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InConcert April 201

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Page 1: InConcert April 201

April 2013

APRIL 18-20

Page 2: InConcert April 201

Personal Advantage Banking from First Tennessee. A distinguished level of

banking designed specifically for those with exclusive financial needs. After all, you’ve

been vigilant in acquiring a certain level of wealth, and we’re just as vigilant in finding

sophisticated ways to help you achieve an even stronger financial future. While delivering

personal, day-to-day service focused on intricate details, your Private Client Relationship

Manager will also assemble a team of CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM professionals

with objective advice, investment officers, and retirement specialists that meet your

complex needs for the future.

A TEAM APPROACH TO FINANCIAL SUCCESS

TO START EXPERIENCING THE EXCLUSIVE SERVICE YOU’VE EARNED, CALL 615-734-6165

Pictured from left to right:

Scott Walker CFP®, Vice PresidentRelationship Manager

Jarrod GrubbVice PresidentRelationship Manager

Lori M. CarverCFP®, ChFC®, Vice President, Horizon Wealth Advisory

Rita MitchellSenior Vice PresidentPrivate Client Services

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Renee ChevalierVice PresidentRelationship Manager

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Investments: Not A Deposit Not Guaranteed By The Bank Or Its Affiliates Not FDIC Insured Not Insured By Any Federal Government Agency

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Financial planning provided by First Tennessee Bank National Association (FTB). Investments available through First Tennessee Brokerage, Inc., member FINRA, SIPC, and a subsidiary of FTB. Banking products and services provided by First Tennessee Bank National Association. Member FDIC.

©2013 First Tennessee Bank National Association. www.firsttennessee.com

WM-13-0150_NshPrfgArts.indd 1 3/4/13 4:04 PM

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MICHAEL KORS • OMEGA • RESTORATION HARDWARE

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Tires aren’T The only Thing we’re passionaTe abouT.

bridgestoneamericas.com supporting the arts in nashville for over 20 years.

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We provide loving care to people with life-threatening illnesses, support to

their families, and service to the community in a spirit of enriching lives.

1718 Patterson Street | Nashville, TN 37203 615-327-1085 or 800-327-1085 | www.alivehospice.org

When we learned how sick Mom was, we didn’t know what to do. We’re so thankful that we asked her doctor about

Alive Hospice. They came into our home like family, helping Mom stay with us where she wanted to be.

alive_hospice_Performing_Arts_Magazine.indd 1 2/7/11 3:28 PM

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Scan here to listen to a patient’s story.

We provide loving care to people with life-threatening illnesses, support to

their families, and service to the community in a spirit of enriching lives.

www.alivehospice.org

When we learned how sick Mom was, we didn’t know what to do. We’re so thankful that we asked her doctor about

Alive Hospice. They came into our home like family, helping Mom stay with us where she wanted to be.

Alive Hospice workfile 9-12.indd 1 9/21/12 1:39 PM

Page 6: InConcert April 201

We’ve developed a revolutionary approach to brain surgery not available anyWhere else in the country.

Your brain is your control center. All your thoughts, senses and emotions depend on a healthy brain. That’s why we have developed a revolutionary new approach to brain surgery that’s not available anywhere else. It’s called the Unity System and it uses groundbreaking technology to join our physicians together so they can work as a unified team to remove a tumor. Your brain makes you who you are. Don’t trust it to anyone else.

For more information about the Unity System, visit stthomas.org/unity.

Nashville, TN | 855-748-6489 (toll-free)

Client: Saint Thomas HospitalJob No: STHN-38708Title: Unity Print Ad

Pub: Nashville Performing ArtsSize: 7.125"x10.875"

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5InConcert

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InConcertA publicAtion of the nAshville symphony

APRIL 2013

48 Conductors53 Orchestra Roster 54 Board of Directors55 Staff Roster 56 Annual Fund: Individuals66 Annual Fund: Corporations68 Capital Funds Donors70 Legacy Society 78 Guest Information

Advertising Sales The Glover Group Inc. 5123 Virginia Way, Suite C12 Brentwood, TN 37027 615.373.5557

McQuIddy prInTInG 711 Spence Lane Nashville, TN 37217 615.366.6565

Cover illustration by roGer clAyTon rogerclaytonpaintings.blogspot.com

dEpArTmENTS prOgrAmS

19 bAnk of AmericA pops series Pink Martini April 4-6

23 jAzz series Wayne Shorter Quartet April 12

27 the Ann & monroe cArell fAmily trust pied piper children's series Under the Sea April 13

28 orgAn series Cameron Carpenter April 14

31 suntrust clAssicAl series Mozart’s Piano Concerto April 18-20

Visit our blog, Inside the Nashville Symphony, at:

NashvilleSymphony.tumblr.com

MoZArT’S pIAno MASTerpIece AprIl 18-20Giancarlo Guerrero, conductorDaniil Trifonov, pianoLicia Jaskunas, harp

Kodály - háry János: SuiteGinastera - harp concertoMozart - Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-flat major “Jeunehomme”Carlos Chávez - Symphony No. 2 “Sinfonía india”

Page 8: InConcert April 201

Encore Dining1808 Grille 1808 Grille offers a full bar, a celebrated wine list, and award-winning New American cuisine, blending traditional dishes and global flavors, with an emphasis on local, seasonal produce and the finest ingredients. Ph: (615) 340-0012 www.1808grille.com

etch Etch is the newest culinary venture from Chef Deb Paquette, featuring an array of global cuisine and decadent desserts. Reservations available for lunch and dinner. Located in the ground floor of the Encore tower downtown. 303 Demonbreun St. Ph: (615) 522.0685 www.etchrestaurant.com

Fleming’s Fleming’s Nashville is an ongoing celebration of exceptional food & wine, featuring the finest prime steak and an award-winning wine list. We are located across from Centennial Park at 2525 West End Ave. Ph: (615) 342-0131 www.flemingssteakhouse.com/locations/tn/nashville

The Melting Pot Where fun is cooked up fondue style. A four course experience in a casual elegant atmosphere.166 Second Avenue North. Reservations at meltingpot.com. Open 7 days for dinner. Ph: (615) 742-4970. www.meltingpot.com/nashville/welcome

Nero’s Grill Green Hills’ favorite neighborhood restaurant! Serving crisp salads, comfort foods, fresh seafood and aged, wood grilled steaks. 2122 Hillsboro Drive. Ph: (615) 297-7777 for reservations. www.nerosgrill.com

Prime 108 Described as “Dining to Die For” by Southern Living Magazine, Prime 108 offers the finest steaks, fresh seafood and an extensive wine list inside the beautifully renovated Union Station Hotel, 1001 Broadway. Ph: (615) 620-5665 for reservations www.unionstationhotelnashville.com

Rodizio Grill Rodizio Grill serves a continuous rotation of 14 rotisserie grilled meats carved tableside by Brazilian Gauchos. Authentic Brazilian appetizers, unlimited gourmet salad area, decadent desserts!Everything at Rodizio Grill is homemade... It’s the Brazilian Way! Coming Late 2012 to Historic Second Ave. Ph: 615.730.8358 www.rodiziogrill.com

Sambuca Sambuca is Nashville’s only rockin’ dinner club. Savor the American menu that is as diverse as the nightly live music, including weekend dance bands. Come for dinner, stay to Dance! 601 12th Avenue S, Nashville, TN 37203 Ph: 615.248.2888 www.sambucarestaurant.com

Sheraton Nashville Downtown Sheraton is the place where friends gather. Make Sheraton a memorable part of your next cultural experience with dinner in Speakers Bistro before the show, or dessert and cocktails in Sessions Lounge after the curtain falls. Ph: (615) 259-2000 for reservations www.sheratonnashvilledowntown.com

Sole Mio For almost twenty years, Sole Mio has been serving up Nashville’s best award winning Italian cuisine. Featuring handmade pasta and traditional Northern Italian Sauces made fresh to order. Check us out! 311 3rd Avenue South, Nashville 37201.Ph: (615) 256-4013 www.solemionash.com

Classic American Comfort Food

For Advertising Information Call: Glover Group Entertainment 615-373-5557

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Filename

Doc. PathFonts

Inks

BMW Type Global Pro (Bold, Light, Regular)

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Description

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Nashville Performing Arts Magazine. EMAIL X1A to [email protected]

THE UNPARALLELED BMW 528i SEDAN.

When comparing the BMW 528i Sedan to rivals like the Mercedes E350, some stark differences quickly come to light. To start, the 528i is faster than the E350, and more fuel-effi cient, with 34 mpg hwy vs. 30 with the Mercedes.* The 528i widens its lead with a comprehensive maintenance plan (that costs you nothing), and a lower MSRP than the E-Class. Looks like it’s time for a test drive of the 528i today.

* Fuel-effi ciency claims based on EPA estimates. The 528i achieves 23/34 city/highway mpg, the Mercedes-Benz E350 achieves 20/30 city/highway mpg. Actual mileage may vary. For comparison purposes only. Speed claim based on published 0–60 acceleration times and MSRP claims based on published information from manufacturer websites. 1 Whichever comes fi rst. For full details on BMW Ultimate Service® visit bmwusa.com/ultimateservice. ©2013 BMW of North America, LLC. The BMW name, model names and logo are registered trademarks.

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Publications: Trim Live Bleed Issue Due DateNashville Performing Arts Magazine 7.125 x 10.875 6.625 x 10.375 7.375 x 11.125 April 3/14

BMW of Nashville 4040 Armory Oaks Drive Nashville, TN 37204 615-850-4040

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buy TIcKeTS AT:NashvilleSymphony.org 615.687.6400

MAY2-4

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DEBUSSY & BRAHMS

MENDELSSOHN’S ‘ELIJAH’

CIRQUE MUSICA

TITANS

Experience an enchanted evening when Nashville Symphony performs Debussy’s

captivating Nocturnes and Brahms’ brilliant Fourth Symphony.

Nashville Symphony Orchestra and Chorus performs Mendelssohn’s epic retelling of

the Old Testament story Elijah — music of sheer power and emotion.

Blending the grace and thrills of the world’s greatest circus performers with stunning

music by the Nashville Symphony. You’ll be on the edge of your seat!

Two of the classical music world’s brightest stars, Edgar Meyer and Joshua Bell,

perform a brand-new double concerto. Prepare to be blown away!

CLASSICAL SERIES

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POPS SERIES

Page 11: InConcert April 201
Page 12: InConcert April 201

Hardware

Cabinetry

Plumbing

Lighting

Appliances

Nashville’s largest lighting showroom. Come see over 4,000 handpicked lightfixtures, lamps and lamp shades, unique decorative accessories, and fans.

We have designed and installed hundreds of beautiful and functional kitchensand bathrooms. With multiple lines of cabinetry, it allows us to provide a wide

range of styles and woods to fit almost any budget. We offer a full line of appliances including, U-Line, Dacor, Miele, Frigidaire, KitchenAid, Wolf,Whirlpool, Sub-Zero, Scotsman and Viking, just to name a few. Quality hardware and plumbing products provide an added convenience for our

customers who can now shop for their bathroom and kitchen design needs at one place. Call or come in and see why “We’re More Than Just Lighting”

Find it All...at Hermitage Lighting Gallery!

HermitageLightingGallery

531 Lafayette St. • Nashville, TN 615-843-3300 • Mon. - Fri. 8 - 5 • Sat. 9 - 5

www.hermitagelighting.com

We Light up Your Life!

Page 13: InConcert April 201

Nothing makes us happier than making

women and children healthy. At TriStar Health,

we believe the best way to care for one is to

care for both. We offer a family of 12 hospitals

that treats women, children and babies in

Middle Tennessee and South Central Kentucky.

Our experts cover everything from gynecology

and obstetrics to neonatology and pediatrics.

No wonder parents and kids are smiling.

TriStarHealth.com

A new choice in children’s healthcare is putting smiles on a new generation of faces.

Page 14: InConcert April 201

4285 sidco dr. • nashville, tn 37204(615) 373-5901 • www.steinwaynashville.com

facebook.com/steinwaynash | twitter.com/steinwaynash

To learn more abouT The Technology of The “smarT” player sysTem come inTo The sTore

or visiT www.sTeinwaynashville.com/player

enjoy nights like tonight in the comforT of your living room

we can make your iphone, ipad, smarTphone, or TableT play your piano or one of ours.

Page 15: InConcert April 201

NASHVILL E

The Ultimate Guide toArts & Entertainment

in Nashville

For more information visit us online at: www.NashvilleArtsandEntertainment.comand follow us on Twitter and Facebook

A Glover Group Entertainment Production 5123 Virginia Way, Brentwood, TN 37027 : 615.373.5557

www.GloverGroupEntertainment.com

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Page 16: InConcert April 201

When you dedicate your life to caring for children, you end up seeing just

about everything. Which is why our team of surgeons, specialists, nurses,

researchers, and educators can treat just about anything. Our unique

combination of experience and expertise is one you won’t find anywhere

else in Middle Tennessee. And it’s what makes Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s

Hospital at Vanderbilt your child’s very own hospital.

ChildrensHospital.Vanderbilt.org

Concussions

Asthma

You swallowed a what?

Page 17: InConcert April 201

A TVA Renewable Energy Initiative

Did you know you can sign up for Green Power Switch for as little as $4 a month? And believe it or not, over the course of a year, that $4 a month worth of green power keeps more carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere than 1.5 hybrid vehicles.* So get more green “bang” for your buck. Visit greenpowerswitch.com and sign up today.

*Compares yearly CO2 emissions avoided by driving a hybrid vehicle vs. a comparable non-hybrid to purchasing twelve 150 kWh blocks of green power. (EPA Green Power Equivalency Calculator)

Sign up for Green Power Switch® and save as much C02 as 1.5 hybrids.

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When you dedicate your life to caring for children, you end up seeing just

about everything. Which is why our team of surgeons, specialists, nurses,

researchers, and educators can treat just about anything. Our unique

combination of experience and expertise is one you won’t find anywhere

else in Middle Tennessee. And it’s what makes Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s

Hospital at Vanderbilt your child’s very own hospital.

ChildrensHospital.Vanderbilt.org

Concussions

Asthma

You swallowed a what?

Page 18: InConcert April 201

Today’s business needs are changing, but one thing remains the same, the need for quality service. Since 1955, RJ Young has built their reputation on leasing, selling and servicing business technology. Today they provide more than copiers including mobile printing and cloud services for instant access to information anytime, anywhere. RJ Young continues to invest in technology and their people so your office runs smoothly. Learn how technology can improve your business go to RJYoung.com/Workflow.

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Win a $500 shopping spreeat great stores likeApple, Pottery Barn,

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Stop by Guest Services to register or scan the QR code below

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Page 19: InConcert April 201

You can help build a house right

here in Middle Tennessee with

your tax-deductible donation

of $55 — the cost of one square

foot in a Habitat for

Humanity home.

Scan our code,

or visit us online at

HabitatNashville.org/buy-the-foot.

Lend aHand,

Buy theFoot!

615-254-HOME (4663)

To us, this is a stepping stone.

www.lipscomb.edu

One might say in our walk of faith, we’ve been down many paths. But few as exciting as the one we’re on now. With hard hats and rolled sleeves, we’re building a university that will serve students in greater, more innovative ways than ever in our history. Two new health science buildings providing state-of-the-art facilities for nursing and pharmacy.

In just the past 24 months— 16 new graduate programs,

with more to come, that meet the

demands of today’s workforce in fields

such as information technology and biomolecular science. And almost 60 new faculty members to help us keep our stride. Watch us as we hammer out our future and take some exciting steps forward.

Page 20: InConcert April 201
Page 21: InConcert April 201

Official PartnersMedia PartnersConcert Sponsor

TM

POPS SERIES

Thursday, April 4, at 7 p.m.Friday & Saturday, April 5 & 6, at 8 p.m.

Nashville Symphony Albert-George Schram, conductor Pink Martini The Von Trapps

FELIX SLATKIN Carmen’s Hoedown (after Georges Bizet)

BRUCE CHASE San Luis Samba (after W.C. Handy)

pink MartiniSelections to be announced from the stage

INTERMISSION

pink MartiniThomas M. Lauderdale, piano

Storm Large, vocals Ari Shapiro, vocals

Gavin Bondy, trumpet Achilles Liarmakopoulos, trombone

Dan Faehnle, guitar Phil Baker, upright bass Nicholas Crosa, violin

Pansy Chang, cello Timothy Nishimoto, vocals and percussion

Brian Lavern Davis, congas, drums and percussion Anthony Jones, drums and percussion

Jacques Von Lunen, sound engineer

Selections to be announced from the stage

19

Official PartnersMedia PartnersConcert Sponsor

TM

POPS SERIES

Thursday, April 4, at 7 p.m.Friday & Saturday, April 5 & 6, at 8 p.m.

Nashville Symphony Albert-George Schram, conductor Pink Martini The Von Trapps

FELIX SLATKIN Carmen’s Hoedown (after Georges Bizet)

BRUCE CHASE San Luis Samba (after W.C. Handy)

Pink MartiniSelections to be announced from the stage

INTERMISSION

Pink MartiniThomas M. Lauderdale, piano

Storm Large, vocals Ari Shapiro, vocals

Gavin Bondy, trumpet Achilles Liarmakopoulos, trombone

Dan Faehnle, guitar Phil Baker, upright bass Nicholas Crosa, violin

Pansy Chang, cello Timothy Nishimoto, vocals and percussion

Brian Lavern Davis, congas, drums and percussion Anthony Jones, drums and percussion

Jacques Von Lunen, sound engineer

Selections to be announced from the stage

PINK MARTINI

Page 22: InConcert April 201

APRIL 201320

PO

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pInK MArTInIIn 1994, Thomas Lauderdale was working

in politics in his hometown of Portland, Oregon, thinking that one day he would run for mayor. Like other eager politicians-in-training, he went to every political fundraiser under the sun, but he was dismayed to find the music at these events lackluster, loud and un-neighborly. Drawing inspiration from music from all over the world and in every genre from classical to old-fashioned pop, he founded Pink Martini in 1994. This “little orchestra” provided more beautiful and inclusive musical soundtracks for political fundraisers supporting a broad range of causes.

One year later, Lauderdale called China Forbes, a Harvard classmate who was living in New York City, and asked her to join Pink Martini. They began to write songs together. Their first song, “Sympathique,” became an overnight sensation in France and was nominated for Song of the Year at France’s Victoires de la Musique Awards. Says Lauderdale, “We’re very much an American band, but we spend a lot of time abroad and therefore have the incredible diplomatic opportunity to represent a broader, more inclusive America…the America which remains the most heterogeneously populated country in the world.”

Featuring 10 to 12 musicians, Pink Martini performs its multilingual repertoire on concert stages and with orchestras throughout Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Northern Africa, Australia, New Zealand, South America and North America. Pink Martini made its European debut at the Cannes Film Festival in 1997 and its orchestral debut with the Oregon Symphony in 1998. Since then, the band has gone on to play with more than 50 orchestras around the world, including multiple engagements with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Boston Pops and the National Symphony.

