It gives me immense pleasure to pen the welcome for the April issue of Horn and More, the official Newsletter of the prestigious International Horn Society. I am thankful to Horn and More Editor Mike Harcrow for offering me the honor of greeting you as the new Indo-Sri Lanka representative for the IHS. This is a momentous occasion: there has not been an IHS area representative from the South Asian region before in the long history of this organization. I must thank the President of the IHS, Radegundis Fetiosa, and the Vice President, Bernardo Silva for welcoming me into the IHS family—and I would be remiss if I did not also acknowledge James Boldin and Johanna Lundy for their generous support during the last two months.
It is incredible that we live in an age where people living thousands of miles apart are able to digitally connect with each other to forge lasting relationships. My entry into the IHS is attributable to this. After my first article was published in the January 2024 issue of the Horn and More, I obtained annual membership in the IHS. Just three months later, here I am, serving as an area representative, entrusted to carry out the duties of coordinating activities of the IHS in the Indo-Sri Lanka region.
My region is a melting pot of diverse cultures and home to indigenous Eastern musical traditions. India is the largest country in the sub-continent, and Sri Lanka—my homeland—is the island just below South India. Both countries are long-time democracies, and we have had bilateral relations for thousands of years. When observed closely, one will even notice that the two cultures are closely intertwined. Western traditions, particularly horn playing was introduced to us by European colonizers. Horn players were first seen in military bands. Modern-day horn players in India and Sri Lanka face unique challenges. In my previous article, I delved deeper into these issues. (Read more: Horn Playing in Sri Lanka)
Regrettably, the region was disconnected from the rest of the horn-playing community for decades. Nevertheless, the proliferation of horn playing in Sri Lanka in recent years has brought us closer to the IHS community. Now, as the appointed representative for both Sri Lanka and India, I am confident that we can transform regional dynamics together.
My commitment is to cultivate a sense of unity, collaboration, and growth among players in India and Sri Lanka. Together, we will explore opportunities for education, performance, and networking, ensuring that our region is well represented on the global stage of horn playing.
I invite you to share your thoughts, ideas, and concerns with me. Your input is so valuable as we work together to nurture our shared passion for the horn. Stay tuned for exciting updates, events, and resources in each edition of the Newsletter.
Thank you for your support. I look forward to connecting with you!
Vidhurinda Samaraweera
Article
Interview with Yun Zeng
by Austris Apenis
AA: You have just won the legendary solo horn position in the Berlin Philharmonic. What an achievement! Congratulations! How were you feeling on the audition day?
YZ: Thank you so much! I'm actually not a very experienced auditionee. The audition for Berlin was only my second audition. My first was for Staatskapelle Berlin, a year and a half ago. So, I would say I was really nervous and even shaking a bit on stage. And playing alone in the main hall of the Philharmonic is not easy at all. Although it has great acoustics, it's still a huge space. It seemed very challenging to bring a clear and rounded sound all the way to the last row where a few orchestra members were sitting. I was also very glad to meet and talk with them and to have the chance to make friends with some of the greatest horn players of our time. Everyone was so excited and so lovely backstage. I was the last one who played at the final round. I went back to the practice room and made phone calls to several friends, trying to get rid of my anxiety. Shortly, the stage manager told us to come out for the results. I packed everything and ran into cellist Solène Kermarrec on my way out. She caught me happily: “Well played! Congratulations, you won the audition!” She actually said it in German, and I didn't understand it very well in my hurry, I just heard, “Congratulations, well played,” and it sounded like she was trying to make me feel better about being eliminated. She probably realized that I didn't understand correctly, so she repeated herself in English. I thanked her with delight and made my way quickly to Sarah Willis. We hugged each other and she confirmed, “You got the job!”
Amazing! This just proves what talent you have. You won the solo horn position at the Berlin Phil on your second audition! I can believe that auditioning for this orchestra would be fierce.
Actually, I asked some new members of this orchestra for some tips. They all gave me the same answer: be yourself. It was a bit hard to understand before the audition; however, it's my favorite attitude now because it works really well! More importantly, since applying for this audition, so many people have been so supportive of me. I appreciate them all very much. It was actually a tough week prior to the audition. I played several other programs in that short time…some Wagner tuba, and Mahler 1 twice. But surprisingly, that got my lips into strong and flexible condition.
In September, I made my first (and only) appearance as guest principal in Berlin. We played the Shostakovich 4th Symphony and Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 2 under the baton of Tugan Sokhiev. I also ran into Alexandre Kantorow that week—he and I won the Tchaikovsky Competition in the same year. I remember being quite nervous before the first rehearsal started. I did a long warmup, which I don’t usually do. But somehow, I got the feeling that I’d play as best as I could with musicians who are among the best in the world. In the first movement of the symphony, I had a solo, which comes after the bassoon plays the same line. When I heard this simple, minimalistic solo interpreted so lyrically by Stefan Schweigert, I felt empowered to play it in the same magical way. Â
Inspiring! How is Berlin to work and live in?
