School of Music presents Leonard Bernstein's Music for Brass

Leonard Bernstein. Photo courtesy of The Leonard Bernstein Office, Inc.
Leonard Bernstein. Photo courtesy of The Leonard Bernstein Office, Inc.

Four members of the School of Music's brass faculty will present Leonard Bernstein's "Music For Brass" on Sept. 22 at 3 p.m. in Kimball Recital Hall. Tickets are $5 general and $3 for students/seniors, available at the door.

Each member of the brass faculty (K. Craig Bircher, trumpet; Alan Mattingly, horn; Scott Anderson, trombone; and Craig Fuller, tuba) will perform a solo sonata accompanied by Michael Cotton in the second half of the program.

Leonard Bernstein completed his suite of brass pieces on April 8, 1959. They were written for members of the New York Philharmonic and received their premier at Carnegie Hall. The pieces were commissioned by the Juilliard Musical Foundation. This set of pieces is rarely performed as a set and are all influenced by Bernstein's love of jazz.

Leonard Bernstein unquestionably loved dogs, and showed this by writing numerous short pieces with a particular one in mind. Bernstein left us this mini-ode, Rondo for Lifey, dedicated to a skye terrier owned by the composer's friend, actress Judy Holliday. The piece begins with an expressive intro, quickly followed by pervasive staccato phrasing throughout. Elegy for Mippy I and II are popular pieces with his brother Burtie's dog in mind. Mippy I was written for horn and piano. Mippy II is for solo trombone. Tragedy struck Mippy, and each of these pieces help signify the dog's second coming.

Bernstein wrote the brass quartet, Fanfare for Bima, which was scored for trumpet, trombone, horn, and tuba. Bima was Serge Koussevitzky's black cocker spaniel. This fanfare is based on the theme, which was whistled in the Koussevitzky household to call his dog.