Pink Martini released Hang on Little Tomato in 2004, Hey Eugene! in 2007 and Splendor in the Grass in 2009. These albums, along with two others, have gone gold in France, Canada, Greece and Turkey, and have sold well over 2.5 million copies worldwide. The band has collaborated

and performed with numerous artists, including Jimmy Scott, Carol Channing, Rufus Wainwright, Michael Feinstein, filmmaker Gus Van Sant, Courtney Taylor-Taylor of The Dandy Warhols, Mamie Van Doren and the original cast of Sesame Street.

Singer Storm Large began performing with Pink Martini in March 2011, when China Forbes took a leave of absence to undergo surgery on her vocal cords. Forbes made full recovery, and now both she and Large continue performing with Pink Martini.

Pink Martini has an illustrious roster of regular guest artists, including NPR White House correspondent Ari Shapiro. Most recently, the four great-grandchildren of Maria and Georg Von Trapp appeared with Pink Martini, and they are currently working on a joint album project with the band.

In January 2012 Thomas Lauderdale recorded the Charlie Chaplin song “Smile” with Phyllis Diller. This song, along with many others you will hear tonight, will be released on Pink Martini’s next album.

The von TrAppS

There is probably not another last name as universally beloved as Von Trapp. The story of the family who escaped Austria, moved to the United States and toured the world singing for two decades continues to inspire people of all ages since the film The Sound of Music was released in 1964.

About the Artists

Page 23: InConcert April 201

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Although the Trapp Family Singers performed their farewell concert in 1957, 40 years later the great-grandchildren of the Captain and Maria von Trapp — sisters Sofia, Melanie, Amanda and brother Justin von Trapp — began singing together to comfort their ailing grandfather, who was portrayed as Kurt, the youngest boy of the seven von Trapp children. Now known as the Von Trapps, they have performed around the world to packed houses. The Von Trapps have toured North America extensively and have appeared with numerous symphony orchestras, including the Boston Pops, as well as the orchestras of Atlanta, Detroit, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Toronto. They have appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Today Show, The View, Fox and Friends, Good Morning America, the Grand Ole Opry and numerous television shows abroad. They have released six albums and are currently working on a new album with Pink Martini.

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSOR RJ Young is a proud supporter of the Nashville Symphony. They believe in investing in the community by

supporting the arts and many other philanthropic endeavors.

RJ Young is the largest independent office equipment and business solutions provider in the Southeast. They offer the latest technology to scan, secure, share, manage and print information efficiently. RJ Young has been providing innovative document solutions for more than 58 years. They are headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, and have 450 employees throughout five states and 19 locations. To learn more about RJ Young visit their website at RJYoung.com.

21InConcert

Your health. Our passion.

Page 24: InConcert April 201

Custom homes ǀ remoDeLING ǀ INterIor DesIGN

step into your dream kitchen

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start building yourdream home today

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Entertainment

GloverGroup

If you would like more information regarding how your company will benefit from advertising in the TPAC Broadway Series, Schermerhorn InConcert, Great Performances at Vanderbilt, Nashville Ballet, Nashville Opera, Tennessee Repertory Theater, Studio Tenn, and Nashville Arts & Entertainment magazines, please call: 373-5557

www.GloverGroupEntertainment.com • www.NashvilleArtsandEntertainment.com

We have a captivated audience that is totally engaged in tonight’s “Playbill” publication.

In today’s new economy it is more important than ever that your advertising message reaches your target audience!

June/July 2012

12.13© Patrick Fabre / Compagnie Heddy Maalem

Kyle Abraham / Abraham.In.MotionPhoto: Steven Schreiber

Look around the room...

March 2013

MAY 7 – JUNE 2

© Disney

NASHVILLE / C M Y K 7.125” X 10.875” 89420 / FRONT COVER / PLAYBILL MAGAZINE

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THE COLUMNISTBY DAVID AUBURN

APRIL 20 – MAY 4Previews: April 18–19Johnson Theater, TPAC

2012–2013 Season ★ René D. Copeland ★ Producing Artistic Director

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JAZZ SERIES

Friday, April 12, at 8 p.m.

Nashville SymphonyVince Mendoza, conductorWayne Shorter QuartetEsperanza Spalding, vocals

Wayne Shorter Quartet

Selections to be announced from the stage

INTERMISSION

Wayne Shorter Quartet with Nashville Symphony arr. WAyne ShorTer vendiendo Alegria

WAYNE SHORTER Flagships

WAyne ShorTer diana arr. Vince Mendoza WAyne ShorTer Gaia Esperanza Spalding, vocals Co-commissioned by Nashville Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, National Symphony Orchestra (a program of the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts) and Detroit International Jazz Festival WAYNE SHORTER Midnight in Carlotta’s Hair

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WAyNE ShOrTEr WiTh SpECiAL guEST ESpErANzA SpALdiNg

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WAyne ShorTer, saxophone

One of the most influential saxophonists and composers in the pantheon of modern music, let alone jazz, Wayne

Shorter will celebrate his 80th terrestrial year in 2013. “At a time when most musicians are content to collect the lifetime-achievement awards and honorary degrees,” one critic recently wrote, “Shorter is creating not just some of the most intense music of his career, but some of the most intense improvised music available.”

Regarded as a pioneer since his emergence in the 1950s, Shorter has restlessly embodied continual exploration and unencumbered momentum. He recently re-signed to Blue Note Records and released his first album for the iconic label in 43 years; he recorded the searing Without a Net with his long-running quartet featuring pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade. Reviews of his recent live performances are exercises in superlative overload. Calling it “the most skillful, mutually attuned and fearlessly adventurous small jazz group on the planet,” the Guardian (UK) said that the quartet “celebrates humanity’s hope for harmony.”

dAnIlo pÉreZ, pianoGRAMMY® winner Danilo Pérez is among

the most influential and dynamic musicians of our time. In just over a decade, his distinctive pan-American jazz (covering the music of the Americas, folkloric and world music) has attracted critical acclaim and loyal audiences. Pérez’s abundant talents and joyous enthusiasm make his concerts both memorable and inspiring. Whether leading his own ensembles or touring with renowned jazz masters, he is making a decidedly fresh imprint on contemporary music, guided, as always, by his love for jazz.

John pATITuccI, bassJohn Patitucci has been at the forefront of the

jazz world for the last 30 years and is active in all styles of music. He is a three-time GRAMMY® winner, has been nominated more than 14 times and has played on many other GRAMMY®-winning recordings. He is an active composer, with 13 solo recordings of his own, and has been commissioned to write for various chamber music groups. Patitucci is currently an artist-in-residence at Berklee College of Music’s Global Jazz Institute and recently launched an interactive online bass school through ArtistWorks.

brIAn blAde, drumsMultitalented young veteran Brian

Blade is widely respected in the jazz world as drummer, composer and leader of Brian Blade and The Fellowship Band, with whom he has released three albums. He is also known as the drummer for many heroes of the music world, including Daniel Lanois, Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Wayne Shorter, Seal, Bill Frisell and Emmylou Harris. Blade is always searching for the balance that gives a song a personal story with an outward-reaching resonance. He has been part of the Wayne Shorter Quartet since 2000. 

eSperAnZA SpAldInG, vocals

In one of the most startling achievements in jazz history, bassist Esperanza Spalding captured the world’s attention upon

earning the title of Best New Artist at the 2011 GRAMMY® Awards. A gifted composer with a hypnotic voice, she stretches the boundaries of jazz and continues her evolution as a musician with the 2012 release of Radio Music Society.

Spalding has graced the stages of the finest concert halls and festivals around the world; performed at the White House, the Nobel Peace

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Prize award ceremony and the BET Awards; and played alongside the likes of Stevie Wonder, Wayne Shorter, Joe Lovano, Herbie Hancock, the Roots and Prince. In addition to her GRAMMY Award, Spalding has been named Rising Star – Acoustic Bass in Downbeat’s Critics Poll, awarded Up and Coming Artist of the Year by the Jazz Journalists Association, and called one of O Magazine’s Women on the Rise.

vInce MendoZA, conductorFor two decades, Vince Mendoza has been

at the forefront of the jazz and contemporary music scene as a composer, conductor and recording artist. He has written scores of compositions and arrangements for big band, as well as compositions for chamber and symphonic settings.

Mendoza’s arranging has appeared on many critically acclaimed projects, including dozens of albums with songwriting legends such as Björk, Chaka Khan, Sting and Joni Mitchell. He has six GRAMMY® awards and 28 nominations. The music director and chief conductor of the

Netherlands Metropole Orchestra, he appears frequently as a guest conductor with orchestras throughout Europe, the U.S., Japan, Scandinavia and the U.K.

ThANk yOu TO Our SpONSOr The Hilton Nashville Downtown is proud to serve as the city’s only all-suites, luxury downtown hotel. It is considered

one of North America’s most prestigious hotels, continuously earning the AAA Four Diamond Award. The Hilton Nashville Downtown believes in the importance and vitality of the arts in Nashville and has been a proud advocate of the Nashville Symphony since the orchestra moved to Schermerhorn Symphony Center in 2006. We look forward to a continued relationship with the Nashville Symphony so that, together, we can bring extraordinary experiences both to the Nashville community and to music patrons from around the world.

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7th AnnualBACHanaliaMARCH 22FREE

Matthew LewisorganAPRIL 19FREE

Christ Church Cathedral

2012.13

celebratingthe creative spiritchristcathedral.org/sacredspace

SACRED SPACE for the CITY

ARTS SERIES

XChurch1213ADPerfArts2ndPrint:XChurch1011Poster 3/4/13 11:25 AM Page 1

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Saturday, April 13, at 11 a.m.

uNdEr ThE SEANashville Symphony Kelly Corcoran, conductor

JOHN WILLIAMS Shark Theme from Jaws

EDWARD ELGAR Variation 13: Romanze from Enigma Variations, op. 36 CLAUDE DEBUSSY Movement 2: Play of the Waves from La Mer GEORGE FREDERIC HANDEL Alla Hornpipe from Water Music

HANS ZIMMER Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl arr. Ricketts ALAN HOVHANESS Excerpt from And God Created Great Whales

AlAn MenKen disney’s The Little Mermaid Orchestral Suite arr. Menken, Merkin, Pasatieri & Ricketts

Special thanks to Frist Center for the Visual Arts for providing pre-concert activities and assisting with images projected during the concert.

Media Partners Official Partners

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ORGAN RECITAL

Sunday, April 14, at 2 p.m.

CAmErON CArpENTErSelections to be announced from the stage

cAMeron cArpenTer, organCameron Carpenter has been hailed by

Los Angeles Times as “one of the rare musicians who changes the game of his instrument” and “a smasher of cultural and classical music taboos.” A virtuoso composer-performer unique among keyboardists, Carpenter has challenged the stereotypes of organ music, and he has generated a level of acclaim, exposure and controversy unprecedented for an organist. His repertoire is perhaps the largest and most diverse of any organist, ranging from the complete works of J. S. Bach and Cesar Franck to transcriptions of

non-organ works, original compositions, and collaborations with jazz and pop artists. He is the first organist ever nominated for a GRAMMY® Award for a solo album.

A keyboard prodigy, he performed Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier at age 11 before joining the American Boychoir School in 1992 as a boy soprano. During his four years of high school studies at The North Carolina School of the Arts, he made his first studies in orchestration and orchestral composition, and he transcribed for the organ more than 100 major works, including Gustav Mahler’s complete Symphony No. 5.

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About the Artist

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Carpenter continued composing after moving to New York City in 2000 to attend The Juilliard School. While at Juilliard, his compositions included art songs and the symphonic poem Child of Baghdad (2003) for orchestra, chorus and Ondes Martenot. He also wrote his first substantial works for solo organ, and he created numerous organ arrangements of piano works by Chopin, Godowsky, Grainger, Ives, Liszt, Medtner, Rachmaninoff, Schumann and others. Carpenter received his master’s degree from The Juilliard School in New York in 2006.

 The same year, he began his worldwide organ concert tours, giving numerous debuts at venues including Royal Albert Hall, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, Melbourne Town Hall, Tchaikovsky Hall in Moscow, Davies Hall in San Francisco and many others. His first album for Telarc®, the GRAMMY®-nominated Revolutionary (2008), was followed in 2010 by the critically acclaimed full length DVD and CD Cameron Live! Edition Peters became his publisher in 2010 and began the ongoing release of his original

works with Aria, Op. 1 (2010). His first major work for organ and orchestra, The Scandal, Op. 3, was commissioned by the Cologne Philharmonie (KölnMusic GmbH). The Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie premiered this work on New Year’s Day 2011, led by Alexander Shelley. Die Welt’s Manuel Brug writes that Carpenter the composer “is proving himself to be a clever eclecticist, who understands to entertain with much finesse, and admits with a wink that he is ‘annoyed by intellectual music.’ ”

Carpenter is one of the only performing artists to make a practice of meeting his audience in person before his performances, often spending over an hour before each concert shaking hands and signing autographs on the floor of a concert venue. With combined millions of hits on YouTube and numerous television, radio and press features including CBS Sunday Morning, BBC Radio 3, ARD, ZDF, NDR Kultur, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal and many others, he is the world’s most visible organist.

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Hope Clinic for Women provides women and men with a safe environment for medical care, counsel, and practical support. With most services free of charge, we rely on your generosity to help us grow!

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Ask us about: • Volunteer opportunities • Financial support opportunities

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Page 32: InConcert April 201

We may never pick up an instrument, but we believe strongly in supporting those who do. After all, a community that supports the arts is a community worth supporting. Get to know all the benefits of banking with SunTrust. Stop by a branch, call 800.SUNTRUST or visit suntrust.com.

SunTrust is a proud sponsor of the Nashville Symphony.

SunTrust Bank, Member FDIC. © 2011 SunTrust Banks, Inc. SunTrust and Live Solid. Bank Solid. are federally registered service marks of SunTrust Banks, Inc.

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CLASSICAL SERIES

Thursday, April 18, at 7 p.m.Friday & Saturday, April 19 & 20, at 8 p.m.

Nashville Symphony Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor Licia Jaskunas, harpDaniil Trifonov, pianoLaurence Kaptain, cimbalom

ZOLTÁN KODÁLY Suite from Háry János Prelude. The Fairy Tale Begins The Viennese Musical Clock Song The Battle and Defeat of Napoleon Intermezzo Entrance of the Emperor and his Court Laurence Kaptain, cimbalom

ALBERTO GINASTERA Concerto for Harp and Orchestra, Op. 25 Allegro giusto Molto moderato Cadenza: Liberamente capriccioso – Vivace Licia Jaskunas, harp

INTERMISSION

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Concerto No. 9 in E-flat major for Piano and Orchestra, K. 271 “Jeunehomme” Allegro Andantino Rondo: Presto Daniil Trifonov, piano

CARLOS CHÁVEZ Sinfonía India [Symphony No. 2]

Lawrence S. Levine Memorial Concert

Concert Sponsor Media Partner Official Partners

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mOzArT’S piANO mASTErpiECE

We may never pick up an instrument, but we believe strongly in supporting those who do. After all, a community that supports the arts is a community worth supporting. Get to know all the benefits of banking with SunTrust. Stop by a branch, call 800.SUNTRUST or visit suntrust.com.

SunTrust is a proud sponsor of the Nashville Symphony.

SunTrust Bank, Member FDIC. © 2011 SunTrust Banks, Inc. SunTrust and Live Solid. Bank Solid. are federally registered service marks of SunTrust Banks, Inc.

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zOLTÁN kOdÁLy Born on December 16, 1882, in Kecskemét (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire); died on March 6, 1967, in Budapest, Hungary

Háry János Suite

In 1926 Kodály had a triumph with his folk opera Háry János, and the following year he introduced a concert suite drawn from its score. One of his best-loved works, the Suite from Háry János filters Kodály’s fascination with Hungarian folk music through a highly polished, sparkling orchestral technique.

First performance: March 24, 1927, with Antal Fleischer conducting the Pablo Casals Orchestra in Barcelona.First Nashville Symphony performance: March 3 & 4, 1975, with guest conductor Arpad JoóEstimated length: 25 minutes

Folk music has provided a plentiful source of inspiration to composers ever since they

started writing more complex, abstract forms that could be listened to for their own sake. But new attitudes about the inherent value of folk music began to take root in the 19th century, strengthened by the discoveries in ethnomusicology pioneered by such composers and researchers as the Hungarian Zoltán Kodály. Along with a breakthrough concerto by the young Mozart, our program features engaging works by three composers working in both the Old and New Worlds in the last century, each of which was shaped by the resurgent interest in folk music.

“The most beautiful seven years” of his childhood, Kodály once recalled, were spent in Galánta. The family moved several times in his youth, including a stint in this small Hungarian town (nowadays in Slovakia), where his father worked as the stationmaster for the main railway line between Budapest and Vienna. Those idyllic years were not only commemorated in Dances of

Galánta — which, together with the Háry János Suite, ranks among Kodály’s best-known concert works — but instilled a lifelong fascination with folk music and culture.

While still a student at the conservatory in Budapest, Kodály insisted on thinking outside the box by concentrating on his homeland’s indigenous music. Previous composers had often trivialized the folk music of the ethnic Magyars by using it merely for “local color” or to spice up a score. Kodály joined with fellow student Béla Bartók to travel about remote parts of the countryside, gathering and recording an enormous trove of musical material that had been passed along for generations but never written down.

A period spent in Paris brought further enlightenment, but the composer’s international breakthrough came relatively late, in 1923, through the Psalmus Hungaricus, a work celebrating the 50th anniversary of the unification of Budapest as the Hungarian capital. Given his

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ZOLTÁN KODÁLY Born on December 16, 1882, in Kecskemét (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire); died on March 6, 1967, in Budapest, Hungary

Háry János Suite

In 1926 Kodály had a triumph with his folk opera Háry János, and the following year he introduced a concert suite drawn from its score. One of his best-loved works, the Suite from Háry János filters Kodály’s fascination with Hungarian folk music through a highly polished, sparkling orchestral technique.

First performance: March 24, 1927, with Antal Fleischer conducting the Pablo Casals Orchestra in Barcelona.First Nashville Symphony performance: March 3 & 4, 1975, with guest conductor Arpad JoóEstimated length: 25 minutes

Folk music has provided a plentiful source of inspiration to composers ever since they

started writing more complex, abstract forms that could be listened to for their own sake. But new attitudes about the inherent value of folk music began to take root in the 19th century, strengthened by the discoveries in ethnomusicology pioneered by such composers and researchers as the Hungarian Zoltán Kodály. Along with a breakthrough concerto by the young Mozart, our program features engaging works by three composers working in both the Old and New Worlds in the last century, each of which was shaped by the resurgent interest in folk music.

