Theo Jörgensmann


Theodor Franz Jörgensmann was a German jazz clarinetist and academic teacher. Professionally known as Theo Jörgensmann, he belonged to the second generation of European free jazz musicians, part of the clarinet renaissance in the jazz and improvising music scene, and one of few clarinet players for whom unaccompanied solo recordings were a significant part of his work. In 1975 he formed a quartet of clarinetists, Clarinet Contrast, and in 1997 a quartet was named after him. Jörgensmann played in many formations internationally. He wrote a philosophical book about improvising in music.

Life and career

Jörgensmann was born in Bottrop on 29 September 1948. His mother came from East Prussia. He trained to be a chemical technician. He started to play clarinet when he was 18 years old. From 1969 until 1972 Jörgensmann took private lessons from a music teacher at the Folkwang Hochschule in Essen. At the same time he started working with fellow musicians from the Ruhr industrial area. After a one and half year hitch in the Bundeswehr, where he played soprano saxophone, Jörgensmann worked with handicapped children and studied social pedagogy for a few semesters. He appeared at the 1972 Frankfurt Jazz Festival, his first major event, as a member of the Contact Trio, with. He became a professional musician in 1975. Early in his career, he often played amplified in jazz rock bands, because there was no jazz scene in North Rhine-Westphalia.
From 1975 to 1977 he led the group Clarinet Contrast, consisting only of clarinets, with Perry Robinson,, and Michel Pilz. He also founded his first quartet then which became one of Germany's best-known jazz groups by the end of the 1970s. They represented Germany at the festival of the European Broadcasting Union in Hilversum, Netherlands. At the beginning of the 1980s he took part in a Clarinet Summit, which was established by Joachim E. Berendt and himself, with John Carter, Perry Robinson, Ernst-Ludwig Petrowsky, Gianluigi Trovesi and others. Since then Jörgensmann was involved in numerous international projects. He was a member of John Fischer's Interface, Franz Koglmann's Pipetet, Andrea Centazzo's Mitteleuropa Orchestra, and 's Contraband. In 1985 he toured Europe with bassist Barre Phillips and reed player Paul McCandless. He formed a duo with the clarinetist, was leader of Klarinettenquartett Cl-4 and co-founder of the large ensemble Grubenklangorchester. In 1987 Jörgensmann was the subject of a documentary film, Theo Jörgensmann, Bottrop, Klarinette, directed by Christoph Hübner.
From 1982, Jörgensmann presented jazz topics for the WDR. Between 1983 and 1993 he lectured clarinet and ensemble at the University of Duisburg, and from 1993 to 1997 he was a lecturer for free improvising at the music therapeutics institute of the Witten/Herdecke University. Together with the musicologist Rolf-Dieter Weyer, Jörgensmann wrote a philosophical book about improvising in music.
In 1997 Jörgensmann moved to Brüel, a rural area similar to where his mother had lived. He started the Theo Jörgensmann Quartet with , and . They toured in the United States and Canada in 1999, 2001, and 2003, including playing twice at the Montreal International Jazz Festival. He also played with the Polish twins Marcin Oles and Bartlomiej Oles since 2003; their album, Oleś Jörgensmann Oleś – Directions, was chosen by the Polish internet jazz magazine Diapason as Record of the Year in 2005.
From 2008 he was a member of Trio Hot with violinist and bassist, and in 2009 he started the Deep Down Clarinet Duo with the bass clarinet player Ernst Ulrich Deuker. They also work together in the Tribal Trio, a clarinet trio with the French-American clarinetist Etienne Rolin. In 2009 Jörgensmann performed a few concerts with younger musicians from the UK in London. In 2010, he founded, together with his wife, a cultural venue in Brüel for concerts and art exhibitions. In 2011 he formed the Freedom Trio with bassist Ramond and acoustic guitar player Hagen Stüdemann. After a twelve-year break, he also worked together again with pianist Bernd Köppen. Jörgensmann also worked again with Clarinet Summit, with Robinson, Trovesi, Konrad, Maurer, Sebastian Gramss and Günther "Baby" Sommer. In 2018, Jörgensmann was artist in residence at Singers Festival Warsaw, the biggest festival of Jewish culture in Poland.
During a career spanning three decades as a free improviser, Jörgensmann also worked with Lee Konitz, Charlie Mariano, Barre Phillips, Kenny Wheeler, Kent Carter and John Fischer.
Jörgensmann died at his home in Brüel on 6 October 2025, at the age of 77.

Theory

Jörgensmann wrote in his book Kleine Ethik der Improvisation:

Discography

  • In Time
  • Straightout!
  • Go Ahead Clarinet
  • Live at Birdland Gelsenkirchen
  • Song of BoWaGe
  • You Better Fly Away with Clarinet Summit
  • Next Adventure
  • Deep Blue Lake with John Fischer
  • Zeitverdichtung
  • Für Den Letzten Gast with Bernd Koppen
  • Tauwetter
  • Swiss Radio Days Volume Three with John Fischer
  • Introitus with Hans-Günther Wauer
  • Live at Music Academy with Federico Sanesi
  • Aesthetic Direction
  • Merseburger Begegnung with Hans-Günther Wauer
  • Pagine Gialle with Eckard Koltermann
  • So I Play
  • '
  • '
  • To Ornette – Hybrid Identity
  • '
  • ' with Oles Brothers
  • New Conception of Duo Hagen Studemann
  • Melencolia with Albrecht Maurer
  • Blue in Blue with Karoly Binder
  • Bucksch
  • Elements in Candor with Krzysztof Dys, Michael Marcus
  • Axiomatic 473’ Exploration, with Alessandro Ciccarelli and Lorenzo Santoro

    Publications

  • Kleine Ethik der Improvisation: vom Wesen, Zeit und Raum, Material und Spontangestalt, by Theo Jörgensmann & Rolf-Dieter Weyer, with silhouettes of Hermann "Es" Richter

    Awards

  • Kunstförderpreis of Aachen 1980
  • Kulturpreis of Bottrop 1991
  • Jazz Pott of Ruhrgebiet 2018