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Jon Hiseman
Jon Hiseman
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Key Information

Philip John Albert "Jon" Hiseman (21 June 1944 – 12 June 2018) was an English drummer, recording engineer, record producer, and music publisher. He played with the Graham Bond Organisation, with John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers and later formed what has been described as the "seminal" jazz rock/progressive rock band, Colosseum. He later formed Colosseum II in 1975.

He was married to saxophonist Barbara Thompson from 1967 until his death in 2018, following surgery to remove a brain tumor.

Early life

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Hiseman was born in Woolwich, south-east London, to Lily (née Spratt) and Philip Hiseman. His mother worked at the Bank of England and his father was a lecturer at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts.[1] His family included musicians, and his mother played piano and flute.[1]

Hiseman studied at the Addey and Stanhope School. He initially studied violin and piano, but eventually focused on the drums.[1] In school, he played in a trio with classmates Dave Greenslade on piano and Tony Reeves on double bass.[1]

Career

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In the mid-1960s, Hiseman played in sessions such as the early Arthur Brown single, "Devil's Grip". He was in a band humorously named the "Wes Minster Five", and, with Neil Ardley, helped found the New Jazz Orchestra.[1] In 1966, he replaced Ginger Baker in the Graham Bond Organisation[2] and also played for a brief spell with Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames.[3] In 1964, Melody Maker magazine wrote his name as "Jon", and he decided to adopt that spelling.[1] He then joined John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers in 1968 playing on Bare Wires. In April 1968, he left to form what has been described as the "seminal" jazz rock/progressive rock band, Colosseum.[4] Colosseum disbanded in November 1971,[5] although Hiseman later formed Colosseum II with Don Airey and Gary Moore in 1975.[3]

Between these two versions of Colosseum, Hiseman formed the band Tempest with Allan Holdsworth, Paul Williams and Colosseum bandmate Mark Clarke.[3] Ollie Halsall joined the band temporarily making the band a quintet but Holdsworth left the group along with Williams, leaving Halsall to handle all guitar and vocal duties. In the mid 1970s, Hiseman played with Dave Greenslade when he toured the album Cactus Choir. Hiseman subsequently played in jazz groups, notably with his wife, saxophonist Barbara Thompson,[3] with whom he recorded and produced more than 15 albums. Andrew Lloyd Webber, searching for a "sound" for an album to feature his brother Julian on cello, stumbled upon Colosseum II by accident and imported the whole band into his "Variations" project. This was the start of a ten-year relationship with Hiseman, whose drumming features on recordings, TV specials and musicals.

In 1982 Hiseman built what was at the time a state-of-the-art recording studio next to his home, and together with the compositional skills of Barbara Thompson produced many recordings for film and television soundtracks.[3] Hiseman was a founding member of the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble, a German-based "Band of Band Leaders", along with Barbara Thompson.[3]

Colosseum reunited in June 1994 with the same line-up of musicians as when they broke up 23 years earlier. They played the Freiburg Zelt Musik Festival and followed it up with a German TV Special (WDR Cologne) in October, which was recorded and released as a CD and a VHS video; a DVD version followed in 2003. Several new studio releases also followed, as well as four expanded editions of Valentyne Suite and Colosseum Live, plus several compilation boxed sets. Barbara Thompson joined the band on various occasions before the death of Dick Heckstall-Smith in 2004 and since then was a permanent member of the band. Colosseum played its farewell concert on 28 February 2015.

Hiseman in 2010

In October 2010 a biography of Hiseman, titled Playing the Band, was published. It was written by Martyn Hanson and edited by original Colosseum manager, Colin Richardson.[6]

In 2017 Hiseman formed a new trio band called JCM with guitarist/vocalist Clem Clempson and bass player/vocalist Mark Clarke. The band recorded an album Heroes late in 2017 which was released in April 2018. JCM began touring on 7 April.[citation needed]

Personal life and death

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He was married to saxophonist Barbara Thompson from 1967.[7] In May 2018 Hiseman's family reported that he was struggling with a brain tumour. He died at the age of 73 on 12 June 2018 in Sutton, London, England from a brain haemorrhage, following surgery to remove the tumour.[8][9]

Selected discography

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  • A Night in the Sun (1982)[10]
  • About Time Too! (1991)