“The most beautiful seven years” of his childhood, Kodály once recalled, were spent in Galánta. The family moved several times in his youth, including a stint in this small Hungarian town (nowadays in Slovakia), where his father worked as the stationmaster for the main railway line between Budapest and Vienna. Those idyllic years were not only commemorated in Dances of

Galánta — which, together with the Háry János Suite, ranks among Kodály’s best-known concert works — but instilled a lifelong fascination with folk music and culture.

While still a student at the conservatory in Budapest, Kodály insisted on thinking outside the box by concentrating on his homeland’s indigenous music. Previous composers had often trivialized the folk music of the ethnic Magyars by using it merely for “local color” or to spice up a score. Kodály joined with fellow student Béla Bartók to travel about remote parts of the countryside, gathering and recording an enormous trove of musical material that had been passed along for generations but never written down.

A period spent in Paris brought further enlightenment, but the composer’s international breakthrough came relatively late, in 1923, through the Psalmus Hungaricus, a work celebrating the 50th anniversary of the unification of Budapest as the Hungarian capital. Given his

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obsession with folklore, it seemed inevitable that Kodály would want to translate it into a stage work. Following an earlier theatrical piece written for a cabaret setting, he had major success with his comic opera Háry János. Its use of spoken dialogue to further the action is similar to the format found in The Magic Flute. The concert suite, which Kodály arranged as a stand-alone work in six movements, has become far better known in the international repertory than the opera.

WhAT TO LiSTEN FOrThe score is permeated by folk elements. In

fact, the orchestra’s very first gesture, at the start of “Prelude: The Fairy-Tale Begins,” delightfully but impressively mimics the sound of a massive sneeze. In addition to their medical significance, sneezes carry a variety of folkloric associations and, in the Hungarian tradition alluded to here, are supposed to vouch for the truth of what’s just been said — a motif János Garay uses in his source poem (see sidebar below). Kodály, however, frames his musical tale by placing it at the beginning, with a wink. The music then builds on the soulful melody first heard in the low strings, which hints at nostalgia for vanished times and draws us into the fantasy world of our hero.

The Suite alternates high Romanticism with scenes from János’ actual exploits amid grand settings. In No. 2 (“Viennese Musical Clock”) it’s the court of the Austrian Emperor himself, to which his charms have won him entrance. The composer’s discovery in his formative years of contemporary music by Debussy and Ravel is evident in the “striking” orchestration (plentiful percussion and winds, no strings) as the hero admires the intricate palace clock. The intensely beautiful “Song” (No. 3) presents another emotional snapshot. A solo viola introduces the folk melody associated with the feelings János still has for his beloved from the village. This music is elaborated into a rhapsodic vision with the aid of sensitive clarinet scoring and the folk-archaic sound of the cimbalom, Hungary’s version of the hammered dulcimer.

János’ delusions of grandeur are at their most spectacular in No. 4, “The Battle and Defeat of Napoleon,” in which he prevails and personally forces the French invader to surrender. Kodály recalls some of the techniques of Richard Strauss’ tone poems, but all in his own style. With a parody of the Marseillaise and plaintive alto saxophone, the arrogantly advancing French are struck down, leading to a dirge in the last section. Celebration is now in order for the proud János

ThE F igurE OF hÁry JÁNOS

the story kodály retells in both his opera and concert suite comes from a mock-epic poem by jános garay (1812-1853) about a peasant war veteran who suggests a combination of don Quixote, peer gynt, and falstaff in his braggart mode. háry jános (or, as we might say, jános — “john” — háry, since traditional hungarian name order places the surname first) entertains his companions at the local tavern with blustery tales of adventure from his days long ago. We learn how the brave young man attracted the attentions of the emperor’s

daughter and the enmity of his rival, ultimately joining the Austrian army and defeating napoleon himself — no matter that, without the accompanying alcohol, these tall tales that rewrite history might strain credulity just a bit. in the end he renounces the pomp of court to return home with his steadfast beloved. in his “folk opera” kodály actually perceived jános not as a figure to be mocked but as “a natural visionary and poet,” as well as an allegory for his country, “whose strivings and ambitions can be fulfilled only in dreams.”

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ALBErTO giNASTErABorn on April 11, 1916, in Buenos Aires, Argentina; died on June 25, 1983, in Geneva, Switzerland

Concerto for Harp and Orchestra, Op. 25

Ginastera was commissioned to compose his Harp Concerto by the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1956 and completed the score in 1964. The concerto fuses Ginastera’s use of Latin American folk idioms with modernist techniques, all the while calling for thrilling virtuosity from the soloist.

First performance: February 18, 1965, in Philadelphia, with Nicanor Zabaleta as the soloist and Eugene Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia OrchestraFirst Nashville Symphony performance: These are the orchestra’s first performances. Estimated length: 25 minutes

As with Kodály, Alberto Ginastera first gained fame with folk-inspired works. He was still

a conservatory student when he composed his ballet Panambí, which explored Native American musical heritage. A few years later, in 1941, came a commission for another ballet, Estancia, which set out to capture the atmosphere of “Argentine country life” in a sort of parallel to Aaron Copland’s recent Billy the Kid. Unforeseen circumstances prevented the ballet’s premiere, but when Ginastera introduced a concert suite of dances from the score in 1943, he clinched his

reputation as the most promising voice among the new generation of composers coming of age in Argentina.

Before Ginastera’s time the norm had been for young talent to study in the prestigious conservatories of Europe. These musicians would then use their training when they returned to promote the growing wave of musical nationalism and discovery. In contrast, after being educated in his native Buenos Aires, Ginastera spent an influential period abroad after World War II studying in the United States. Later in his career

and his fellow soldiers. The “Intermezzo” (No. 5) that immediately follows fittingly shifts gears to a version of the verbunkos, a folk Hungarian dance that became associated with the recruitment of soldiers by Austrian officials. Naturally, the cimbalom again becomes a major component in Kodály’s palette here. The full orchestra, brightly colored, joins for the imperial ceremonies honoring the heroic János in the final movement (“Entrance of the Emperor and His Court”). Raucously shrill high spirits in the final moments

leaven the pompous brass proclamations as János happily winds up his well-embroidered tales.

The Háry János Suite is scored for 3 flutes (all on doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (1 doubling on E-flat clarinet), 2 bassoons, alto saxophone, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 cornets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, snare drum, chimes, tubular bells, glockenspiel, cymbals, tam-tam, tambourine, triangle, xylophone, piano, celesta, cimbalom and strings.

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ALBERTO GINASTERABorn on April 11, 1916, in Buenos Aires, Argentina; died on June 25, 1983, in Geneva, Switzerland

Concerto for Harp and Orchestra, Op. 25

Ginastera was commissioned to compose his Harp Concerto by the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1956 and completed the score in 1964. The concerto fuses Ginastera’s use of Latin American folk idioms with modernist techniques, all the while calling for thrilling virtuosity from the soloist.

First performance: February 18, 1965, in Philadelphia, with Nicanor Zabaleta as the soloist and Eugene Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia OrchestraFirst Nashville Symphony performance: These are the orchestra’s first performances. Estimated length: 25 minutes

As with Kodály, Alberto Ginastera first gained fame with folk-inspired works. He was still

a conservatory student when he composed his ballet Panambí, which explored Native American musical heritage. A few years later, in 1941, came a commission for another ballet, Estancia, which set out to capture the atmosphere of “Argentine country life” in a sort of parallel to Aaron Copland’s recent Billy the Kid. Unforeseen circumstances prevented the ballet’s premiere, but when Ginastera introduced a concert suite of dances from the score in 1943, he clinched his

reputation as the most promising voice among the new generation of composers coming of age in Argentina.

Before Ginastera’s time the norm had been for young talent to study in the prestigious conservatories of Europe. These musicians would then use their training when they returned to promote the growing wave of musical nationalism and discovery. In contrast, after being educated in his native Buenos Aires, Ginastera spent an influential period abroad after World War II studying in the United States. Later in his career

and his fellow soldiers. The “Intermezzo” (No. 5) that immediately follows fittingly shifts gears to a version of the verbunkos, a folk Hungarian dance that became associated with the recruitment of soldiers by Austrian officials. Naturally, the cimbalom again becomes a major component in Kodály’s palette here. The full orchestra, brightly colored, joins for the imperial ceremonies honoring the heroic János in the final movement (“Entrance of the Emperor and His Court”). Raucously shrill high spirits in the final moments

leaven the pompous brass proclamations as János happily winds up his well-embroidered tales.

The Háry János Suite is scored for 3 flutes (all on doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (1 doubling on E-flat clarinet), 2 bassoons, alto saxophone, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 cornets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, snare drum, chimes, tubular bells, glockenspiel, cymbals, tam-tam, tambourine, triangle, xylophone, piano, celesta, cimbalom and strings.

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he began incorporating some of the innovations and procedures of the European avant-garde into his music. The political situation in Argentina caused him to go into exile a few years after he completed the Harp Concerto. Ginastera returned to the U.S. but then decided to settle in Switzerland, where he lived for the rest of his life.

Ginastera’s friendship with Copland helped further his reputation among North American ensembles. One of several significant commissions that came from abroad was for a concerto to showcase the artistry of Edna Phillips, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s harpist and the orchestra’s first female player. She and her husband were responsible for commissioning numerous works for the instrument. Ginastera later composed concertos for piano, as well as violin and cello, but he found the assignment to craft one for the harp unexpectedly difficult and missed the originally agreed on deadline by years. Phillips had already retired from the orchestra by the time the score was ready, so the highly demanding role of soloist went to the Spanish harpist Nicanor Zabaleta. The concerto nevertheless retains Ginastera’s dedication to Edna Phillips, and she liked it best of all the works commissioned on her behalf.

WhAT TO LiSTEN FOr In the concerto’s outer movements, Ginastera ingeniously marries the vibrant, earthy rhythms of a uniquely Argentine dance, the malambo, with his colorful and complex harmonic language. The malambo originated as a ritual display of machismo by gauchos (“cowboys”) during the long days out on the vast pampas. It figures prominently in the composer’s earlier ballet Estancia. Its association with all-male dance contests (which were also a chance to show off some fancy footwork) generates an interesting counterpoint to the common perception of the harp as a “feminine” instrument. Indeed, much of the fascination of this work derives from the many different personalities Ginastera creates for the soloist. Dispensing with a formal orchestral introduction, he brings the harpist immediately into the foreground with a propulsive theme of aggressively syncopated chords. This in turn

gives way to a gentler, more “bardic” mode veiled in lyrical mystery. The rest of the movement proceeds to contrast these two kinds of music.

Lower strings begin the introverted melody that dominates the meditative second movement. Piquant harmonies also feature in its soundscape, as Ginastera mixes and matches orchestral colors with the harp, alternating between shadow and light with great imagination. The music’s dreaminess crosses over into a lengthy cadenza for the harp (“liberamente capriccioso”). Serving as a prelude to the final movement, the cadenza calls for improvisatory gestures amid its silky glissandos, far-spanning arpeggios and dramatic chords, even imitating a guitar tuning up at the very start.

Ginastera once contrasted the different kinds of “nationalism” he explored in his earlier music (“objective” and “subjective”) with a tendency toward a more abstract “neo-expressionism,” yet the Harp Concerto integrates these facets in intriguing ways. The harpist sets the stage for the return of the malambo rhythmic momentum in the orchestra, which initiates the rousing last movement. Using a main theme whose catchy, straightforward simplicity is quintessentially folklike, Ginastera creates surprise with a dazzling, ever-changing whirlwind of textures, featuring special attention to his full range of percussive sonorities. Enormously challenging for the soloist, the music hurtles forward, impetuous and determined, until a final burst of energy concludes the concerto with a fierce exclamation point.

In addition to solo harp, the Harp Concerto is scored for 2 flutes (2nd doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani, crotales, bongos, tom-toms, cowbells, cymbals, tam-tam, triangle, claves, güiro, maracas, woodblock, whip, bass drum, snare drum, tenor drum, tambourine, glockenspiel, xylophone, celesta and strings.

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WOLFgANg AmAdEuS mOzArT

Born on January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, Austria; died on December 5, 1791 in Vienna Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-flat major, K. 271 (“Jeunehomme”)

Mozart wrote this concerto in January 1777 for a French pianist visiting Salzburg who was the daughter of a friend. The longest of his piano concertos and his first real masterpiece in the genre, this endlessly inventive work marks an extraordinary creative leap for the young composer.

First performance: No firm date has been established, though the first performance was likely given sometime in 1777 in Vienna by French pianist Victoire Jenamy.First Nashville Symphony performance: March 20, 1956, with Music Director Guy Taylor and soloist Mary Louise BoehmEstimated length: 34 minutes

if Mozart had grown up in present-day Nashville, he would have just reached the

legal drinking age when he composed this concerto. Since we’re talking about Mozart, one of the most famous prodigies in music history, this might not necessarily seem impressive at first glance. To be sure, he had been performing and composing since early childhood and by this point even had several operas to his credit. Yet the Piano Concerto No. 9 holds a special place in Mozart’s catalogue. All of the Mozart piano concertos that remain in the regular repertory — works considered among his finest masterpieces — date from his final decade in Vienna; all except this one, which was written in January 1777, four-and-a-half years before the composer was able to break away from his hated Salzburg for good to resettle in the capital.

The sudden appearance of this music during Mozart’s Salzburg years is part of its mystique. In his classic study of the composer, Alfred Einstein may have seemed to exaggerate a bit when he famously compared K. 271 to the quantum leap we find in Beethoven’s Eroica. Still, Einstein’s entirely justifiable enthusiasm has been echoed by many other experts, including Charles Rosen, an authority on Viennese classicism, who admired the concerto as “perhaps the first unequivocal masterpiece in a classical style purified of all mannerist traces.”

Simply put, a brilliantly innovative and self-assured voice emerges in this music. Mozart had written keyboard concertos before this, ranging from pieces that recycled and transcribed music by other composers to the forward-looking Concerto in D major of 1773 (K. 175), but No. 9 represents an unprecedented achievement in terms of ambition, scope and originality. In fact, it’s longer than the rest of Mozart’s piano concertos and, if we didn’t know the date, it might easily be mistaken for a product of the Viennese Mozart of the 1780s. The composer himself evidently remained proud of what he had accomplished, since he returned to it several years later in Vienna to

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write out new cadenza-like passages. Typically Mozart improvised his own cadenzas, but since he originally intended this work for another performer, the cadenzas he wrote out for all three movements have survived.

Another reason for the concerto’s mystique involves the occasion for which Mozart wrote it. The Viennese concertos became so significant in part because he conceived and composed them for himself to perform: they were essential tools as he set about establishing a freelance career and they helped build his audience base. Yet Mozart initially wrote K. 271 for someone else.

Victoire Jenamy, daughter of a major figure in ballet, had become a renowned pianist in Vienna and commissioned a new concerto from Mozart, her father’s friend. There was no mysterious “Mlle./Madame Jeunehomme,” despite continued mistaken assertions to the contrary. “Jeunehomme” was a posthumous invention for what should therefore really be called the “Jenamy” Concerto — though, as the former simply means “young man” and wasn’t a misspelling, it applies in its own way to this stunning creation by the young Mozart.

WhAT TO LiSTEN FOr Mozart’s boldness begins within seconds of the opening. Convention called for a formal statement of the themes by the ensemble as a way of properly introducing the soloist, who is then expected to have her say. But here, with no clearing of the throat, we hear immediately from the pianist — or harpsichordist, since the work may have been performed on that instrument during these years of transition to the newer fortepiano. The soloist not only steps right into the fray, but remains interventionist, challenging convention by joining in for the closing passage instead of bowing out per usual at the end of the cadenza. Another notable feature of this movement is its generosity of ideas, themes and melodies: Mozart presents one after another yet keeps them all lucid and clear for the listener. And despite the reduced orchestration (strings with only oboes and horns), the sound is rich and full.

What follows is an unexpected turn toward the minor key and a movement of real emotional pathos. The Andantino reminds us that for Mozart, piano concertos provided a “stage” for the operas he longed to write. Here

SOLviNg A mOzArTEAN mySTEry

musicological research probably sounds like one of the drier topics to the general reader — right next to reading a cell phone owner’s manual — but it can actually be pretty exciting and even change our perception of a familiar work. About a decade ago, through remarkable detective work, the Austrian musicologist michael lorenz found the answer to the mystery of how this concerto came about. before then the concerto had gone by the posthumous nickname “jeunehomme” (as it often does to this day).

this was assumed to be the correct spelling of the surname of the female pianist for whom mozart had written the

piece, though, inexplicably, he himself referred to her in a letter as “madame jenomè” (he did after all love spelling games and jokes). All sorts of speculations arose — still frequently encountered in program notes — about the mysterious “jeunehomme” woman who lacked a first name but somehow inspired mozart to write such wonderful music for her to perform. lorenz was able to verify her identity as victoire jenamy, daughter of a friend of mozart, jean-georges noverre (1727-1810). her father was an important figure in ballet for whom mozart also wrote music.

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the mode is the old-fashioned opera seria but, as always with this composer, rendered urgently up to date, a despairing meditation of powerful accents and harmonies. The soloist becomes the singer, finding solace in a turn to the major but returning to the plaintive C minor that frames the movement.

All sorrow is instantly swept away by the stirring Presto theme, which fuels the finale and exhibits the pianist in an extroverted, uninhibited light. Mozart isn’t satisfied with churning out

yet another standard-issue rondo, however. In the center, like a Russian Easter egg opening up, comes a slower minuet theme complete with its own set of variations (perhaps a sly homage to père Noverre, the dance master). We can count on the soloist to whisk us out of this dream-within-a-dream and back into the unbridled Presto for a brilliant finish to this landmark concerto.

In addition to solo piano, Mozart scores his concerto for 2 oboes, 2 horns and strings.

CArLOS ChÁvEz

As Kodály and Ginastera did for their respective countries, Carlos Chávez played

a key role in staking out the musical identity of Mexico in the wake of the epochal Revolution of 1921. He developed a powerful presence as a composer, conductor, teacher, journalist, music critic, orchestra builder and musical citizen overall. His deep, ongoing friendship with Aaron Copland led to a mutually beneficial influence between the two. Both men explored the heritage of folk music as a rich resource that could be

tapped to supply fresh energy for the modernist rethinking of the basic principles of composition.

The highly prolific Chávez regarded folk idioms, rhythms and tunes as far more than abstract artifacts to be used at will. “The indigenous music of Mexico,” he observed, “is a reality of contemporary life. It is not, as might be thought, a relic to satisfy mere curiosity on the part of intellectuals, or to supply more or less important data for ethnography.” He also notes that “the essential characteristics of this

Born on June 13, 1899, in Calzada de Tecube, Mexico (near Mexico City); died on August 2, 1978, in Mexico City

Symphony No. 2 “Sinfonía India”

Carlos Chávez composed the Sinfonía India in 1935. Condensing the eventfulness of a complete symphony into a single movement, Chávez demonstrates the enduring vitality of the music of the indigenous Mexican peoples.

