Composer/Percussionist Gerry Hemingway, has been at the forefront of creative improvised music for over two decades. He was born in 1955 in New Haven, Conn., to a family with musical interests (his grandmother had been a concert pianist and his father studied composition with Paul Hindemith). Gerry Hemingway became interested in drums around the age of ten and by the age of seventeen was working as a professional musician primarily in the jazz and bebop domain. In the 1970's, New Haven was home for a number of interesting musicians. This was where Hemingway met and first played with Anthony Davis, Leo Smith, George Lewis and Anthony Braxton. In the late 1970's, Gerry Hemingway, trombonist Ray Anderson, and bassist Mark Helias formed a collective trio which they eventually named BassDrumBone. The trio celebrated it's 25th anniversary in 2002 with the release of March of Dimes on the Data label.
Gerry Hemingway joined and remained a member of the Anthony Braxton quartet for eleven years from 1983 - 1994, and in the late eighties began performing with the Reggie Workman Ensemble which is ongoing and at different times has included Oliver Lake, Jeanne Lee, Marilyn Crispell, John Purcell and Don Byron among others. Gerry Hemingway is a core member of Anthony Davis' Episteme Ensemble, and has performed and recorded as a featured soloist on Mr. Davis' violin concerto "Maps" as well as the operas "Under the Double Moon" and "Tania" (released recently on Koch Classics). Hemingway also performed in duet with pianist Cecil Taylor in May of 1999 on the invitation of De Singel in Antwerp, Belgium.
A recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, Gerry Hemingway has become increasingly prominent as a solo composer and improvisor and a leader of several long standing quintets and quartets of international acclaim. In addition to receiving fellowships from both the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York Foundation on the Arts, he has also received four commissions through the Parabola Arts Foundation with funding from the New York State Council on the Arts, the latest of which (1998) was for "The Visiting Tank", which concludes his Tzadik release Chamber Works. In 1993, Gerry Hemingway premiered a commission from the Kansas City Symphony with funding from Meet the Composer for a concerto for percussionist and orchestra entitled "Terrains." In June of 1998 a co-composition with the Amsterdam based composer Guus Jannsen was commissioned by the NPS radio of the Netherlands and performed at the Holland Festival. Entitled "Cycles," the work used a unique computer controlled conducting system that allowed the ensemble to play in multiple tempos.
Gerry Hemingway’s current primary working band is a quartet with either Ray Anderson (trombone) or Herb Robertson (trumpet), Ellery Eskelin (tenor sax) and Mark Dresser (bass). The band performed 40 concerts in the US in 1998 and its first recording, Johnny's Corner Song was released on the Auricle Record label in March of 1998. The quartet has also completed a studio recording entitled Devil's Paradise which was released in May 2003 on Clean Feed records.
This follows nine years of performances and recordings with Hemingway’s European based quintet whose final album was released on GM Recordings in the fall of 1999 entitled Waltzes, Two-Steps and Other Matters of the Heart. Previous recordings include Special Detail (91), Down to the Wire (93), Demon Chaser (94) and The Marmalade King (95) all on the Swiss Hat Art label (all currently out of print) and Slamadam (95) and Perfect World (96) on Random Acoustics. The quintet formation is in a process of reactivation with new personnel and instrumentation and performing and recording in Lisbon, Portugal in the fall of 2002. A release of that material which is now prepared for release is planned for 2004.
A significant part of Gerry Hemingway’s body of work is represented in his work as a solo percussionist which began in 1974. His interest in extending the vocabulary of the instrument for the purpose of creating richly textured, vibrant and cogent compositions for the drum set have been documented in four recordings including Electro-Acoustic Solo Works (84-95) and Acoustic Solo Works (83-94) on the Random Acoustics label as well as the previous vinyl editions Solo Works on Auricle Records and Tubworks on the Sound Aspects label.
Gerry Hemingway’s work as a composer and percussionist includes recordings, collaborations and performances with Derek Bailey, Leo Smith, Oliver Lake, Kenny Wheeler, Frank Gratkowski, George Lewis, John Cale and Hank Roberts among many others. Collaborative trios include the GRH trio with German pianist Georg Graewe and the Dutch cellist Ernst Reijseger, the WHO trio with Swiss pianist Michel Wintsch and bassist Baenz Oester, the CGH trio with pianist Marilyn Crispell and bassist Barry Guy recently heard at Guimarães festival in Portugal, and Brew with Reggie Workman and Miya Masaoka.
Gerry Hemingway also performs in a number of ongoing duos including one with John Butcher and another with live electronics and saxophone virtuoso, Earl Howard. Tom & Gerry is another duo with Thomas Lehn who performs live analog electronics. In addition the duo with pianist Marilyn Crispell continues with a recent performance at the 2001 Guelph festival. Another of Hemingway’s duo project is with vocalist Andrea Goodman known for her work with Meredith Monk. They have released a recording on Ruby Throated Records entitled Divine Doorways. His work for multimedia includes "Waterways", for multiple slide projectors, tape and percussion, as well as an ongoing collaboration with video artist/animator Beth Warshafsky.