BERNHARD SCULLY
Bernhard Scully is an internationally renowned horn soloist, author, and Professor of Horn at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In 2025 he received the Campus Distinguished Promotion Award. He is Artistic Director of the non-profit 501(c)(3) Cormont Music. He spends his summers in the White Mountains of New Hampshire both on faculty and as artistic director of Cormont Horn Camp (formerly Kendall Betts Horn Camp) and as the horn player of the North Country Chamber Players. He currently serves as principal horn of the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra (ROCO) [https://roco.org/ ], as principal horn of the Saint Bart’s Music Festival [https://www.saintbarthmusicfestival.com/en ] and locally as principal horn of the Sinfonia da Camera. His solo career has spanned the world over including being the former long-time horn player of the Canadian Brass and former principal horn of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. Among his many awards are top honors at numerous competitions, most notably being the first classical brass player to win a McKnight Fellowship for Performing Musicians.
In 2021 Bernhard was made a member of the University of Illinois College of Agricultural Consumer Environmental Sciences Global Academy. His Global Academy Partnership Project (referred to now as The Consilience Project) is a trans disciplinary collaboration with a faculty colleague, Ann-Perry Witmer of the Carle Illinois College of Medicine, and their mutual student, Jess Mingee of the UI School of Engineering. The project has culminated into a book coedited by the three partners titled, Consilience: Learning About Ourselves By Applying Indigenous Traditions to Western Music and Technology (Springer, 2024) [https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-58399-5]. The book details how the The Consilience Project, brought together musicians, engineers, and scholars to explore the intersections of Western classical music, engineering design, and Indigenous knowledge systems. Through field experiences in Bolivia and Sierra Leone, contributors examine how non-Western traditions—particularly oral transmission, communal improvisation, and place-based technologies—challenge the universalist assumptions embedded in Western training and practice. By applying the concept of consilience, the unity of knowledge across seemingly disparate domains, the authors propose pedagogical and methodological reforms that integrate humility, reciprocity, and contextual awareness into music performance and technological innovation. The volume argues that true advancement in both fields requires decentering Western practices in favor of relational, adaptive, and culturally grounded approaches.
As the Horn player of Canadian Brass, Bernhard annually toured the world over, is featured on many CD’s and videos, and performed in front of orchestras that included the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Detroit Symphony, Vancouver Symphony, National Arts Centre Orchestra, and the Toronto Symphony. The Canadian Brass have been featured guest artists at prestigious music events and festivals including, Music Academy of the West, Oregon Bach Festival, Banff Centre For the Arts, Texas Music Educators Convention, Midwest Band and Orchestra Clinic, Chautauqua Festival, Schleswig-Holstein Festival, NAMM Convention, and numerous others.
As Principal Horn of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Bernhard was often featured as a soloist, performing notable works by Mozart, Strauss, and Britten. He toured with the SPCO both nationally and internationally, most notably performing at Carnegie Hall. His concerts with the SPCO were broadcast weekly on National Public Radio. He is also featured on the SPCO’s 50th Anniversary Chamber Orchestra Festival recording. Since his departure to pursue a solo and teaching career, Bernhard has returned to play guest principal horn under the acclaimed director, Pinchas Zuchermann. He has collaborated with many great North American Orchestras including the Chicago Symphony, San Francisco Symphony, Minnesota Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra as guest principal horn, Pittsburgh Symphony as guest principal horn, and as principal horn of the Violon du Roy in Quebec City.
As a soloist Bernhard is featured on many recordings. His most recent album is titled, Contemplations: Music for Horn and Piano by Douglas Hill (Navona) [ https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6736/ ]. Andrew Lewinter: Chamber Works (Navona) [https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6471/ ] features Bernhard and his UI colleagues. His solo album, Dialogue en Francais: French Masterpieces for Horn and Piano (Albany), was featured on Minnesota Public Radio. His album, Windows in Time (Opening Day) features the premiere recording of Gunther Schuller’s “Quintet for Horn and Strings (2009)” in collaboration with the acclaimed Jupiter String Quartet. The album also includes W.A. Mozart’s “Quintet for Horn and Strings, K. 407”. Gunther Schuller produced this recording himself, and this was one of the last projects he took part in before his unfortunate passing in 2015. His recording The G. Schirmer Horn Collection Volumes One, Two, and Three (Hal Leonard Publishing) includes much of the standard repertoire for horn and piano. The Instrumentalist describes these three volumes: “Scully offers musical, intuitive performances that provide a fine example for hornists of all levels. These carefully thought out publications are a good investment for future growth and belong in every horn teacher and players library.” Bernhard can be heard as a featured performer on numerous Canadian Brass CD’s.
As a pedagogue Bernhard has given lectures and master classes around the world and is a regular featured artist at international music conventions and festivals. He has been on the faculties at the Chautauqua Festival, Rafael Mendez Brass Institute as a member of the Summit Brass, Music Academy of the West, Brevard Music Festival, Eastman School of Music, in residence at the University of Toronto with the Canadian Brass, Madeline Island Music Camp as a member of the Prairie Winds, The North Country Chamber Players, and the Illinois Summer Youth Music Horn Week. His students are now located all over the globe sharing the horn as performers, educators, scholars and in all their chosen walks of life.
His degrees are from Northwestern University (with honors), and the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he attended on a Paul Collins Distinguished Graduate Fellowship. In 2010 the University of Wisconsin awarded him a Distinguished Alumni Award for excellence in artistry. His teachers include Herman Baumann, Kendall Betts, Douglas Hill, Roland Pandolfi, Frøydis Ree Werkre, and Gail Williams. He resides with his wife, Sarah, who is a music therapist and photographer; their three daughters, Ellie, Abby, Maddie; their Springer Spaniel, Gustav Mahler; and their two cats, Kenny and Lucy.
