Julius Hemphill


Julius Arthur Hemphill was a jazz composer and saxophone player. He performed mainly on alto saxophone, less often on soprano and tenor saxophones and flute.

Biography

Hemphill was born in Fort Worth, Texas, and attended I.M. Terrell High School. He studied the clarinet with John Carter, another I.M. Terrell alumnus, before learning saxophone. Gerry Mulligan was an early influence. He studied music at North Texas State College.
Hemphill joined the United States Army in 1964, and served for several years in the United States Army Band. He later performed with Ike Turner for a brief period. In 1968, Hemphill moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and co-founded the Black Artists' Group, a multidisciplinary arts collective that brought him into contact with artists such as saxophonists Oliver Lake and Hamiet Bluiett, trumpeters Baikida Carroll and Floyd LeFlore, and writer/director Malinke Robert Elliott.
Hemphill moved to New York City in the mid-1970s, and was active in the then-thriving free jazz community. He gave saxophone lessons to a number of musicians, including David Sanborn and Tim Berne. Hemphill was probably best known as the founder of the World Saxophone Quartet, a group he formed in 1976, after collaborating with Anthony Braxton in several saxophone-only ensembles. Hemphill left the World Saxophone Quartet in the early 1990s, and formed a saxophone quintet.
Hemphill recorded over 20 albums as a leader, around 10 records with the World Saxophone Quartet and recorded or performed with Björk, Bill Frisell, Anthony Braxton and others. Late in his life, ill-health forced Hemphill to stop playing saxophone, but he continued writing music until his death in New York City. His saxophone sextet, led by Marty Ehrlich, also released several albums of Hemphill's music, but without Hemphill playing. The most recent is entitled The Hard Blues, recorded live in Lisbon after Hemphill's death from diabetes.
In 2021, New World Records released a retrospective seven-disc box set album titled The Boyé Multi-National Crusade for Harmony featuring Hemphill in a variety of mostly live solo and group contexts.
A source of information on Hemphill's life and music is a multi-hour oral history interview that he conducted for the Smithsonian Institution in March and April 1994, and which is held at the Archives Center of the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.

Discography

As leader

  • Dogon A.D.
  • Coon Bid'ness reissued as Reflections in 1995
  • Blue Boyé
  • Roi Boyé & the Gotham Minstrels
  • Raw Materials and Residuals
  • Buster Bee with Oliver Lake
  • Live in New York with Abdul Wadud
  • Flat-Out Jump Suite
  • Georgia Blue
  • Julius Hemphill Big Band
  • Fat Man and the Hard Blues
  • Live from the New Music Cafe
  • Oakland Duets with Abdul Wadud
  • Five Chord Stud
  • Chile New York
  • Live at Kassiopeia with Peter Kowald
  • The Boyé Multi-National Crusade for Harmony a seven-CD archival set recorded during 1977–2007
Albums featuring Hemphill's music
  • Diminutive Mysteries
  • At Dr. King's Table
  • One Atmosphere
  • The Hard Blues: Live in Lisbon
With World Saxophone Quartet