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Mountains can have unforeseen consequences on the imagination.
For Philadelphia-native Melinda Wagner, serving as a composer-in-residence at a music festival in Vail, Colorado, this resulted in the composition of a new Trombone Concerto, a piece tailor-made for Joseph Alessi, the principal trombonist of the New York Philharmonic.
“During my free moments in Vail, I found myself gazing — in disbelief really — at the jagged, youthful beauty of the Rockies. By comparison, ‘my’ mountains — the old Endless, Allegheny, and Pocono ranges of Pennsylvania — seemed to be no more than a set of soft wrinkles in the skin of the earth!” said Wagner. “Nobility and power, hallmarks of the trombone sound, are words that come to mind in the presence of mountains, old and new. And a truly great musician, as I learned while hearing Joseph Alessi play, can coax so much more out of the trombone: aching tenderness, sadness, lyricism, mirth.”
Alessi gave the premiere performance of Wagner’s new concerto on today’s date in 2007, with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Lorin Maazel. She’s also written three major orchestral works for the Chicago Symphony, including Extremity of Sky, a piano concerto for Emanuel Ax.
Melinda Wagner (b. 1957): Trombone Concerto; New York Philharmonic; Lorin Maazel, conductor; Bridge 9345
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
Mountains can have unforeseen consequences on the imagination.
For Philadelphia-native Melinda Wagner, serving as a composer-in-residence at a music festival in Vail, Colorado, this resulted in the composition of a new Trombone Concerto, a piece tailor-made for Joseph Alessi, the principal trombonist of the New York Philharmonic.
“During my free moments in Vail, I found myself gazing — in disbelief really — at the jagged, youthful beauty of the Rockies. By comparison, ‘my’ mountains — the old Endless, Allegheny, and Pocono ranges of Pennsylvania — seemed to be no more than a set of soft wrinkles in the skin of the earth!” said Wagner. “Nobility and power, hallmarks of the trombone sound, are words that come to mind in the presence of mountains, old and new. And a truly great musician, as I learned while hearing Joseph Alessi play, can coax so much more out of the trombone: aching tenderness, sadness, lyricism, mirth.”
Alessi gave the premiere performance of Wagner’s new concerto on today’s date in 2007, with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Lorin Maazel. She’s also written three major orchestral works for the Chicago Symphony, including Extremity of Sky, a piano concerto for Emanuel Ax.
Melinda Wagner (b. 1957): Trombone Concerto; New York Philharmonic; Lorin Maazel, conductor; Bridge 9345

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