Tom Hall (b. 1958) (baritone & tenor saxophones) has
been an active professional musician since his teens when
he played a weekly gig at the Ebony Inn with Ohio Hung
Jury, a Washington, DC funk band. He moved to Boston in
1976 to attend New England Conservatory, where he studied
with Joe Allard, Jaki Byard, Jimmy Guiffre, George Russell,
and Ernie Wilkins.
It was during these years he first studied free
improvisation. He was the co-founder of Ensemble Garuda,
whose members included percussionist Sam Bennett, trumpeter
Frank London, and Brazilian cellist Jaques Morelenbaum.
This group met for years, with the sole purpose of an
intensive exploration of improvisation.
In 1979, shortly before graduation from NEC, he co-founded
Your Neighborhood Saxophone Quartet (1979-1997) with Steve
Adams, Allan Chase, and Circe Miller (other members of the
group over the years included Ben Schachter, Joel Springer,
Douglas Yates and Bob Zung). Over the next 18 years, Your
Neighborhood Saxophone Quartet toured the United States and
Europe and recorded five CDs. In addition to playing at
every conceivable venue in New England, YNSQ also appeared
at The Boston Globe Jazz Festival, Bang on the Can Festival
(NY, NY), and the Moers Music Festival (Germany), among
others.
During the 1980's, along with his work with YNSQ, he
recorded and toured with many original groups, playing very
different styles of music. Hall toured the world and
recorded with Volo-Volo (1980-1987), a popular Haitian
band, as well as playing in many of the New England areas
finest Latin orchestras. He was a longstanding member of
Mark Harvey's avante-garde big band Aardvark Jazz
Orchestra. He led and fronted his own rap group (1988),
walked the bar in blues bands, performed with the Bentmen
and recorded with avante-garde rockers Birdsongs of the
Mezesoic, and singer-songwriter Geoff Bartley.
In the 1990's, Hall continued playing, touring, and
recording in a variety of musical styles. He was a member
of Bob Nieske's jazz quintet, Wolf Soup (1992-1999), and
played with blues/jazz keyboardist Bruce Katz in the Bruce
Katz Band (1994-1999). During this time, he also played and
recorded with singer-songwriter April Hall, was a member of
The Jane Gang (country swing) and Soul Kitchen (classic
R&B), recorded with R&B giant Mighty Sam McLain,
and was the arranger and horn section leader on CD's by
rocker Dennis Brennan. (Discography)
In 1997, Hall developed a course on free improvisation for
Brandeis University, and has been teaching and directing
the Brandeis Improvisation Collective ever since, as well
as being the saxophone instructor for Brandeis University.
He has also conducted Master Classes at New England
Conservatory (Boston, MA.), and at the Royal Conservatory
and Rotterdam Conservatory in The Netherlands.
Since 1999, he has been a frequent contributor to Club
d'Elf, a dub-trance-groove group led by bassist Mike
Rivard, whose rotating cast includes John Medeski, DJ
Logic, Mat Maneri, Duke Levine, Reeves Gabrels, Joe Maneri,
Dave Tronzo, Kenwood Dennard, and Brahim Fribgane, and
appears on several live CDs.
In 2001, he designed and led Session I, a workshop for
professional improvisers, culminating in a series of
concerts in the New England area, with participating
musicians Brian Carpenter, Ken Field, Jeff Song, Jane Wong,
Alec Redfearn, Grant Smith and David Tronzo. In 2002 he led
Session II, a workshop designed to study groove related
improvisation. From 2002-2005, Tom was a curator for the
Cultural Construction Music Series.
In addition to his ongoing teaching and group performances,
he currently produces “The Sessions” an improvised music
series that brings together musicians from all styles of
music and turns them loose in a free improvisatory setting.