Rod Cless

Clarinetist Rod Cless seems to have emerged from the middle of a potato field somewhere in Iowa and died in the mid-'40s after falling several stories from the balcony of an apartment. Named George Roderick Cless, he was related by marriage to the much better-known reedman Bud Freeman, but certainly had a respectable career in the Dixieland ensembles of leaders such as Muggsy Spanier and Bobby Hackett. He began playing in bands in college including the Varsity Five, darlings of Iowa State University. In the mid-'20s he relocated to Des Moines where he first came into contact with an important influence, bandleader Frank Teschemacher, known as "Tesch" to his musical cohorts. The two went to Chicago together and began playing with groups such as the orchestra of Charlie Pierce.