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Tuba player
from Hagerstown, Maryland, who came from a long line of
railroad workers but was smitten by music when he heard the National
Symphony Orchestra perform when he was young. He decided he wanted to be in the
school band when he was in the seventh grade but his parents didn’t
have a lot of money to spend on musical instruments. When you didn’t have your own
instrument, you pretty much picked up whatever the school had available, in
his case, the sousaphone.
It was this
same sousaphone that he played at an audition for the Peabody
Conservatory. He aced the
audition, but was told he would have to buy a new instrument. So he cobbled together whatever
money he had a purchased his first, new tuba. It was out of tune, however, and he
had to go back and buy another one.
The third time was the charm and he graduated from Peabody with a Bachelor’s degree in
1961.
It did not
take long for him to find a job.
By September, he was gainfully employed by the NSO as their
principal tuba player. He made
his Carnegie Hall debut with them on 11th March 1962.
In 1963, he
was conscripted into the United States Army where he played in the Field
Band in Fort Meade, Maryland.
He must have
built up some muscles lugging his tuba around, because in 1972, he hit two
home runs to help the NSO defeat their dreaded rivals, the New York
Philharmonic, by a score of 15-13.
Needless to say, it was not a pitcher’s duel.
In addition to
being the NSO’s principal tuba player and
resident slugger, he became their personnel manager in 1976, a post he
would hold for nearly a quarter of a century.
In 1987, he
flexed his musical muscles by performing the “Horn Concerto” of
Richard Strauss with the NSO.
What was unusual about this performance was that he played the solo…
on tuba.
On 18th
February 1998, the NSO descended on Alabama
and performed at Decatur
High School where
about 500 students were mesmerized by the music of Benjamin Britten, Aaron
Copland, Gustav Mahler, Ottorino Respighi, John
Philip Sousa, and Richard Wagner.
The NSO Principals
Brass Quintet conducted its South
Dakota residency in March 2002. One of the highlights featured David
and his fellow quintet members playing the theme from The Flintstones on
conch shells.
In the spring
of 2003, they honoured their North Dakota
residency with stops at Beulah Middle School, Bismarck State College, Kenmare High School, North Dakota
College of Science, Red River High School and St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church in Grand Forks, and Trinity Lutheran
Church and the University of Mary
in Bismarck, and West Fargo
High School. Their program comprised Morley
Calvert’s “Suite from the Monteregian
Hills”, Duke Ellington’s “Three American Jazz Classics”,
George Frideric Handel’s “Hallelujah”
and overture from Berenice,
W.C. Handy’s “Beale Street Blues”,
Gustav Holst’s “Second Suite in F”,
and Peter Schickele’s “Fanfare to the
Common Cold” and “Variations on a Joke”.
On 10th
January 2004, the NSO Principals Brass Quintet, which consisted of David,
horn player Martin Hackelman, trombonist Milton
Stevens and trumpeters Steve Hendrickson and Adel Sanchez,
performed their Bravo Brass! Kinderkonzert at the
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. They performed at the Alden Theatre
in McLean, Virginia, on 7th March 2004.
In May 2004,
the NSO presented “The Ring Without Words”, with music by
Wagner arranged by Maestro Lorin Maazel. It
was one of his last concerts with the NSO, because he retired shortly
thereafter.
He has hardly
been twiddling his thumbs since then.
On 23rd May 2007, he returned to South Hagerstown
High School to
perform with the school’s concert band and wind ensemble. The concert included Andrea Catozzi’s “Beelzebub” and Frank Ticheli’s “An American Elegy” and arrangement
of “Amazing Grace”.
This time, David had his own tuba.
He hasn’t
been spending that much time playing tuba, however. In fact, his last recording featured
him singing in the bass section of the Choral Arts Society of Washington in
the London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra’s performance of Mahler’s
“Symphony No. 8”.
He also sang in Mahler’s second and eighth symphonies at
Carnegie Hall.
In 2010, he
helped coordinate TUBACHRISTMAS at Kennedy Center. He also performs with his wife Sara,
who is a flautist, at schools in the D.C. area, as part of the NSO’s educational outreach program, In-School
Ensemble.
How is he
enjoying retirement? It suits
him just fine, thank you. He’s
working out, cooking, gardening, singing in the church choir, and
volunteering at Kennedy
Center. His dad, uncles and grandfathers
would be happy to know that his favourite hobby is
railroading.
Paul Hill Chorale recordings
O Come All Ye Faithful (Frederick
Oakeley/John Francis Wade)
Arranger – Jackson Berkey
Conductor – Paul Hill
Organist – Sondra Proctor
National
Capital Brass and Percussion Ensemble
Sources:
- http://books.google.com/books?id=bojo_CLOpDsC&pg=PA127&lpg=PA127&dq=%22David+Bragunier%22+AND+%22Tuba%22&source=bl&ots=3E-O53wRZT&sig=S-LnvPqyCr3g6-_uqhlNfzA33Xg&hl=en&ei=8kmfTdbhEeGX0QHqrrWSBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CE0Q6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=%22David%20Bragunier%22%20AND%20%22Tuba%22&f=false
- http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/200203/22_hetlandc_symphony-m/
- http://www.classof1957.com/Newsletter%20Archive/Nov%2009%20Newsletter.pdf
- http://forums.chisham.com/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=21510&start=0
- https://www.kennedy-center.org/explorer/artists/?entity_id=4057&source_type=A
- http://www.classof1957.com/Newsletter%20Archive/Nov%2010%20Newsletter.pdf
- http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1086483/index.htm
- http://www.nytimes.com/1998/02/19/arts/arts-in-america-oh-they-come-to-alabama-but-without-the-banjos.html
- http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/200203/22_hetlandc_symphony-m/
- http://www.kennedy-center.org/nso/community/MasterSchedND2003.pdf
- http://www.answers.com/topic/monteregian-hills-suite-for-brass-quintet
- http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2003/dec/16/20031216-102543-7944r/print/
- http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/articleprint.asp?article=292254&paper=68&cat=226
- http://basstrombone.nl/forums/t/1090.aspx
- http://www.mail-archive.com/horn@music.memphis.edu/msg21815.html
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HRRQZbY7lE
- www.theclassicalshop.com/download_booklet.aspx?file=LSO%200669.pdf
- http://www.tubachristmas.com/readtcloc.php?TCState=All
- http://www.tubachristmas.com/whatis.htm
- http://www.miltstevens.com/htmlpages/nso.html
- http://www.classof1957.com/Newsletter%20Archive/Nov%2009%20Newsletter.pdf
- http://www.classof1957.com/Newsletter%20Archive/Nov%2010%20Newsletter.pdf
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