With Jack Bruce

With Colosseum

With Colosseum II

  • Strange New Flesh (1976)
  • Electric Savage (1977)
  • War Dance (1977)

With JCM

  • Heroes (2018)

With Tempest

  • Tempest (1973)
  • Living in Fear (1974)
  • Under The Blossom: The Anthology (2005) [includes both albums + BBC session recordings]

Tribute

With United Jazz + Rock Ensemble

  • Live Im Schützenhaus (1977)
  • Teamwork (album)|Teamwork (1978)
  • The Break Even Point (1979)
  • Live in Berlin (1981)
  • United Live Opus Sechs (1984)
  • Highlights (1984)
  • Round Seven (1987)
  • Na Endlich! (1992)
  • Highlights II (1994)
  • Die Neunte Von United (1996)
  • The UJRE plays Albert Mangelsdorff (1998)
  • X (1999)
  • The UJRE plays Wolfgang Dauner (2002)
  • The UJRE plays Volker Kriegel (2002)

With John Mayall

  • Bare Wires (1968)

With Peter Lemer Quintet

  • Local Colour (1968, recorded 1966)

Further reading

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jon Hiseman (21 June 1944 – 12 June 2018) was an English drummer, composer, recording engineer, record producer, and music publisher, best known for co-founding the progressive rock band and pioneering the fusion of with rock and blues elements. Born in , , he began his musical training on and before switching to percussion in his teens and turning professional in 1966 by replacing in . His innovative drumming style, which included pioneering the use of two bass drums for in 1965 and delivering virtuosic solos incorporating gongs, earned him a reputation as one of Britain's most influential percussionists in the jazz-rock genre. Hiseman's career spanned several landmark bands and projects that defined the progressive and fusion scenes of the late and . He co-led from 1968 to 1971, releasing seminal albums like (1969), before the group disbanded and later reunited in the 1990s through the 2010s. He also formed Tempest in 1973 and II in 1975, collaborating with musicians such as and , and contributed to the United Jazz + Rock Ensemble alongside figures like and . As a , he worked with on productions including Variations (1978) and Cats (1981), and co-founded the band Paraphernalia with his wife, saxophonist Barbara Thompson, producing over 10 albums together. In addition to performing, Hiseman made significant contributions behind the scenes to the music industry. In 1982, he established Temple Music, which encompassed TM Studios, TM Records, and TM Publishing, serving as a hub for recording and production where he engineered sessions and produced over 100 concerts. His later work included the band JCM with and , culminating in the 2018 album Heroes, released shortly before his death from complications of a in Sutton, . Married to Barbara Thompson since 1967, he was survived by her, their two children, and four grandchildren.

Early Life

Childhood and Family

Philip John Albert Hiseman was born on 21 June 1944 in , south-east , during the final months of the Second World War. He was the only child of Lily (née Spratt) Hiseman and Philip Hiseman, growing up in the post-war recovery period in a modest household in the working-class neighborhoods of south-east . His mother worked in the music library at the , while his father served as a in printing at the School of Arts and Crafts; the family's extended relatives on the paternal side included entertainers and dance band musicians, providing an informal cultural backdrop amid the of the era. The Hisemans initially lived in a flat in Blackheath before relocating to a larger house in nearby , reflecting the gradual improvements in living conditions for many families in the late 1940s and 1950s.

Musical Beginnings and Education

Hiseman began his formal musical education in childhood, studying and at Addey and Stanhope Grammar School in , . These lessons provided him with a solid foundation in musical rudiments, including classical techniques, though he found the structured practice challenging and less engaging than his growing interest in rhythm. By the age of 12, he shifted his focus to percussion, acquiring his first and beginning to explore drumming as his primary instrument. Largely self-taught on , Hiseman developed his technique by listening to recordings and imitating the styles of influential and big-band drummers. He drew early inspiration from figures such as , whose dynamic big-band playing and showmanship captivated him. This autodidactic method allowed him to experiment with percussion's role in ensemble dynamics. During his school years, around age 14 or 15, Hiseman formed a jazz-oriented trio with Dave Greenslade on piano and on , whom he met through local youth clubs; the group performed at local youth clubs and events in southeast . The group drew from a blend of standards and classical influences, with Hiseman's drumming providing a rhythmic backbone that incorporated swing patterns and subtle dynamics learned from his record collections. These early performances honed his ensemble skills and fostered lifelong musical partnerships, emphasizing and interplay over rigid notation.