First performance: January 23, 1936, in a radio transmission, with Chávez conducting the Columbia Broadcasting Symphony OrchestraFirst Nashville Symphony performance: April 10 & 11, 1992, with Music Director Kenneth Schermerhorn Estimated length: 12 minutes

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indigenous music have been able to resist four centuries of contact with European musical expressions.”

The enduring vitality of that indigenous music is the driving subtext of the Second Symphony, which Chávez chose to introduce via radio broadcast when William Paley invited him to appear with the CBS Radio Orchestra in the mid-1930s, just around the time his friendship with Copland was beginning to flourish. The title Sinfonía India refers to the indigenous Mexican culture — specifically, that of the Yacqui, Seri and Huichol peoples — that finds expression here. Rather than create a program “about” the native, pre-Columbian peoples of Mexico, Chávez uses the rhythms, melodies and instrumentation of their music as his basic building blocks.

WhAT TO LiSTEN FOrSinfonía India comprises just one highly

condensed movement, but Chávez packs so much activity and so many contrasting sonorities into its span that it feels like a large-scale, multi-movement work. It’s not necessary to recognize the outlines of European sonata form Chávez references to enjoy the sense of event he creates. A more newfangled sensibility can also be sensed in the quasi-cinematic jump-cutting of material, which recalls Stravinsky’s revolutionary ballets.

What is characteristic of Chávez above all is the brilliant orchestration, the way his ideas take on a particular personality through his specific use of instruments. He notably calls for a marvelous extended percussion contingent that makes ample use of Native American instruments. Yaqui drum, clay rattle, water gourd, a string of deer hooves and even a “string of butterfly cocoons” are all employed, though the composer suggests more easily obtainable Western substitutes as needed.

“The music of America’s immediate ancestors is the strong music of a man who constantly struggles and tries to dominate his surroundings,” writes Chávez, who also admires its “simplicity and purity.” This musical strength gathers force in the brilliantly animated section that brings the Sinfonía India to its breathtaking close.

The Sinfonía India is scored for 2 piccolos, 2 flutes, 3 oboes, 2 clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, timpani, 4 percussionists, harp and strings.

— Thomas May is the Nashville Symphony’s program annotator.

About the soloistslIcIA JASKunAS, harp

Licia Jaskunas has been principal harpist with the Nashville Symphony since 1998. She also performs with Alias Chamber Ensemble and can be heard on their latest recording, Boiling

Point. Prior to joining the NSO, Jaskunas was the principal harpist of the New World Symphony, under the direction of Michael Tilson Thomas, as well as of the Utah Festival Opera Company Orchestra. Jaskunas has performed as soloist with the Nashville Symphony, the Louisville Orchestra and the New World Symphony, among others. She was a fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, and she has also performed at the Aspen Music Festival, the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan, and at the Spoleto Festival in Charleston, S.C., and Spoleto, Italy. Honors include First Prize in the Advanced Division of the National Competition of the American Harp Society in 1987, the Ruth Lorraine Close National Award for Harp (now the Anne Adams Award) for two consecutive years, and the prestigious Performer’s Certificate from the Indiana University School of Music. She received a bachelor’s degree in music from Indiana University and a master’s degree in music from the Eastman School of Music.

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dAnIIl TrIFonov, piano

Born in Nizhniy Novgorod in 1991, Daniil Trifonov is one of the brightest names in the new generation of pianists. During the 2010/11 season he won medals at three

of the most prestigious competitions in the music world: the Chopin Competition in Warsaw (Third Prize), the Rubinstein Competition in Tel Aviv (First Prize) and the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow (First Prize and Grand Prix). Jury members and observers at these competitions included Van Cliburn and Valery Gergiev. Gergiev personally awarded Trifonov the Grand Prix in Moscow.

Highlights of the 2011/12 season for Trifonov included debuts with the London Symphony Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic and Russian National Orchestra, as well as collaborations with Vladimir Fedoseyev, Pietari Inkinen, Sir Neville Marriner, Diego Matheuz and Antoni Wit. In 2012/13 Daniil Trifonov debuts with several prestigious international orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, Boston Symphony, The Cleveland Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra and Royal Philharmonic. Trifonov’s upcoming recitals include The Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall (Stern Auditorium), Berlin Kammermusiksaal der Philharmonie, Amsterdam Concertgebouw (Master Piano Series), Paris Auditorium du Louvre, Brussels Palais de Beaux Arts, Schloss Elmau and the Seoul Arts Center.

Trifonov began his musical studies at age 5. He studied at Moscow Gnesin School of Music in the class of Tatiana Zelikman from 2000-2009. Since 2009 he has studied piano at the Cleveland Institute of Music in the class of Sergei Babayan. He received a Guzik Foundation Career Grant in 2009.

Daniil Trifonov’s first CD was released on Decca in 2011, featuring a selection of Chopin solo piano works. His recording of Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No.1 with Valery Gergiev and the

Mariinsky Orchestra, as well as a selection of solo piano music, was released on the Mariinsky label last year. He recently signed an exclusive contract with Deutsche Grammophon.

lAurence KApTAIn, cimbalomAs a percussionist and symphonic cimbalom

artist, Laurence Kaptain appears regularly with major ensembles, award-winning composers and renowned performing artists, including the New York Philharmonic, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Pittsburgh Symphony. His performances may also be heard on recordings with the Chicago Symphony, St. Louis Symphony, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Czech National Symphony.

Kaptain has been interviewed and featured on programs such as NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered and, most recently, a retrospective broadcast of historic recordings made by Georg Solti on the Chicago Symphony’s BP Network broadcasts. He has also performed with renowned artists including Yo-Yo Ma, Isaac Stern, Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Elliot Carter, Gil Shaham, Suzanne Farrell, Kurt Masur, Elvis Costello, Henry Mancini, Donna McKechnie, Carol Channing and Robert Altman.

As dean of the College of Music and Dramatic Arts at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Kaptain is an energetic, well-respected academic leader with an exemplary record of effectiveness directing internationally renowned higher education programs and performing arts units in the provision of superlative learning, creative and performance opportunities. At LSU he coordinates and guides the execution of program development and fundraising efforts to support artistic and intellectual growth of over 600 full-time students, 80 faculty and over 20 professional staff members.

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Thanks to new surgical techniques, patients with previously inoperable and high-risk valvular heart issues are going on to potentially live full, healthy lives. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is a minimally invasive alternative to open heart surgery that has a significantly shorter recovery time. Saint Thomas Heart is the first FDA approved program in the state to perform this procedure through

the rib cage for patients with arteries that are too small for the transfemoral approach. With TAVR, we are able to help more patients who previously had little hope.

For more informations, visit www.SaintThomasHeart.com/TAVR. To schedule an appointment with a Saint Thomas Heart physician, please call 800.345.5016.

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©2013 Jaguar Land Rover North America, LLC*Not a substitute for safe and attentive driving, nor can it overcome all extreme circumstances. Please consult owner’s manual or your authorized Land Rover Retailer for more details.

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THE NEXT GENERATIONRANGE ROVERThe all-new Range Rover has been engineered from the ground up to be the most refined, most capable Land Rover ever. With the addition of the first all aluminium body and chassis technologies, the vehicle’s performance has moved on to another level, both in the breadth and accessibility of its off-road capability, and its on-road handling and refinement

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NASHVILLE SYMPHONY ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGNIn addition to being an essential source of revenue for our organization, your gift to the Nashville Symphony Annual Campaign impacts the city of Nashville and surrounding communities throughout Middle Tennessee by helping us to Create, Engage and Inspire. 

Your gift CREATES world-class musical performances including jazz, pops, classical and bluegrass music. 

Your gift ENGAGES the broad community, reaching 30 counties throughout Middle Tennessee. 

Your gift INSPIRES thousands of children to become the next generation of great musicians. Visit NashvilleSymphony.org/support or call 615.687.6401 to make a contribution.

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©2013 Jaguar Land Rover North America, LLC*Not a substitute for safe and attentive driving, nor can it overcome all extreme circumstances. Please consult owner’s manual or your authorized Land Rover Retailer for more details.

3 Cadillac Drive | Brentwood, TN 37027 www.LandRoverNashville.com

THE NEXT GENERATIONRANGE ROVERThe all-new Range Rover has been engineered from the ground up to be the most refined, most capable Land Rover ever. With the addition of the first all aluminium body and chassis technologies, the vehicle’s performance has moved on to another level, both in the breadth and accessibility of its off-road capability, and its on-road handling and refinement

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C R EAT E . ENGAGE. IN S P I R E .

NASHVILLE SYMPHONY ANNUAL GIVING CAMPAIGNIn addition to being an essential source of revenue for our organization, your gift to the Nashville Symphony Annual Campaign impacts the city of Nashville and surrounding communities throughout Middle Tennessee by helping us to Create, Engage and Inspire. 

Your gift CREATES world-class musical performances including jazz, pops, classical and bluegrass music. 

Your gift ENGAGES the broad community, reaching 30 counties throughout Middle Tennessee. 

Your gift INSPIRES thousands of children to become the next generation of great musicians. Visit NashvilleSymphony.org/support or call 615.687.6401 to make a contribution.

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Conduct Your Business atSchermerhorn Symphony Center

Board Room

Mike Curb Family Education Hall

Laura Turner Concert Hall

Whether you’re planning a gala for 2,000, a business meeting for 200 or an executive lunch for 10,we’ll orchestrate an event your company or organization will remember for years to come!

Schermerhorn Symphony Center has 11 different meeting spaces, each tailored to your specific needs.

• Law Office Meetings• Government Functions

• Galas & Fundraisers• Award Shows & Banquets

• Leadership Training• Medical Conferences

• Film & Television Production• Seminars

• Fashion Shows• Private Concerts

• Photo Shoots• Business Luncheons

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NOVEMBER 201245

Belmont University’s Musical Theatre program will stage the country’s first university performance of the Tony Award-winning musical, Les Misérables.

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Belmont University Musical Theatre Presents

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For more information on student performances or majors, please visit www.belmont.edu/music or call 615.460-6408.

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TOUCH SCREEN Q

Curb Concerto Competition winners John Paul Powers, Mary Grace Johnson and Mary Grace Bender

Curb Concerto Competition winners John Paul Powers, Mary Grace Johnson and Mary Grace Bender

NASHVILLE SYMPHONY EDUCATION PROGRAMS PROMOTE YOUNG TALENT IN TENNESSEE

On March 1-2, students from across Tennessee came to Schermerhorn Symphony Center to compete in the Curb Records Young Musicians Concerto Competition. Open to youth ages 14-18, this annual event provides a unique opportunity for the Nashville Symphony to showcase and support the state’s most talented young instrumentalists. Violinst Mary Grace Johnson, a home school student from Murfreesboro, took top honors for her performance of Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto. As grand prize winner, she was

presented with a $3,000 scholarship and a SunTrust Classical Series ticket package for four. Congratulations are also due to second place winner John Paul Powers, a tuba player from Clinton, Tennessee, and third place winner Mary Grace Bender, a cellist from Franklin. Johnson will perform her winning piece at the Nashville Symphony’s Side-by-Side Concert, 7 p.m. May 16 at the Schermerhorn. Free and open to the public, this annual concert features the Curb Youth Symphony performing with the Nashville Symphony.

CONGRATULATIONS TO 2013 CURB CONCERTO COMPETITION WINNERS!

To learn more about the Nashville Symphony’s music education programs, which reach 80,000 students each year, visit NashvilleSymphony.org/Education.

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giANCArLO guErrErOmuSiC dirECTOr

giancarlo Guerrero is Music Director of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra (NSO) and

concurrently holds the position of Principal Guest Conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra Miami Residency. Last year, he led the Nashville Symphony to a GRAMMY® win for a second consecutive year with their recording of American composer Joseph Schwantner’s Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra. His previous recording with the orchestra of Michael Daugherty’s Metropolis Symphony and Deus Ex Machina won three 2011 GRAMMY® Awards, including Best Orchestral Performance. A fervent advocate of new music and contemporary composers, Guerrero has collaborated with and championed the works of several of America’s most respected composers, including John Adams, John Corigliano, Osvaldo Golijov, Jennifer Higdon, Michael Daugherty, Roberto Sierra and Richard Danielpour.

In the 2012/13 season, Guerrero makes debuts with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin and Norwegian Radio Orchestra. He returns to the Boston, Indianapolis and Toronto Symphony Orchestras, Philadelphia Orchestra for both its subscription season and at Vail, Brussels Philharmonic, Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra and to Australia for performances with the Adelaide Symphony and Auckland Philharmonia. An advocate for young musicians and music education, Guerrero now returns annually to Caracas, Venezuela, to conduct the Orquesta Sinfónica Simón Bolívar and to work with young musicians in the country’s lauded El Sistema music program. This season he will also work with the student orchestras of Curtis Institute and the Colburn School.

In recent seasons Guerrero has appeared with many of the major North American orchestras, including the symphony orchestras of Baltimore,

Boston, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, San Diego, Seattle, Toronto, Vancouver and the National Symphony in Washington, D.C., as well as at several major summer festivals, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, The Cleveland Orchestra at Blossom Music Festival and Indiana University’s summer orchestra festival. He is also establishing an increasingly visible profile in Europe, where his upcoming engagements will include a debut appearance with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Last season, he led a five-city European tour with the Monte Carlo Philharmonic.

Early in his career, Guerrero worked regularly with the Costa Rican Lyric Opera, and in recent seasons has conducted new productions of Carmen, La Bohème and Rigoletto. Future plans include productions at the Houston Grand Opera and Marseille Opera. In February 2008, he gave the Australian premiere of Osvaldo Golijov’s one-act opera Ainadamar at the Adelaide Festival, to great acclaim.

In June 2004, Guerrero was honored with the Helen M. Thompson Award by the American Symphony Orchestra League, which recognizes outstanding achievement among young conductors nationwide.

Guerrero holds degrees from Baylor and Northwestern universities. He was previously the Music Director of the Eugene Symphony in Oregon. From 1999 to 2004, he served as Associate Conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra, where he made his subscription debut in March 2000 leading the world premiere of John Corigliano’s Phantasmagoria on the Ghosts of Versailles. Prior to his tenure with the Minnesota Orchestra, he served as Music Director of the Táchira Symphony Orchestra in Venezuela.

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rSThe 2012/13 season marks Associate Conductor

Kelly Corcoran’s sixth season with the Nashville Symphony. During this time, she has conducted a variety of programs, including the Classical and Pops Series, and has served as the primary conductor for the orchestra’s education and community engagement concerts. She made her Carnegie Hall conducting debut in May 2012 with the Nashville Symphony during the Spring For Music Festival. This season she is also the Acting Director for the Nashville Symphony Chorus.

Corcoran appears this season with The Cleveland Orchestra, Naples Philharmonic, Louisville Orchestra, Knoxville Symphony and as a Music Director candidate with the Topeka Symphony and Fargo-Moorhead Symphony. She has conducted major orchestras throughout the country, including the Atlanta, Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee and National Symphonies, often with return engagements. In 2009, she made her South American debut as a guest conductor with the Orquesta Sinfónica UNCuyo in Mendoza, Argentina, returning for multiple subscription programs in 2011.

Named as Honorable Mention for the Taki Concordia Conducting Fellowship, Corcoran studied with Marin Alsop and shared performances with her and the Bournemouth (UK) Symphony and Colorado Symphony. Prior to Nashville, she completed three seasons as assistant conductor for the Canton Symphony Orchestra in Ohio and music director of the Canton Youth Symphony and the Cleveland-area Heights Chamber Orchestra. Corcoran attended the Lucerne Festival’s master class in conducting with Pierre Boulez.

In 2004, Corcoran participated in the National Conducting Institute, where she studied with Leonard Slatkin. Her past posts include assistant music director of the Nashville Opera, founder/music director of the Nashville Philharmonic Orchestra and fellow with the New World Symphony. Originally from Massachusetts and a member of the Tanglewood Festival Chorus for more than 10 years, Corcoran received her Bachelor of Music in vocal performance from The Boston Conservatory and her Master of Music in instrumental conducting from Indiana University.

AssociAte conductor

kELLy COrCOrANresident conductor

ALBErT-gEOrgE SChrAm

Albert-George Schram, a native of the Netherlands, has served as Resident Conductor

of the Nashville Symphony since 2006. While he has conducted on all series the orchestra offers, Schram is primarily responsible for its Bank of America Pops Series.

Schram’s longest tenure has been with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, where he has worked in a variety of capacities since 1979. As a regular guest conductor of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra, Schram in 2002 opened the orchestra’s new permanent summer home, Symphony Park. From 1990 to 1996, he served as resident conductor of the Louisville Orchestra. The former Florida Philharmonic Orchestra appointed Schram as resident conductor beginning with the 2002/03 season.

In 2008 Schram was invited to conduct the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional of Bolivia and the Orquesta Sinfónica UNCuyo in Mendoza, Argentina. His other foreign conducting engagements have included the KBS Symphony Orchestra and the Taegu Symphony Orchestra in Korea, and the Orchester der Allgemeinen Musikgesellschaft Luzern in Switzerland. He has returned to his native Holland to conduct the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic and the Netherlands Broadcast Orchestra.

In the U.S., his recent and coming guest conducting appearances include the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Tucson Symphony, Louisiana Philharmonic, Oklahoma City Philharmonic, Spokane Symphony, Dayton Philharmonic, Shreveport Symphony, San Antonio Symphony, Allentown Symphony and the Mansfield Symphony.

Schram’s studies have been largely in the European tradition under the tutelage of Franco Ferrara, Rafael Kubelik, Abraham Kaplan and Neeme Järvi. He received his initial training at the Conservatory of The Hague in the Netherlands, then later moved to Canada to undertake studies at the universities of Calgary and Victoria. His training was completed at the University of Washington.

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JUNE 201250

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Paper mosaic created by Room In The Inn day class.Ad donated by a friend of Room In The Inn.

“Hope Always Believes In The Possible.”–Charles Strobel, Founding Director, Room In The Inn

www. RoomInTheInn.org

RITIad2/09.indd 1 2/13/09 7:42:54 AM

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Cultivated performing arts program

Competitive athletics

College-prep academics

Christ-centered worldview

www.davidsonacademy.com

Preschool—12th Grade

615.860.5300Preparing students for college, life, and eternity

www.davidsonacademy.com

Preschool—12th Grade

615.860.5300Preparing students for college, life, and eternity

Cultivated performing arts program

Competitive athletics

College-prep academics

Christ-centered worldview

615-352-9696

IT’S NOT JUST A MAP.

Families have relocated from 26 states and six foreign countries, citing Currey Ingram Academy as a major factor in their decision to move to this area. We offer individualized learning plans for every student and a robust host of athletics, arts and extracurricular activities — all on a beautiful 83-acre campus in the heart of Brentwood, Tenn.

IT’S a vote OF CONFIDENCE.

Find out more at curreyingram.org/thedifference

A coed, K-12 college preparatory school that celebrates individuality, student strengths and personalized goal-setting.

