Tubas become horns of plenty
Posted: Tue Nov 15, 2011 11:47 am
Thunk thunk is the new oompah.
Here's a link to an upbeat article on Los Angeles tuba players and new banda opportunities.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me ... full.story" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank
"L.A. is the tuba capital of the world and has been for many years," said Bill Roper, a jazz tubist in Altadena.
Two players, in particular, made it that way. Tommy Johnson, a tuba professor at USC who died in 2006, almost single-handedly populated the tuba world with his students and played on more than 2,000 movie soundtracks, including the shark music on "Jaws." (Three top tubist jobs in America — at the New York, Chicago and Los Angeles symphonies — are filled by students of Johnson.) Roger Bobo, who now teaches in Japan, was a tubist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic for 25 years and made solo recordings that expanded the instrument's role, said Gene Pokorny, a tubist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra."
Here's a link to an upbeat article on Los Angeles tuba players and new banda opportunities.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me ... full.story" target="_blank" target="_blank" target="_blank
"L.A. is the tuba capital of the world and has been for many years," said Bill Roper, a jazz tubist in Altadena.
Two players, in particular, made it that way. Tommy Johnson, a tuba professor at USC who died in 2006, almost single-handedly populated the tuba world with his students and played on more than 2,000 movie soundtracks, including the shark music on "Jaws." (Three top tubist jobs in America — at the New York, Chicago and Los Angeles symphonies — are filled by students of Johnson.) Roger Bobo, who now teaches in Japan, was a tubist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic for 25 years and made solo recordings that expanded the instrument's role, said Gene Pokorny, a tubist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra."