Tuba Classics

Nationally and internationally known tubist Floyd O. Cooley has been heard in recital throughout the US, Europe and Japan, appearing as soloist, clinician, giving masterclasses, and as a member of the San Francisco Symphony.
 
Floyd joined the San Francisco Symphony in 1969, at the time the youngest tuba player in any major orchestra in the United States. Since then he has soloed with that orchestra on two occasions, under the baton of Seiji Ozawa and Jahja Ling, given recitals in a wide variety of places, including Carnegie Hall, commissioned works by Earl Zindars and Richard Felciano and recorded three solo albums, The Romantic Tuba on Crystal Records, A Schumann Fantasy on Summit Records, and Friends in Low Places on Albany Records. He played the 1992-1993 season with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
 
As a musician of extremely varied activities and interests Floyd has performed on the Visiting Artist Series in the Quad Cities of Iowa and Illinois, where he played in schools and factories to over fifteen thousand people. No matter what the activity, Floyd has been praised for his sensitive playing, mellow tone and singing melodic line. The San Francisco Chronicle wrote "the sheer beauty of tone and technical accuracy were amazing. The effect was operatically vocal." Floyd has been a participant at the Grand Teton Music Festival from 1975-2001.
 
Floyd spent one year at Kansas University and received a Performer's Certificate from Indiana University in 1969. While at Indiana he studied with William Bell, and also has studied with Mstislav Rostropovich, Jacob Krachmalnick and Mark Lifschey. He Studied with Arnold Jacobs from 1973-1998. In 2001, after 31 years playing with the San Francisco Symphony he turned his career towards teaching. Prior to leaving the San Francisco Symphony Floyd taught at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Stanford University and DePaul University. His teaching has taken him to New Zealand, Australia, Japan and Europe. Currently he is teaching at DePaul University where he is the Brass Coordinator, teaching tuba; brass concepts, pedagogy and teaching people to teach one-on-one.

Tuba Classics

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Tuba Classics - Bach - Partita in A Minor

Tuba Classics - Bach - Partita in A Minor


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Tuba Classics - Bach - Sonata in E Flat

The composition of instrumental music dominated Bach’s years at Cothen 1717-1723. The Sonata in E flat Major is one of six flute and harpsichord sonatas written during this period. These were placid years for Bach, conducting the Court Orchestra and composing. The E flat Major Sonata is a happy and carefree representative of those years. The sonata is written in concerto form yet with melodic equality between the two instruments. Only the second movement, Siciliano, employs the harpsichord as a true accompanist, while the tuba sings melody with a pleasing tenderness.


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Tuba Classics - Schumann - Adagio & Allegro

The Adagio and Allegro, composed in February 1849 immediately after the Fantasy Pieces, is a work for horn, with alternative parts provided for violin and cello. (The sketch is clearly for violin.) Here is quite another sort of music, spacious, rhetorical, and captivatingly virtuostic.


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Tuba Classics - Schumann - Drei Romanzen

The Three Romances, op. 94, come from the last month of 1849. Schumann intended them in the first place for oboe, but provided for alternative versions for violin or clarinet. The manner of the first Romance is demure. If, however, we listen carefully to the music, we hear that when the tuba melody begins, projected against a screen of simple chords in the piano, it adds a surprising stretch to the end of the first phrase so that we get in fact a beguilingly asymmetrical five measures. Schumann makes quasi-amends by adding a three measure echo, odd in itself, but conciliatory in that it makes the whole package add up to a neat eight bars. When the tuba resumes, it does so in pairs of three measure phrases; also the overlapping melodies of tuba and piano are rhythmically anything other than naive or obvious. In other words, beneath the Biedermeier exterior there beats a distinctly subversive heart. Adventure, understated adventure not quite letting on that it is adventure, is altogether a hallmark of these pieces. And if, for example, the symmetries and rhymes of the second Romance seem to contradict all this, it is only the more effectively to set off the impetuous gestures of its slightly quicker middle section and the delicious oddities of the closing piece of this opus.


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Tuba Classics - Schumann - Fantasiestucke

Fantasiestucke (Fantasy Pieces) is the title of three pieces, written on 11 and 12 February 1849, originally for clarinet, but also published by Schumann in versions for violin and cello. (Alternative instrumentations do in fact exist for all these sets of character pieces; to make translation for the tuba, therefore, though it involves coming up with thoughtful and tactful solutions to problems of octave registration, is simply to carry Schumann’s own openness with respect to instrumental color one step further.) Schumann originally called them Soireestucke before he changed to the designation he had already used in 1837 for one of his finest cycle of piano pieces. Here, more than in any of the other 1849 sets of short pieces, Schumann is concerned with the cumulative effect of the group as a whole, tempi and characters being chosen to build mounting intensify.


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Tuba Classics - Schumann - Marchenbilder

The four Marchenbilder (Pictures of Fairyland) were originally written for viola, with ab alternative version for violin. This sets offers the quickest music of any genuine allegros though it probably the melancholy final song that leaves the most vivid impression. The date is 1851, the first full year of the Schumanns, now numbering eight, spent in Dusseldorf, the year the Rhenish Symphony and two violin sonatas (among many other things), and alas the beginning of a new depressive phrase as Schumann realized that, for the depth of his musical perception, he was not technically equipped to be a successful conductor.


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Tuba Classics - Vivaldi - Sonata No 2

Tuba Classics - Vivaldi - Sonata No 2


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