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Hitz Academy Blog

A blog about performing music, teaching music and the business of music.

Filtering by Tag: Jeff Curnow

The Case for One Person Calling the Shots in a Chamber Group

Andrew Hitz

I have been in chamber groups with one person calling the shots artistically. I’ve also been in chamber groups where everyone had an equal say in what was played and how it was played.

It’s seems to be a common belief that a true artistic democracy is the more desirable of these two models. That everyone putting their vision forward will always end up with a richer artistic product.

But in my experience, each model has benefits.

Jeff Curnow, former member of the legendary Empire Brass and current member of the Philadelphia Orchestra, talks in the clip from TBJ182 below about the benefits of playing in a group where one or two people are calling the shots.

It’s just food for thought if you’re ever considering starting a group.

Artistic democracies are good! But so are groups that are formed to realize the vision of just one or two people!

For episode 182 of The Brass Junkies, come for thoughts on how to set up a chamber group artistically and stay for the Empire Brass road stories. This interview was one of my favorite hours in quite some time.


The Brass Junkies Episode 182: Jeffrey Curnow

Andrew Hitz

Jeff Curnow is a legend!

I have looked up to him since my very first Empire Brass concert in August of 1988.

Jeff was one of the five people who changed my life forever that afternoon and it’s crazy to me that we are now friends and colleagues. The music business is funny that way!

We got some Empire Brass stories I hadn’t heard before (and I’ve heard A LOT of them so I always get excited for new ones!)

And Jeff spoke so highly of Sam Pilafian. It is obvious how much of an impact Sam had on his life and career.

Pretty crazy that I get interview people who were on posters on my wall as a kid but here we are!

You can watch the episode on YouTube below or head over to Pedal Note Media for all of the links to where to find it.

Enjoy!


On This Episode of The Brass Junkies:

  • How proud the three of us are for figuring out how to get on the same Zoom call

  • How playing in a full-time touring quintet is basically like living together and can feel like a reality show

  • The similar approach that Sam and Rolf shared on how Empire should play

  • When the mics came on for a recording session you either knew your part or didn’t which helped to focus everyone even between sessions

  • Rolf’s vision of walking onstage and leveling the place and how that shaped the entire artistic trajectory of Empire Brass

  • That time when Lance told a radio interviewer that he used be an astronaut

  • That time when Rolf woke Jeff up at 8:00 am and he was suddenly on his way to a radio interview where he ended up playing Guns N’ Roses

  • The Empire Brass Seminar and the profound impact it had on so many people and how that hit home for Jeff when former EBS student Jen Montone joined him in the Dallas Symphony

  • The intense attention to detail you need to play in a professional chamber ensemble

  • Getting your musical ideas to the back of the hall

  • Why you always have to have a musical opinion, go out on stage and make people feel something

  • That time when Andrew was playing a gig with Marty Hackleman in Mexico and made a toast that had Marty staring a hole in him

  • How all the time he had on the road with Empire led to a rekindled love of cartooning

  • The parallels between his detail-oriented approach to both cartooning and music

  • His process for making cartoons for NPR and The Wall Street Journal

  • How he and Mark Gould collaborated on Orchestra Confidential


Brass Legacy Project: Sam Pilafian

Andrew Hitz

For the first installment of the Brass Legacy Project we simply had to start with Sam Pilafian. Both Lance LaDuke and myself were incredibly close to Sam. He shaped us as musicians and as humans. Sam was like a second father to me.

We decided to go big for this tribute! We were joined by 21 different guests from various aspects of Sam's life and career. All were people who knew him intimately and were deeply affected by his artistry and humanity.

Group #1 (0:00​):

  • Daniel Burdick

  • Julian Dixon

  • Julie Landsman

  • Elaine Martone

  • Tom McCaslin

  • Clarke Rigsby

Group #2 (44:00​):

  • Mark Gould

  • Mike Jacobetz

  • Jens Lindemann

  • JD Shaw

  • Patrick Sheridan

Group #3 (1:29:00​):

  • Velvet Brown

  • Jeff Curnow

  • Marty Hackleman

  • Scott Hartman

  • Charles Villarrubia

Group #4 (2:15:00​):

  • Joe Alessi

  • Chuck Kerrigan

  • Michael Nickens

  • Michael Sachs

  • Gail Williams

Miss you like crazy, Sam.