About the artist:
Critically hailed as “Fab,” and “Quite the individual,” Justin Weis is making a name for himself as a euphonium soloist and innovator for the instrument. Originally a native of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Justin has traveled around the United States and abroad to share both beautiful and unconventional sounds of the euphonium.
Recently, among other accolades, Justin has won the artist division at the 2024 Leonard Falcone Euphonium and Tuba Festival, the electronics solo competition at the 50th Anniversary International Tuba Euphonium Conference (ITEC), and the euphonium artist division at the 2022 International Women’s Brass Conference (IWBC).
Justin has presented recitals of contemporary and electronic euphonium music during his studies and at regional tuba-euphonium conferences, and has been involved in the commissioning of multiple works. Some commissions and consortium involvements include solo works with live electronics from Lucy Pankhurst and Andrew May, a multimedia solo piece by Brandon Warner, and consortium works by Fernando Deddos, Benjamin Dean Taylor and Ian Lester. Though he performs a wide variety of repertoire spanning the 18th century to the present, he takes a special interest in the use of electronics and video in the euphonium repertoire.
In addition to performing, Justin actively composes works for solo euphonium and electronics, and arranges for his euphonium quartet, Euphonium Camerata. His works and arrangements have been performed at festivals, galas, and competitions. His recent euphonium edition of the Cyrille Rose 32 Etudes for Clarinet is published by KDP, and other arrangements can be found through the euphonium.com store. Additional compositions and arrangements are available upon request and include quartet arrangements of Bruckner, Dvorak, and Verdi, which range in difficulty from music for young players to works that will challenge even professional ensembles.
As an educator, Justin currently serves as Adjunct Professor of Low Brass at Collin College, and Adjunct Instructor of Euphonium at the University of North Texas, where he coaches undergraduate students in weekly lessons. He recently served as a teaching fellow at the University of North Texas while completing his doctoral studies, where he was additionally responsible for coaching a chamber ensemble and leading the 7 O’Clock Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble. He now teaches a full studio of private middle and high school students in three separate districts around the Dallas-Fort Worth area. He has previously taught as a graduate assistant at the University of Memphis, and taught at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater summer band camp programs each year as a sectional coach, conducting teacher, music history teacher, and counselor.
Justin received a BM in music education from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, an MM in euphonium performance with a conducting related field from the University of North Texas, and a DMA in euphonium performance from UNT. He currently lives in Denton, Texas, where he is advocating for the euphonium as an instrument of expression outside the traditional classical settings. He continues to present recitals at conferences and nontraditional venues, and publicizes electronic euphonium repertoire to engage audiences that may not typically listen to solo euphonium music - functioning as somewhat of a modern euphonium Troubadour.