trumpet

Trumpeter Eric Berlin has made the music of our time the focus of his career. As a soloist, Eric has commissioned, premiered and recorded new works for trumpet from some of today's most exciting composers, including Robert Bradshaw, Michael Ellison, Eric Ewazen, Evan Hause, Salvatore Macchia, Stephen Paulus, and James Stephenson. A new recording of American Trumpet Sonatas with pianist Nadine Shank will be released in the spring of 2011 with two other recording projects of new chamber music and new music for trumpet and band in progress. Mr. Berlin will premier and record a new concerto by George Tsontakis commissioned for him by the Albany Symphony Orchestra in March 2012.

Mr. Berlin has been featured with many ensembles, including the Hartford Symphony Orchestra in Shostakovich's Piano Concerto No. 1, after which Jeffrey Johnson of the Hartford Courant wrote, "Berlin brought the trumpet solo into focus with great skill and a sweet sound." Mr. Berlin performed as soloist with John Williams conducting his own music from "Born on the Fourth of July," as well as with the Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra, the Helsinki University Orchestra, the U.S. Coast Guard Band, the Pioneer Valley Symphony Orchestra, and the wind ensembles of the University of Massachusetts and the University of Denver.

Mr. Berlin has been Principal Trumpet of the Albany Symphony Orchestra since 1998 and can be heard with that ensemble on more than a dozen acclaimed recordings that include works by Morton Gould, John Harbison, Roy Harris and William Schuman to name a few. He holds the same position with the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra and is a member of the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, where he can be heard on over two dozen recordings by living American composers including Derek Bermel, Lukas Foss, Charles Fussell, Steven Mackey, Gunther Schuller, and Evan Ziporyn. Since 2006, has spent his summers performing as Associate Principal Trumpet of the Colorado Music Festival in Boulder, CO. In addition to his regular positions, he has performed with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the New York Philharmonic, as well as the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and the Boston Pops.



Mr. Berlin enjoys international regard as a trumpet pedagogue. He maintains a studio as Artist-Teacher of Trumpet at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where he hosted the 2007 International Trumpet Guild Conference. He has given master classes at the University of North Texas, Virginia Commonwealth University, Northeastern University, and University of New Hampshire, as well as the Turku Conservatory in Turku and the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, Finland.


A native of Pennsylvania, Mr. Berlin attended the New England Conservatory of Music, where he was a student of Charles Schlueter, former Principal Trumpet of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Robert Nagel of the New York Brass Quintet. He has also studied extensively with Vince Penzerella of the New York Philharmonic, Tom Rolfs of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and Frank Kadarabek, former Principal Trumpet of the Philadelphia Orchestra.



While not performing and teaching, he can be found running, hiking and biking in Western Massachusetts where he lives with his wife Alison and their pack of three big dogs. Eric Berlin is a Yamaha Performing Artist.

Performances

Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory | January 22, 2011

News and Press

[Concert Review] A double dose of BMOP

For classical music nerds, the term ‘Double Concerto’ might likely bring to mind Vivaldi’s many works for pairs of violins or other instruments, or for the more romantically-inclined, Brahms’ Double Concerto for violin and cello. But there are many examples in the 20th and 21st centuries as well, for all kinds of instrument combinations. Last Friday night, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project gave a diverse sampling of the genre entitled Double Trouble, featuring four works composed between 1938 and 2010.

Miss Music Nerd Full review