In 2005, Thurber was accepted into The Juilliard School in New York City.[1] He was the first undergraduate to be accepted into both the Classical and Jazz divisions.[6] He was a member of Remington, a rock band he founded in 2005 with Ross Mintzer.[7] In 2007, he performed on NPR's From the Top with banjo player Bela Fleck.[8]
Stay Human and bassist
From 2015 to 2016, he was the bassist on CBS's The Late Show with Stephen Colbert as a member of the house band, Jon Batiste and Stay Human.[1] While in the band, he recorded The Late Show EP.[9] Currently, he performs international in a duo with violinist Tessa Lark.
Cdza and YouTube
In 2012, Thurber co-founded CDZA with Joe Sabia and Matt McCorkle.[10] CDZA was a YouTube-based music collective that featured over 100 young, conservatory trained performers. As of 2019, the CDZA YouTube channel has over 304,000 subscribers and over 36 million views.[11] In 2012, they created AT&T's "Thank You Notes", a digital ad campaign in collaboration with BBDO.[12] They performed at the first ever YouTube Music Awards, headlining alongside Lady Gaga, Arcade Fire, Eminem and M.I.A.[13] Thurber later worked with YouTube's event teams as Music Director.[6]
In 2016, Thurber wrote and performed his one man musical The Booty Call, which was produced for a month long run at The Barrow Group Theater.[18]
In 2018, Thurber composed scores for the plays Sugar In Our Wounds[19] at MTC and Eddie and Dave at The Atlantic Theater Company.[20] In 2018, he received a Working Farm residency at SPACE on Ryder Farm.[21]
Concert music and other compositions
In 2015, Thurber wrote Three Musketeers: A Play for Instruments. The piece is a quadruple concerto written for and featuring pianist Kris Bowers, clarinetist Mark Dover and violinist Charles Yang. It was premiered on a live radio broadcast with The Interlochen Academy Orchestra.[22] That same year, Thurber also joined the board of NPR's From The Top and composed music for the dance piece "B Sides" choreographed by Tiffany Rea Fisher for Dallas Black Dance.[23]
In 2016, he composed "Jam Session", a horn piece for virtuoso hornist William VerMeulen, commissioned by the International Horn Society[24] and a violin concerto "Love Letter" for violinist Tessa Lark.[25] Thurber has written commercial scores for Vanity Fair, BBC America and CollegeHumor.[26]