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The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2010 9:44 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Robert Soto
Bass Trombone
Orange County Symphony Orchestra, orange County Wind Symphony

recieved his bachelor's from UTEP and master's from Yale. Studied with Scott Hartman, Steve Norrell, Joseph Alessi, John Lofton, Dr. Steve Wilson, Dr. Mark Williams, Dr. Allan Kaplan, Mr. Robert Melendez, and conducting with Maestro Toshiyuki Shimada and Dr. Ron Hufstader

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Sat May 22, 2010 6:24 pm
by ttf_anonymous
I didn't see Abbie Conant on the list.  She played with Munich Philharmonic for a long time.

Studied at:

Temple University (BM)
Juilliard (MM)

Teachers were Dee Stewart, Branimir Slokar, and Per Brevig.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Fri Jun 11, 2010 1:29 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Kirk Ferguson went to Julliard. Richard Lopez went to University of Northern Colorado. Rob Tapper went to Eastman.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Fri Jun 11, 2010 2:50 pm
by ttf_Torobone
Quote from: vegasbound on Nov 28, 2009, 02:15AMAre people from the colinies allowed to win jobs?? How many apply?

A player from the colonies won the 2nd chair at Vienna!!

Stanley Clark is a Canadian playing in the Bern SO.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Oct 06, 2010 7:46 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Scott Anderson

Teaches at University of Nebraska-Lincoln (Huskers)

Has performed nationally and internationally as Principal and Second Trombone with the Minnesota Orchestra, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Omaha Symphony and the Des Moines Symphony and as second trombone in the Kansas City Symphony, Kansas City Ballet and Opera Omaha

Degrees from: University of Minnesota (DMA 1995), Northwestern University (MM 1987) and Iowa State University (BM 1985)

Studied with: Thomas Ashworth, the late Frank Crisafulli and Dr. David Stuart

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2011 7:11 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Stephen Lange, new BSO 2nd trombone went to Indiana University for undergrad.
Doug Yeo also went to Indiana University for his freshman year, if you want to count that.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 1:19 pm
by ttf_anonymous
For Marshall University, you have Marshall University listed.  That's a funny name, but I'm guessing it's masculine?   Image

You're missing Peter Sullivan, principal of the Pittsburgh Symphony.  His bio says that he studied at Ottawa and McGill Universities and the Aspen School of Music, along with being a finalist in the 1990 Munich International Competition.  Teachers cited were Theodora Griffith, Per Brevig, and Christian Lindberg.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 4:19 pm
by ttf_Matt K
Conrad Herwig also attended Interlochen in '74 I believe.  My bunk bed was right below his signature on the wall.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 9:34 am
by ttf_TheFreak90
Chris Oliver(second trombonist, Dallas Symphony) studied with John Kitzman at SMU and Steve Witser at the Cleveland Institute of Music.
Michael Priddy (bass trombone, San Diego Symphony) attended the Cleveland Institute of Music but I can't confirm who he studied with.


The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 10:05 am
by ttf_Gabe Langfur
To sum up, all kinds of players went to all kinds of schools. Some schools are certainly represented more than others in the top orchestras, but those schools also graduated a lot of people who make their livings in other ways.

School is what you make of it. Any school.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Aug 18, 2011 11:24 am
by ttf_GetzenBassPlayer
Quote from: Gabe Langfur on Aug 18, 2011, 10:05AMTo sum up, all kinds of players went to all kinds of schools. Some schools are certainly represented more than others in the top orchestras, but those schools also graduated a lot of people who make their livings in other ways.

School is what you make of it. Any school.

Yes.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Aug 25, 2011 10:00 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Kirk Ferguson, the newly appointed second chair in the Milwaukee Symphony, went to Julliard.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Mon Oct 31, 2011 2:41 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Evan Conroy, new bass trombonist with the Louisiana Philharmonic, went to Western Michigan for his undergrad and won the job while doing his masters at Juilliard.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Fri Jan 20, 2012 3:29 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Chris Wolf, new principal of phoenix went to University of Maryland and Juilliard

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2012 10:45 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Great thread, great spreadsheet.

I think Spokane's pretty busy. If you count them, Richard Strauch went to Wheaton (studied with Audrey Morrison, I believe) and Yale.
 

Cheers,
Joe Schoonmaker
Wheaton '98
Trombone, US Navy


The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Fri Feb 03, 2012 5:09 am
by ttf_anonymous
Joseph Rodriguez

Opernhaus Zurich

UT Arlington/Juilliard/Alessi Seminar

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Fri Feb 03, 2012 10:41 am
by ttf_djdekok
Quote from: connman93 on Oct 31, 2011, 02:41PMEvan Conroy, new bass trombonist with the Louisiana Philharmonic, went to Western Michigan for his undergrad and won the job while doing his masters at Juilliard.
Go Broncos!!!