I couldn't say that I liked this city at first, but the more I experience it, the more I realize how lovely Berlin is. It's an international city, which cured my homesickness quickly because so much Asian food is available here. And I made a lot of friends from all over the world. Most important, Berlin took my understanding of classical music to the highest level. My father is also a horn player. He would always emphasize how beautiful the horn is—so that I would willingly learn it from him later. When I was very young, he bought me my first DVD. It was a concert by Berlin from 1998, under the baton of Daniel Barenboim, performed in the State Opera Berlin. At that concert, Stefan Dohr, Dale Clevenger, Ignacio Garcia, and Georg Schreckenberger played Konzertstück by Schumann. But how unbelievable is it for me: I came here only 2 years ago, but I've confirmed all my initial impressions which for so long had only been thoughts. Berlin—and Germany—are probably my lucky charm.
I know that concert! I discovered it on YouTube when I was a teenager. The sound of Stefan Dohr really blew me away. The first part of the KonzertstĂĽck is ridiculously high and heavy but it sounded so easy and impressive. Tell me a bit about your past. How did you start your journey on the horn?
Actually, my story happened very simply because I have a horn player father. It should have been my last year at kindergarten, but my parents withdrew me because I was frequently sick. Naturally, when my father was practicing at home, it always got my attention. One day, I asked him if I could play his horn. He gave me a mouthpiece, told me how to blow in it the proper way, and I got a correct sound right away. In January 2006, when I was 6, I started my own relationship with this difficult instrument. After about 4 years, I started getting bored. Just practicing at home or playing duets with my father didn’t make me more curious about the horn. I started cheating while practicing: I tried playing some CDs by Hermann Baumann and Barry Tuckwell loudly, and told my parents that it was me who played that sound, but I wasn’t working. I tried to break my horn, then my parents paid for repair and grounded me. One day, an orchestra in my town called my father. They needed a second horn player for the week when my father would play principal. After persuading the office for a long time, he took me. It was a shocking moment when I heard for first time how 60 instruments sounded around me, and I thought immediately that I have to become a horn player, especially in an orchestra. I even got through the 4th movement of Dvorak 9. It was so enjoyable!
How was it to grow up and study music in China?
China is very different from Europe. Almost every school or college has a student dormitory. I went to a music school in Beijing when I was 11 without my parents. That school is called a Middle School, and it’s attached to the Central Conservatory of Music, which has many famous alumni such as Lang Lang and Yuja Wang. It was quite an elite early education. It seems like every young kid there is chosen to be prepared for a professional music career. Besides some regular middle school courses (math, Chinese, English, etc.), we had solfège, music theory, choir, chamber music…basically, we even “slept” music. There, I met my professor, Prof. Quan Wen. He's a marvelous teacher and a person who always gives 100% focus to his students. With his help, I also got involved in some special projects at school (and later at the conservatory as well) which continually supported me with a good budget to take part in competitions and masterclasses abroad, from 2012 until the ARD competition in 2021.
That sounds familiar! In Latvia there are also special music high schools, where you have a mix of normal and music subjects. That really prepares you well for the conservatory. You have also studied in Geneva with Bruno Schneider. How was it being in Switzerland?
Although I was only in Geneva for six months, it was really a marvelous time! It was an exchange program which, in Europe, they call Erasmus. I enjoyed studying with Prof. Schneider. He is a great teacher for all kinds of horn players because he himself is a great soloist, chamber player, and orchestral musician. He expanded my repertoire and especially rebuilt my way of playing Mozart, which is a very important part of horn auditions. And he was the first one who told me that I should audition for Berlin when the time came. I didn't have any idea what he was talking about, though! I appreciate him so much now for all the motivation and inspiration. It was also my first time truly living abroad. Luckily, Geneva is a beautiful city. Living costs were too expensive for a student, but it was worth it! I didn't manage to learn much French though. It was too difficult for me; but the comparison makes English more user-friendly and worth knowing. I'm still miss cheese fondue, especially that which Prof. Schneider prepared!
That is such a Swiss thing to say! Thank you for the amazing interview. Enjoy your new job!
JBS: At a time when we celebrate the centenary of the birth of Georges Barboteu, this is for you a very personal project. How did it come about? Could you give us a brief introduction?
HJ: First of all, in France every horn player has an unlimited admiration for Georges Barboteu, even the ones who never took lessons with him, and even the young generation who had no chance to meet him. It probably has to do with the strong personality and multi-disciplinary artistry of Mr. Barboteu. During his studies, he learned the horn with his father (himself principal horn at Algiers Radio), but also the double bass, in case of a sports accident! He studied harmony and counterpoint as well, and he discovered Jazz music next to pianist Martial Solal (96 years old and still living). When moving to France where he lived his whole life (between Paris and his beloved land of Corsica), he started sharing his time among many different activities. Playing in the orchestra in the best French phalanges, teaching in different conservatories and summer academies, writing music (and not just for horn), playing studio sessions for movies or tv programs (including whistling), playing in the Ars Nova brass quintet and a wind ensemble (sometimes conducting this group), and, of course, a solo career across Europe (concerts and recordings). Obviously, this intensive presence in the musical world established Georges Barboteu as a prime figure in France. It is also clear that his compositions made him become forever a complete and legendary artist.
