Dale Oehler
Dale Dixon Oehler was an American arranger, producer and pianist.
Oehler's work fuses various elements to enhance several genre of music he worked on, including jazz, pop, country, R&B or easy listening. His credits include artists such as Marvin Gaye, Freddie Hubbard, Joni Mitchell and Andre Kostelanetz. Leonard Feather once described Oehler, in his Los Angeles Times jazz column, as "an adaptable writer".
Early career
In his early childhood, Dale received formal piano training in the Classics. While in his teens, Oehler started playing jazz gigs in the Springfield, Illinois area. He later played at clubs in the Chicago area while attending Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.After graduation he went to Cedar Rapids, Iowa to play with J. R. Monterose at the Tender Trap. Other notables that came through the club were Al Jarreau, Dave Sanborn, Freddie Waits and Cecil McBee. He segued from playing in Cedar Rapids to attending the University of Iowa at Iowa City where he pursued his master's degree in Composition and was able to establish the first Jazz Program at that university. While going to school, he represented the University of Iowa at the University of Notre Dame Jazz Festival in 1965 where he received Best Arranger and Best Pianist awards, as judged by Quincy Jones and Clark Terry.
Oehler also played on J.R. Monterose. While at the University of Iowa, he arranged his first professional record for Bugsy Maugh, which received a Grammy Award nomination the following year.
Later career
In 1969, Oehler, now married, moved to the Los Angeles, California area to pursue a career in music. In the early 1970s, Oehler again met up with J.J. Johnson, whom he had met in the early 1960s when Johnson was with the Miles Davis band. Johnson was responsible for introducing Dale to Marvin Gaye, with whom he subsequently arranged Trouble Man, which was the main title for the movie of the same name. Also during this period, he reconnected with Tom McIntosh, whom he had first met in 1962 while Tom was with the Art Farmer and Benny Golson Jazztet. Tom was instrumental in providing the opportunity to write various film cues, which included Shaft’s Big Score. It was during that film Dale met Freddie Hubbard, following which Freddie asked Dale to arrange his first Columbia record, entitled High Energy. He also worked on You Light Up My Life, arranging the title tune for Andre Kostelanetz.Beginning in 1975, he worked at Blue Note Records with Bobby Hutcherson, Carmen McRae and Horace Silver. Oehler's Warner Bros. Records work included Al Jarreau, Randy Crawford and Jennifer Holliday. He also worked on Joni Mitchell's The Hissing of Summer Lawns.
In 1978, Oehler produced and arranged the Freddie Hubbard album, Super Blue, which featured Joe Henderson, Hubert Laws, Ron Carter, Jack DeJohnette, Kenny Barron and George Benson.
During the 1990s, Oehler's credits included work on albums for Dolly Parton, Kirk Whalum, Joe Sample, Diane Schuur and Mark Whitfield.
Discography
As producer
Bobby HutchersonMontara Waiting The View from the Inside Knucklebean Un Poco LocoOthers
- Moacir Santos, Carnival of the Spirits
- Carmen McRae, Can’t Hide Love
- David Sanborn, Promise Me the Moon
- Freddie Hubbard, ''Super Blue''
As arranger
- 1968 Inside Bugsy
- 1972 Shaft's Big Score!
- 1972 Trouble Man
- 1973 Willie Dynamite
- 1974 High Energy
- 1975 The Hissing of Summer Lawns
- 1975 Who Is This Bitch, Anyway?
- 1976 Can’t Hide Love
- 1976 Glow
- 1977 Promise Me the Moon
- 1978 You Light Up My Life
- 1978 Super Blue
- 1978 Blue Note Meets the L.A. Philharmonic
- 1979 Silver 'n Strings Play the Music of the Spheres
- 1979 Suspended Animation
- 1980 Un Poco Loco
- 1981 Secret Combination
- 1983 Nightline
- 1985 Say You Love Me
- 1992 All the Way
- 1993 Invitation
- 1995 Something Special
- 1995 In This Life
- 1995 Love Walked In
- 1997 ''Forever Love''
As a piano player
- J. R. Monterose, J. R. Monterose
- Bugsy Maugh, Inside Bugsy
- David Sanborn, Promise Me the Moon
- Freddie Hubbard, Super Blue
- J. R. Monterose, ''Live at the Tender Trap''