Career

Early Bands and Blues Influences

Hiseman entered the professional music scene in 1966 by joining , where he replaced on after being recommended following a rehearsal with the New Jazz Orchestra. The group, initially rooted in , was evolving under Bond's direction toward a pioneering jazz-blues fusion, and Hiseman's precise, energetic style helped propel this shift during his tenure through 1967. He contributed to live performances and recordings captured on the 1970 compilation album Solid Bond, which features 1966 tracks demonstrating the band's intense interplay of grooves and , such as "Waltz for Daddy-O" and "Ho Ho Country Kicking Blues." Within the Organisation's high-energy environment, Hiseman honed drumming techniques that integrated elements into structures, including polyrhythms to layer complex rhythms over foundational beats and extended improvisational solos that maintained musical cohesion rather than isolating the drums. His of "playing " rather than the instrument alone emphasized emotional tension through varied tone colors and hard-hitting dynamics, avoiding conventional timekeeping in favor of a unified dual-bass-drum approach tuned for melodic depth. These methods, drawn from his background and applied to contexts, allowed him to support the group's seamless transitions between structured riffs and free-form explorations. In early 1968, Hiseman briefly joined , replacing on drums for a six-month period that aligned with the recording of their album Bare Wires. Released in November 1968 on , the double album blended traditional with harmonies and psychedelic extensions, peaking at No. 3 on the charts and marking Mayall's commercial breakthrough. Hiseman's contributions, including on tracks like "I'm a Gambler" and the suite "Bare Wires," showcased his ability to drive narratives with polyrhythmic underpinnings and spontaneous solos that enhanced the ensemble's improvisational freedom. In 1968, Jon Hiseman founded the jazz-rock band , drawing on his prior experience to pioneer a fusion of improvisational elements with rock energy and phrasing. The initial lineup featured Hiseman on drums, saxophonist , bassist , keyboardist Dave Greenslade, and guitarist/vocalist , though Bruce departed shortly after formation, replaced by on bass. Colosseum's debut album, Those Who Are About to Die Salute You (1969), showcased Hiseman's dynamic drumming alongside extended improvisations, establishing the band as a key innovator in the emerging jazz-rock genre. Their follow-up, (1969), further emphasized compositional depth with a three-part suite blending orchestral influences and rhythmic complexity, highlighting Hiseman's role in driving the band's progressive evolution. The group released one more studio album, Daughter of Time (1970), before disbanding in 1971 amid lineup changes and shifting musical landscapes. Following Colosseum's dissolution, Hiseman formed Tempest in 1973 as a short-lived power trio emphasizing technical virtuosity and hard-edged fusion. The band included Hiseman on drums, bassist Mark Clarke, and guitarist Allan Holdsworth, with Paul Williams handling vocals and occasional keyboards. Their self-titled debut album, Tempest (1973), captured live-wire energy through tracks like "Gorgon" and "Up on the Wing," where Hiseman's precise, propulsive rhythms supported Holdsworth's innovative legato guitar work. Tempest toured extensively but disbanded by 1974, allowing Hiseman to explore new directions. In 1975, Hiseman reconvened a new iteration, Colosseum II, shifting toward instrumental progressive fusion with a lineup featuring guitarist Gary Moore, keyboardist Don Airey, bassist John Mole, and vocalist Mike Starrs. The band's debut, Strange New Flesh (1976), integrated Moore's fiery guitar leads with Airey's expansive keyboard textures, propelled by Hiseman's intricate drumming on pieces like "Down to You," underscoring their fusion of jazz harmony, rock intensity, and symphonic scope. Subsequent releases, Electric Savage (1977) and War Dance (1978), refined this approach with tracks such as "The Scorch" and "Fighting Talk," emphasizing complex time signatures and thematic cohesion before the group ended in 1978. Parallel to these projects, Hiseman joined the United Jazz + Rock Ensemble in 1974, a multinational supergroup blending European jazz improvisation with rock dynamics. As drummer, he contributed to their debut album United Jazz + Rock Ensemble (1974) and subsequent recordings through the 1970s and beyond, collaborating with figures like Wolfgang Dauner, Volker Kriegel, and his wife Barbara Thompson on , fostering cross-cultural experimentation in live performances and studio work.