How important was Georges Barboteu to the French school of horn playing and to your career in particular?
Excepting the typical French vibrato, I would insist that we consider his musical qualities. Probably due to his eclectic and rich musical studies, he has developed a unique way of finding an elegant freedom when singing into the horn. By the way, he loved to sing or to whistle, a clear sign that he was looking for ease in his playing. It is difficult to perfectly know the early years (arriving in Paris around 1940), but I guess that playing the piston horn—definitely not the easiest for virtuosity—Georges Barboteu had to develop his own way to make the instrument special, as interesting as the piano or the flute or the violin.
Personally, during my childhood, I was ashamed to walk with a horn case in the street. Suffice it to say that in my region the horn was quite unknown, and I was too shy to present a brass instrument looking like that—and it was chosen for me by my grandfather! After discovering some solo vinyls (Ferenc Tarjány, Alan Civil, Dennis Brain, Hermann Baumann, Barry Tuckwell), I had the great joy to observe through Barboteu that a solo career was possible with the horn. Developing and successfully defending the status of soloist, he has opened to me a grand way for believing in my future solo life with the horn. In forty years, I have played concertos with 140 different orchestras, so I am so grateful to my dear teacher!
Historically in France there have been great horn players/pedagogues/composers. Do you think that Georges Barboteu has a place of similar importance to Dauprat or Gallay?
For those who are less familiar with Barboteu's compositions and would like to discover more or even purchase some, which companies have published his compositions?
Most of his published music is represented by the French editor Choudens (founded in 1845 by Antoine de Choudens). Today, this brand belongs to Wise Music Group based in the UK and who also manages Chester Music (Francis Poulenc, Igor Stravinsky). Those interested can find and order most of Barboteu’s titles at the French branch of Wise Music.
How do you currently see Barboteu’s legacy, and how do you see it for the future?
Definitely, with his unique way of reading a horn score, by exploring opportunities to sing, Barboteu opened our eyes to the unlimited power of expression in music. This heritage will last because it is based on good taste, not doing something just to do it. Here, we encounter the great chance for classical music to be maintained and developed on stylistic traditions. Only with good roots can a tree grow and secure a future in its environment. The Japanese are publishing the old recordings of legendary flutist Marcel Moyse (1889-1984), for example, and I welcome this initiative. This is a prerequisite to the desire to become a professional musician: knowing any school or geographic style. That is why I feel a responsibility to promote at least the music of this one immense artist. I encourage every horn player to try to listen to some of Barboteu’s recordings which are always so deeply personal. He offers us a great lesson on what it means to be a performer.
This recording project has some peculiarities and technical specificities, first, because you recorded all the horn parts. What kind of challenges did this pose for you?
It has given me such excitement and joy to work on a recording with the goal of reaching a high level of quality but also, and especially, a natural and organic musical result. Nothing is more enjoyable than making music with friends and colleagues! But the fact is that I couldn’t bring three other horn players to Germany for a week to work with me. So, it became important to find a technical way to imitate a regular horn quartet. We started with positioning in the hall (Engelbert Schmid’s Mindelsaal Concert Hall in Bavaria), placing the mics so as to create real stereophony in the environment. Then came the order of recording the parts, knowing first where you should stop, whether or not to play the first sound of the next section, how long to hold a fermata, and so on. Other issues included whether or not you want the breaths to be heard, and the question of finding when a click track is most useful (in the piece called Noël, for example, which has many stops and starts). Facing these realities was sometimes a challenge that I would discuss intently with sound engineer Hans Lorenzen; but honestly, I have to say that switching parts was so refreshing that I never felt tired or exhausted by playing them all. It was also very convincing to listen, track-by-track, to the similarity of phrasing. We were mounting the tracks on site, so I had lots of time to rest. I am already looking forward to recording the Barboteu sextet in the near future.
Is there anything else you would like to mention or highlight? Are there already new projects for the future?
Speaking about Barboteu specifically, the next project is another tribute CD, featuring more chamber music—as I had mentioned—and perhaps one or two works without horn. For the ones who desire to know more about Georges Barboteu, I encourage you to purchase my recording because it includes a nice booklet in English, German, and French where you can read about his life (by Pascal Lagrange), and about every single piece on the album (by me). I will add that the trademarked name Centenaire Georges Barboteu has been registered by myself, not to own anything, but just to feel protected. I won’t see the bicentenary of his birth, but I am sure that this 100th anniversary is going to be of interest for at least another decade. In my recording, I am proud of two things: having the idea to ask a composer to harmonize 2 studies for horn with piano (discovering later that Barboteu improvised a piano part one day while teaching) and having the idea of the bonus track (inspired by his hobby) which is a surprise, so I won’t give away anything about that but leave it for you to discover. I feel so well paid-back by Maestro Barboteu, through his kindness and the fantastic Triptyque for horn and string quartet he wrote for me. As a note of interest, the first time I met him was at the summer academy I mentioned earlier when I was 15 years old, and my grandfather was with me. After this meeting, Barboteu never failed to ask about my grandfather and how he was faring. What an amazing memory! My grandfather died at age 96, so I had the chance to update him on many things.
