Carlo Krahmer (born William Max Geserick, 11 March 1914, Shoreditch, London – 20 April 1976, London) was a British jazz drummer and record producer.
Born in Shoreditch, London, Krahmer was partially sighted.
He joined Claude Bampton's Orchestra, a body sponsored by the National Institute for the Blind (now the RNIB), of which George Shearing was also a member.
He worked in various bands, sometimes as leader, taking his own group to the Paris Jazz Festival in 1949.In 1947 Krahmer co-founded Esquire Records with Peter Newbrook, a label which recorded bebop and licensed American blues and jazz recordings.
By 1950, Krahmer had retired from active performance, but had begun to teach aspiring drummers such as Victor Feldman.
Krahmer died in 1976