Tyrone Breuninger Explained
Tyrone Breuninger (died May 6, 2012) was an American trombonist with the Philadelphia Orchestra as well as a euphonium/trombone/tuba teacher from Rowan University, located in Glassboro, New Jersey.[1] Throughout his career, he also did freelance solo performances. His degrees include a Bachelor of Science in music education and an MM of music in performance. He also arranged a version of Georg Philipp Telemann's Sonata in G minor for euphonium.
Ensembles and events
- The Philadelphia Orchestra (1967–1999)
- Associate principal trombone
- Solo euphonium
- The Atlantic Brass Band (at Rowan University)
- Luzerne Music Festival (Lake Luzerne, New York)
- Coordinator of brass activities
- EU-TU Quartet (euphonium and tuba)
- The Festive Brass Quintet
Albums
Breuninger recorded one album, The Classic Euphonium, containing within it:
- "Wee Cooper of Fife" - Traditional
- "Andante" (from Concerto for Double Bass) - Antonio Capuzzi
- "Rondo" (from Concerto for Double Bass) - Antonio Capuzzi
- "Aubade" - Philip Sparke
- "Moderato" (from Euphonium Concerto) - Joseph Horovitz
- "Lento" (from Euphonium Concerto) - Joseph Horovitz
- "Scherzando" (from Euphonium Concerto) - Joseph Horovitz
- "Romance" - Victor Ewald
- "Rhapsody for Euphonium" - James Curnow
- "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice" - Camille Saint-Saëns
- "Fantasy" - Philip Sparke
Sources
- https://web.archive.org/web/20050326032805/http://www.rowan.edu/fpa/music/our_assets/bio/breuninger.html
- http://www.goodnewsmusic.com/audiocds/8913581.html
- http://dwerden.com/emg/recordingsearch.cfm?Song=&Composer=&AlbTitle=&Artist=Breuninger%2C+Tyrone&doSearch=1
Notes and References
- Web site: Tyrone Breuninger, 73, trombonist - Philly.com . Articles.philly.com . 2012-05-21 . 2013-09-13.