JOEL TREYBIG
Dr. Joel Treybig is assistant professor of trumpet at Belmont
University in Nashville, Tennessee, where he works with
undergraduate and graduate trumpet students, teaches music
theory, performs with the Belmont Brass Quintet, and directs the
university's brass ensembles. He was a member of the faculties
of Bowling Green State University (Ohio) and the University of
Southern Mississippi before joining the Belmont faculty in 2005.
He has performed with symphony orchestras in Alabama,
Mississippi, Ohio, and Texas, and with numerous pit orchestras
and chamber groups. Treybig is an active solo recitalist and
clinician, and has performed as a guest artist in Alabama,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, and Texas, including
diverse venues such as Spivey Hall, the Vicksburg Chamber Music
Festival, the Victoria Bach Festival, and the New Texas and
Bowling Green New Music Festivals. Dr. Treybig performs
frequently as a freelance performer in Nashville and regularly with
the Belmont Brass Quintet.
As a performer of contemporary music, Treybig has worked with
such American composers as John Cheetham, Eric Ewazen,
Karel Husa, Kent Kennan, Joan Tower, and Luigi Zaninelli, who
have commended his performances of their music. Additionally,
Dr. Treybig's doctoral treatise, An Investigation and Analysis of
Karel Husa's Concerto for Trumpet and Wind Orchestra, was
praised by Dr. Husa as being exceptional and wrote that he
considered the treatise to be "one of the most conscientious
research documents on any of my compositions."
Treybig is an active member of the College Music Society and the
International Trumpet Guild, and his articles and music reviews
have been published in the International Trumpet Guild Journal.
Treybig is a proponent of chamber music for trumpet, and
Manduca Music has published several of his arrangements for
brass quintet including F.J. Haydn’s Concerto in E-flat and
Walter Dignam’s virtuosic theme and variations, Hope Told a
Flattering Tale, for solo E-flat cornet with brass quintet and
percussion.
His performances have been broadcast on public radio throughout
the southeast, and he may be heard on several recordings,
including The University of Texas Wind Ensemble at Carnegie
Hall, Jam and Spice: The Songs of Kurt Weill, the soundtrack to
the video game Ultima IX: Ascension, and The Gulf Coast
Symphony’s CD of Beethoven’s 6th Symphony and Stravinsky’s
Firebird Suite.
Treybig has studied with Raymond Crisara (NBC Symphony,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra), James Darling (Cleveland
Orchestra), Murray Greig (English Northern Philharmonia, Orfeo
Trumpet Consort), Scott Johnston (Akron Symphony, Canton
Symphony, Paragon Brass Quintet) and Mary Squire (Ohio
Chamber Orchestra). His biography has been listed in Who's
Who in America and Who’s Who Among American Teachers.
|