Production Work and Later Collaborations

In the late and , Hiseman expanded into production and session work, notably collaborating with composer on several major musicals. He contributed drumming and arrangement elements to productions including Cats (1981), (1980), (1984), and (1985), providing rhythmic foundations and orchestral support that blended jazz influences with theatrical scoring. Hiseman also maintained extensive artistic partnerships with his wife, saxophonist Barbara Thompson, producing and performing on over 15 collaborative albums across various projects from the onward. These included works with her band , such as the 10 albums he engineered and drummed on, like Mother Earth (1982) and Nightwatch (1983), as well as joint efforts like A Night in the Sun (1982), which featured Brazilian musicians and highlighted their shared fusion style. The 1990s marked Hiseman's return to band leadership with the reunion of in 1994, leading to extensive European touring and new recordings that revisited their jazz-rock roots while incorporating matured elements. The group released studio albums including (1999) and Tomorrow's Blues (2006), the latter capturing live energy from their 2003 sessions, before concluding with a on 28 February 2015 at London's . In his final years, Hiseman formed the power trio JCM in 2017 with guitarist and bassist , both former Colosseum II members, to explore tributes. Their debut album, Heroes (released April 2018), honored influences like and through energetic covers and originals, though a planned tour was curtailed by Hiseman's health issues.

Studio Ownership and Technical Contributions

In 1982, Jon Hiseman constructed Temple Music Studios adjacent to his home in Sutton, , , founding it alongside TM Records and TM Publishing to facilitate professional music production. The facility was particularly geared toward creating soundtracks for film and television, enabling Hiseman and his wife, saxophonist Barbara Thompson, to compose and record music for series such as ITV's . As a recording and , Hiseman played a pivotal role at the studio, handling engineering and production duties for a range of projects that spanned jazz-rock and classical crossover genres. He produced and engineered ten albums for Thompson's band , including Mother Earth (1982) and Nightwatch (1983), capturing the improvisational essence of jazz-rock fusion. Additionally, his technical expertise contributed to classical crossover recordings, such as the 1978 album Variations by , where Colosseum II—featuring Hiseman on —performed arrangements blending rock with classical themes, achieving No. 2 on the UK charts and providing the theme for ITV's . Hiseman's technical contributions extended to innovative studio setups optimized for his fusion-oriented drumming style, emphasizing high-fidelity capture of complex rhythms and improvisations. The studio supported early digital multi-track recording, which Hiseman employed to document live performances during 1985 tours with the United Jazz + Rock Ensemble and , resulting in the 1986 drum solo album About Time Too!. This approach allowed for precise isolation and layering of percussion elements, enhancing the clarity of jazz-rock ensembles in both studio and live-derived recordings.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Jon Hiseman married saxophonist and composer Barbara Thompson in 1967, following their initial meeting in the New Jazz Orchestra in 1964 where their professional collaboration began. Their partnership extended beyond personal life, as Thompson frequently contributed to Hiseman's projects, including performing with , blending their musical talents in jazz-rock ensembles. The couple had two children, son Marcus and daughter Anna, born during the height of their touring careers. Family life was closely intertwined with their professional commitments, as Hiseman and Thompson balanced raising their children with extensive international tours, often integrating family support into their nomadic lifestyle as touring musicians. Throughout their marriage, Hiseman and Thompson pursued shared musical endeavors, including joint albums and performances in groups like Barbara Thompson's Paraphernalia, where Hiseman served as drummer. This collaboration not only strengthened their artistic bond but also allowed them to maintain a unified family dynamic amid demanding schedules.

Health Challenges and Death

In May 2018, during a tour with his band JCM in , Hiseman was taken ill and diagnosed with a cancerous . He underwent surgery later that month to remove the tumor, but complications arose shortly afterward, including a hemorrhage that led to a from which he did not recover. Hiseman passed away peacefully on 12 June 2018 at a in , at the age of 73, with his wife Barbara Thompson and daughter Anna by his side; his son Marcus announced the news to the public. A private funeral was held, followed by a public memorial concert on 21 July 2018 at in London, featuring performances by members and other collaborators to celebrate his life and contributions. Despite his deteriorating health, Hiseman had recently completed work on the JCM album Heroes, a tribute to musical influences like Graham Bond, which was released in April 2018 and marked one of his final creative endeavors.

