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Jay Friedman
jayfriedman.net
Jay Friedman attended Yale University
on scholarship and majored in composition at Roosevelt
University. After four years with the Civic Orchestra of
Chicago and two years with the Florida Symphony, he
joined the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1962 and was
appointed principal trombone in 1964. He has soloed with
the CSO on several occasions, including a concerto by
Ellen Taaffe Zwilich.
Friedman recently released The
Singing Trombone, a solo CD designed to assist trombone
students. He has taught trombone privately for many
years, and his students hold positions in major
orchestras such as the Gothenburg Symphony, the Atlanta
Symphony, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Friedman
currently serves as professor of trombone, principal
guest conductor, and head of winds and brass at the
Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt
University. He also has been artist-in-residence at
Indiana University. Friedman was invited to hold master
classes and perform at the International Trombone Camp
in Fossano, Italy, in 2002, and in Limone, Italy, in
2003. That same year, he also performed at the
International Trombone Association in Helsinki, Finland.
In 2006 Friedman held master classes in Vigo, Spain.
An active conductor, Jay Friedman was
named music director of the Symphony of Oak Park & River
Forest in 1995. At the invitation of Daniel Barenboim,
Friedman conducted the Civic Orchestra in act 1 of
Wagner’s Die Walküre, in a
performance the Chicago Sun-Times
called “the best Civic concert in the past 30 years.” In
2002, he was chosen Conductor of the Year by the
Illinois Council of Orchestras.
In 2001, Friedman combined his
passion for brass and conducting by organizing the
Chicago Symphony brass and alumni in a concert at
Symphony Center benefiting the Symphony of Oak Park &
River Forest and honoring Adolph “Bud” Herseth. This
all-brass concert, Brass Buddies, featured Friedman’s
own arrangement of Strauss’s An
Alpine Symphony.
Friedman’s conducting career has
included guest appearances with orchestras around the
world, including the Orchestra of the Italian Radio
(RAI), the Malmo Symphony, and the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra’s annual donor concerts. In April 2005, he
conducted three concerts with the Santa Cecilia
Orchestra of Rome. In March 2006, he conducted the Civic
Orchestra of Chicago in a public master class of
Mahler’s Fifth Symphony at Symphony Center, and in May
2007 he conducted the RAI orchestra in Italy with Daniel
Barenboim as piano soloist.
Friedman’s articles on
conducting and orchestral style have been published by
The Instrumentalist magazine.
These articles currently are being used as a curriculum
at leading universities and can be accessed on his Web
site at
www.jayfriedman.net.
On April 19, 2010, Jay Friedman
conducted Mahler’s Eighth symphony ("Symphony of a
Thousand") at Symphony Center, with the Symphony of Oak
Park and River Forest, the choirs of the Symphony of Oak
Park and River Forest, Chicago Concert Chorale,
Concordia University and The Oak Park Children’s Choir,
with soloists Nancy Pifer, Marcy Stonikas, Elizabeth
Norman, Deborah Guscott, Tracy Watson, Kurt Hansen,
Douglas Anderson, Peter Van De Graaf.
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