Admiring important horn players of the past is not turning us to the past: in doing so, we can honor and promote their unique spirits for our own benefit—and this makes the future so exciting.
March 20, 2024
Horn on Record
by Ian Zook
Volume 14—Zdeněk Tylšar
This month’s entry honors a paragon of the horn’s Bohemian heritage as we celebrate Zdeněk Tylšar’s recording of Ignaz Pleyel’s Sinfonia Concertante No. 5 in F major. This recording was made in the Concert Hall of the Czechoslovak Radio in Bratislava, October 1980, and reissued by Musical Heritage Society in 1983.
ZdenÄ›k Tylšar (1945-2006) was a deeply influential Czech hornist who performed for forty years (1963-2003) as solo horn of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra. With his older brother BedĹ™ich, the two performed and recorded as a horn duo, touring across the world and highlighting the large repertoire of concerti for two horns and orchestra.Â
Zdeněk Tylšar was born in Prostějov in the Olomouc region of Czechia. He began horn studies at the Brno Conservatory in 1958, and then continued onto the Janaček Academy under the tutelage of František Solč. After graduating in 1964, he was immediately engaged by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, initially playing second horn alongside principal horn Miroslav Štefek. Zdeněk was appointed solo horn in 1968 and led the Philharmonic section for the rest of his career, retiring in 2003.
Zdeněk Tylšar also gained acclaim for his successes in solo competitions, winning third prize in the 1962 Prague Spring Competition when he was only 17 years old—stunning, as he was under the minimum allowed age limit of 18. In 1968, he returned to win first prize at the same competition, as well as first prizes at the Munich Competition (ARD) and the Geneva Competition.
The Tylšar duo first joined to perform the Haydn/Rosetti Concerto for Two Horns for Bedřich’s graduation recital from Brno Conservatory in 1962. The brothers then began a recording legacy of solo, duo, and both multi-horn concerti and chamber music that stretched from 1967 to 1994, highlighted by the duo concerti by Josef Fiala, Zavier Pokorny, and Franz Anton Rössler. Zdeněk was even more involved as a soloist, having been featured with the Czech Philharmonic over thirty times and recording a vast array of repertoire for horn with a catalog of twenty-eight records between the Supraphon, Pony, Canyon, and Essex labels.
Ignaz Pleyel’s Sinfonia Concertante No. 5 In F Major For Flute, Oboe, Bassoon, Horn and Chamber Orchestra dates from 1805. Pleyel, born in Austria in 1757, was a pupil of Franz Joseph Haydn, and made his career in Strasbourg, France, as kapellmeiseter of the cathedral orchestra. In addition to being one of the most popular and frequently-performed composers in the late 18th century, he opened his own publishing house in Paris in 1797 (inventing the paperback orchestra score), and established the Pleyel piano manufacturing workshop 1807. Pleyel pianos are still being produced today, with over 350,000 units sold annually in China alone.
The Sinfonia Concertante has the same solo instrumentation as Mozart’s version for winds, K. 287b from 1778. However, Pleyel provides a much greater degree of soloistic writing while retaining the light and virtuosic nature of this genre. The performers are flautist Miloš Jurkovič, oboist Lothar Koch, bassoonist Klaus Thunemann, and hornist Zdeněk Tylšar.
Our first example follows the four solo instruments as they introduce the melodic material for the first movement in turn:
As the music shifts into a minor key, we can hear Tylšar’s ability to blend and balance his sound from the broad opening solo, to transparent when paired with the flute, and then robust when paired with the bassoon:
A short solo allows Tylšar to showcase his uniquely supple and vibrant tone, all phrased in the singing style so prized in the Bohemian tradition:
Pleyel’s work concludes with a cadenza for the winds, recapitulating the melodic material and then launching vigorously into an ending that quizzically then fades away—an odd touch from Pleyel.
As mentioned, there is a great treasure trove of recordings from Zdeněk Tylšar as soloist as well as those paired with his brother. Many can be found on the Supraphon and Naxos websites. Among the most essential listening are the 24 Trios for Horns, Op. 82, by Anton Reicha, which the duo recorded in 1988 with Zdeněk Divoky and which won the Czech Golden Record prize.
‍IHS Members: Don't forget to place your vote for new members of the Advisory Council! Please log onto hornsociety.org and vote online before April 15 by clicking the link on the IHS homepage, or submit your vote using the mail-in postcard included in the February issue of The Horn Call.Â
‍Latin America—Interview with Arturo Pantaleón
Research to Resonance—Turning Struggle Into Skill
by Katy Carnaggio
Honestly, it gets to be easy. Okay…it is a little hard, but what follows makes it so much easier.
