Arts and Entertainment

Trombone professor to present recital Jan. 15

Credit: Penn StateCreative Commons

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State trombone professor Mark L. Lusk will present his 60th faculty recital at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, Jan.15, in Esber Recital Hall. Admission is free.

Lusk will be joined by guest artists Velvet Brown (tuba), Kathy Gattuso Cinatl (piano), Langston J. Fitzgerald III (trumpet), Marko Marcinko (drums), Matthew Neff (bass trombone) and special guest Kaitlyn Lusk (vocalist), along with members of the Penn State Trombone Choir. The program will feature music of John Stevens, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Jacques Castérède, Kim Scharnberg, and Michael Davis.

The recital will also be available via livestream video at the Penn State School of Music website.

Program

Dialogues for Trombone and Tuba — John Stevens (with Velvet Brown, tuba)

Songs of Travel — Ralph Vaughan Williams (with Kathy Gattuso Cinatl, piano)

Concertino for Trumpet, Trombone and Piano — Jacques Castérède (with Langston J. Fitzgerald III, trumpet; Kathay Gattuso Cinatl, piano)

A Brief Sojourn (from "Journey for Trombone And Orchestra") — Kim Scharnberg (with Kaitlyn Lusk, voice; Kathy Gattuso Cinatl, piano)

Lusk became a member of the Penn State faculty in 1986. Prior to his appointment, he enjoyed a varied career with such diverse groups as the Woody Herman Thundering Herd, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Eastman Wind Ensemble, and the Chicago Contemporary Chamber Players.

He continues to have an active playing career as a soloist, clinician, and freelance musician. As a member of the Woody Herman Alumni Band, he has performed throughout the United States and abroad, including featured performances at jazz festivals in China, England, France, Finland, Germany, Italy, Malaysia, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Scotland, and Sweden. The two most recent recordings of the Woody Herman Alumni Band are entitled the "60th Jubilee" and "Live in London," and are available on the New York Jam label.

Lusk has also performed on Broadway, including the recent production of "Little Women." The original cast album is currently available from Ghostlight Records. His successful experience on Broadway has allowed him to play such memorable shows as "Les Miserables," "Phantom Of The Opera," "Sunset Boulevard," "Victor/Victoria," "Miss Saigon," and "Beauty and the Beast."

His performing and teaching have also taken him to South America. He has toured Chile as an artist/clinician, teaching and performing throughout the country, including a performances with the Orquesta Sinfónica de Concepción and  the Orquesta Sinfónica de Chile. Lusk has also visited Argentina, where he served as an artist/clinician and was the first trombone soloist in the history of the Teatro Colon.

In the summer months, Lusk is a member of the faculty at the Cleveland Trombone Seminar, the Interlochen Trombone and Tuba Institute, and the Interlochen Summer Arts Camp as a Valade Fellow instructor. Each year, Lusk tours as a soloist and with various groups that take him to numerous universities and schools of music across the United States. He has often performed at the New York Brass Conference, the Eastern Trombone Workshop, and the International Trombone Workshop, where he was invited to conduct the William Cramer Memorial Trombone Ensemble of College Professors.

Lusk is a native of Brandenburg, Kentucky. He holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from the Eastman School of Music and a performance certificate from Northwestern University. Lusk is an artist/clinician for S. E. Shires Trombones, and has published "Trombonist's Guide to the Unaccompanied Cello Suites of J. S. Bach" (Lyceum Press).

 

Mark L. Lusk Credit: Penn StateCreative Commons

Last Updated January 9, 2017