The Boston Globe

Peter Brötzmann, 82; leading free-jazz musician

- By Mike Rubin

Peter Brötzmann, an avantgarde saxophonis­t whose ferocious playing and uncompromi­sing independen­ce made him one of Europe’s most influentia­l freejazz musicians, died June 22 at his home in Wuppertal, Germany. He was 82.

His death was confirmed by Michael Ehlers, director of Eremite Records, who served as Mr. Brötzmann’s longtime North American tour manager and business partner.

No cause was given, but Mr. Brötzmann had suffered from respirator­y issues for the past decade. A self-taught musician — best known for his tenor saxophone work, he also played various clarinets and the tarogato, a Hungarian woodwind instrument — he said that his practice of pushing too much air through his horn might have caused his health problems, which he likened to the lung damage suffered by glassblowe­rs.

“I wanted to sound like four tenor saxophonis­ts,” he told British music magazine The Wire in 2012. “That’s what I’m still chasing.”

The force of Mr. Brötzmann’s abrasive squall felt tectonic. “I can’t think of anyone that played with more power than Peter,” British saxophonis­t Evan Parker, who appeared on several of Mr. Brötzmann’s early records, said in a phone interview. “I don’t think it can be done, to get more out of a saxophone than that. Sometimes his nose would bleed because he was blowing so hard. He gave everything.”

Mr. Brötzmann described his style as a means of exorcising demons — particular­ly those of Germany’s crimes against humanity in World War II.

“Younger people don’t understand, but what has happened to us in Germany is a kind of trauma of our generation,” he told The Wire. “There is a great shame there and a terrible kind of trauma. And that’s why maybe the German way of playing this kind of music sounds always a bit different than the music from the other parts of Europe, at least. It’s always more a kind of scream. More brutal, more aggressive.”

Hans Peter Hermann Brötzmann was born on March 6, 1941, in Remscheid, an industrial city in western Germany. The city was almost destroyed by Allied bombardmen­t in 1943, and Mr. Brötzmann’s earliest memory was of running through the streets holding his mother’s hand to escape the firestorm.

His father, Johannes, a tax officer, had been conscripte­d into the Nazi army. Captured by the Russians on the Eastern Front, he didn’t return until 1948, after escaping from a POW camp in Siberia. Mr. Brötzmann grew up in Remscheid with his family — his father, his mother, Frida (Schröder) Brötzmann, and his sister Mariane — but moved to Wuppertal for school and remained there the rest of his life.

He studied graphic design and visual art in the late 1950s at the School of Applied Arts in Wuppertal, where he created fonts: striking, blocky alphabets that he later used on the covers of many of his albums. He had his first gallery show in 1959 and participat­ed in early performanc­es staged by the experiment­al, interdisci­plinary art movement Fluxus.

Mr. Brötzmann continued making artwork prolifical­ly even as music assumed a place of priority in his life.

“From the very start, he didn’t love the art-world milieu,” said John Corbett, co-owner of the Corbett vs. Dempsey gallery in Chicago, who began curating exhibition­s of Brötzmann’s artwork in 2003. “But he continued privately making visual art. He was interested in beauty, but it had to be accompanie­d by a certain kind of honesty and forthright­ness.

“He really could not deal with people who were false, with art that was false, and with music that he felt was false,” Corbett added. “He was quite intolerant of all those things.”

In 1967, Mr. Brötzmann released his first album as a bandleader on his own label, BRÖ. If its title, “For Adolphe Sax,” read like a provocatio­n aimed at the 19th-century inventor of the saxophone, then his next BRÖ album, “Machine Gun,” released in 1968 and credited to the Peter Brötzmann Octet, announced all-out war on everything that had come before.

“Machine Gun” was a nickname trumpeter Don Cherry had given him, as well as a reference to the carnage of the war in Vietnam. A milestone of collective improvisat­ion, the album boasted three tenor saxophonis­ts who would become titans of European free music: Parker, Willem Breuker of the Netherland­s, and Mr. Brötzmann.

Mr. Brötzmann’s violently expressive sounds, combined with confrontat­ional album titles such as “Nipples” (1969) and “Balls” (1970), “was something to get used to,” Parker said. “It wasn’t the gentle school of English ‘after you, sir’ kind of improvisin­g.”

In 1969, Mr. Brötzmann cofounded a label, FMP (the initials stood for “free music production”), for which his poster and album designs helped create a distinctiv­e visual aesthetic. His trio with Dutch drummer Han Bennink and Belgian pianist Fred Van Hove — both veterans of “Machine Gun” — lasted a dozen years before Van Hove departed.

But Mr. Brötzmann’s reputation was largely confined to Europe until the mid-1980s, when he joined with guitarist Sonny Sharrock, bassist Bill Laswell, and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson to form Last Exit, a group whose amplified cacophony flirted with heavy metal and raised his profile in North America.

Mr. Brötzmann’s restless creativity sometimes found unlikely admirers. In a 2001 interview with Oxford American magazine, former president Bill Clinton was asked to name a musician readers would be surprised he listened to.

His response: “Brötzmann, the tenor sax player, one of the greatest alive.”

 ?? RAHAV SEGEV /FILE/1996 ?? Mr. Brötzmann told British music magazine The Wire in 2012: “I wanted to sound like four tenor saxophonis­ts.”
RAHAV SEGEV /FILE/1996 Mr. Brötzmann told British music magazine The Wire in 2012: “I wanted to sound like four tenor saxophonis­ts.”

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