If you’ve ever wondered how great musicians have managed to turn their deep struggles into awe-inspiring strengths, consider this to be a kickstart. But instead of giving you vague, general advice like “Enjoy the process!” “Take it one day at a time!” and “Focus on the music!” we’re going to get a little gritty, because you’re never ever going to trill like Tryon if nobody teaches you how to work through the inevitable setbacks.
And speaking of the lovely Denise Tryon, next week, in collaboration with the Office of Wellness at Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, I’ll be hosting a workshop that not only features her (along with Demondrae Thurman, euphonium, and Grigory Kalinovsky, violin) but was inspired by her, focusing on how each musician transformed struggle into expertise.
The first step? Seek evidence you’re not alone.
Earth shattering is how I describe my first lesson with Denise. And when you’ve unintentionally built your world with fear, doubt, frustration, and disconnection, a wake-up call can be a good thing.
At 12:52 p.m., I made my way to the lesson with her, weary from a long battle with embouchure issues that arose after an untimely surgery. At 1:14 p.m., my earth was shattered. Fear and doubt and frustration and disconnection had all become visible for Denise to see. But in place of all these were validation, self-knowledge, hope, belief, and a horn sound I actually kind of liked! Not only did somebody see me and understand what I was going through, but she knew exactly the way forward—because she had been there, too.
It gets to be that easy.
Whether facing a technique overhaul, injury, heartbreak, or simply exhaustion, the presence of struggle isn't the issue. These often signal that you're undergoing change. The issue lies in our fear that our struggles mean we’re inadequate. We fear that these experiences might confirm our worst suspicions about ourselves. Out of fear, we withdraw into the practice room, hesitate to pursue new opportunities, or conceal our experiences to avoid judgment or rejection. The fear that we are inadequate leads us to a limited world, where the solutions to our struggle seem just as limited. However, struggle more often reveals our talent rather than our shortcomings. “What is talent?” Grigory Kalinovsky mused during a preliminary discussion. “It’s not just ability. If you have natural ability, great. But if you have ability and burning need? That is talent.”
Talented to say the least, each of our panelists shares a burning need and sense of integrity in their stories of struggle. Am I doing the music justice? Am I doing myself justice? When the answer was no, each faced the vulnerability, resistance, or discomfort of change. But instead of withdrawing in self-doubt, they stepped out towards self-knowledge. In doing so, they connected with somebody who sparked a pivotal shift in their perspectives.
When you find yourself entangled in a struggle, consider taking a little time to expand your world beyond the practice room. Whether through books, podcasts, lessons, Facebook groups, or a simple conversation, you’ll soon find that a shift in perspective shared by somebody who's been there before is exactly what you've been missing. Cheers to all solution-finders and puzzle-solvers, with special thanks to Denise for holding my missing piece!
‍We are honored to announce that the May 2024 issue of The Horn Call will contain tributes, photographs, and other memorials to three important figures in the horn community: Hermann Baumann, Willie Ruff, and John Covert. If you are not an International Horn Society member already, please be sure to join the IHS by Friday, April 5, in order to receive this special hard-copy edition issue in the mail.
Student Column—Preparing for Performance Anxiety
by Inman Hebert
Whether playing for juries, recitals, or even important concerts, many collegiate horn players have felt the effects of performance anxiety. Symptoms may include dry mouth, shaking muscles, shortness of breath, sweaty palms, and more. Experiencing performance anxiety is perfectly normal; however, learning how to prepare for and manage nerves is critical to the evolution of horn students in elevating our performances.
Musical preparation and visualization are the initial steps to managing anxiety. If a student cannot play a piece consistently in the practice room, no amount of managing nerves will overcome poor preparation. After a piece becomes second nature, performing the music in our practice sessions, including others (fellow students, for example) as our audience, and being creative in simulating performance conditions can give us the confidence to perform under pressure. Aside from regular musical preparation, visualization of successful performances can also help mitigate anxiety. Imagine warming up pre-performance, stepping on stage, and playing the music. These steps can make a performance feel familiar instead of foreign, and this helps a horn player stay focused in the moment which leads to more success.
Recognizing and accepting performance anxiety symptoms as our body’s normal reaction to pressure allows us to refocus our energy on coping strategies. Physically, hydrate with water and limit caffeine intake the days before a performance since caffeine can raise adrenaline levels and worsen the effects of stress. Anxiety can trigger dry mouth, muscle tension, and shallow breathing; however, incorporating stress reduction techniques into our pre-performance can alleviate these symptoms. Stretching releases tension and helps improve posture. Deep breathing lowers our heart rate and blood pressure, and reduces stress hormones. Airflow is foundational to our horn playing. Take a deep breath, exhale slowly, and connect to the present moment.