Legacy

Key Discography Highlights

Jon Hiseman's discography as a performer and leader is marked by pioneering jazz-rock fusion, with Colosseum's debut album Those Who Are About to Die Salute You (1969) establishing the band's raw energy through tracks like "Walking in the Park" and "Mandarin," blending blues improvisation with progressive structures. This was followed by Valentyne Suite (1969), a conceptual work featuring the 23-minute title suite that showcased Hiseman's dynamic drumming alongside Dave Greenslade's keyboards and Dick Heckstall-Smith's saxophones, influencing the emerging prog-jazz scene. The band's 1994 reunion culminated in the live release Colosseum LiveS – The Reunion Concerts 1994 (1995), capturing performances from Cologne and Freiburg that revived their signature intensity with the original lineup, including Chris Farlowe on vocals. With Colosseum II, Hiseman shifted toward more intricate fusion, co-leading the group with on guitar. Their debut Strange New Flesh (1976) highlighted technical prowess on tracks like "," integrating Moore's fiery leads with Don Airey's keyboards and Hiseman's precise rhythms. The follow-up Electric Savage (1977) expanded this with heavier rock elements, as heard in "The Scorpion," earning acclaim for its balance of virtuosity and accessibility in the jazz-rock genre. In collaborative efforts, Hiseman's work with his wife, saxophonist Barbara Thompson, produced A Night in the Sun (1981), a Brazilian-influenced album where he handled drums and production, featuring Thompson's melodic lines amid tropical percussion on cuts like "Tropeiro." Later, as part of the trio JCM with and , he released Heroes (2018), a blues-rock outing that reflected his enduring vitality through covers and originals like the title track, recorded shortly before his death. Hiseman's production and engineering credits extended to high-profile projects, including drumming and contributing to Andrew Lloyd Webber's Variations (1978), where Colosseum II provided the backing for Julian Lloyd Webber's cello adaptations, and Cats (1981), on which he played drums for the original cast recording. These efforts bridged his jazz-rock roots with theatrical soundscapes, demonstrating his versatility in studio roles.

Tributes, Publications, and Influence

Following Hiseman's death from a brain tumour in June 2018, major obituaries highlighted his pioneering role in fusing jazz improvisation with rock, as noted in The Guardian, which described him as "among the first to successfully transfer jazz improvisation to rock." Similarly, The New York Times praised him as a "drummer who melded rock, jazz and blues," emphasizing his leadership of Colosseum and Tempest as key to progressive-rock innovation. Biographical publications have documented Hiseman's career in detail. Martyn Hanson's Playing the Band: The Musical Life of Jon Hiseman (2010, Temple Music), a 464-page volume with over 100 photos, draws on Hiseman's personal archives and interviews to trace his journey from early bands to jazz-rock leadership. Hanson's follow-up, Jon Hiseman's Journey in the Time Machine: Album by Album (2022, Temple Music), provides an annotated discography covering Hiseman's prolific output across decades, launched to commemorate his enduring legacy. Posthumous tributes include an online Book of Remembrance on the official Jon Hiseman website, where fans, musicians, and family contribute messages honoring his drumming prowess and contributions to jazz-rock, with entries continuing as of 2025. To mark what would have been Hiseman's 80th birthday in June 2024, Repertoire Records reissued Colosseum's seminal live album Live '05 (originally from 2005 concerts), featuring a 24-page booklet with tributes from fellow musicians, friends, and family, underscoring his lasting impact on the genre. Hiseman's influence on the jazz-rock genre remains profound, as he co-founded in 1968, blending elements with rock rhythms to pioneer the style, as detailed in Jazz Journal's retrospective on his integration of the forms. His dynamic solos and compositional approach inspired subsequent fusion acts, establishing a template for improvisational drumming in . Additionally, Hiseman mentored emerging talent through his long involvement with the National Youth Jazz Orchestra (NYJO), supporting education from its early days and influencing a generation of drummers. Recent fan tributes, including those in the 2024 reissue booklet, often cite his studio innovations—such as his engineering work at Temple Music Studios—as underappreciated aspects of his broader influence on British music production.

References

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