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Sound the Horn: How the National Brass Ensemble Returned to SFCM

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How some of the best brass players in the country came to convene at SFCM this summer鈥攁nd why it's such a unique undertaking.

June 13, 2022 by Alex Heigl

By Alex Heigl

The journey to bring brass musicians from seven major US cities together began with a single album.

The 1968 album The Antiphonal Music Of Gabrieli, featuring principal brass from the Chicago Symphony, the Cleveland Orchestra, and the Philadelphia Orchestra, to be precise. That record, National Brass Ensemble (NBE) Artistic Director Michael Sachs explained, is, for musicians of his generation, 鈥渒ind of the Mount Rushmore of American brass players.鈥 

鈥淚t was a big inspiration for a lot of us,鈥 Sachs reflected. 鈥淏ut it was one of those things where they got together for a couple of days, recorded this thing, never played a concert, never did anything after that.鈥

It wasn鈥檛 until Sachs arrived at his current position as principal trumpet at the Cleveland Orchestra in 1988 that conversations with Michael Mulcahy (second trombone, Chicago Symphony) about the notion of creating an updated version of that summit began to take shape.

Enter the family Martin: Christopher (principal trumpet, New York Philharmonic) and Michael (fourth/utility trumpet, Boston Symphony), who, along with their father Freddy, put together the National Brass Symposium in Atlanta in 2011 and 2012 that featured seminars, masterclasses and concerts.

鈥淲hen they put that together, we started thinking, how could we do something similar but broaden the representation?鈥 Sachs continued. At this point, SFCM President David Stull, then at Oberlin Conservatory鈥攚here Sachs鈥 wife, harpist Yolanda Kondonassis, was teaching鈥攇ot involved. The pair discovered their mutual love of the Gabrieli recording, which led to a 2014 gathering in Sonoma to record a new version of the Gabrieli works (arranged by SFCM trombone professor Tim Higgins) along with a new work by famed composer John Williams.

鈥淒avid is a unicorn,鈥 Sachs enthused. 鈥淭here are very, very, very few people in this business who I have been more impressed with. He sees opportunity and possibility where other people see impossibilities.鈥

But getting what Sachs called 鈥渢he Rubik鈥檚 cube鈥 of so many prominent (and busy) players together proved to be exactly as challenging as one would think, and so the next scheduled gathering was scheduled for June of 2020, which the COVID-19 pandemic obviously precluded.

Two years later, the event has expanded to not just the education-focused Academy (an element not present at early gatherings), but That evening will include works by Aaron Jay Kernis, jazz trumpeter Arturo 含羞草传媒doval, and a new Richard Wagner 鈥淩ing鈥 compilation arrangement by Higgins, along with a commission from Jonathan Bingham, awarded as part of SFS and SFCM鈥檚 Emerging Black Composers Project in 2021.

The personnel for the performance has swelled from 26 to 33, with brass augmented by percussion, harpists and an organist. Stull, a tubist himself, is as excited about the NBE鈥檚 return as any brass superfan: 鈥淭he biggest, baddest, brass ensemble in the world is coming to Davies Hall for a singular performance of new works that are dazzling in scale, virtuosity, and complexity."

For the educational portion, Sachs said, the goal was to avoid a standard model divvied up by instrument. 鈥淲e wanted to do things where there was cross-pollination, a class where it would be trumpet, timpani and snare drum talking about their partnership in the orchestra, or classes in which trumpet students would be taught by horn teachers and vice versa.鈥

鈥淚 wanted to really utilize a lot of the personal relationships already in place,鈥 he added. 鈥淎 lot of these people have worked together in other places鈥攁nd for me personally, I鈥檓 dear friends with a lot of them鈥攐r may have studied with the same teacher or come from the same lineage. There's a lot of common ground here to mine to make sure students get something they wouldn鈥檛 elsewhere.鈥

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Sachs admitted that this spirit of collaboration is something of a break with tradition. Players from previous eras, 鈥渒ind of kept to their own group 鈥 and I wanted students to see us all working together, all getting along. I get questions like, 鈥極h, well how does so-and-so principal feel about playing the second part here?鈥欌

鈥淭hey don鈥檛 care. There鈥檚 no egos here. People are friends, having a good time, inspiring each other. That鈥檚 what I hope the legacy of this group is.鈥

Stull doesn鈥檛 mince words when the Academy, concert, and recording are concerned: 鈥淢uch like that passing of a comet, when the NBE assembles for a show, it is not to be missed. We are boundless in our anticipation of this performance and look forward to a fabulous week with this extraordinary group of artists!鈥

Find out more about and the personnel involved in this one-of-a-kind performance.