Camaraderie is keynote for USC Thornton tuba players
Most of the working professionals around Los Angeles received their degrees from the USC music school
Its the tuba players paradox: always alone, but never lonely.
Theres only one tuba player in an orchestra, said Jim Self, head of the USC Thornton tuba studio. But tuba players are clannish and we keep in touch with one another.
And why not? According to Self, most of the working professionals around Los Angeles have their degrees from Thornton.
In the 10 years that Ive been in charge of the tuba program, Ive tried to encourage our alumni to stay involved, Self said. For example, when our ensemble goes to play at a conference, I always invite our alumni to join in.
Adding to the sense of intimacy and camaraderie is the small size of USC Thorntons tuba program there are only six students. This allows for a strong bond between teacher and student.
My first year studying with Jim as my private teacher was a fun experience week to week, said undergraduate student Cameron Holt. Hed always make a point to ask how I was doing outside of playing the tuba and kept a constant, vested interest in how I was doing outside of Thornton. I wouldnt be where I am today without those band directors and professors in my life because they really do become life coaches in addition to music instructors.
In addition to Self, the tuba faculty is rounded out by Norm Pearson of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Doug Tornquist, a prominent studio musician and principal tuba of the Long Beach Symphony.
You would be hard-pressed to find such a lineup of tuba teachers all in one place anywhere else.
Kyle Richter
When you step back and really think about who the three of them are in the tuba world, its remarkable that consistently being around and learning from all three of them felt like normal, said Kyle Richter MM 16. You would be hard-pressed to find such a lineup of tuba teachers all in one place anywhere else.
Oom-pah-pah
Here at Thornton, we have an emphasis on chamber music and its a great thing very few schools have it, Self said. So every tuba student plays in a brass quintet. And every semester, we have a Brass Bash concert where all the brass chamber ensembles get together for a performance.
Yet there is also an opportunity for USC Thornton tuba players to play with one another: the USC Bass Tuba Quartet.
Its a mix of graduate students and the top undergraduate players, Self said. Its an outgrowth of a professional group we had back in the 70s called the Los Angeles Tuba Quartet.
In addition to Self, the Los Angeles Tuba Quartet featured Roger Bobo, Don Waldrop and tuba legend Tommy Johnson, who was Selfs predecessor as head of USC Thorntons tuba studio. He was my teacher when I came to do my doctorate here, Self said. He was my mentor; he helped me a lot.
Because very little music had previously been written for tuba quartet, the Los Angeles Tuba Quartet commissioned a lot of music back then. The USC Bass Tuba Quartet has continued that tradition.
Ive commissioned really good music from our faculty here, like Bruce Broughton, whos a famous film composer. He wrote a great piece for us last year and we premiered that, Self said. Ive written music for them and done some tuba quartet arrangements. Weve done lots of cool things over the years, so by now were getting quite a library of music for four tubas.
An all-tuba ensemble challenges the students.
It makes them play beyond what they thought were their capabilities, Self said.
The hard work was has paid off. Two years, ago at the International Tuba and Euphonium Conference, the quartet took first prize in the chamber music competition and appeared again at the conference in 2016.
Free concerts around the world
Self works to ensure that the USC Thornton tuba students have every opportunity to improve their skills through performance.
We have a concert every spring at my home. We call it Live From Bassett Hall, he said. Its a private concert for 70 to 80 people, but its really a nice affair.
Every winter, the tuba quartet gives a free holiday concert to the public as part of an event called TubaChristmas, in which hundreds of tuba players play free concerts in cities around the globe.
Its become a worldwide Christmas tradition, but it was started by one of my teachers, Harvey Phillips, Self said. Weve been doing it in L.A. for 40 years now.
USC Thornton tuba students also learn the ropes of studio recording. Last year, all six tuba students recorded Snajort, an original piece by Self, and an arrangement of Polkadots and Moonbeams.
Each year I try to give them a real studio experience and we record really challenging music, Self said. Ive always found throughout my teaching career that students like to be challenged. I always tell them, prove to me that you can do it and they like that.