Meet MHCB's conductors!
- Thomas A Blomster, MHCB's Music Director and Conductor of the Jazz and Concert Bands
- Brent Paulson, Conductor of the Beginning and Intermediate Bands
Thomas A. Blomster: Thomas began his lifelong love affair with music at the age of four when his parents took him to an orchestra concert featuring "The Little Train of the Caipira" by Heiter Villa-Lobos and "Ballet Suite from Estancia" by Alberto Ginastera, both works featuring percussion. It was at this concert that Thomas met his most important teacher, John Galm, who was Professor of Percussion at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Thomas studied with Professor Galm through high school, and at the age of fourteen Thomas was accepted to the prestigious Aspen Music School to study with Charles Owen, principal percussionist with the Philadelphia Orchestra for 18 years under Maestro Eugene Ormandy. That summer Bill Moyers came to Aspen to film a PBS special on Aaron Copland, who was always in residence during the summers in Aspen. Mr. Owen saw fit to assign Thomas the gong part on Mr. Copland’s famous "Fanfare for the Common Man," with Copland conducting as a part of the PBS special. In addition to working with Aaron Copland, Thomas spent four formative years performing at the Aspen Music Festival, where he also worked and studied with Elliot Carter, Krystof Penderecki, and members of the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, and the San Francisco Symphony.
Upon graduation from high school, Thomas was accepted to the Hochschule fur Musik in West Berlin, Germany, where he studied with members of the Berlin Philharmonic and the Deutsche Oper. He was offered a position with the Theatre des Westens after substituting for a fellow percussionist, but chose to return to the USA to continue his studies with timpanist James Rago of the Louisville Orchestra, whom he had met and studied with in Aspen. Shortly after Thomas began his studies at the University of Louisville, KY, he became a member of the Louisville Orchestra, where he performed and recorded for four years, working with composers Karel Husa, Morton Gould, Michael Colgrass, David Amram, Claude Baker, Maestro Lawrence Leighton Smith and many others. He also performed with the Orquesta Sinfonica de Mineria (Mexico City) at this time.
When the Louisville Orchestra went on strike in the fall of 1984, Thomas moved to Denver to be timpanist of the Denver Chamber Orchestra under the baton of Joann Falletta. Since that time, Thomas has also performed with the Colorado Ballet Orchestra, the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, the Boulder Philharmonic, the Evansville (IN) Philharmonic, the Bedford Springs Music Festival (PA), the Colorado Music Festival, and was Percussionist and Artist in Residence at St. John’s Episcopal Cathedral in Denver. He also decided to return to school to complete a degree in conducting, earning a Bachelor of Music Performance degree from the Metropolitan State College of Denver and a Master of Arts in Conducting from the University of Denver.
Thomas has led the following ensembles on the podium: the Colorado Springs Philharmonic, the Denver Chamber Orchestra, the Mostly Strauss Orchestra, the Boulder Brass, and was founder and Music Director of the Mercury Ensemble for eleven years. He was Assistant Conductor for the Junior Symphony Guild’s educational programs “Inside the Orchestra” and “Tiny Tots” for ten years.
Currently Thomas is Music Director of the Colorado Chamber Orchestra and the Mile High Community Band, as well as percussionist with the Colorado Springs Philharmonic and the Denver Municipal Band. As an educator, he currently teaches at Red Rocks Community College and previously taught at Metropolitan State College of Denver and Monmouth College (IL). He continues to be a freelance musician throughout Colorado, write and arranges music, plays drum set for Goat Magnet (a jazz group) and has performed in New Zealand with Tempist Fujit, a rock and roll band. His composition, "A Brighton Serenade" is the title cut for The Mercury Ensembles’ CD for Sonora Productions. Thomas resides in Denver, Colorado and enjoys cycling, hiking, and gardening when he gets a break from his many demanding musical roles.
Brent Paulson: Brent is originally from Tracy, CA where he began playing cornet in the 4th grade. Through the remainder of elementary and High school he played Baritone in marching band, Horn and Tuba in Concert band, and Trumpet in Jazz Band. In 1990 Brent received his BM in Music Education and BS in Elementary Education from Concordia Teachers College, Seward, NE. In College Brent was a member of the A-Cappella Choir, Brass Quintet, Concert Band, and Collegium Musicum where he played cornetto, sackbutt, and recorder. Brent's career focus has been on teaching 4th though 8th grade band in parochial schools having served schools in Chicago and Denver. Since 2006 Brent has taught band at 6 area Lutheran and Catholic schools and has been the instructor of wind instruments at Red Rocks Community College. He is a founding member of the Alpine Brass and has performed as a member of Colorado Wind Ensemble, Musica Sacra Chamber Orchestra, Rocky Mountain Brassworks, and is an active church musician on flute and trumpet. He has also had the honor of being a participant in the Raphael Mendez Brass Institute.


