Keith Brion (born July 9, 1933)[1] is an American classical conductor and band leader.
Biography and career
Keith Brion was born in Pennsylvania and is the son and only child of Kenneth (1901-1965)[2] and Margaret (1903-1974)[3] Brion.[4] Brion studied music education at West Chester State University[5] and piccolo with John C. Krell, then taught in New Jersey schools while studying for a Master's Degree in Music Education at Rutgers University. He played piccolo with the New Jersey Symphony, and founded the North Jersey Wind Symphony, of which he was music director. He was later a band educator and music supervisor in the New Jersey public schools, and Director of Bands of Yale University, where he led the Yale Band in performances at venues such as the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall.
Brion has published many editions of band music, by composers such as Charles Ives, Percy Grainger, John Philip Sousa and others. He is currently recording the complete music of Sousa for Naxos Records with London's Royal Artillery Band. This series is projected to cover 23 volumes. He has also recorded music of Sousa on the Delos label.
Additionally, Brion has recorded the music of Alan Hovhaness, including one LP (1971) on the Mace label, one CD (1994) for Delos and three CDs (2005, 2010, 2018) for Naxos, the latter comprising a three-disc survey comprising most of Hovhaness's music for band and chamber works featuring wind instruments.
Personal life
Brion married Larue Elder on September 6, 1955.[7] They subsequently had three children, Randall (conductor/arranger), Laurie (violinist), and Jon Brion (multi-instrumentalist, producer, composer).
Legal Issues
In 1979, Brion was named in a federal lawsuit against Yale University, Alexander v. Yale regarding sexual misconduct with students by faculty and staff at Yale. The portion of the lawsuit pertaining to Brion was eventually dismissed by the court because the student graduated and no longer attended Yale and this “mooted...claims for grievance procedures.”[8] Brion was never charged or convicted of any criminal wrongdoing, nor is there any record of any civil judgements or settlements regarding this case on Brion's behalf.
^For a text of the decision, see https://www.clearinghouse.net/chDocs/public/ED-CT-0002-0002.pdf; see also Anne E. Simon, “Alexander v. Yale University: An Informal History,” Directions in Sexual Harassment Law, Catherine A. MacKinnon and Reva B. Siegel, eds, 2007, Yale University Press, pp. 51-59.