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For information about our free faculty and student performances, guest artists, lectures, master classes, and more, visit the Blair website at blair.vanderbilt.edu

Blair School of Music • Vanderbilt University2400 Blakemore Avenue • Nashville, TN 37212

Complimentary valet parking and FREE self-parking for most events

Blair Concert Series 2012-2013The Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University—Artistry in Education

BlairPAM12-13_sm:Layout 1 7/6/12 11:06 AM Page 1

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FIrST vIolInS*Jun Iwasaki, Concertmaster Walter Buchanan Sharp ChairGerald C. Greer, Associate Concertmaster Erin Hall, Assistant ConcertmasterMary Kathryn Van Osdale, Concertmaster EmeritaDenise BakerKristi SeehaferJohn MapleDeidre Fominaya BaccoAlison GoodingPaul TobiasBeverly DrukkerAnna Lisa Hoepfinger Kirsten MitchellErin Long+Isabel Bartles

Second vIolInS*Carolyn Wann Bailey, PrincipalZeneba Bowers, Assistant PrincipalKenneth BarndJessica BlackwellRebecca ColeRadu GeorgescuBenjamin LloydLouise MorrisonLaura RossLisa Thrall+Adrienne Watkinson++Jeremy WilliamsRebecca J Willie

vIolAS*Daniel Reinker, PrincipalShu-Zheng Yang, Assistant PrincipalJudith AblonHari BernsteinBruce ChristensenMichelle Lackey CollinsChristopher FarrellMary Helen LawMelinda WhitleyClare Yang

celloS*Anthony LaMarchina, PrincipalJulia Tanner, Assistant Principal James Victor Miller ChairBradley MansellLynn Marie PeithmanStephen DrakeMichael SamisMatthew Walker

celloS*Christopher StenstromKeith NicholasXiao-Fan Zhang

bASSeS*Joel Reist, PrincipalGlen Wanner, Assistant PrincipalElizabeth Stewart Gary Lawrence, Principal EmeritusKevin Jablonski

FluTeSErik Gratton, Principal Anne Potter Wilson ChairAnn Richards, Assistant PrincipalKathryn Ladner

pIccoloKathryn Ladner, Norma Grobman Rogers Chair

oboeSJames Button, PrincipalEllen Menking, Assistant PrincipalRoger Wiesmeyer

enGlISh hornRoger Wiesmeyer

clArIneTSJames Zimmermann, PrincipalCassandra Lee, Assistant PrincipalDaniel Lochrie

e-FlAT clArIneTCassandra Lee

bASS clArIneTDaniel Lochrie

bASSoonSCynthia Estill, PrincipalDawn Hartley, Assistant PrincipalGil Perel

conTrA bASSoonGil Perel

hornSLeslie Norton, PrincipalBeth Beeson

hornSRadu V. Rusu, Acting Associate Principal/ 3rd HornHunter SholarJennifer Kummer, Acting Assistant 1st Horn

TruMpeTSJeffrey Bailey, PrincipalPatrick Kunkee, Co-Principal Preston Bailey, Acting Assistant Principal

TroMboneSSusan K. Smith, Acting PrincipalPrentiss Hobbs, Acting Assistant Principal

bASS TroMboneSteven Brown

TubAGilbert Long, Principal

TIMpAnIWilliam G. Wiggins, Principal

percuSSIonSam Bacco, PrincipalRichard Graber, Assistant Principal Trent Leasure

hArpLicia Jaskunas, Principal

KeyboArdRobert Marler, Principal

lIbrArIAnSD. Wilson Ochoa, PrincipalJennifer Goldberg, Librarian

orcheSTrAperSonnelMAnAGerSAnne Dickson RogersCarrie Marcantonio, Assistant

*Section seating revolves+Leave of Absence++Replacement/Extra

2012/13 NASHVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

GIANCARLO GUERREROMusic Director

ALBERT-GEORGE SCHRAMResident Conductor

KELLY CORCORANAssociate Conductor

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SEPTEMBER 201254

Janet AyersJohn Bailey IIIJoseph BarkerRussell BatesScott BeckerDavid BlackJack Bovender Jr.William Braddy Anastasia BrownKeith ChurchwellRebecca Cole *Michelle R. Collins *Lisa Cooper *Ben CundiffCarol DanielsRobert DennisRobert EzrinBenjamin FoldsJudy FosterJames GoochAlison Gooding *Amy GrantCarl Haley Jr.

Michael W. HayesBilly Ray HearnLee Ann IngramMartha R. Ingram *Elliott Warner Jones Sr.Larry LarkinJohn T. LewisRichard MillerEduardo MinardiDavid MorganPeter NeffCano OzgenerVictoria Chu PaoPam PfefferDeborah PittsJennifer H. PuryearWayne RileyAnne RussellMichael Samis *Nelson ShieldsBeverly K. SmallRenata SotoBrett Sweet

Van TuckerSteve TurnerMark WaitJeffery WalravenJohnna WatsonTed Houston WelchWilliam Greer

Wiggins *David Williams IIHarry Williams Jr. *Jeremy Williams *Rebecca Willie *Clare Yang *Donna Yurdin *Shirley ZeitlinJames Zimmermann *

*Indicates Ex Officio

Ingram Scholar InternMarwah Shahid

Edward A. GoodrichBoard Chair

James Seabury IIIBoard Chair Elect

Kevin CrumboBoard Treasurer

betsy Wills *Board Secretary

Alan d. valentine *President & CEO

DIRECTORSOFFICERS

2012/13 BOARD OF DIRECTORS BO

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execuTIveAlan D. Valentine, President and CEOKaren Fairbend, Executive Assistant to the President and CEOMark A. Blakeman, Senior Vice President, General ManagerKaty Lyles, Assistant to the Senior Vice President and General ManagerMichael Kirby, V.P. of Finance and Administration and CFOJonathan Norris, V.P., RevenueDelaney Gray, Assistant to the V.P., Revenue

ArTISTIc AdMInISTrATIonLarry Tucker, Director of Artistic Administration Emma Smyth, Manager of Artistic AdministrationEllen Kasperek, Manager of Pops and Special Programs Andrew Risinger, Organ Curator

box oFFIce/TIcKeTInG & SAleSKimberly Darlington, Director of Ticket ServicesEmily Shannon, Box Office ManagerTina Messer, Ticket Services SpecialistMissy Hubner, Ticket Services Assistant Sheridan Ernst-Cavanaugh, Group Ticket Services Specialist Jackie Knox, Director of Sales Marketing Associates: Alexandra Arekelian, Richard Bartkowiak, Linda Booth, Toni Conn, James Calvin Davidson, Kevin Davis, Kimberly DePue, Mark Haining, Lloyd Harper, Monique Ireland, Rick Katz, Deborah King, Misha Robledo, Dustin Skilbred

dATA STAndArdSTony Exler, Director of Data StandardsSheila Wilson, Sr. Database Associate

developMenTErin Wenzel, CFRE, Sr. Director of Special CampaignsMaribeth Stahl, Sr. Director of Annual CampaignsHayden Pruett, Major Gifts OfficerSara Davenport, Development and League Events ManagerJason Parker, Grants ManagerDan Tonelson, Corporate Development Manager

educATIonBlair Bodine, Director of Education and Community EngagementAndy Campbell, Education and Community Engagement Program ManagerKelley Bell, Education and Community Engagement Assistant

FInAnceKaren Warren, ControllerPam Lindemann, Payroll and Accounts Payable ManagerSheri Switzer, Senior AccountantSteven McNeal, Staff Accountant

Food, beverAGe And evenTSSteve Perdue, Sr. Director of Food, Beverage and EventsLacy Lusebrink, Food and Beverage ManagerRyan Slattery, Executive Sous ChefHiroju LaPrad, Sous ChefBruce Pittman, Catering & Events Sales ManagerHays McWhirter,Catering and Events ManagerCollin Husbands, Catering and Events Manager

Staci Davenport, Food, Beverage and Events AssistantJohnathon McGee, Food and Beverage SupervisorSchuyler Thomas, Food and Beverage SupervisorAnderson S. Barns, Beverage ManagerGarland Smith, Beverage SupervisorDebra Hollenbeck, Buyer/Retail Manager

huMAn reSourceSAshley Skinner, Director of Human ResourcesKathleen Conwell, Human Resources CoordinatorKathleen McCracken, Volunteer Manager and League LiaisonMartha Bryant, Receptionist and Human Resources Assistant

I.T.Dan Sanders, Director of Information TechnologyTrenton Leach, Software Applications Developer Chris Beckner, Technical Support Specialist

MArKeTInG & coMMunIcATIonSJonathan Marx, Sr. Director of Marketing & CommunicationsMisty Cochran, Director of Advertising and Promotions Laurie Davis, PublicistNancy VanReece, Social Media Strategist and Website ManagerJessi Menish, Graphic DesignerSean Shields, Graphic Design Associate

pATron ServIceSEric Adams, Director of Patron Services Patron Services Specialists:Dennis Carter, Gina Haining, Paul Shearer, Judith Wall

producTIon And orcheSTrA operATIonSTim Lynch, Sr. Director of Operations and Orchestra ManagerAnne Dickson Rogers, Director of Orchestra PersonnelCarrie Marcantonio, Assistant Orchestra Personnel ManagerD. Wilson Ochoa, Principal LibrarianJennifer Goldberg, LibrarianJohn Sanders, Chief Technical EngineerBrian Doane, Production ManagerMitch Hansen, Lighting Director Michelle Griesmer, Assistant Lighting DirectorGary Call, Audio EngineerMark Dahlen, Audio EngineerW. Paul Holt, Stage ManagerJosh Walliser, Stage and Production Assistant

venue MAnAGeMenTEric Swartz, Associate V.P. of Venue ManagementDanny Covington, Chief EngineerRaay Creech, Facility Maintenance TechnicianKenneth Dillehay, Facility Maintenance TechnicianWade Johnson, Housekeeping ManagerKevin Butler, Lead Housekeeper/UtilityDeAndrea Mason, HousekeeperTony Meyers, Director of Security and Front of HouseAlan Woodard, Security Guard

2012/13 NASHVILLE SYMPHONY STAFF

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VIRTUOSO SOCIETY Gifts of $10,000-$14,999

MARTHA RIVERS INGRAM SOCIETY Gifts of $25,000 +

Anonymous (1)Mr. & Mrs. James AyersJ. B. & Carylon BakerRussell W. BatesAnn & Frank BumsteadAnn Scott Carell*Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. CarltonFred CassettyKelly & Bill ChristieMr. & Mrs. Tom F. ConeHilton & Sallie DeanMr. & Mrs. Robert J. DennisMarty & Betty DickensDee & Jerald DoochinLaura & Wayne DugasMr. & Mrs. Jere M. ErvinAnnette Eskind

The Jane & Richard Eskind & Family FoundationMarilyn EzellJohn & Lorelee GawaluckAllis Dale & John GillmorEd & Nancy GoodrichMr. & Mrs. Billy Ray HearnHelen & Neil HemphillMrs. V. Davis HuntMr. & Mrs. David B. IngramLee Ann & Orrin IngramKeith & Nancy JohnsonElliott Warner Jones & Marilyn Lee JonesAnne KnauffChristine Konradi & Stephan

HeckersRalph & Donna Korpman

Mr. & Mrs. Fred W. LazenbyDr. & Mrs. George R. LeeJim LewisZachary LiffRobert Straus LipmanEllen Harrison MartinMr. & Mrs. Robert A. McCabe Jr.Sheila & Richard McCartyEdward D. & Linda F. MilesRichard & Sharalena MillerAnne & Peter NeffDr. Barron Patterson & Mr. Burton JablinHal & Peggy PenningtonMr. & Mrs. Charles R. PruettCarol & John T. RochfordAnne & Joe RussellJoe & Dorothy Scarlett

Dr. & Mrs. Michael H. SchatzleinDr. & Mrs. John SelbyMr.* & Mrs. Nelson SeveringhausRonald & Diane ShaferNelson & Sheila ShieldsMr. & Mrs. Irvin SmallMr. & Mrs. Earl S. SwenssonDr. John B. ThomisonMr. & Mrs. Louis B. Todd Jr.Alan D. ValentinePeggy & John WarnerMs. Johnna Benedict WatsonMr. & Mrs. Ted H. WelchDavid & Gail WilliamsBarbara & Bud ZanderMr. Nicholas S. Zeppos & Ms. Lydia A. Howarth

STRADIVARIUS SOCIETY Gifts of $5,000 - $9,999

iNdividuALSthe nashville symphony is deeply grateful to the following individuals who support its concert season and its services to the community through their generous contributions to the Annual fund. donors as of february 28, 2013:

David & Diane BlackMr. & Mrs. John Chadwick

Carol & Frank Daniels IIIMrs. Martha Rivers Ingram

Anonymous (1)Mr. & Mrs. Jack O. Bovender Jr.Richard & Judith BrackenMr.* & Mrs. J. C. Bradford Jr.Mac & Linda CrawfordJanine & Ben CundiffMr. & Mrs. Brownlee O. Currey Jr.

Giancarlo & Shirley GuerreroCarl & Connie HaleyPatricia & H. Rodes HartJan & Daniel LewisThe Melkus Family FoundationThe Honorable Gilbert S. Merritt

Dr. Harrell Odom II & Mr. Barry W. CookMr. & Mrs. Philip M. PfefferMr. & Mrs. Ben R. RechterMr. & Mrs. James C. Seabury IIIMargaret & Cal Turner

WALTER SHARP SOCIETY Gifts of $15,000 - $24,999

GOLDEN BATON SOCIETY Gifts of $2,500 - $4,999

Anonymous (1)Clint & Kali AdamsMrs. R. Benton Adkins Jr.Shelley AlexanderDr. & Mrs. Elbert Baker Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Robert O. BegtrupMs. Marilyn BellMark & Sarah BlakemanDr. & Mrs. Frank H. BoehmJamey Bowen & Norman WellsDr. & Mrs. H. Victor BrarenDan & Mindy BrodbeckMr.* & Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl IIIMr. & Mrs. Paul J. BuijsmanDrs. Rodney & Janice Burt

Mr. Philip M. CavenderMr. & Mrs. Terry W. ChandlerDrs. Keith & Leslie ChurchwellDorit & Donald CochronThe Honorable & Mrs. Lewis H. ConnerRichard & Sherry CooperMr. & Mrs. James H. CostnerMr. & Mrs. Justin Dell CrosslinThe Rev. & Mrs. Fred DettwillerDonna & Jeffrey EskindMr. & Mrs. Robert A. EzrinBob & Judy FisherTom & Judy FosterDr. & Mrs. Thomas Frist Jr.Cathey & Wilford Fuqua

Mr. & Mrs. Andrew GiacoboneHarris A. GilbertWilliam & Helen GleasonMr. & Mrs. Fred C. Goad Jr.James C. Gooch & Jennie P. SmithTony & Teri GosseMr. & Mrs. C. David GriffinSuzy HeerMr. & Mrs. Robert C. HiltonMs. Cornelia B. HollandMr. & Mrs. Donald J. IsraelDonald L. JacksonMr. & Mrs. John F. JacquesRobin & Bill KingMr. & Mrs. Michael A. Koban Jr.

Anonymous (1)Judy & Joe Barke

Martin Brown FamilyMr. & Mrs. Albert F. Ganier III

Dr. & Mrs. Howard S. KirshnerMr. & Mrs. Cano Ozgener

Mr. & Mrs. Steve Turner

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Anonymous (12)Jerry AdamsJeff & Tina AdamsJames & Glyna AderholdDrs. W. Scott & Paige AkersMark & Niki AntoniniMs. Teresa Broyles-AplinJeremy & Rebecca AtackJon K. & Colleen AtwoodGrace & Carl AwhDr. & Mrs. Billy R. BallardMr. & Mrs. H. Lee Barfield IIBarbara & Mike BartonMrs. Brenda BassMr. & Mrs. James BecknerBetty C. BellamyMr. & Mrs. Louie A. BeltDr. Eric & Elaine BergFrank M. Berklacich, MDMr.* & Mrs. Harold S. BernardMr. & Mrs. Raymond P. BillsMr. David Blackbourn & Ms. Celia ApplegateDennis & Tammy BoehmsBob & Marion BogenMr. & Mrs. Robert Boyd Bogle IIIMr. & Mrs. Dennis BottorffJean & David BuchananDr. & Mrs. Glenn BuckspanSharon Lee ButcherChuck & Sandra CagleJohn E. Cain IIIMr. & Mrs. Gerald G. CalhounMr. & Mrs. William H. CammackJan & Jim CarellAnn & Sykes CargileMr. & Mrs. William F. Carpenter IIIClint & Patty CarterDr. & Mrs. Dennis C. CarterMichael & Pamela CarterAnita & Larry CashMary & Joseph CavarraErica & Doug ChappellBarbara & Eric ChazenDonna R. CheekJames H. Cheek IIIMrs. John Hancock Cheek Jr.Catherine ChitwoodM. Wayne ChomikMr. & Mrs. Sam E. ChristopherDavid & Starling ClarkGeorge D. Clark Jr.Mr. Terry ClyneEsther & Roger CohnEd & Pat ColeChase ColeMarjorie & Allen* Collins

Mr. & Mrs. W. Ovid CollinsMr. Brian CookMr. & Mrs. Charles W. Cook Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Joe C. Cook IIIJoe & Judy CookTeresa Corlew & Wes AllenNancy Krider CorleyRoger & Barbara CottrellMr. & Mrs. Roy J. CovertMr. & Mrs. Donald S. A. CowanJames L. & Sharon H. CoxDr. & Mrs. James CraftonDrs. Paul A. & Dorothy Valcarcel CraigMr. & Mrs. J. Bradford CurrieGreg & Collie DailyMr. Charles E. DaleyJohn & Natasha DeaneM. Maitland DeLand, M.D.Mr. & Mrs. Daryl DemonbreunMr. & Mrs. Kenton DickersonMr. & Mrs. Robert S. DoochinStephen & Kimberly DrakeLaura L. DunbarDr. & Mrs. E. Mac EdingtonMr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Edmondson Sr.Robert D. EisensteinDavid Ellis & Barry WilkerDrs. James & Rena EllzyDr. Jack W. ErterLaurie & Steven EskindRobert & Cassandra EstesMr. Matthew EversMr. & Mrs. DeWitt EzellDr. Meredith A. EzellMs. Paula FairchildMrs. Nancye FeistritzerT. Aldrich FineganJohn & Cindy Watson FordMs. Deborah F. Turner & Ms. Beth A. FortuneDrs. Robert & Sharron FrancisDanna & Bill FrancisDr. & Mrs. John R. FurmanMr. & Mrs. Nicholas R. GanickCarlene Hunt & Marshall GaskinsMr. & Mrs. Roy J. Gilleland IIIFrank GinanniMr. & Mrs. J. George HarrisJanet & Jim HassonMr. & Mrs. James O. Hastings Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John Burton HayesMs. Doris Ann HendrixCarrie & Damon HiningerMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey N. HinsonJudith HodgesKen & Pam HoffmanMr. & Mrs. Dan W. Hogan