Mentally, reframe your emotions and develop mindfulness. Interpret your anxiety as excitement, and create a mental checklist of positive performance memories. Hear the music in your head and remember how you want it played. Having the right mindset before and during the performance can help mitigate anxiety. Accepting that mistakes may happen, not all performances will go well, and perfection is unrealistic helps us not to panic and to stay in the moment. Instead of dwelling on a mistake just made, an upcoming phrase, or pending feedback, refocus on the present. Your audience will most likely appreciate your authentic self who communicates a convincing musical message over technical perfection.
Many horn professionals share experiences of overcoming performance anxiety. As horn students, we cannot see anxiety as taboo. Instead, we must view it as another area to navigate. With proper mental and physical preparation tools, we can manage performance anxiety, allowing our musical selves to shine.
Spring has sprung! Time to begin collecting your summer reading, so…
In the busy month of March, the horn community in Sri Lanka, experienced a significant milestone. Despite the island's long history of orchestral music, stretching over six decades, no Sri Lankan orchestra had ever performed a complete Mahler symphony. The country has been home to numerous distinguished classical musicians, some of whom received their education in renowned conservatories and music schools around the world. However, the orchestral landscape has remained somewhat unchanged. This stagnation is not due to a lack of expertise or knowledge, but rather a lack of vision. Established organizations have clung to their historical ideals of elitism and isolation, thereby maintaining an amateur outlook. However, the formation of the Gustav Mahler Orchestra of Colombo in 2018 has provided a beacon of hope for passionate local musicians.
Under the leadership of Maestro Srimal Weerasinghe, the orchestra made history by premiering Gustav Mahler's Fourth Symphony on March 16th, 2024, at the Lionel Wendt Theatre in Colombo, and the concert was aptly named "The Heavenly Life."
The Gustav Mahler Orchestra of Colombo at the Premiere conducted by maestro Srimal Weerasinghe (Image courtesy: Sagara Lakmal de Mel Photography)
The performance featured the talented Sri Lankan mezzo-soprano, Rachel Halliday, who is currently a vocal teacher at the Royal Opera House of Oman. This was not just a Sri Lankan first, but also a South Asian premiere since Mahler's Fourth Symphony had never been performed in the region before.
I had the honor of leading the horn section as principal in this momentous premiere. My colleagues in the section were Jude Fernando, Senira Prematilleke, Ashan Madhusanka, and Thihela Somasiri. It was a dynamic section in which the youngest member was just 13 years old and the oldest 58 years old. Young Thihela is still in high school. Senira has left high-school and is expecting entry into college. Ashan is a Western music teacher based in the Southern Province of Sri Lanka. Jude is a retired serviceman now working as a freelance musician. Most notably, we are all Sri Lankan.
The concert was attended by numerous musicians and music enthusiasts, and the performance was met with widespread acclaim. I am confident that the horn section’s performance has set a new standard for future performances in Sri Lanka.
In the heart of the Indian subcontinental region is an island nation that has been instrumental in the growth and development of horn playing. The reason is simple: Sri Lanka is home to a passionate community of capable players who are eager to learn. The Indo-Sri Lankan region, a place of rich cultural heritage, is home to a single professional orchestra, the Symphony Orchestra of India (SOI), established in 2006. Interestingly, this orchestra's horn section is exclusively composed of foreign musicians, primarily Europeans. While the horn is occasionally featured in military bands, its presence among locals is rare. This has led to a unique situation where the demand for horn players is significantly higher in India than in Sri Lanka. As a result, Indian orchestras often extend invitations to their Sri Lankan counterparts for concerts.
Collaborations with horn players and communities beyond our region present the opportunity to bring a wealth of global expertise and knowledge to our region. By establishing sustainable educational platforms, we can share the rich knowledge we acquire from these collaborations with a wider audience, thereby opening our region to the world. As we stand on the brink of this exciting journey, let the regular reports to come serve as stepping stones to establishing a thriving hub for horn performance and education in South Asia. This is not just a dream, but a vision that we are bringing to life, one note at a time.
Let us, together, create a future where the horn sounds echo throughout our region, inspiring generations to come. Stay tuned for more updates in the forthcoming editions of Horn and More. For more information on the exciting developments in my region, feel free to reach out to me at vidhurinda@gmsc.lk.
Online Music Sales
Mulliganesque by John Graas, Jr., edited by Jeff Snedeker, for horn and jazz ensemble
Mulliganesque was composed as a tribute to Gerry Mulligan (1927-1996), a good friend of the composer and considered by many to be one of the finest baritone saxophonists in history. Graas performed many times with Mulligan in a variety of settings, most of which were part of the “cool” jazz scene. Tom Mack, producer at Decca Records, wrote the liner notes for the album, and said the following about this tune: “It was a happy coincidence that made John’s good friend Gerry Mulligan available for this album. The lead-off composition bears witness to Graas’s long-standing admiration for the Mulligan approach to jazz. The title indicates the intention of this original to erect a familiar framework for Gerry’s boundless drive and distinctive sound.” Now available in the IHS Online Music Sales.
