring their  instinctive interpretations to it, and I wanted to be able to sculpt the sound a bit more than the first  album.”  
 
The results, produced by longtime associate Lee Townsend, include virtual miniature soundtracks such as  “No Time Like the Past,” which takes its title from an old Twilight Zone episode, and, Krauss says,  evokes the late-summer feeling of nostalgia that seeps into you while cruising a rural highway in the  Midwest and reminiscing about the past.” And “Eyes in the Heat” and “Last Book” actually originated in  scores Krauss composed for a pair of short films.  
 
As for the vocal tunes, “When She’s Dancing” began as a bed of music in need of a melody, which Ben Taylor provided with his lyric. Krauss’ rendition of the Pink Floyd classic Shine on You Crazy Diamond, sung here by Shawn Colvin, features one of his favorite rock recording  moments—a magical shift in meter from six to four. And Krauss had loved the Tracy Nelson song (I  Could Have Been Your) Best Friend ever since he heard Bonnie Raitt’s definitive version in college. “I  knew I wanted Lyle on the record before I had chosen the tune,” he says. “the song which I had appreciated for years really ended up being a perfect fit for him."
 
Throughout II, Krauss plays a variety of keyboards and acoustic and electric guitars.  His ensemble approach,  however, is still shaped by what he’s learned on his primary instrument, the bass. Citing influences as  diverse as Ray Brown, John Paul Jones, Leland Sklar, and AC/DC’s Cliff Williams, Krauss says, “It’s not  necessarily what you play, it’s how the instrument sounds and arranges within the context of music surrounding you. It’s interesting to get into the space of others,  see what you can add to it, and figure out what those good arrangement choices are.”

Music from II was performed live for the first time at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival at the BMI Snowball Showcase featuring Dean, Matt as well as guitarist/producer Mitch Watkins.  Other live performances have included guitarists Tim Young, Adam Levy, Jack Silverman, Steve Walsh as well as engineer/keyboardist Jason Lehning.  Engineer Jason Lehning received a Grammy Nomination for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical for his work on II. 

Viktor was awarded a fellowship to the 2006 Sundance Institute Film Composers Lab and actively seeks ventures into film music composition.




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