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I
grew up in South Florida and got my first break when I was selected
to play with the famous Palm Beach High School Band as a 7th grader.
Two years later we moved up the coast to Ft. Pierce where I continued
in band. I was selected solo trumpet in the Florida All-State Band
my junior year and was awarded scholarships to Northwestern and
the University of Michigan as well as the University Of Miami. I
had been taking the bus to Miami several times a month for trumpet
lessons my senior year and when they offered my a Henry Fillmore
scholarship which covers everything - I accepted.
I was very busy
at the University. I was required to perform all band functions
for my scholarship and take all the required courses for a BM in
music education. As time went on I played first trumpet in the orchestra
and brass ensemble as well. I studied with the likes of Clifton
Williams, Alfred Reid and Fred Fennell and some jazz with Jerry
Coker. My senior year I performed with the faculty brass quintet
which was very active.
Upon graduation
I taught instrumental music in the Miami public school system and
began my career as a professional musician by playing principal
trumpet with the Ft. Lauderdale Symphony, the Miami Opera and the
Miami Beach Symphony. I also started getting calls to play some
of the big shows on Miami Beach staring Frank Sinatra, Perry Como,
Jackie Gleason etc.
In the summer, I played in the orchestra at the Coconut Grove Theater
which produced six Broadway Shows each season as well as the Summer
Pops Orchestra which performed on a barge out in the bay with the
audience sitting in the amphitheater or on their boat.
After three
years of teaching in Miami I decided to get a Masters Degree in
Trumpet Performance and accepted the graduate assistant position
in trumpet at Florida State. I finished the program in a year and
a half. I performed in all the University's major productions as
well as the university orchestra and faculty brass quintet.
Tallahassee was a great experience and it taught me that what I
really wanted to do was to play. I started the orchestra audition
process. One of the positions I applied for was for principal trumpet
in the Jerusalem Symphony with the noted American conductor and
composer, Lukas Foss. This was the State Orchestra Of Israel and
a good position. I flew to New York for the audition. Upon returning
home I was offered the job and had a week to think about it. The
information I found in the library about Israel was fascinating
and knowing the orchestra performed two different concerts each
week was what I was looking for. I took the job.
Upon joining
the orchestra in Jerusalem I played fifty six straight weeks and
then had six weeks off. I spent that time in London visiting friends
in the brass section of the All-Europe Youth Orchestra which spent
a month in Jerusalem. The highlight of that trip was being asked
to play an extra trumpet part in the Mahler 2nd Symphony which was
performed and recorded in Albert Hall by the London Symphony and
conducted by Leonard Bernstein. I then traveled on the Orchestra
train to Edinburgh Scotland for two more performances in the Edinburgh
Music Festival.
I returned to
Israel for my second season with the orchestra. I was very aware
of the many problems in that part of the world and what was causing
them. However the demands of my job kept me focused on my music.
I, like everyone else was not prepared for the war with Syria and
Egypt in 1973. It was one of the worst times to be in that country.
Everything changed over night. It was a terrible loss to everyone.
So many people died on both sides. There were a number of people
that I never saw again. They were killed or injured or remained
in the army.
As the only Christian in the orchestra and an American I knew that
I no longer belonged there.
I departed some six weeks later but not before I visited as many
locations as I could that were mentioned in the Bible. I then traveled
in Europe for seven weeks before coming back.
Upon returning
to the US I had been accepted as a special student by Vincent Chickowitz
who was a great teacher and played in the Chicago Symphony and was
on the faculty of Northwestern University. I had always wanted to
study and work in Chicago and this time there was nothing to stop
me. During the five years I spent there I also studied with Will
Scarlet and Arnold Jacobs both from the Chicago symphony. In 1978
I married my wife, Karen, who was a wonderful nurse at Chicago's
Children's Memorial Hospital. During my stay in Chicago I performed
with the Civic Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony, the Joffrey ballet
and the North Shore Concert Band as well as free lance work with
the likes of the Ringling Brothers Circus and
the Chicago Bears Band. I was select to be the featured soloist
with the New York Chamber Orchestra's three week tour of Southern
Spain and brought Karen along as nurse & Liberian.
In 1979 I accepted
a faculty position at James Madison University in Harrisonburg,
Va. where I directed the faculty brass quintet and worked with brass
students. During my second year I auditioned for the principal trumpet
opening in the Winston-Salem Symphony in North Carolina and added
it to my schedule.
We decided to
move back to the Midwest in 1981 and researched a number of areas
near Chicago. I had been on tour with the with the pop singer Tom
Jones several times when I lived in Chicago and always enjoyed the
stops in Madison. So Madison it was moving here in 1981.
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