Ambitious Amateurs—Being Organized
by Marty Schlenker
Dear Fellow Ambitious Amateurs,
This month, I tackle a topic that affects us all: organization.
I am a member of the “players just wanna play” crowd. If I had all the time in the world, I’d have horn-to-face each day until I couldn’t stand it, anywhere, with anybody—like a songbird in a tree, regardless of the technical and interpretive limitations. I know that I am much like my fellow amateur readers of Horn and More. Horn is more than just this thing I do on Monday nights when I go to community band.
Those of us in the “players just wanna play” school, of course, owe a debt of gratitude to those from the “let’s get organized” school. If we are to walk in, get our horns out, and sit down to a stand of music, a member of the “let’s get organized” school will already have been on the job.
I am fortunate to be in the company of such people as a member of Brass Triumphant. Brass Triumphant is remarkable in its longevity for an amateur group, active continuously since 1985. The founding members (trumpeters Becky Speck and Mike Stahl—who continue to lead the group—plus horn, trombone, and piano) were brought together as pit musicians for passion plays put on by the Harrisburg (Pennsylvania) chapter of Youth for Christ. When the organization chose to dispense with a live pit, the players had to find other outlets for performance.
Members of four different churches, the players had the advantage of being able to take repertoire “on the road,” and steady participation in church worship services followed. Performances at retirement centers, weddings, and other events came, too. A big motivator to staying organized is having those performance dates on the calendar. Nearly all dates have come via members’ personal connections, but we’ve had business cards since the 1990s and a website for 7 or 8 years.
Brass Triumphant at a summer church service on a well-known riverboat in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Instrumentation is currently a well-balanced 4 trumpets, 2 horns, 3 trombones, and tuba, but it has varied over the years. Brass Triumphant could fit into members’ basements for rehearsals when the group was smaller, but we now rehearse in the showroom of Mike’s commercial flooring business on Saturday mornings at 8:00 a.m. sharp. Organizational advantages include a sufficiently spacious and reliably available rehearsal site, and a consistent time slot.
The group was fortunate to add trumpeter and arranger Dave Rutman in the early 1990s. He has adapted dozens of pieces to whatever the instrumentation has been at the time. Dave is modest about his arranging skills, but he has Finale software, a can-do attitude, and a sense of humor that can surprise you.
His most common adaptations are to insert additional trombone lines into brass quintets (which trombonist Jeff Schwartz will also do, ad lib) and to simplify unnecessarily challenging lines for the benefit of players and listeners alike. Dave states, “If I can mess with it before it gets passed out, no one feels like they’ve had notes taken away.” In 39 years, Brass Triumphant has assembled a library of close to 200 selections, much of which has been scanned for space efficiency and to reduce the risk of a lost folder; this is another investment of time that continues to yield organizational benefits.
Being the least-tenured member of the group, I was introduced to its history over a post-rehearsal breakfast, and one of the things that struck me was the matter-of-fact way in which the ensemble’s well-oiled functioning is organized. Things that are intimidating to many, especially for players new to self-promotion, are routine here. Want people to play with? Go find them! Want gigs? Cultivate them! Want to be asked back? Set clear expectations and come prepared. You don’t have to be virtuosos, but being organized surely helps.
And for anyone still paying attention to how my re-started lessons are going…uh…I am still far from practicing the organization that I preach. I returned last week from three weeks away from Pennsylvania, during which I was only able to practice a couple of times. I’m not back at square one but the irregularity sure isn’t helping. The good news is that the coming month will be much more settled. Check back!
Chamber Music Corner—Júlio Medaglia’s Belle Epoque en Sud-America
by Layne Anspach
Hello musicians!
This month’s Chamber Music Corner will focus on Julio Medaglia’s Belle Epoque en Sud-America (1994-97). Medaglia was born in 1938 in São Paulo, Brazil, and he studied music theory and conducting.
Medaglia is well-established as a conductor in Brazil, having worked with all the major orchestras there. He has written extensively for film and theater, including over 100 scores for German television, and hundreds of soundtracks for Brazilian movies and television programs.
Belle Epoque en Sud-America was written for the Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet and was originally recorded by the group for their album Summer Music (BIS, 1998). The work is a suite in three movements, the name of which translates as “a beautiful era in South America,” and each movement draws from a different South American dance style.
The first movement, El Porsche Negro, probably referring to the German sports car, is denoted as a tango. After an introduction, the clarinet serves as soloist, and the melody, rhythmically pushed by the other voices, is later taken up by the flute.
The second movement, Traumreise nach Attersee, or “dream trip to Attersee,” is labeled Vals Paulista, a Brazilian waltz. Attersee likely refers to the lake of that name located near Salzburg, Austria. But while one might assume Austrian influence by the name, the movement is sonically sourced in South America. The work alternates throughout between two tempi. The introduction starts quickly and immediately slows, and the subsequent Lento is led by the oboe and horn and is felt very much in three. The contrasting Vivo moves in one and features the flute.