Mr. & Mrs. Richard HoltonMr. & Mrs. Henry W. HookerMr. & Mrs. Ephriam H. Hoover IIIThe Evelyn S. & Jim Horne Hankins FoundationVicki & Rick HorneRay HoustonHudson Family FoundationDrs. James I. and Margo Hudson IIIDonna & Ronn HuffMr. & Mrs. Thomas W. HulmeDr. & Mrs. Stephen P. HumphreyJudith S. & James R. HumphreysCarlene Hunt & Marshall GaskinsMarsha & Keel HuntMr. & Mrs. Charles L. Irby Sr.Bud IrelandRodney Irvin FamilyMr. & Mrs. Toshinari IshiiEllen & Kenneth JacobsLee & Pat JenningsGeorge & Shirley JohnstonJan Jones & Steve WilliamsMary Loventhal JonesRay & Rosemarie KalilMr. & Mrs. James KelsoMichael & Melissa KirbyTom & Darlene KlaritchWalter & Sarah KnestrickWilliam C. & Deborah Patterson KochMs. Pamela L. KoernerMr. & Mrs. Gene C. KoonceMr. & Mrs. Edward J. KovachHeloise Werthan Kuhn

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Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Ledbetter Jr.John T. LewisRed & Shari MartinMr. & Mrs. Martin F. McNamara IIIDr. Arthur M. MellorF. Max & Mary A. MerrellMr. & Mrs. Eduardo H. MinardiChristopher & Patricia MixonMr. David K. MorganJonathan R. Norris & Jennifer CarlatDrs. Mark & Nancy PeacockKeith & Deborah PittsMr. & Mrs. Gustavus A. Puryear IV

Eric Raefsky, M.D. & Ms. Victoria HeilAnne & Charles RoosGeoffrey & Sandra SandersonMr. & Mrs. Scott C. SatterwhiteMr. & Mrs. J. Ronald ScottMr.* & Mrs. Martin E. SimmonsChristopher & Maribeth StahlPamela & Steven TaylorRich & Carol ThigpinScott & Julie ThomasDr. & Mrs. Alexander TownesDrs. Pilar Vargas & Sten H. Vermund

Mr. Vince VinsonMr. & Mrs. Jeffery C. & Dayna L. WalravenJonathan & Janet WeaverCarroll Van West & Mary HoffschwelleArt & Lisa WheelerCharles Hampton WhiteMr. & Mrs. Jimmie D. WhiteMr. & Mrs. Joseph J. WimberlyDr. Artmas L. WorthyShirley Zeitlin

Anne Akiko Meyers & Anne Knauff

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Mr. & Mrs. Randolph M. LaGasseBob & Mary LaGroneRobert & Carol LampeLarry & Martha LarkinRichard & Diane LarsenKevin P. & May LavenderSandi & Tom LawlessDr. & Mrs. John W. Lea IVJon & Elaine LevineSally M. LevineDon & Patti LiedtkeDr. & Mrs. T. A. LincolnDr. & Mrs. Christopher LindMargaret & Bill LindbergMr. & Mrs. Lawrence LipmanTim LynchMyles & Joan MacDonaldDr. John F. Manning Jr.Rhonda A. Martocci & William S. BlaylockLynn & Jack MayBob MaynardMr. Charles W. McDowellJoey & Beth McDuffeeTommy & Cat McEwenMr. & Mrs. Robert McNeilly Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. McRae IIIDr. Mark & Mrs. Theresa MessengerMr. & Mrs. William T. Minkoff Jr.Mr. & Mrs. William P. Morelli

Ms. Lucy H. MorganMatt & Rhonda MulroyJames & Patricia MunroLeonard Murray & Jacqueline MarschakMr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Nave Jr.Lannie W. NealRobert NessMs. Agatha L. NolenRepresentative & Mrs. Gary L. OdomDan & Helen OwensThe Paisley FamilyDavid & Pamela PalmerVictoria & William PaoMr. & Mrs. William C. PfaenderDr. Edgar H. Pierce Jr.David & Adrienne PistonMr. Charles H. Potter Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph K. PresleyMr. & Mrs. Paul E. PrillDr. Gipsie B. RanneyMs. Allison R. Reed & Mr. Sam GarzaDrs. Jeff & Kellye RiceMr. & Mrs. Doyle R. RippeeMr. & Mrs. Stephen RivenMr. & Mrs. John A. RobertsMargaret Ann & Walter Robinson FoundationMr. & Mrs. David L. RollinsMs. Sara L. Rosson & Ms. Nancy MenkeGeorgianna W. RussellJames & Patricia RussellDavid SampsellPaula & Kent SandidgeSamuel A. Santoro & Mary M. ZutterMr. & Mrs. Eric M. SaulDr. Norm Scarborough & Ms. Kimberly HewellMr. Paul H. ScarbroughMs. Sandra A. SchattenMrs. Cooper M. SchleyDr. & Mrs. R. Bruce ShackJoan B. ShayneAnita & Mike SheaAllen Spears* & Colleen SheppardBill & Sharon SheriffDr. & Mrs. Andrew ShinarDr. & Mrs. Nicholas A. Sieveking Sr.Luke & Susan SimonsTom & Sylvia SingletonWilliam & Cyndi SitesGeorge & Mary Sloan

Drs. Walter E. Smalley Jr. & Louise HansonMr. & Mrs. Brian S. SmallwoodSuzanne & Grant SmothersK. C. & Mary SmytheMr. & Mrs. James H. SpaldingJack & Louise SpannMr. M. Clark SpodenMr. & Mrs. Hans StabellE.B.S. FoundationDr. Michael & Tracy StadnickMr. & Mrs. Joe N. SteakleyDr. & Mrs. Robert SteinMr. & Mrs. David B. StewartJane Lawrence StoneMr. & Mrs. James G. Stranch IIIAnn & Bob StreetMrs. Susan & Volker Striepe M.D.Bruce & Elaine SullivanJohanna & Fridolin SulserJames B. & Patricia B. SwanBrett & Meredythe SweetDr. Steve A. Hyman & Mr. Mark Lee TaylorAnn M. Teaff & Donald McPherson IIIDr. & Mrs. William ThetfordDr. & Mrs. Clarence S. ThomasCandy TolerNorman & Marilyn TolkJoe & Ellen TorrenceMr. & Mrs. Marshall TrammellThomas L. & Judith A. TurkChristi & Jay TurnerThe Vandewater Family FoundationLarry & Brenda VickersKris & G. G. WaggonerDr. & Mrs. Robert W. WahlDeborah & Mark WaitMike & Elaine WalkerTalmage M. WattsErin WenzelMr. & Mrs. Thomas G. B. WheelockStacy WidelitzMr. & Mrs. William G. WigginsMr. & Mrs. David M. WildsCraig P. Williams & Kimberly SchenkJudy S. WilliamsMr. & Mrs. Ridley Wills IIMr. & Mrs. William M. WilsonMs. Marilyn Shields-Wiltsie & Dr. Theodore E. WiltsieDr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. Wolfe

Anonymous (14)Carol M. AllenJeff & Carrie BaileySallie & John BaileyDr. Houston A. BakerRichard W. BakerRandall B. BallSusan F. & Paul J. BallardGeorge E. BarrettMr. & Mrs. Edwin R. BartonDr. & Mrs. Jere BassMr. & Mrs. Thomas E. BatemanKatrin T. BeanMarti BellingrathBernice Amanda Belue

Mike & Kathy BensonMr. Rob BironasRalph & Jane BlackRandolph & Elaine BlakeMr. & Mrs. Bill BlevinsDr. & Mrs. Marion G. BolinIrma BolsterMr. & Mrs. William E. BoyteMr. Randal BrakerRobert* & Barbara BraswellMr. & Mrs. Stephen BraunDr. & Mrs. Phillip L. BressmanBerry & Connie BrooksBob & Kay BrothertonDr. Pamela E. Brown

Dr. Roger & Mrs.* Donah BurgessGene & Jamie BurtonMr. Peter L. BushJames ButtonMichael & Linda CarlsonBill & Chris CarverMr. & Mrs. Christopher John Casa SantaMs. Pamela CaseyJohn & Susan ChambersDr. & Mrs. Robert H. ChristenberryJay & Ellen ClaytonSallylou & David CloydDr. & Mrs. Alan G. CohenMr. & Mrs. Domer Collins

CONCERTMASTER Gifts of $500 - $999

George Takei & fans

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William & Margaret ConnorPaul & Alyce CookeMr. Randy M. CooperMarion Pickering CouchMr. and Ms. Joseph B. Crace Jr.Dr. Robert Crants IIIMs. Susannah C. CulbertsonKimberly L. DarlingtonMr. & Mrs. Edgar DavenportMariaGabriella Giro & Jeff DavidsonMr. & Mrs. Charles E. DavisMr. Shawn DelpMrs. Edwin DeMossMr. Carl DenneyWally & Lee Lee DietzPeter & Kathleen DonofrioTere & David DowlandMs. Katie DoyleMr. Frank W. DrakeMr. & Mrs. Glenn EadenDr. Jane Easdown & Dr. James BoothDr. James E. EdwardsMrs. Clara ElamDr. Christopher & Wendy EllisDr. John & Janet ExtonBill & Dian S. EzellMichael & Rosemary FedeleBill Fialkowski, M.D.Ms. Fern FitzhenryBela FleckDr. Arthur C. Fleischer & FamilyPatrick & Kimberly ForrestRobert & Peggy FryeSuzanne J. FullerJohn & Eva GebhartDr. & Mrs. Harold L. GentryMr. & Mrs. H. Steven GeorgeDodie & Carl GeorgeMr. & Mrs. Stewart J. GilchristMr. Benjamin L. GordonBryan D. GravesRichard & Randi GreenDr. Gary S. Gutow & Ms. Jessica Gutow VinerRenée & Tony HalterleinDr. & Mrs. Thomas L. HardyKent & Becky HarrellDr. & Mrs. Jason HaslamMr. Scott HatcherMr. & Mrs. Doug HausemanMrs. Estela R. HayesMr. & Mrs. Philip F. HeadLisa & Bill HeadleyKeith & Kelly HerronMr. David HilleyDr. Becky E. Swanson-HindmanMr. & Mrs. Jim HittDr. Elisabeth Dykens & Dr. Robert HodappSusan S. HoltDr. Jian HuangMr. & Mrs. Robert J. HuljakMargie HunterMr. & Mrs. David HusemanBob & Virginia JohnsonRuth E. JohnsonMrs. Robert N. JoynerDr. Barbara F. KaczmarskaMr. & Mrs. Michael KaneMrs. Edward C. KennedyJohn & Eleanor KennedyTeresa F. Kersey

Jane Kersten & Ray SissomMs. Janet KleinfelterNancy & Edd LancasterMr. & Mrs. Thomas W. LandMr. & Mrs. Samuel W. LavenderMrs. Martha W. LawrenceTed & Anne LenzMichael & Ellen LevittMr. & Mrs. Irving LevyMr. & Mrs. John LillieBurk & Caroline LindseyDr. & Mrs. Nicholas LippolisDrs. Walt & Shannon LittleThe Howard Littlejohn FamilyMr. & Mrs. Denis LovellGeorge & Cathy LynchMr. & Mrs. Peter C. MacDonaldWilliam R. & Maria T. MacKayDonald M. & Kala W.* MacLeodJoe & Anne MadduxMr. & Mrs. Michael R. MannoJames & Patricia MartineauMr. & Mrs. Leon MayDrs. Ricardo Fonseca & Ingrid MayerPeg & Al McCreeMr. John M. McDougalCatherine & Brian McMurrayEd & Tracy McNallyLinda & Ray MeneelyBruce & Bonnie MeriwetherCedric & Delberta MillerDrs. Randolph & Linda MillerDr. & Mrs. Kent B. MillspaughDr. Jere MitchumDiana & Jeff MobleyDr. & Mrs. Charles L. MoffattMs. Gay MoonBeth & Paul MooreCynthia & Richard MorinMs. Patricia A. MoseleyMargaret & David MossDick & Mary Jo MurphyLucille C. NaborsLarry & Marsha NagerMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. NagleLeslie & Scott NewmanLonnie & Allene NewtonWilliam & Kathryn NicholsonMr. Brian M. NorrisJane K. NorrisVirginia O'Brien

D. Wilson OchoaMr. & Mrs. Russell Oldfield Jr.Mr. Sergio OraDr. & Mrs. Harry L. PageMr. & Mrs. M. Forrest ParmleyMs. Lisa Pasho-CoughlinGrant & Janet PattersonJohn W. & Mary PattersonDrs. Teresa & Phillip PattersonDr. & Mrs. Joel Q. PeavyhouseMr. John S. PerryLinda & Carter PhilipsBarbara Gregg & Robert PhillipsFaris & Robert PhillipsJoe* & Gaynelle PitnerMs. Julie B. PlexicoRick & Diane PoenMr. John PopeDr. & Mrs. James L. PottsJ. Hayden PruettGeorge & Joyce PustMr. Edwin B. RaskinCharles H. & Eleanor L. RathsFranco & Cynthia RecchiaMr. Gregory M. ReedMary RiddleSusan B. RidleyMrs. Julie A. RoeMr. & Mrs. Doug RogersDr. & Mrs. Jorge RojasMr. & Mrs. David C. RolandLaura RossSamuel L. & Barbara SandersPhilip & Jane SandersonDavid M. SatterfieldPam & Roland SchnellerDr. & Mrs. Timothy P. SchoettleDr. Kenneth E. Schriver & Dr. Anna W. RoePeggy C. SciottoMr. & Mrs. Robert ScottMr. Roderick ScruggsDrs. Fernando F. & Elena O. SegoviaOdessa L. SettlesMax & Michelle ShaffMr. & Mrs. Richard ShearerSmith Family FoundationMr. & Mrs. Kevin Scott SmithDr. Robert Smith & Barbara RamseyMr. & Mrs. S. Douglas SmithMr. & Mrs. Douglas C. Snyder

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Sarah Hannah, Dayna Turney & Beth Meador

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Dr. Beth S. BarnettA. S. BarnsDr.* & Mrs. Thomas C. BarrMr. & Mrs. William BeachMs. Traciee D. BeardenDr. Sammy F. BecdachSusan O. BelcherMark H. BellRon & Sheryl BellMr. & Mrs. W. Todd BenderMs. Margaret P. BernadoDick & Gwen BerryAnnie Laurie & Irvin BerryCherry & Richard BirdDr. & Mrs. Ben J. BirdwellDr. Joel S. BirdwellMs. Helen R. Blackburn-

WhiteJoan BledsoeMs. Mimi BlissMrs. Andrea BoelyDavid BordenkircherJerry & Donna BoswellRobert E. BosworthMr. Brian BoxerDon & Deborah BoydJeff & Jeanne BradfordMr. Mark D. BranstetterMr. Charles BrasherMary Lawrence BreinigBetty & Bob BrodieKathy & Bill BrosiusMr. & Mrs. Charles H. BrownTom BruceBurnece Walker BrunsonT. Mark & D. K. BufordDr. & Mrs. Grady ButlerGeraldine & Wilson ButtsDr. & Mrs. Robert O. ByrdMr. Richard CallahanMrs. Julia C. CallawayClaire Ann CalongneMr. Richard A. CalvinBratschi CampbellGary E. CanadayRobert & Melanie CanslerMr. T. James CarmichaelKaren CarrRonald & Nellrena CarrMr. & Mrs. Edwin CarterValleau & Robert M.

CaruthersReCreations FurnitureEvelyn LeNoir Chandler

Dr. Walter J. ChazinMrs. Robert L. ChickeyBarry & Janie ChildersMs. Dorothy H. ChitwoodMr. Won S. ChoiMr. Joseph B. ChristyDr. André & Ms. Doreatha H. ChurchwellTeresa C. CissellMr. Daryl ClaggettCouncilman & Mrs. Phil

ClaiborneDrs. Walter & Deborah ClairCharles & Agenia ClarkSteven* & Donna ClarkDr. Paul B. Clark Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Roy Claverie Sr.Mr. & Mrs. Neely B. Coble IIIMisty Cochran & Josh SwannMark & Robin CohenMr. & Mrs. Robert T. ColemanColonel (ret.) Dr. & Mrs. James R. (Conra)

CollierMs. Peggy B. ColsonF. Michael CombsMr. & Mrs. Randy CookMs. Anne G. CooperMike & Sandy CooperKathy & Scott CorlewElizabeth CormierAllie & Landford CorrellDrs. Charles L. & Joy CoxMr. & Mrs. George Crawford

Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Jeff L. CreasyMr. & Mrs. David CrecraftR. Barry & Kathy CullenMr. Brian B. CuylerMs. Margaret M. DAngeloKatherine C. DanielJames & Maureen DanlyMr. M. Bradshaw Darnall IIIAndrew Daughety & Jennifer ReinganumJanet Keese DaviesMs. Gloria DeanerSteve Sirls & Allen DeCuyperDr. & Mrs. Roy L. DeHartWade & Jeanine DenneyMr. & Mrs. J. William DennyDr. & Mrs. Henry A. DePhillipsMrs. John S. Derryberry

Dr. Joseph & Ambassador Rachel DiggsMr. Guy R. DinwiddieMs. Shirley J. DodgeClark & Peggy DruesedowMr. & Mrs. Bradley DuggerKathleen & Stephen DummerMr & Mrs. Mike DunganMr. & Mrs. Jim Eades Jr.Kathryn & Webb EarthmanMr. & Mrs. Kevin B. EbertThomas D. Edmonds DVMMr. & Mrs. James H. Ellis IIIDan & Zita ElrodMr. Owen T. EmbryDr. & Mrs. James EttienMs. Claire EvansDr. Ann Evers & Dr. Gary

SmithEd W. Evins Jr.Tony & Shelley ExlerSteven & Katie EzellChrtistopher Farrell & Kathryn BeasleyLaurie & Ron FarrisMs. Karen A. FentressDana FerrisVince & Dorothy FesmireBilly & Donna FieldsJanie & Richard FinchDr. & Mrs. Jack FisherDoris T. FleischerNellie FolsomDr. & Mrs. Armando C.

