Alto and baritone saxophonist, composer, and bandleader
Tim Berne was born in Syracuse, NY, in 1954, and purchased his first alto saxophone while attending Lewis and Clark College in Oregon. A fan of R&B and Motown music, he was not particularly interested in jazz until he heard saxophonist
Julius Hemphill's album
Dogon A.D. Inspired by
Hemphill's ability to project R&B soulfulness in a creative jazz context,
Berne traveled to New York City in 1974 and located the saxophonist.
Berne took saxophone lessons from
Hemphill and also became involved in managing the elder musician's rather infrequent concert appearances. A mentor-apprentice relationship evolved, providing
Berne encouragement for his musical endeavors as well as lessons in how to operate independently.
Hemphill, founder of
the World Saxophone Quartet and a major figure in the 1970s New York loft jazz scene, died in 1995 leaving a considerable imprint on creative music but with his greatest promise unfulfilled. To this day,
Berne cites
Hemphill as a significant and continuing influence on his work.
In 1979,
Berne founded Empire, his first record label, and released four albums over the next four years. These recordings featured a number of musicians who had -- or would soon have -- stellar reputations in creative jazz circles, including
Paul Motian,
John Carter,
Olu Dara,
Vinny Golia,
Alex Cline,
Nels Cline, and
Ed Schuller.
Berne's efforts attracted the interest of Italian record producer
Giovanni Bonandrini, whose Soul Note label released the saxophonist's next two albums,
The Ancestors in 1983 and
Mutant Variations in 1984. Drummer
Motian and bassist
Schuller from the Empire recordings are featured on the Soul Note releases, which also introduce trumpeter
Herb Robertson as a new member of the
Berne coterie.
Robertson first met
Berne at a 1981 loft jam session and would figure prominently in many of the saxophonist's later and most successful recordings. Notably,
Berne cites
Mutant Variations as his first album in which compositions were written specifically for the musicians involved. Previously, he had written material without knowing exactly who would be available to record it.
With six albums as a leader to his credit,
Berne then landed a major-label deal with Columbia, which released
Fulton Street Maul in 1987 and
Sanctified Dreams in 1988. The former album includes cellist
Hank Roberts and then-ECM guitarist
Bill Frisell, along with
Berne and drummer
Alex Cline.
Sanctified Dreams features a larger ensemble with
Berne joined again by
Roberts and
Robertson, as well as bassist
Mark Dresser and drummer
Joey Baron. This quintet afforded
Berne the opportunity for some of his most complex and focused music to date. With
Sanctified Dreams' loosening and tightening rhythms, spiky melodic lines, and attention to textural detail,
Berne charted a direction that he would continue to explore even more deeply on subsequent recordings.
Not a bastion of the avant-garde, Columbia issued only two recordings and
Berne's relationship with the label was over. German producer
Stefan Winter then signed
Berne to his JMT label and from 1989 until 1995, the saxophonist was given free rein to pursue a number of challenging projects. These resulted in two recordings by the collaborative trio
Miniature, featuring
Berne,
Roberts, and
Baron;
Fractured Fairy Tales,
Berne's first JMT recording as a leader; and
Pace Yourself and
Nice View by
Tim Berne's Caos Totale. The two
Caos Totale recordings, released in 1991 and 1993, featured an extended ensemble of
Berne with
Robertson,
Dresser, trombonist
Steve Swell, drummer
Bobby Previte, and French guitarist
Marc Ducret. (
Nice View also includes British musician
Django Bates on keyboards and E flat peck horn.) The
Caos Totale recordings reveal a mature and self-assured
Berne with an instantly identifiable saxophone style and a compositional approach moving toward extended-form pieces of extraordinary scope.
Diminuitive Mysteries (Mostly Hemphill),
Berne's heartfelt tribute to his friend and mentor, was also released by JMT in 1993, only two years before the gravely ill
Hemphill died of a heart condition. That
Hemphill was pleased by this homage remains a source of great satisfaction to
Berne.
Berne's career was about to move into a new phase marked by the formation of an important new band and a second new label. In 1991,
Berne had recorded a session led by bassist
Michael Formanek for
Formanek's
Extended Animation, released the following year by Enja. In 1992, the two musicians recorded again, this time in a collaborative trio with drummer
Jeff Hirshfield from the
Extended Animation ensemble. The result was
Loose Cannon, released by Soul Note in 1993, a recording that reveals
Berne and
Formanek to be a particularly compatible reeds-and-bass team.
Berne became interested in leading his own trio with
Formanek as the bassist, and chose
Jim Black, a recent arrival to New York City from Boston, as the drummer.
Berne soon decided that a quartet would serve as a better outlet for his "composing jones" and following a recommendation from
Black added tenor saxophonist and clarinetist
Chris Speed to the group. (
Speed, like
Black, was originally from Seattle and studied in Boston before making the jump to New York.)