The third movement, Requinta Maluca, or “crazy refinement,” is labeled Chorinho (little choro). Despite the direct translation of choro being cry or lament, the style is mostly quick and happy. Melodic content is carried throughout by an e-flat clarinet, bringing the suite to a bright and energetic conclusion.
The reference recording features Ricardo Silva, horn, with the Veits Quintet performing at the 2016 Ditto Festival in Seoul, South Korea.
Ein Waldhorn Lustig
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Composer Spotlight—Radie Britain
by Caiti Beth McKinney
Hello everyone!
This month, I’d like to introduce you to a composer I’ve only learned about very recently, Radie Britain. Born in 1899 in rural Texas, Radie (pronounced RAY-dee) was a highly successful composer during her lifetime who specialized in orchestral music with a Southwestern flair. Originally a pianist and organist, by the time she was in her mid-twenties, Radie had traveled to Europe to study composition with German composer Albert Noelte. Britain’s works for orchestra are very much in the style of late-Romantic German music while featuring subjects from the United States. Among her output are pieces such as Southern Symphony, Cowboy Rhapsody, Cactus Rhapsody, and Musical Portrait of Thomas Jefferson which would later be renamed Epic Poem. One of my favorites of her recorded orchestral compositions is her Heroic Poem, written in 1948; it features a lovely horn solo at around the 7-minute mark that is well worth a listen!
Although many of her works are for large ensembles, Radie also composed an impressive number of chamber works for a wide variety of groupings, several of which involve or feature the horn. First and most notably is a piece entitled In the Beginning, which is available both for unaccompanied horn and for horn quartet. It is unclear at the time of this writing whether the piece began as the solo version or vice versa, but, luckily for us, both are published and available for purchase online. Britain also composed a brass quartet called Adoration, several brass quintets including Ode to NASA (yes, the American space agency NASA!) and Awake to Life, and at least one woodwind quintet, Four Sarabandes. Although, to my knowledge, none of these chamber pieces has been recorded, if they are even half the quality of her outstanding orchestral pieces, any intrepid horn player who wants to dust off these long-neglected works is sure to be in for a wonderful treat.
‍Pedagogy Column—Interview with Chris Komer
‍by Dan Grabois
New York-based horn player Chris Komer serves as principal horn of the New Jersey Symphony. He is also currently principal horn in the Miami Ballet. On top of his success in the world of orchestral music, he is an incredibly diverse performer whose resume includes a long list of jazz experiences. In this interview, he talks about how he learned to improvise, and he offers great tips on how to get started.
Upcoming IHS Podcasts
with James Boldin
April 15: Bernhard Scully
May 1: Bonus Episode—Pedagogy Interview with Richard King, by Daniel Grabois
May 15: Panel Discussion on Hermann Baumann with Ab Koster, Joseph Ognibene, Justin Sharp, and J. Bernardo Silva
June 15: Marshall Sealy
July 15: Monica Martinez
August 15: Kate Warren
Find all podcasts on the Podcast archive page on the International Horn Society website. Just scroll through the list to discover the many excellent interviews. These are great for listening while commuting, exercising, and relaxing!
IHS 56—Horns on the Horizon
by John McGuire
Hello fellow hornists!
This month has seen a flurry of activities in preparation for our August IHS 56 Symposium. The team has spent several weeks crafting what we believe will be a very strong schedule for the week. We have many wonderful performances, presentations, masterclasses, and other exciting events, and I would encourage everyone to go through the schedule—which is now posted at www.hornsonthehorizon.com—and find all the sessions and concerts that interest you. I guarantee that there are many opportunities for everyone to learn and be inspired!
Of course, we are all excited about the Featured Artists’ performances and masterclasses—who wouldn’t be! But I would like to draw special attention to a few other exciting offerings. Notably, there will be a large number of outstanding Contributing Artists sharing their talents and new works for horn, and presenting research that pertains to all of us. I personally can’t wait to see and hear them all…or at least as many as I can physically attend!
Additionally, we will be hosting late-night sessions after the evening concerts. These sessions will be informal interviews with many of our Featured Artists. It will be a chance for all of us to sit down with these icons of the horn world and get to know them in a more comfortable, relaxed atmosphere. (If you have ever had the chance to see the American television program Inside the Actors’ Studio, that’s how I envision these gatherings.)
Last, please make plans to attend what will surely be a wonderful and emotional tribute concert to Hermann Baumann, who recently passed away. Undoubtedly one of the finest horn players in history, Hermann’s impact on players around the world cannot be overstated, and it’s difficult to imagine someone who has had a greater influence on so many. This concert will be the featured evening performance on Thursday, August 1st—which would have been Baumann’s 90th birthday. There will be many terrific individual performances and tributes, and I’m sure there won’t be a dry eye in the house.
Please register now for IHS 56, if you have not already done so. We look forward to seeing you in Colorado!