ForondaMr. Kent T. ForwardCathy & Kent FourmanMrs. Katherine H. FoxAndrew & Mary FoxworthMs. Elizabeth A. FranksWilliam H. & Babs FreemanScott & Anita FreistatDr. Henry FusnerBill & Ginny GableMr. Anderson C. GaitherDr. & Mrs. Ronald E. GalbraithMr. & Mrs. Kevin GangawareMr. William GannMr. & Mrs. Philip GanskeMr. & Mrs. George C. GardenMr. & Mrs. Jerry GarrettAlan & Jeannie GausJennifer George

FIRST CHAIR Gifts of $250 - $499

Anonymous (24)Drs. Oran Aaronson & Shannon SnyderJudith AblonThe Rev. Dr. & Mrs. W. Robert AbsteinBen & Nancy AdamsEric & Shannon AdamsMr. George E. AlexanderDr. & Mrs. John AlgrenDr. Joseph H. AllenNewton & Burkley AllenRuth G. AllenMr. & Mrs. John AllpressAdrienne AmesWm. J. & Margery AmonetteKen & Jan AndersonNewell Anderson & Lynne McFarlandMr. & Mrs. Carlyle D. AppleMr. & Mrs. George Armistead IIIMr. Aaron ArmstrongPatricia & Jay ArmstrongTodd & Barbara ArrantsCandy Burger & Dan AshmeadThe Brian C. Austin FamilyMr. & Mrs. Gerald AverbuchDr. & Mrs. J. Kelley AveryJanet B. BaggettLawrence E. BaggettJames M. & Kim M. BaileyMs. Susie M. BairdMr. & Mrs. J. Oriol Barenys

Mr.& Mrs. James M. SohrMr. & Mrs. Ronald M. SohrMs. Maggie P. SpeightDr. & Mrs. Anderson Spickard Jr.Ms. Karen G. SroufeGloria & Paul Sternberg Jr.Dr. & Mrs. William R. StewartJean StumpfMr. Donald T. Sullivan Jr.Mr. & Mrs. James E. Summar Sr.Craig & Dianne SussmanDr. & Mrs. J. D. TaylorMr. Marcus W. ThompsonLorraine Ware & Reid Thompson

Mr. & Mrs. William D. TidwellMr. Michael P. TortoraMartha J. TrammellMonty Holmes & Van TuckerMs. Rita R. VannKathryn G. VarnellLois J. Wagner & Barbara M. LonardiMr. & Mrs. Robert J. Warner Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Mark WathenMrs. William C. Weaver IIIMrs. James A. Webb Jr.Dr. Medford S. WebsterBeth & Arville Wheeler

Mr. & Mrs. Fred WheelerMr. & Mrs. Thomas F. WhiteAlyson WidemanJoe WieckMr. & Mrs. Herbert WiesmeyerMrs. Marie Holman WigginsAdam & Laura WilczekVicki Gardine WilliamsGary & Cathy WilsonEdward & Mary E. WomackPatrick & Phaedra YachimskiMr. Payton H. YoungRoy & Ambra ZentMr. & Mrs. Glenn Zigli

Smokey Robinson & fans

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Mr. Scott A. German & Ms. Tammie ShannonEm J. GhianniMark Glazer & Ms. Cynthia StoneLinda & Joel GluckSusan T. GoodwinZachary & Martha GoodyearDr. & Mrs. Gerald S. GottererTom & Carol Ann GrahamDr. Cornelia R. GravesMr. Chris GrayMr. & Mrs. Luke GregoryMr. Michael GrillotMs. Melinda T. GrimesR. Dale & Nancy G. GrimesTeresa J. GrimesMr. & Mrs. Russell D. GroffDr. & Mrs. John D. HainsworthByron & Antoinette HaitasMs. Leigh Ann HaleScott, Kathy & Kate HallKatherine S. HallWalter H. White III & Dr. Susan Hammonds-WhiteMr. & Mrs. Harry M. HannaMr. Eric HardestyDr. John B. & Kathleen E. HarkeyCindy HarperMrs. Edith HarrisDickie & Joyce HarrisMr. & Mrs. Jay HartleyMr. James S. HartmanDr. Morel Enoch & Mr. E. Howard HarveyRobert & Nora HarveyMr. Jonathan HarwellMr. & Mrs. Gerald HausmanDavid & Judith Slayden HayesPeggy R. HaysStephen & Deborah HaysFred & Judy HelferDoug & Becky HellersonJohn Reginald HillRonald & Nancy HillMr. & Mrs. Robert C. HilmerMr. Charles R. HintermanMs. Christina M. HirschDr. & Mrs. Robert L. HodumMr. & Mrs. Donald HofeJim & Kim HolbrookAurelia L. HoldenMr. & Mrs. James G. HollemanWilliam HollingsMr. James N. HollingsworthCatherine J. HolsenMr. & Mrs. Robert E. HooperDrs. Richard T. & Paula C. HoosDr. & Mrs. Robert W. HouseAllen, Lucy & Paul HoviousSamuel H. HowardMs. Edith B. HudsonDr. & Mrs. Louis C. Huesmann IIThe Hunt Family FoundationMichael & Evelyn HyattMr. Narum HyattDr. & Mrs. Roger IresonDr. Anna M. JacksonFrances C. JacksonHaynie & Patsy JacobsMr. & Mrs. Alan R. JavorckyMr. Richard W. JettJohn T. & Kerrie JohnsonSusan & Evan JohnstonDr. Amos Jones Jr.

Mr. Patrick D. JonesDr. & Mrs. Herman J. KaplanMrs. Michel G. KaplanMrs. Cynthia A. KeathleyJeffrey & Layle KenyonMr. Jason KeslerBill & Becca KillebrewMr. & Mrs. Monty KimbleKathleen & Don KingLouise & Joe KitchellGeorge McCulloch & Linda KnowlesMr. & Mrs. Rick KoelzDavid & Judy KolzowDr. Valentina Kon & Dr. Jeffrey L. HymesSanford & Sandra KrantzTim KyneMr. & Mrs. John H. LairdDr. & Mrs. Jeffrey LawrenceMr. & Mrs. Joseph A. LawrenceMrs. Douglas E. LeachRob & Julia LedyardDorothy & Jim LeschRalph G. LeverettJohn & Marge LewisMr. & Mrs. Monty S. LigonMr. & Mrs. Ronald S. LigonMack & Katherine LinbaughRobert A. LivingstonDr. & Mrs. John L. LloydKeltner W. & Debra S. LockeJean & Steve LockeKim & Mike LomisFrances & Eugene LotochinskiDavid & Nancy LouckyThomas H. LoventhalKenyatta & Tracey LovettJ. Edgar LoweMr. & Mrs. Jay LowenthalMs. Frances B. LumbardMr. & Mrs. James C. Lundy Jr.Patrick & Betty LynchSharron LyonHerman & Dee MaassDr. & Mrs. Joe MacCurdyMr. John MadduxDr. Mark A. Magnuson & Ms. Lucile HouseworthMr. & Mrs. Robert A. MaierMr. Cosmin E. MajorsMr. Mikal MalikAudrea & Helga ManeschiDr. & Mrs. N. H. Mann Jr.Sheila Mann

David & Leah MarcusSam & Betty MarneyDr. & Mrs. Harry D. MarshMr. Henry MartinDr. & Mrs. Raymond S. MartinAbraham, Lesley & Jonathan MarxMr. & Mrs. Brian S. MastersonSue & Herb MatherMr. Jimmy R. MattinglyMargery Mayer & Carolyn OehlerMr. & Mrs. John D. McAlisterJoanne Wallace McCallChris & John McCarthyKathleen McCrackenMary & John McCulloughBob McDill & Jennifer KimballEd & Carla McDougleDr. & Mrs. James B. McKee Jr.Mr. Brian L. McKinneyDr. & Mrs. Timothy E. McNutt Sr.Sam & Sandra McSeveneyMr. & Mrs. Michael R. McWherterMs. Virginia J. MeeceRonald S. MeersJanis MeinertDrs. Manfred & Susan MenkingSara MeredithMs. Brinkley MeyersSherree MeyersMr. & Mrs. Mike HannoldDr. & Mrs. Philip G. MillerDr. Ron V. MillerDr. Fernando Miranda & Dr. Patricia Bihl-MirandaMr. Michael MishuMr. Hershel MitchellMr. Steve C. MitchellMr. & Mrs. Steven MollDr. Michael F. Montijo & Mrs. Patricia A. Jamieson- MontijoMr. & Mrs. Jonathan MorphettLynn MorrowMr. Gary MorseDr. Matthew K. MostellerMr. & Mrs. B. Dwayne Murray Jr.Mr. & Mrs. J. William MyersAllen & Janice NaftilanMs. Carolyn Heer NashDr. Turner NasheMr. Fred S. NelsonDr. & Mrs. Harold NevelsDr. John Newman & Ms. Rebecca LyfordAl Nisley

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Elizabeth Broyhill and Elizabeth Dennis with Sandra Lipman

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Judy M. NortonMr. & Mrs. Michael NowlinAnn & Denis* O'DayDr. & Mrs. Wills OglesbyHunt & Debbye OliverMr. & Mrs. Jack OmanPhilip & Carolyn OrrWayne OverbyDr. & Mrs. Ronald E. OverfieldFrank & Pamela OwsleyTerry & Wanda PalusDr. Fritz F. ParlClint ParrishLisa & Doug Pasto-CrosbyMr. Pat PatrickMr. & Mrs. Gary K. PattersonJohn & Lori PearceCharlie & Connally PenleyAnne & Neiland PenningtonDr. & Mrs. A. F. Peterson Jr.Claude Petrie Jr.Charles & Mary PhyMr. & Mrs. James R. Pickel Jr.Mr. Maurice W. PinsonGail PluckerPhil & Dot PonderMr. Jason E. PooleMs. Elizabeth M. PotocsnakMr. Sean PowerCammy PriceMr. & Mrs. Thomas PriesmeyerAnn PushinMr. Daniel L. Rader & Mrs. Leah R. Jensen-RaderEdria & David RagosinMr. & Mrs. Ross RainwaterMr. & Mrs. William C. RandleRandy & Carol RawlingsBuford L. & Ernestine S. ReedDon Reed & Lynne WallmanMr. & Mrs. David R. ReevesDr. William M. RegenoldLee Allen ReynoldsAl & Laura RhodesMr. Cliff N. RhodesMr. & Mrs. Larry V. RhodesBarbara RichardsDon & Connie RichardsonMr. & Mrs. Michael RichardsonMrs. Jane H. RichmondMrs. Paul E. RidgeMargaret RiegelMr. George RitzenMr. Steven B. RobertsonFran C. RogersDr. & Mrs. Bruce D. Rogers

Judith R. RoneyMr. Aaron D. RosburgRodney & Lynne RosenblumEdgar & Susan RothschildJan & Ed RoutonMr. & Mrs. Robert RutherfordJudith Ann SachsMr. Stephen SachsMr. Douglas L. SadtlerRon & Lynn SamuelsDr. Glynis Sandler & Dr. Martin SandlerJack & Diane SassonWilliam B. & Toni C. Saunders

Mrs. Thomas W. Schlater IIIMolly & Richard SchneiderDrs. Carl & Wendy SchofieldJack SchuettDr. & Mrs. Stephen J. SchultenoverMr. Devin SchultzMr. & Mrs. Chuck SelfGene & Linda ShadeRichard & Marilyn ShadingerMr. & Mrs. Michael E. ShawMr. Paul ShearerMrs. Jack W. ShepherdDr. John O. SimmonsKeith & Kay SimmonsMrs. Wilson SimsDr. & Mrs. Manuel SirAlice SiskPamela SixfinAshley N. SkinnerMr. Wesley A. SkinnerDr. & Mrs. David SloskyCharles R. Smith & Vernita Hood-SmithDallas & Jo Ann SmithJohn & Jane SmithMrs. Rebecca SmithSusan K. Smith & Joe StegemannRuth & William SmithElaine & Robert SmythMr. James E. Snider Jr.Dr. Susan Snyder & Mr. William SnyderMarc & Lorna SobleNan E. SpellerTom SpiggleMrs. Randolph C. St. JohnTabor Stamper - KHS AmericaCaroline Stark & Lane Denson*

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Lelan & Yolanda StatomDennis & Billie Jean StephenMr. & Mrs. Lemuel Stevens Jr.Richard & Jennifer StevensCAPT & Mrs. Charles E. Stewart Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Cyril StewartBob & Tammy StewartTom & Gayle StroudMr. & Mrs. Samuel E. Stumpf, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. William C. SuchmanGayle SullivanDewayne & Kristy SullivanFrank Sutherland & Natilee DuningMr. & Mrs. Herbert SvennevikMs. Jeanette TatmanMr. & Mrs. Eugene Te SelleDr. Paul E. TeschanDr. & Mrs. Edward L. ThackstonMr. & Mrs. Richard TheissMr. Gilbert ThibedoreRichard & Shirley ThrallMr. Dwight D. ThrashMr. & Mrs. Robert W. ThurmanScott & Nesrin TiftMs. Shari L. TishMr. Lewid J. TomikoMr. Dan TonelsonLeon TonelsonMr. & Mrs. Ray TroopMila & Bill TruanMr. & Mrs. Timothy TrueMr. Phillip TrustyRichard, Kimiko, Jennifer & Lindsey TuckerMr. & Mrs. John A. TurnbullMs. Junita TurnipseedRev. and Mrs. Jan P. Van EysMr. James N. VickersKimberly Dawn VincentMs. Lucy A. ViscegliaMs. Maria VossMr. Matthew D. WardleMs. Leslie P. WareLawrence & Karen WashingtonDr. Adam E. WatkinsGayle & David WatsonShirley Marie WattsFrank & Jane WcisloH. Martin & Joyce WeingartnerDr. & Mrs. Matthew B. WeingerMs. Karen L. WeissmanMr. Kevin L. WelshDr. J. J. WendelJoni WerthanFranklin & Helen WestbrookLinda & Raymond WhiteMr. & Mrs. Jeff WhiteakerMr. Michael T. Whitler & Mr. Mark WeberJonna & Doug WhitmanMs. Eleanor D. WhitworthMs. Judith B. WiensRoger M. WiesmeyerMr. & Mrs. Spencer WigginsMr. & Mrs. Donald R. WilliamsJerry & Ernie WilliamsFrank & Marcy WilliamsMr. & Mrs. Harry E. WilliamsJeremy S. WilliamsJohn & Anne WilliamsDr. Joyce E. WilliamsAmos & Etta WilsonTommy & Carol Ann WilsonThe Wing FamilyMs. Sandra WiscarsonScott & Ellen WolfeMr. Robert H. Walle Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Wood Sr.Mr. Michael T. Woods

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Mr. Peter Wooten & Ms. Renata SotoMr. Howard F. WrightGary & Marlys WulfsbergKay & Randall WyattPam & Tom WyllyVivian R. & Richard A. WynnMs. Na YangShu-Zheng & Li Li YangDr. Mary YarbroughMr. & Mrs. Samuel C. YeagerDonna B. YurdinMr. & Mrs. Michael A. ZibartJames & Candice Zimmermann

HONORARY In honor of Bette BerryIn honor of Darlene BoswellIn honor of Marion P. CouchIn honor of Thomas Wynne CowanIn honor of Jeanne CrossnoeIn honor of George* & Jo Hall's

58 years of marriageIn honor of Martha IngramIn honor of the marriage of Michael Thigpen & Kimhoung Nhep

MEMORIALIn memory of Carole Slate AdamsIn memory of Mrs. Evalina AndrewsIn memory of Pauline BeckerIn memory of Jessica BloomIn memory of Mrs. Mary Jane BlountIn Memory of Rachelle BuchananIn memory of Steven A. ClarkIn memory of Scott Clayton, CLUIn memory of Mrs. May DrummondIn memory of Mr. Charles K. EversIn memory of Mr. Patrick Francis HamillIn memory of Mr. John Bachman HardcastleIn memory of T. Earl Hinton & Nora Smith HintonFrom Hutt Family in memory of Dr. James Irvin Hudson Jr.In memory of Dr. James I. Hudson Jr.In memory of Virgil Davis HuntIn memory of Lawrence LevineIn memory of Jerry LongIn memory of Katherine Ramage LoveIn memory of Volker MarschallIn memory of Mr. J. Patrick MaxwellIn memory of Lil McAdamsIn memory of Cate MyerIn memory of Mildred J. OonkIn memory of Willis PageIn memory of Jean PinsonIn memory of Babs ReinfeldIn memory of William SatterwhiteIn memory of Mr. Earl ScruggsIn memory of Mr. Gerald E. SheridanIn memory of Martha B. ShortIn memory of Martin E. SimmonsIn memory of Mrs. Adele Youngberg SmithIn memory of Lester SpeyerIn memory of Mr. James Albert SteinIn memory of Joe TobiasIn memory of Fred ViehmannIn memory of Dr. David L. WalkerIn memory of Mary Lee Watson

*denotes donors who are deceased

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the nashville symphony is deeply grateful to the following corporations, foundations and government agencies that support its concert season and its servicesto the community through generous contributions to the Annual fund. donors as of february 6, 2013:

COrpOrATiONS, FOuNdATiONS & gOvErNmENT AgENCiES

PRINCIPAL PLAYERS Gifts of $25,000+

PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL Gifts of $75,000+

SEASON PRESENTERS Gifts of $100,000+

The Martin Foundation

GOVERNMENT

Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County

Mayor Karl F. Dean Metropolitan Council

Mike Curb FamilyFoundation

TM

DIRECTORS’ ASSOCIATES Gifts of $50,000+

N A S H V I L L EC O N V E N T I O N & V I S I T O R S B U R E A U

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ORCHESTRA PARTNERS Gifts of $10,000 - $24,999Caterpillar Financial ServicesChaseCoca-Cola Bottling Company ConsolidatedAnn Hardeman and Combs L. Fort FoundationAnn and Gordon Getty FoundationGriffin TechnologyHampton Inn & Suites Downtown NashvilleHearn Charitable FoundationLifeWay WorshipNeal & Harwell, PLCNordstrom Community GivingPublix Super Markets Charities, Inc.Mary C. Ragland FoundationRyman Hospitality Properties FoundationWells Fargo

ARTISTIC UNDERWRITERSGifts of $5,000- $9,999Aladdin Industries, LLCBDOChet Atkins Music Education Fund of the Community Foundation of Middle TennesseeThe Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc.Corrections Corporation of AmericaCracker Barrel FoundationSamuel M. Fleming FoundationLandis B. Gullett Charitable Lead Annuity TrustInterior Design Services, Inc.Nashville Predators FoundationOSHi FlowersPwCThe Elizabeth Craig Weaver Proctor

Charitable FoundationTennessee Christian Medical Foundation

BUSINESS PARTNERGifts of $2,500 - $4,999AmSurgBioVentures, Inc.Blevins, Inc.Cassidy TurleyCity of BrentwoodConsolidated Pipe & Supply Co., Inc.Delta Dental of TennesseeFirst Baptist NashvilleFirst Trust PortfoliosSchoenstein & CompanyTennsco CorporationTravelink American Express Travel

BUSINESS COUNCIL Gifts of $1,500 - $2,499Alessio InternationalAT&TButterfly Meadows Inn & FarmCapWealth Advisors LLCCarter Haston Real Estate Services Inc.The Crichton GroupGannett Foundation/The TennesseanHarmon GroupThe Hendrix FoundationJ. Alexander's CorporationLexus of NashvilleReliant BankUniversal Lighting TechnologiesWASCO, Inc.

