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Student's Essential Studies for Trombone includes 42 etudes taken from the various collections publishing by Carl Fischer. Stylistic Etudes for Trombone includes 20 original compositions by Tom Brantley, designed to help students master various styles required of a trombone player in a variety of performance settings.
Concert Piece No. 1 for Trombone and Piano; Concert Piece No. 2 for Trombone and Piano; Concert Piece No. 3 for Trombone and Piano; Concert Piece No. 4 for Trombone and Piano; Concert Piece No. 5 for Trombone and Piano (1935) 20 Miniatures for Trombone and Piano; 10 Concert Etudes for Trombone and Piano; 12 Melodic Etudes; 24 Etudes "Virtuoso"
Paul Hindemith, Trombone Sonata (1941) Vagn Holmboe, Trombone Sonata, Op. 172a (1987) Søren Hyldgaard, Rapsodia Borealis (2001) Arthur Honegger, Hommage du trombone exprimant la tristesse de l'auteur absent (1925) Alan Hovhaness, O World, Op. 32, No. 2 (1960) Joseph Jongen, Aria et polonaise, Op.128 (1944) Ernst Krenek, 5 Pièces (1967)
Henri Couillaud (9 December 1878 in Bourg-la-Reine – February 1955) was a French classical trombonist.. He was a soloist for the Opéra de Paris, the Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire and the French Republican Guard Band.
Vladislav Mikhailovitch Blazhevich [n 1], (3 August 1881 – 10 April 1942) was a Soviet-era Russian composer, conductor, trombonist, and pedagogue. [1] A highly skilled trombonist, euphonist and tubist, Blazhevich played in various orchestras and bands and was a professor of trombone at Moscow Conservatory.
Ed Byrne was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, in 1946. [2]Since the 1970s, Byrne played trombone as a sideman alongside many of the New York jazz scene's most well-known jazz artists (e.g., Chet Baker, Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Charlie Mingus, Eddie Palmieri, Willie Colon, Manu Dibango, and many others).
Thème varié for bass trombone (or tuba, or bass saxhorn) and piano (1957) New Orleans for bass trombone (or tuba, or bass saxhorn) and piano (1962) 3 Pièces for trombone quartet (tuba ad libitum) (1964) Ciaccona for trombone and piano (1967) 11 Études sur des modes karnatiques (11 Studies in Karnatic Modes) for trombone (1972)
Alan Raph (July 3, 1933 – December 8, 2023) was an American bass trombonist, composer, arranger, and conductor who founded and conducted the Danbury Brass Band. He recorded with many well-known musicians including Quincy Jones, Philip Glass, Peter Nero, John Pizzarelli and Bob Brookmeyer for television, movies, and ballet. [1]