Tutti Trombone: A Collaborative Concert featuring the Thomasian Trombone Choir and the FEU Drum and Bugle Corps with the special participation of Thanapoom Sriwiset, Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra Assistant Principal Trombone, Ethan Santos, New Orleans-based Performer, Educator, Arranger and Band Leader, and Koowie Relevo, FEU DBC's Assistant Artistic Director, IABF Class of 2017
Following previous Tutti concerts in the past, (Flutti, Guitarri, Celli and Harpi) the FEU Center for the Arts proudly presents "Tutti Trombone: A Collaborative Concert featuring the Thomasian Trombone Choir and the FEU Drum and Bugle Corps with the special participation of Thanapoom Sriwiset, Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra Assistant Principal Trombone,
Ethan Santos, New Orleans-based Performer, Educator, Arranger and Band Leader, and Koowie Relevo, FEU DBC's Assistant Artistic Director, IABF Class of 2017” at 6:00 PM on November 18, 2024 at the historic FEU Auditorium, currently celebrating its 75th anniversary.
The Thomasian Trombone Choir is composed of trombone-playing students from the University of Santo Tomas Conservatory of Music under the tutelage of Ricson Poonin, a “highly acclaimed trombonist” (The Manila Times) and acting principal trombonist of the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra. The ensemble made its debut earlier this year.
The Thomasian Trombone Choir will perform with the FEU Drum and Bugle Corps, the 89-year-old official marching unit of Far Eastern University and one of the cultural groups under the FEU Center for the Arts. The marching Tamaraws are led by their Artistic Director, Kevin Castelo, who finished his Master’s degree in Percussion at the University of Indiana, and Koowie Relevo, the Assistant Artistic Director, an alumnus of the FEU DBC from FEU’s Institute of Accounts, Business and Finance, Class of 2017. The FEU DBC is composed of student artists from various non-music courses at the University.
The collaborative concert will also feature the special participation of Thanapoom Sriwiset, the Associate Principal Bass Trombone of the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra since 2010. He became a trombone instructor at Mahidol University College of Music in 2016. He had the opportunity to perform with the Grazer Philharmoniker at Opernhaus Graz in Austria. Thanapoom has been invited to teach and conduct master classes at prestigious festivals including the Thailand International Trombone Festival, the Thailand International Brass and Percussion Conference, and other brass-related events across Asia.
Another special participant is Ethan Santos, a Filipino-American multi-instrumentalist and an adjunct trombone professor at Tulane University of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the United States of America. Ethan performed as a bandleader in various jazz festivals in New Orleans. Other than playing with esteemed musicians and bands, Ethan also taught at clinics held at the Jazz & Heritage Foundation, the Louis Armstrong Summer Jazz Camp, the New Orleans Creative Center for the Arts, the Buchanan Educational Center, and Bullard High School.
Completing the list of guest performers is Koowie Relevo, tagged as a “multi-faceted musician” by The Manila Times. When he was still a student artist of the FEU DBC, he and his fellow FEU DBC members represented the University and the Philippines in competitions in Indonesia. Koowie was one of the music directors at the recent concert of the FEU DBC in the FEU Auditorium called “From the Field to the Concert Hall”. Together with Artistic Director Kevin Castelo, they curated a classical, operatic and modern repertoire to showcase the talents of the FEU DBC student artists.
Come for a night of unforgettable performances in the historical, 75 year old FEU Auditorium on November 18, 2024 at 6:00 PM!
FREE ADMISSION!
Register Here: https://forms.office.com/r/eWHud2uEAS
For more information on the concert, please follow or message the Far Eastern University Center for the Arts on their Social Media accounts:
Facebook: Far Eastern University Center for the Arts
Instagram: @feucenterarts
No comments:
Post a Comment