Berne now had a new working quartet, which he named
Bloodcount. Still under contract to JMT, the quartet headed to Paris in September 1994 and joined up with guitarist
Ducret for four nights of concerts to be recorded live. In 1995, the results appeared on a trilogy of JMT CDs,
Lowlife,
Poisoned Minds, and
Memory Select. On the CDs, the members of
Bloodcount stretch out with individual and collective improvisations that are slowly drawn back into unison structures which retain
Berne's skewed R&B sensibility. Extended-form compositions, now stretched to the 30- to 50-minute range, are filled with episodes of gradually escalating tension with sometimes intentionally muted, rather than explosive, resolution. The Paris concert trilogy of recordings received considerable acclaim, but the JMT label was soon to disappear, taking
Berne's recordings out of circulation. JMT had a distribution deal with Polygram, which after purchasing the label decided to shut it down.
Berne's entire back catalogue of JMT recordings was deleted and much of the music he had written and performed during the early '90s was gone. "It's like being erased," he commented to the New York Times.
In characteristic fashion,
Berne moved forward and established his second independent label, Screwgun, which has since become the major outlet for his work. With guerilla recording tactics, plain brown packaging on the label's initial releases, and wild and scribbly
Steve Byram graphic art, the Screwgun CDs have often presented
Berne at his roughest and edgiest.
Bloodcount Unwound, the label's inaugural release in 1996, is a three-CD energy blast recorded live by the core quartet (minus
Ducret) at club dates in Berlin and Ann Arbor, MI. A slew of additional recordings followed during the remainder of the 1990s, including
Discretion and
Saturation Point by
Bloodcount and
Visitation Rites and
Please Advise by
Paraphrase,
Berne's improvising trio with bassist
Drew Gress and drummer
Tom Rainey.
Berne continued to appear on other labels during this period as well.
I Think They Liked It Honey by the
Big Satan trio of
Berne,
Ducret, and
Rainey was released on
Stefan Winter's Winter & Winter label in 1997; other CDs issued during the late '90s included
Ornery People by the
Berne and
Formanek duo on Little Brother Records,
Cause & Reflect by
Berne and
Hank Roberts on Level Green, and
Melquiades by the Italian band
Enten Eller (with
Berne as guest alto saxophonist) on Splasc(h) Records.
As the new millennium began,
Berne traveled to Denmark and Sweden to perform and record with
the Copenhagen Art Ensemble, the results of which appeared on the Screwgun double-CD set
Open, Coma (with full-color artwork now replacing the label's earlier "plain brown wrapper" style) in 2001. And earlier, at the June 2000 Bell Atlantic Jazz Festival in New York City,
Berne premiered two new ensembles, both of which featured former Detroit-area keyboardist and
Roscoe Mitchell collaborator
Craig Taborn.
Shell Game was released by the
Hard Cell trio (
Berne,
Rainey, and
Taborn) the following year, and 2002 and 2003 saw the release of
Science Friction and
The Sublime And by
Berne's
Science Friction quartet (
Hard Cell plus guitarist
Ducret). Meanwhile,
Berne also found time to pursue his more compositional side on
The Sevens, a New World label release from 2002 also featuring
the ARTE Quartett saxophone ensemble and guitarists
Ducret and
David Torn, the latter also responsible for "sonic nurturing" and "sonic redistribution." The year 2004 saw
Berne release
Hard Cell Live on Screwgun, and
Souls Saved Hear, a new studio recording from
Big Satan on Thirsty Ear, also arrived. Recorded in Brooklyn, NY, and Ann Arbor, MI,
Hard Cell Live appeared later that year, followed by
Feign, another Screwgun release, this time by an acoustic version of
Hard Cell, in 2005, a year that also saw the Winter & Winter label re-release the three earlier JMT
Bloodcount Paris Concert collections (
Lowlife,
Poisoned Minds, and
Memory Select). A new recording from
Paraphrase,
Pre-Emptive Denial, also arrived on Screwgun in 2005.
As the decade continued,
Berne also collaborated with various musicians who had been major contributors to his own endeavors, including
David Torn's
Prezens (essentially the
Hard Cell trio under the leadership of
Torn) and
Drew Gress'
7 Black Butterflies. He also resurrected
Bloodcount for selected club and concert appearances, and began performing and recording with the
Buffalo Collision quartet -- consisting of
Berne and cellist
Hank Roberts along with
Bad Plus members
Ethan Iverson (piano) and
David King (drums) -- whose
Duck CD was released by Screwgun in 2008.
Tim Berne continues to be an important member of the New York City creative music community who asserts a strong and singular musical personality throughout his diverse and frequently absorbing works. He has influenced other and often younger creative improvising musicians, and he knows his way around the music business. The last attribute has been particularly useful to
Berne, who has been quick to establish independent record labels if necessary to get his music recorded and released to the public. Not beholden to major-label sensibilities,
Berne has been free to explore a singular and uncompromising musical path. ~ Dave Lynch, All Music Guide