
HAYDN:
TRUMPET CONCERTO
and other music
arranged and composed for
TRUMPET & ORGAN
J.S. BACH, BUXTEHUDE, COPLAND, HAYDN,
LESHNOFF, PURCELL,
SCHNITTKE
STEVEN HENDRICKSON
trumpet
WILLIAM
NEIL organ
MYRIAM AVALOS-TEIE piano*
***
DEBUT SOLO RECORDING ***
$14.95 ~ MS1155
"Steven
Hendrickson is a superb instrumentalist, and this beautifully recorded disc
shows off many facets of his art...[his] piccolo trumpet glistens...[his] C
trumpet soars...Quiet City is a total success...Cosmic Echoes exudes a vitality
all its own and makes a fine impression in this gorgeously played
reading...Hendrickson's playing [of Haydn's Concerto] is up there with [Helmut
Wobisch, Maurice Andre and Wynton Marsalis]. This disc is highly recommended to
trumpet enthusiasts..."
Fanfare -
November/December 2006
"Let
me say at once [this recital] is an excellent recording, so all congratulations
to the fine performing artists...[This recording] reveals, probably more than
many recordings one hears, the character and nature of the trumpet; not just the
instrument but in a subtle way the performer himself...There is a lyrical,
endearing and warm-hearted quality" about this playing which one does not,
generally speaking, associate with the basic "aggressive" nature of
the trumpet...The playing is impeccable throughout...[Leshnoff's Cosmic Echoes]
is one of the most imaginative and compelling works for trumpet and organ I have
ever heard, and ought to be widely known by trumpeters everywhere..."
MusicWeb International -
August 2006
"A
lovely program...Hendrickson has a round, warm, and pure tone that is often
delicate...."
American Record Guide -
September/October 2006
*
* *
The
tradition of music for trumpet and organ apparently began in French and German
churches at some point in the second half of the seventeenth century. In a sense
these two instruments—related, after all, in several respects—became
extensions of one another, and one of the classic musical examples of a whole
somewhat greater than the sum of its considerable parts. In our own time,
trumpet-and-organ recitals and recordings by such renowned musicians as Maurice
André with Hedwig Bilgram, and Edward H. Tarr with various organists, have not
only kept the tradition alive but have inspired numerous composers and arrangers
to enrich its repertory.
Steven
H. Hendrickson, the
National Symphony Orchestra’s principal trumpeter, and William Neil, that
orchestra’s organist, have been performing together for several years,
constantly adding to their joint repertory with new works composed for them as
well as new arrangements of existing music, both of which categories are
represented among their performances on this CD.
*
* *
Steven
E. Hendrickson is principal trumpeter with the National Symphony
Orchestra in Washington, D.C. He joined the NSO in 1982 as assistant principal,
and became principal in 1988. With the NSO, Mr. Hendrickson has been recorded as
principal trumpeter in numerous Shostakovich symphonies under Mstislav
Rostropovich, and in John Corigliano’s Symphony No.1, which won a Grammy for
Best Orchestral Performance. Hendrickson has played as soloist in the Arutunian
Concerto, J.S. Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No.2, Persichetti’s The Hollow
Men, Copland’s Quiet City and most recently the Haydn Trumpet Concerto. A
native of Iowa, Mr. Hendrickson graduated from Luther College in 1973 where he
was a student of Robert Getchell. Subsequently, he moved to Chicago for further
study with noted brass players of the Chicago Symphony, including Adolf Herseth,
Charles Geyer, William Scarlett and Arnold Jacobs, and later joined the Chicago
Civic Orchestra as part of his training. Hr. Hendrickson is currently an
instructor of trumpet at the University of Maryland. Prior to this position, he
taught at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore for 17 years. He has given
master classes in trumpet at many music schools, including Juilliard and the
Manhattan School.