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Morton Gould, Tuba Suite for Solo Tuba and 3 Horns (1971) Meyer Kupferman , Sound Objects 1-3 (1978), for tuba, trumpet and piano (1978) [ 4 ] Alvin Lucier , Sestina for Contrabass Flute, Contrabass Saxophone and Contrabass Tuba (2000)
Øystein Baadsvik is known for his master classes, performances, and tuba clinics which are frequently held in numerous universities throughout the world including The Juilliard School, Indiana University, Cleveland Institute of Music, Northwestern University, Shepherd School of Music at Rice University, the University of Wisconsin–Madison ...
The Concerto in F Minor for Bass Tuba and Orchestra by British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams was written in 1954 for Philip Catelinet, principal tubist of the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO), who together gave the premiere on 13 June 1954 with Sir John Barbirolli conducting. [1] The same musicians made the work’s first recording that same ...
Cook and Morton noted that "[Bob] Stewart's long tuba solo on the title-piece is one of the few genuinely important tuba statements in jazz, a nimble sermon that promises storms and sunshine." [ 5 ] Thom Jurek, writing for AllMusic , notes that "this group lays like a band that had been together for years, not the weeklong period it took them ...
Guai ai gelidi mostri, for two altos, flute, clarinet, tuba, viola, cello, double bass and live electronics (1983) Omaggio a György Kurtág, for alto, flute, clarinet, bass tuba and live electronics (1983) Prometeo. Tragedia dell’ascolto, for vocal and instrumental soloists, mixed chorus, four instrumental ensembles and live electronics (1984)
Don Butterfield – tuba; Jerome Richardson – soprano and baritone saxophone, flute; Dick Hafer – tenor saxophone, clarinet, flute; Booker Ervin – tenor saxophone; Eric Dolphy – alto saxophone, flute, bass clarinet; Jaki Byard – piano; Charles Mingus – bass, narration ("Freedom") Walter Perkins – drums; Bob Hammer – arranger and ...
Miles Davis & Gil Evans: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings [4] is a box set of music by jazz musicians Miles Davis and Gil Evans originally released on CD in 1996 and remastered and re-released in 2004.
John Thomas Johnson (January 7, 1935 - October 16, 2006) was an American orchestral tuba player. He performed on more than 2,000 film soundtracks, most notably John Williams' Jaws score, in which he played a high-register tuba solo as the melodic theme for the shark.