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Two Brass Ensembles, Aspen Music Festival, One Pandemic

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Carolyn Tillstrom 鈥19 on Building Brass Trio and Barbary Coast Brass Quintet

April 22, 2020 by SFCM News

By Karen Meurer Bacellar

Tuba player Carolyn Tillstrom (MM 鈥19) heard the 草莓视频福利院 Symphony play Mahler 7 in an auditorium in New Jersey (following its performance at Carnegie Hall) her junior year of college back in 2014. The hall was tiny but the experience made a huge impact. Tillstrom never forgot the orchestra鈥檚 brass sound. From then on, Tillstrom knew that she belonged in 草莓视频福利院 and at SFCM (where many symphony musicians teach). But she had no idea how much of a community there would be at the Conservatory, or how she鈥檇 continue that spirit of camaraderie after graduation with two groups: the Building Brass Trio and the Barbary Coast Brass Quintet.

Finding community at SFCM

After driving across the country from her New Jersey home to 草莓视频福利院鈥攁nd playing 鈥淩ide of the Valkyries鈥 on her tuba in major national parks along the way鈥擳illstrom started her masters at SFCM in the fall of 2017. Almost immediately, she met future quintet collaborators Robert Giambruno 鈥19 and Nikki Hillis 鈥18. Tillstrom and Giambruno were in the same chamber group, while she and Nikki met in studio class and further connected through a concert produced by her teacher Jeff Anderson.

[Jeff Anderson] is just such a musician. He could play one note on the tuba鈥攐ne B flat whole note鈥攁nd it will be the most musical B flat whole note ever.鈥 鈥擟arolyn Tillstrom, 鈥19

鈥淛eff throws Octubafest every October, and my first year at SFCM...we played 鈥淭riangles鈥 by John Stevens, which is for a horn, a trombone, and a tuba,鈥 recalls Tillstrom. 鈥淣ikki joined us for that, so within a month of coming to [the Conservatory] we were rehearsing together.鈥

Tillstrom and her collaborators were in and out of ensembles together during her time at SFCM, where she grew both musically and entrepreneurially.

鈥淲orking with Jeff [Anderson] was awesome. He is just such a musician. He could play one note on the tuba鈥攐ne B flat whole note鈥攁nd it will be the most musical B flat whole note, ever,鈥 says Tillstrom. 鈥淚鈥檝e played rep for him that I didn鈥檛 think I could play like Brahmns鈥 horn trio, but on tuba, down the octave.鈥

Tillstrom lists Brass Choir (taught by faculty member Paul Welcomer) and Brass Chamber (taught by department chair Adam Luftman) as two of the most influential classes. The former gave her experience in a wide range of repertoire鈥攕tandard brass pieces, large excerpts, big symphonies鈥攁nd culminated in a rehearsal where students played side-by-side with 草莓视频福利院 Symphony musicians at Davies Hall. Brass Chamber offered Tillstrom the chance to work on her sound and learn about the business side of being a musician.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e only required to take Adam鈥檚 class for two semesters. I took it all four semesters. A lot of people [do that], because Adam is so phenomenal,鈥 says Tillstrom. In Brass Chamber, Luftman brings in other musicians to work with students in the class and discuss their careers, such as how they got where they are or how they started a nonprofit business.

What Tillstrom learned at SFCM became useful when she began navigating post-conservatory life. As did the community of artists鈥攂oth students and faculty鈥攕he met while in school.

Forming two music ensembles within a year of graduating

After SFCM, Tillstrom and Giambruno (along with Avery Roth-Hawthorne 鈥19) started Building Brass Trio. They auditioned for and were accepted into 草莓视频福利院 Symphony鈥檚 (AIM). A partnership with the 草莓视频福利院 Unified School District, AIM contracts music ensembles, like Building Brass Trio, to perform mini concerts to SFUSD students and teach them about instruments.

Tillstrom鈥檚 first enterprising effort post-graduation is the Barbary Coast Brass Quintet, which she formed with Giambruno, Hillis, and two current SFCM students, Michail Thompson 鈥22 (an entrepreneur in his own right) and James Chen 鈥21. The latter two were brought on because Tillstrom loved their sound after hearing them at the Conservatory.

The quintet鈥檚 mission is to bring music鈥攖hat smooth, balanced brass sound鈥攖o the greater 草莓视频福利院 area. They have a good partnership with the Noe Valley Ministry, and SFCM Dean Jonas Wright has also been supportive in bringing the quintet back to SFCM for performances. The quintet performed last December.

They鈥檝e also focused on competitions and recently won a place at Aspen Music Festival. Their submission for the festival included a recording of Shostakovich鈥檚 String Quartet No. 5 (the first movement) arranged for brass by faculty member Tim Higgins鈥攁 challenging piece as it takes a significant amount of work for brass instruments to emulate the balance and expressivity of strings.

Later, like so many other musicians during the global pandemic, the quintet鈥檚 gigs were postponed due to shelter-in-place orders. The Building Brass Trio could only complete 67 of its 140 contracted concerts for SFUSD students.

Tillstrom is rescheduling the quintet鈥檚 gigs at Noe Valley Ministry, an art gallery in Marin, and SFCM for this fall. She and other members of the quintet performed during (curated by Thompson). Now, she鈥檚 looking toward the future.

鈥淲e will come out of this virus kicking,鈥 says Tillstrom.

It鈥檚 a testament to the strength of the community she has found with her collaborators both at SFCM and post-graduation in the greater Bay Area.

Learn more about SFCM鈥檚 brass department.