Tom Bergeron
In a career that spans 5 decades, Tom Bergeron has performed throughout the United States, and in Europe and Central America.
He has appeared with internationally-renowned artists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Hal Blaine, Anthony Braxton, Rosemary Clooney, Natalie Cole, Robert Cray, Myron Florin, Vinnie Golia, Dick Hyman, Oliver Lake, Glen Moore, Bernadette Peters, Bobby Shew, The Fifth Dimension, The Temptations, Sunny Turner, Guy Lombardo's Royal Canadians, and Marin Alsop's String Fever.
He has premiered dozens of new concert works for the saxophone, and is widely recognized as one of the world's foremost authorities on multiphonics, the esoteric technique of producing several notes at once on the saxophone.
Tom began his musical journey as a multi-instrumentalist in his native New England, studying piano and music theory with Roland Belisle, who learned stride piano from Fats Waller. In the late 1960s, Tom met the legendary concert saxophonist and teacher Donald Sinta, with whom he studied while in high school and graduate school. Upon moving to Oregon in 1981, Tom studied with J. Robert Moore, who was among the last generation of students of Marcel Mule, the French Godfather of the saxophone.
As a composer, Tom draws inspiration from the jazz heritage and Western European art music, as well as from music traditions from around the world. In the 1980s, he studied African marimba with the late Zimbabwean master-percussionist Dumisani Maraire; more recent explorations have taken him to Brazil, Costa Rica and Poland.
Bergeron performs and records with Whirled News, Cathexis Orchestra, Western Rebellion, Labirynt, Hagberg/Bergeron Quartet, and Mason Williams & Friends. Over the years, he has played saxophone with the Portland Chamber Orchestra, Portland Center Stage, Third Angle New Music Ensemble, Pittsburg New Music Ensemble, Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, Oregon Bach Festival, Oregon Festival of American Music, Oregon Coast Music Festival, Cascade Festival of Music, Kansas City Symphony, Sacramento Symphony, Eugene Symphony, Newport Symphony, and Grande Ronde Symphony. His first orchestral experience was as second bassoonist with the NH Philharmonic in 1968.
When he's not making music or teaching music theory at Western Oregon University, Tom can be found swimming in the creek behind his house in the foothills of Oregon's Coast Range.
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