International Trombone Week grand finale!
The last word in authenticity. “76 Trombones” performed by 76 trombones:

International Trombone Week grand finale!
The last word in authenticity. “76 Trombones” performed by 76 trombones:

International Trombone Week continues!
Somebody took this classic trombone “motorcycle” prank…
… and made it into a concerto. Here’s Jan Sandstrom’s “A Motorbike Odyssey” (with a Tommy Dorsey encore).

For International Trombone Week, a great way to start the day – here’s Eric Ewazen’s Triple Concerto for Three Trombones, written for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Movt. I https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9udNGnOuV8
Movt. II https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAPDVf4bTx4
Movt. III https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKXW3zYzBqc

International Trombone Week meets Yom HaShoah, a day of Holocaust remembrance.
At first glance, it may seem wildly incongruous to present music by Erwin Schulhoff – a composer whose life ended in a concentration camp at the age of 48 – with whimsical images of Buster Keaton and Fatty Arbuckle. But in remembering composers who perished in the Holocaust, we risk a tendency to think of them, reductively, as victims, which can inadvertently have the effect of diminishing their overall achievements. These were not artists who created and lived their lives with the expectation of being memorialized for their senseless deaths. I mean no disrespect with this observation. Schulhoff was one of the great musical losses of the Holocaust. But a broader appreciation of his work, if anything, deepens our understanding of what was taken from this world too soon – a vital, creative being, snuffed out, because of a “solution” formulated by a monstrous ideology.
http://orelfoundation.org/composers/article/erwin_schulhoff
“The Syncopater’s Peter” (1934) for trombone, with Buster Keaton footage
Schulhoff’s String Quartet No. 1 (1924)
The Dada ballet “Die Mondsüchtige,” or “Moonstruck” (1925). The scenario describes a somnambulist dancing across the roofs of Prague with a figure identified as “The Moon Dandy.”
Concertino for Flute, Viola and Double Bass (1925):
“Symphonia Germanica” (1919)
Symphony No. 2 (1932)
Symphony No. 6 (1940-41)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88ivh1Lfqe0
PHOTO: Schulhoff and son

The secret’s out: It’s International Trombone Week!
International Trombone Association
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