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BRASS SECTION
All Photographs by Katrin Talbot
Musician
profiles are in alphabetical order.
ANNE ALEY, Horn
Noteworthy: Trained in horn & piano at the
Royal Conservatory of Music & University of Toronto; member of Oakwood
Chamber Players; Outreach manager for UW-Madison Summer Music
Clinic. Oddest practice quarters: By hummingbird feeder at Aspen
Festival. Funniest concert experience: Playing a brass quintet at
the finish line for the New York City Marathon. What your colleagues
don't know about you: I am an enthusiastic & creative vegetarian
cook.
JOHN ALEY, Principal Trumpet Marilynn G.
Thompson Chair
Noteworthy: First American to win the Maurice
Andre International Trumpet Competition; soloist with the English and Vienna
Chamber Orchestras; recorded & performed with Peter Schickele/PDQ Bach;
Professor of Music, UW-Madison; member of Wisconsin Brass Quintet & former
Member of American Brass Quintet. Oddest practice quarters:
Ancient Greek ampitheatre with outstanding acoustics. Funniest concert
moment: Playing a concert in Venezuela with soprano Jesse Norman, who was
drowned out by tree frogs in a nearby jungle.
MICHAEL ALLSEN, Bass Trombone
Noteworthy: Has written program notes for the MSO since 1984; also writes for several other orchestras, and has had program notes published in the UK, Israel, Australia, Japan, and Zimbabwe. Allsen is also the MSO's unofficial historian, writing online articles and newspaper features on the history of our orchestra. Several published editions and journal articles on Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque music; articles in the New Grove Dictionary, Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, and other reference works. Oddest practice quarters: Under an amusement park
roller coaster. Funniest concert experience: An early music
performance in which one of the members of our group, who also happens to be one
of my colleagues in the MSO, was playing tambourine with great gusto and managed
to stick his fist through the head of the instrument! What your
colleagues don't know about you: I really wanted to be a blues
guitarist. Recurrent musical fantasy: To have been present for the
dedication ceremony for the Cathedral of Florence in 1436.
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FRANK HANSON, Trumpet
Noteworthy: Doctorate degree from Ohio State
University; Professor of Trumpet: UW-Whitewater; Principal Trumpet: WI Chamber
Orchestra; member of Whitewater Brass Quintet. Oddest practice
quarters: In a canoe in a lake in the Canadian Boundary
Waters. Funniest concert experience: A trombonist lost control of
his slide, which went sledding across the floor, under my chair and over the
edge of the stage into the audience. What your colleagues don't know
about you: I raced sports cars during college. Recurring musical
fantasy: To perform the National Anthem as soloist before a Browns football
game in Cleveland Stadium.
PAUL HAUGAN, Principal Tuba
Noteworthy: Former principal tuba of the
Nurnberg Philharmonic, Chicago Brass Ensemble and Civic Orchestra of Chicago.
Currently play with Rockford, Green Bay and Milwaukee Festival City Symphonies.
Performed as tuba soloist in Europe. Oddest practice quarters: On
the shores of Horicon Marsh while surrounded by hundreds of
geese. What your colleagues don't know about you: I'm more
concerned about the future of endangered species than the future of the tuba or
the symphony orchestra. Recurrent musical fantasy: Introducing the
new dress code for orchestras world-wide (plaid flannel shirts, jeans and
running shoes) during a musical extravaganza in Vienna with Karl Bohm conducting
and Jenny Lind singing.
LINDA KIMBALL, Principal Horn Steve &
Marianne Schlecht Chair
Noteworthy: Bachelor of Music, Lawrence
Conservatory; Master of Music, UW-Madison; faculty horn at UW-Whitewater;
Principal Horn: WI Chamber Orchestra, member of Artemis Horn Quartet, Whitewater
Brass Quintet and Wingra Woodwind Quintet. Oddest practice
quarters: On the beach in Alabama
Funniest concert experience:
Playing a "Sunday Afternoon Live at the Elvehjem" concert with no audience. The
museum was closed due to a blizzard, but we played the concert for radio
broadcast anyway. What your colleagues don't know about you: I'm
learning to play the violin with my 12 and 6-year old sons. Recurring
musical fantasy: To play fiddle in a bluegrass band.
KATIE KRETSCHMAN, Trombone
Noteworthy: B.M. UW-Madison; studied at the
Utrecht Conservatory, The Netherlands. 1996 Neal Silva Young Artist Award
Winner, live solo recital on WPR. International Trombone Association Marstellar
Award Winner, solo performance at 1994 ITA workshop. Oddest practice
quarters: Landing strip. Funniest concert experience: I was
playing in the pit for a production of Peter Pan. During a fight scene, a wooden
dagger plummeted into the pit hitting me in the noggin which caused much pain,
but none of my colleagues noticed. After the show, a lady from the audience came
rushing down and asked if I was ok. All the other musicians looked at me like
"What the heck is she talking about?" What your colleagues don't know
about you: I had height reduction surgery. Only kidding, I'm naturally
short.
JOYCE MESSER, Principal Trombone Fred &
Mary Mohs Chair
Noteworthy: Seeing her students achieve their
performance goals through major scholarships & solo opportunities with
orchestras; playing Mahler's Third Symphony with MSO. Oddest practice
quarters: A storage room full of Santa costumes. Funniest concert
moment: Performing a piece titled "And the White Wind Blew" and immediately
afterwards driving a long way home in a blizzard. What your colleagues
don't know about you: I was once a church organist.
WILLIAM MUIR, Horn
Noteworthy: B.A. in music education from St.
Olaf College and M.M. in horn performance from UW-Madison; member of Wisconsin
Chamber Orchestra and Artemis Horn Quartet; building contractor and
woodworker. Funniest concert experience: Playing "Christmas in
July" with my horn quartet at a Jellystone campground. At any given time we had
between zero and three people listening, mostly from golf carts. It was not a
roaring success. Recurrent musical fantasy: To play all of the
Mahler symphonies in order...hey, wait a minute - some fantasies do come
true!
MIKE SZCZYS, Horn
Noteworthy: M.M. University of Minnesota; B.M.
University of Northern Colorado; Winner of the 2000 Rocky Mountain Concerto
Competition and the 2000 Angie Southard Chamber Music
Competition. Funniest concert experience: Playing a Led Zeppelin
tribute concert with the MSO. They pulled a guy in a sleeveless t-shirt from the
audience to conduct the next number. He was one of the most enthusiastic
conductors I've ever played under. What your colleagues don't know
about you: A few weeks before my first audition for college I got cold feet
and almost didn't pursue music. Recurrent musical fantasy: To live
in a time before TV and recorded music, when live music was the main source of
entertainment. Playing any instrument was a virtue because you could entertain
friends and family in your own home. How do you pronounce your
name? Stish - it's a Polish name.
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