- Jearlyn Steele, VocalEssence Chorus, The Ensemble Singers, Richard Dworsky, Krista J. Palmquist, Philip Brunelle, Garrison Keillor
- Charles Kemper, Lori Lewis, Christopher Kachian, Marilyn Ford, Charles Hodgson, Anthony Ross, VocalEssence Chorus, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, Lynne Aspnes, David Livingston, Charles Gray, Sigrid Johnson, Dale Newton, Krista J. Palmquist
- VocalEssence Chorus, Krista J. Palmquist, James Bohn, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, Anders Eckman, Maria Jette
- Silvester Vicic, Clint Hoover, Greg Hippen, Joan Griffith, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, Charles Kemper, Bobby Stanton, David Hagedorn
- Robert Commodore, Charles Kemper, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, Gordon Johnson, Moore by Four, Sigrid Johnson, VocalEssence Chorus, Sanford Moore, Joe Pulice, Jay Young
- Jazz Ensemble, Maria Jette, Yolanda Williams, Anthony Elliott, Dan Dressen, VocalEssence Orchestra, Woodwind Quintet, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, VocalEssence Chorus
- Paul Shaw, VocalEssence Chorus, Studio Orchestra, Jearlyn Steele, Concordia Orchestra, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers, Michael Forest
- VocalEssence Chorus, —, Garrison Keillor, Hopeful Gospel Chorus, The Hopeful Gospel Quartet, Philip Brunelle, VocalEssence Ensemble Singers
Philip Brunelle
Biography
Philip Brunelle is an important American conductor, largely of choral music and opera. He spent 17 seasons as the director of the Minnesota Opera and, in the 1970s and 1980s, regularly appeared on Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion radio program. He has also made a number of recordings for various labels, including RCA, Virgin Classics, and Angel Records. Brunelle was born in Austin, MN, in 1943. He began studying the piano at the age of four, showing the same enthusiasm for music as his mother. His father, a Protestant minister, died when Brunelle was 13, leaving the family of six in difficult circumstances. Brunelle, bolstered by his mother's determination, managed to forge ahead with his musical education, studying with Harry Opel at the Minnehaha Academy, with Theodore Bergman (piano) at the MacPhail Center for the Arts in Minneapolis, and with Dominick Argento at the University of Minnesota. He also studied organ with Arthur B. Jennings, whom he would succeed in the late '60s as organist and choir director at Plymouth Congregational Church in Minneapolis. For five years Brunelle served as pianist and percussionist for the Minnesota Orchestra in the 1960s. In 1969 he became director of the Minnesota Opera, then known as Center Opera. During his 17-year tenure there, he introduced many new operas, including three by his teacher Dominick Argento, among them The Voyage of Edgar Allan Poe. 1969 was also the year Brunelle founded the Plymouth Music Series, which would become known as VocalEssence in 2002. In 1974 he began appearing on Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion radio program. Brunelle ended his tenure with the Minnesota Opera in 1985, in part because of differences with management over his preference for local artists. His regular appearances on the Keillor radio show ended in 1987, but Brunelle continued to perform with Keillor on concert dates with major orchestras in Chicago, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco. Though Brunelle has held no major post since 1985, he has continued to regularly conduct the chorus and orchestra of VocalEssence and make guest appearances throughout the world. In the new century his activities included serving as Chair of the Sixth World Symposium on Choral Music in Minneapolis and St. Paul (2002) and conducting Stockholm's Royal Opera. He also maintained a schedule that included regular organ recitals and contributing a monthly column to The American Organist. Brunelle's opera recordings include Britten's Paul Bunyan, Copland's The Tender Land, Argento's Postcard From Morocco and Siegel's Kaddish, and he has made numerous choral recordings with VocalEssence.