The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Nov 08, 2012 9:19 am
by ttf_anonymous
The 2nd/associate principal trombone of Colorado Symphpony Orchestra Paul Naslund did both his Bachelor and Master's degree from University of Michgan. You can add him to this site. https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=p_b-ZtcpsnGpQQRqwRxwtDg&gid=0
By the way, this is a great site!

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Nov 13, 2012 11:54 am
by ttf_Torobone
Add:
Richard Raum

Eastman (classmate of Ralph Sauer)

Regina Symphony Orchestra and trombone instructor at U of Regina

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Nov 27, 2012 4:31 pm
by ttf_anonymous
It's time for me to start looking for schools as well. I see that Juliard pops up constantly. How about a CCM or West Virginia? I heard WV had a boss trombone studio.

NBee

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 4:02 am
by ttf_anonymous
I believe that the significance of the school itself is over-rated -- not just for music education, but in all disciplines.  The engine is the student; his (her) desire, innate aptitude, willingness to work.  Names like Julliard and Eastman look impressive on resumes and may help a new artist find work through the alumni network, but a lackadaisical student at a household-name music school will finish far behind a dedicated student at a liberal arts university.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 6:37 am
by ttf_Matt K
Quote from: NBee on Nov 27, 2012, 04:31PMIt's time for me to start looking for schools as well. I see that Juliard pops up constantly. How about a CCM or West Virginia? I heard WV had a boss trombone studio.

NBee

WVU is not comparable to Juliard.  Feel free to PM me if you want information about WVU, I just graduated last year.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 9:23 am
by ttf_bassboneman
Quote from: elofton on Jun 11, 2013, 04:02AMI believe that the significance of the school itself is over-rated -- not just for music education, but in all disciplines.  The engine is the student; his (her) desire, innate aptitude, willingness to work.  Names like Julliard and Eastman look impressive on resumes and may help a new artist find work through the alumni network, but a lackadaisical student at a household-name music school will finish far behind a dedicated student at a liberal arts university.
Pick a school with a dedicated and talented trombone studio! Find someone you can work well with - you do the practice - the prof leads the way!

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Jun 12, 2013 12:25 am
by ttf_anonymous
Personally, I think you should go wherever you will get the most opportunities. A place that you can be sucessful.  There are a lot of public and private universities where you can be sucessful.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 5:22 pm
by ttf_NBee
Now how are you defining success? Job or what you learn? My understanding is that the name on the degree will carry just as much weight as the professor's ability to teach.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 10:05 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Quote from: NBee on Oct 27, 2013, 05:22PMNow how are you defining success? Job or what you learn? My understanding is that the name on the degree will carry just as much weight as the professor's ability to teach.
If you play good, you play good


The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Sat Aug 09, 2014 5:07 am
by ttf_anonymous
I agree wholeheartedly with Thomas Matta in that the Public schools are way understated. They will allow experimentation with respect ro what branch of playing you really enjoy without bankrupting you. My suggestions: University of North Texas ( perhaps the best overall public based on BOTH a superb jazz and classical reputation), Indiana and Michigan.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2014 4:27 am
by ttf_anonymous
Please consider The University of Maryland School of Music. The trombone faculty consists of National Symphony Orchestra trombonists Craig Mulcahy, Barry Hearn and me.



http://www.music.umd.edu/prospective_students/

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Wed Jul 08, 2015 8:48 am
by ttf_ThunderChops
Arizona State University. IMO, two really strong professors (Doug Yeo and Ryan Haines) who both have a ton of real world experience (seems that would seem to me to be important).

I think a bigger factor should be the other members of the studio.

I would think that working in a studio where the members work together to teach and support each other would be much preferable to a studio where there's a lot of overt (or worse covert) competition between members.




The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2015 7:17 pm
by ttf_anonymous
Since you seem to have missed the Kansas City Symphony (NOT the Philharmonic since 1982):

Roger Oyster - University of Michigan (studied with Abe Torchinsky), also some grad study with Milt Stevens at University of Maryland (but I don't think he finished a degree). Also studied with Brian Bowman in high school.

Wyatt Henderson - B.M. University of North Texas (Leon Brown and Vern Kagarice, also with John Kitzman); M.M. Northwestern University(Frank Crisafulli, also with Arnold Jacobs and Ed Kleinhammer. Also did Tanglewood and Aspen (Per Brevig)

Adam Rainey - B.M. and M.M. New England Conservatory (Doug Yeo and James Markey). Also has done Tanglewood.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 1:16 pm
by ttf_GeeSamYouWell
Jeff Reynolds went to Cal State Long Beach. Terry Cravens did his undergrad at Louisville.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 2:14 pm
by ttf_blast
Love the list..... so you can only study and get jobs in the US ? I teach in a place that is rated no 6 in the world... but doesn't seem to exist.
Never mind.

The Best Schools for Orchestral Trombonists

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 2:14 pm
by ttf_blast
Love the list..... so you can only study and get jobs in the US ? I teach in a place that is rated no 6 in the world... but doesn't seem to exist.
Never mind.