Steve Beresford at the Red Rose club, London, 1990
Steve Beresford (born 1950) is a British
musician.
He has played a variety of instruments, including piano, trumpet, euphonium, double-bass
and a wide variety of toy instruments, such as the toy piano.
He has also played a wide range of music. He is probably best known for
free improvisation, but has also
written music for film
and television
and has been involved with a number of pop music groups.
Beresford was born in Wellington, Shropshire in England, studied
at the University of York, and stayed in
York after
graduating, becoming involved in theatre as well as arranging various free
improvisation concerts in the city. At this early stage, he was playing
a wide variety of music, playing the Hammond
Organ in a soul
music covers band, featuring on Trevor Wishart's early work Journey
Into Space (1973) and free improvising.
In 1974, Beresford moved to London, where he played in Derek
Bailey's Company events and in the groups Alterations
with David
Toop, Terry Day and Peter
Cusack, and the Three Pullovers with Nigel Coombes and Roger
Smith. He was also a member with Gavin Bryars and Brian
Eno of the Portsmouth Sinfonia.
Beresford has continued to play free improvisation with a
number of prominent musicians, including Evan
Parker, Lol
Coxhill, John
Zorn and Han
Bennink. He has also worked with a number of popular
musicians, including The Slits, Frank
Chickens, Ted Milton and The
Flying Lizards.
During the 1970s,
Beresford was a co-founder and co-editor of the magazine Musics,
which dealt mainly with free improvisation, whilst during the early 1980s he helped to
set up the somewhat glossier publication Collusion,
which had a wider musical remit, covering fields such as rap,
heavy metal, classical music, film
music, pop
music as well as the avant-garde and free improvisation.
Along with David Toop, Beresford was also a prime mover of the London Musicians
Collective.