BUSINESS LEADER Gifts of $1,000 - $1,499Anonymous (1)A-1 Appliance CompanyEnfinity Engineering, LLCMarylee Chaski Charitable CorporationDZL Management CompanyRD Plastics Co., Inc.Richard Fletcher of 511 Group Inc.Sales Executives Professional RecruitmentWilliam Morris Endeavor EntertainmentWomen's Philharmonic Advocacy

BUSINESS ASSOCIATES Gifts of $500 - $999AARP TennesseeADEX! HomesellersBlack Box Network ServicesR. H. Boyd Publishing CorporationBMIThe Buzz 102.9 / The Game 102.5 / The LIGHT 102.1CedarStone BankD.F. Chase, Inc.Cushman & Wakefield | CornerstoneHaber CorporationJ & J Interiors, Inc.Loews Vanderbilt HotelKappa Lambda Omega Chapter, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.Northgate Gallery, Inc.Quanta Computer NashvilleSESAC, Inc.Stansell Electric Company, Inc.Stites & Harbison, PLLCSysco NashvilleVolunteer Barge & Transport, Inc.

BUSINESS FRIENDGifts of $300 - $499V. Alexander & Co., Inc.V. Alexander & Co., Inc.Batten & Shaw, Inc.CB Richard Ellis, Inc.Courtyard by Marriott DowntownDataMarketing Network, Inc.Frank C. Davis & AssociatesDemos' Steak & Spaghetti HouseFreeman Webb Company Realtors, Inc.Horrell Realty and InvestmentsHoskins & Company, P.C.Hunter MarineImport Auto Maintenance, LLCINDUSCOJack Cawthon/ Jack's Bar B QueJesse Lee Jones of Robert's Western WorldKappa Lambda Omega Chapter, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.National Toxicology Specialists Inc.Riley Warnock & Jacobson PLCServitech Industries, Inc.Sharing Spree LLCTrickett HondaMonte Turner/Turner and Associates Realty, Inc.

IN-KINDAARP TennesseeAmerican AirlinesAmerican TuxedoCrowe Horwath LLPDulce DessertsThe Glover GroupHampton Inn & Suites Downtown Nashville, 4th AvenueStephen M. EmahiserHilton Nashville DowntonMs. Sally M. LevineLipman BrothersMcQuiddy PrintingNashville Symphony Volunteer AuxiliaryOSHi Floral Décor StudioThe Pinnacle at Symphony PlacePremier Parking of TennesseeMr. John R. Sanders

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the nashville symphony wishes to acknowledge and thank the following individuals, foundations and corporations for their commitment to the symphony. this list recognizes donors who contributed $10,000 or more to one of the symphony’s endowment or capital campaigns. these capital campaigns make it possible to ensure a sustainable future for a nationally recognized orchestra worthy of music city.

$1M+ AmSouth FoundationAndrea Waitt Carlton Family

FoundationThe Ayers FoundationBank of AmericaAlvin & Sally Beaman Foundation Lee A. Beaman, TrusteeMr. & Mrs. Dennis C. BottorffAnn* & Monroe* CarellCaterpillar Inc. & Its EmployeesThe Community Foundation of Middle

TennesseeMike Curb Family FoundationCaremarkRxGreg & Collie Daily

Dollar General CorporationLaura Turner DugasThe Frist FoundationAmy Grant & Vince GillPatricia & H. Rodes HartMr. & Mrs. Spencer HaysHCAIngram Charitable FundLee Ann & Orrin IngramThe Martin FoundationEllen Harrison MartinMr. & Mrs. R. Clayton McWhorterThe Memorial FoundationMetropolitan Government of Nashville

& Davidson County

Anne* & Dick RagsdaleMr. & Mrs. Ben R. RechterEstate of Walter B & Huldah Cheek

SharpState of TennesseeMargaret & Cal Turner Jr.James Stephen Turner Charitable

FoundationVanderbilt UniversityThe Vandewater Family FoundationMs. Johnna Benedict WatsonColleen & Ted WelchThe Anne Potter Wilson Foundation

Mr. Tom BlackDr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist, Jr.Giarratana Development, LLCCarl & Connie HaleyMr. & Mrs. J. Michael Hayes

HCA Foundation, in honor of Dr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. McCabe Jr.Regions BankMr. & Mrs. James C. Seabury III

Estate of Anita StallworthSunTrust BankTennessee Arts CommissionLaura Anne Turner

American Constructors, Inc.Barbara & Jack BovenderAmerican Retirement Corp.Connie & Tom CigarranE.B.S. FoundationGordon & Shaun Inman

Harry & Jan JacobsonThe Judy & Noah Liff FoundationRobert Straus LipmanMrs. Jack C. Massey*Mr. & Mrs. Henry McCallLynn & Ken Melkus

Richard L. & Sharalena MillerNational Endowment for the ArtsJustin & Valere Potter FoundationIrvin & Beverly SmallAnne H. & Robert K. Zelle

Mr. & Mrs. Dale AllenPhyllis & Ben* AlperAndrews Cadillac/Land Rover NashvilleAveritt ExpressBarbara B. & Michael W. BartonBellSouthJulie & Frank BoehmRichard & Judith BrackenMr. & Mrs. James C. Bradford Jr.Boult, Cummings, Conners & Berry, PLCThe Charles R. Carroll FamilyFred J. CassettyMr.* & Mrs. Michael J. ChasanoffLeslie Sharp Christodoulopoulos

Charitable TrustCLARCORMr. & Mrs. William S. CochranMr. & Mrs. Thomas Fite ConeCorrections Corporation of AmericaEstate of Dorothy Parkes CoxJanine, Ben, John & Jenny CundiffDeloitte & Touche LLPThe Rev. Canon & Mrs. Fred DettwillerMarty & Betty DickensMichael D. & Carol E. Ennis FamilyAnnette & Irwin* EskindThe Jane & Richard Eskind & Family

Foundation

The M. Stratton Foster Charitable Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Steven B. FranklinFront Brown Todd LLCGannett Foundation / The TennesseanDr. Priscilla Partridge de Garcia & Dr.

Pedro E. GarciaGordon & Constance GeeGenesco Inc.Mr. & Mrs. Joel C. GordonGuardsmark, LLCBilly Ray & Joan* HearnThe Hendrix FoundationMr. & Mrs. Henry W. Hooker & FamilyMr. & Mrs. Elliott Warner JonesWalter & Sarah KnestrickESaDesign Team Earl Swensson Associates Inc. I.C. Thomasson Associates Inc. KSi/Structural EngineersLattimore, Black, Morgan & Cain PCMr. & Mrs. Fred Wiehl LazenbySally M. LevineAndrew Woodfin Miller FoundationMorgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.Nashville Symphony ChorusNashville Symphony Orchestra LeaguePat & John W. Nelley Jr.

O’Charley’sPartnership 2000Bonnie & David PerdueMr. & Mrs. Philip Maurice PfefferMr. & Mrs. Dale W. PolleyMary C. Ragland FoundationThe John M. Rivers Jr. Foundation Inc.Carol & John RochfordMr. & Mrs. Alex A. RogersAnne & Joseph Russell & FamilyDaniel & Monica ScokinBill & Sharon SheriffMr. & Mrs. Martin E. SimmonsLuke & Susan SimonsMr. & Mrs. Michael W. SmithBarbara & Lester* SpeyerThe Starr FoundationHope & Howard StringerLouis B. & Patricia C. Todd Jr.Lillias & Fred ViehmannThe Henry Laird Smith FoundationMr. & Mrs. E.W. WendellMr. David M. WildsMr. & Mrs. W. Ridley Wills IIIMr. & Mrs. David K. Wilson

$500,000+

$250,000+

$100,000+

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$15,000+

Adams and Reese / Stokes Bartholomew LLP

American AirlinesAmerican General Life & Accident

Insurance CompanyBaker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell &

BerkowitzJ B & Carylon BakerDr. & Mrs. T.B. Boyd IIIWilliam H. Braddy IIIDr. Ian & Katherine* BrickMr. & Mrs.* Martin S. Brown Sr.Michael & Jane Ann CainMike Curb/Curb Records Inc.The Danner FoundationDee & Jerald DoochinErnst & Young

Mr. & Mrs. David S. EwingEzell Foundation / Purity FoundationMr.* & Mrs. Sam M. FlemingIn Memory of Kenneth SchermerhornLetty-Lou Gilbert, Joe Gilbert & FamilyJames C. Gooch & Jennie P. SmithEdward A. & Nancy GoodrichBill & Ruth Ann Leach HarnischHastings Architecture Associates, LLCDr. & Mrs.* George W. Holcomb Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Clay T. JacksonKPMG LLPMrs. Heloise Werthan KuhnJohn T. LewisGilbert Stroud MerrittMr. & Mrs. David K. MorganMusicians of the Nashville Symphony

Anne & Peter NeffCano & Esen OzgenerPonder & Co.Eric Raefsky, M.D. & Ms. Victoria HeilDelphine & Ken RobertsRo’s Oriental Rugs, Inc.Mrs. Dan C. Rudy*Mary Ruth & Bob ShellMr. & Mrs. Richard SpeerStites & Harbison, PLLCMr. & Mrs. Bruce D. SullivanAlan D. ValentineWaller Lansden Dortch & Davis, LLPEstate of Christine Glenn WebbDavid & Gail WilliamsNicholas S. Zeppos & Lydia A. Howarth

AMSURGFamily of Kenneth SchermerhornThe Bank of NashvilleBass, Berry & Sims PLCTom & Wendy BeasleyThe Bernard Family FoundationThe Honorable Philip Bredesen & Ms.

Andrea ConteThe Very Rev. Robert E. & Linda M.

BrodieMr.* & Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl IIIMr. & Mrs. Frank M. BumsteadCommunity Counselling Service Co.,

Inc.Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Cook Jr.Doug & Sondra CruickshanksMr. & Mrs. Robert V. DaleGail & Ted DeDeeIn Memory of Ann F. EisensteinEnco Materials, Inc./Wilber Sensing Jr.,

Chair EmeritusNancy Leach & Bill HoskinsJohn & Carole FergusonEstate of Dudley C. Fort

Mr. & Mrs. F. Tom Foster Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Keith D. FrazierJohn & Lorelee GawaluckGiancarlo & Shirley GuerreroMr. & Mrs. James Earl HastingsHawkins Partners, Inc. Landscape

ArchitectsNeil & Helen HemphillHilton Nashville DowntownIn Memory of Ellen Bowers HofsteadHudson Family FoundationIroquois Capital Group, LLCJohn F. & Jane Berry JacquesMercedes E. JonesMr. & Mrs. Randall L. KinnardKraftCPAs PLLCEstate of Barbara J. KuhnMr. & Mrs. Lawrence M. LipmanThe Howard Littlejohn FamilyThe Loventhal and Jones FamiliesMimsye & Leon MayKevin P. & Deborah A. McDermottRock & Linda MorphisCarole & Ed Nelson

Nissan North America, Inc.Odom’s Tennessee Pride Sausage, Inc. Larry D. Odom, Chairman/CEOHal N. & Peggy S. PenningtonCeleste Casey* & James Hugh Reed III*Renasant BankJan & Stephen S. RivenLavona & Clyde RussellDr. & Mrs. Michael H. SchatzleinKenneth D. Schermerhorn*Lucy & Wilbur SensingNelson & Sheila ShieldsMichael & Lisa ShmerlingJoanne & Gary SlaughterDoug & Nan SmithHans & Nancy StabellAnn & Robert H. StreetMr. & Mrs. William J. TyneWashington Foundation, Inc.Mr. & Mrs. W. Ridley Wills IIMr. & Mrs. Joseph J. WimberlyJanet & Alan YuspehShirley Zeitlin

Kent & Donna AdamsRuth Crockarell AdkinsAladdin Industries, LLCAmerican Brokerage Company, Inc.American Paper & Twine Co.Mr. & Mrs. William F. AndrewsDr. Alice A. & Mr. Richard ArnemannMr. & Mrs. J. Hunter AtkinsSue G. AtkinsonMr. & Mrs. Albert BalestiereBaring IndustriesBrenda C. BassRussell W. BatesJames S. & Jane C. BeardAllison & John BeasleyRuth Bennett & Steve CroxallFrank & Elizabeth BerklacichAnn & Jobe* BernardMr. & Mrs. Boyd Bogle IIIJohn Auston BridgesMr. & Mrs. Roger T. Briggs Jr.Cathy & Martin Brown Jr.Grennebaum Doll & McDonald PLLCPatricia & Manny* BuzzellMr. & Mrs. Gerald G. CalhounMr. & Mrs. William H. CammackTerry W. ChandlerNeil & Emily ChristyChase Cole

Dr. & Mrs. Lindsey W. Cooper Sr.Mr. & Mrs. Andrew D. CrawfordBarbara & Willie K. DavisMr. & Mrs. Arthur C. DeVooghtMr. & Mrs. Matthew H. Dobson VMike & Carolyn EdwardsMr. John W. Eley & Ms. Donna J. ScottSylvia & Robert H. ElmanMartin & Alice EmmettLarry P. & Diane M. EnglishDr. & Mrs. Jeffrey B. EskindBob & Judy FisherKaren & Eugene C. FlemingMr. & Mrs. H. Lee Barfield IICathey & Wilford FuquaMr. & Mrs. Paul J. GaetoThe Grimstad & Stream FamiliesHeidtke & Company, Inc.Robert C. HiltonDr. & Mrs. Stephen P. HumphreyFranklin Y. Hundley Jr.Margie & Nick* HunterJoseph HuttsMr. & Mrs. T.J. JacksonMr. & Mrs. David B. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Russell A. Jones Jr.John Kelingos Education FundBeatriz Perez & Paul KnollmaierPamela & Michael Koban Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth G. LangoneRichard & Delorse LewisRobert A. LivingstonFrances & Eugene LotochinskiMr.* & Mrs. Robert C.H. Mathews, Jr.Betsy Vinson McInnesJack & Lynn MayMr. & Mrs. James Lee McGregorDr. & Mrs. Alexander C. McLeodMR. & Mrs. Robert E. McNeilly IIIDr. Arthur McLeod MellorMary & Max MerrellDonald J. & Hillary L. MeyersChristopher & Patricia MixonNewsChannel 5 NetworkSusan & Rick OliverPiedmont Natural GasDavid & Adrienne PistonCharles H. Potter Jr.Joseph & Edna PresleyNancy M. Falls & Neil M. PriceMr. & Mrs. Charles R. PruettLinda & Art RebrovickMr. & Mrs. Doyle R. RippeeDr. & Mrs. Clifford RobersonMr. & Mrs. Walter M. Robinson Jr.Anne & Charles RoosRon RossmannJoan Blum Shayne

$50,000+

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Anonymous (2)Barbara B. & Michael W. BartonJulie & Frank BoehmMr. & Mrs. Dennis C BottorffCharles W. CagleDonna & Steven ClarkDr. Cliff Cockerham & Dr. Sherry CummingsMrs. Barbara J. ConderMr. & Mrs. Roy CovertWilliam M. & Mildred P.* DuncanDeborah Faye DuncanAnnette & Irwin* EskindJudy & Tom FosterDr. Priscilla Partridge de Garcia & Dr. Pedro E. GarciaJames C. Gooch Ed & Nancy GoodrichBilly Ray HearnJudith Hodges

Judith S. HumphreysMartha R. IngramElliott Warner Jones &

Marilyn Lee JonesAnne T. KnauffHeloise Werthan KuhnSally M. LevineJohn T. LewisTodd M. LiebergenClare* & Samuel LoventhalMrs. Ernestine M. LynfootEllen Harrison MartinDr. Arthur McLeod MellorCynthia & Richard MorinAnne T. & Peter L. NeffMr. & Mrs. Michael NowlinPamela K. & Philip Maurice PfefferJoseph PresleyEric Raefsky, MD & Victoria HeilDavid & Edria Ragosin

Mr. & Mrs. Ben R. RechterFran C. RogersKristi Lynn SeehaferMr.* & Mrs. Martin E. SimmonsIrvin & Beverly SmallMary & K.C. SmytheDr. & Mrs. W. Anderson Spickard Jr.Dr. John B. Thomison Sr. Louis B. ToddJudy & Steve TurnerAlan D. ValentineMrs. Johnna Benedict WatsonDr. Colleen Conway Welch &

Mr. Ted Houston WelchBarbara & Bud ZanderShirley ZeitlinAnne H. & Robert K.* Zelle

*deceased

leAving A legAcy, building A future

When Schermerhorn Symphony Center opened to the public in 2006, we envisioned our concert hall serving many generations for decades to come. If you have that same vision for the Nashville Symphony, then a planned gift can become your ultimate demonstration of commitment and support. You can help us plan for our future — and your own — through this creative approach to philanthropy and estate planning, which allows you to make a significant contribution to the Nashville Symphony while also enjoying income and tax benefits for you and your family.

Great orchestras, like all great cultural institutions throughout history, are gifts to posterity; they are built and bestowed to succeeding generations by visionary philanthropists.

to find out more about planned giving opportunities, please visit nashvillesymphony.org/plannedgiving, or contact hayden pruett, major gifts officer, at 615.687.6615

Mr. & Mrs. Irby C. Simpkins, Jr.Patti & Brian SmallwoodMurray & Hazel SomervilleSouthwind Health Partners®The Grimstad & Stream FamiliesDr. Steve A. Hyman & Mark Lee TaylorJohn B. & Elva ThomisonMr. & Mrs. Marshall Trammell Jr.

Eli & Deborah TullisMr. & Mrs. James M. UsdanLouise B. Wallace FoundationMr.* & Mrs. George W. WeesnerAnn & Charles* WellsIn Memory of Leah Rose B. WerthanMr.* & Mrs.* Albert WerthanBetty & Bernard Werthan Foundation

Olin West, Jr. Charitable Lead TrustMr. & Mrs. Toby S. WiltDr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. WolfeDr. Artmas L. WorthyMr. & Mrs. Julian Zander Jr.

n A S h v I l l e Sy M p h o n y legAcy society

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1936 Delahaye 135M Figoni and Falaschi Competition Coupe. Jim Patterson/The Patterson Collection, Louisville, KY. Photograph © 2013 Peter Harholdt

J U N E 1 4 – S E P T E M B E R 1 5 , 2 0 1 3

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restrooms & WAter fountAinsrestrooms and water fountains are available on the lounge level, located one floor below the main lobby; on the east and west sides of the founders and balcony levels; and outside the mike curb music education hall on the founders level. located on the lounge level, unisex restrooms are available for disabled guests needing special assistance.

coAt checkto enhance the acoustical experience inside laura turner concert hall, guests are invited to check their coats at one of several complimentary coat-check locations on each seating level. the most convenient is on the lounge level, located one floor below the main lobby.

cAmerAs, cell phones & other devicescameras or audio recording equipment may not be brought into any space where a rehearsal, performance or lecture is taking place. cellular phones, beepers and watch alarms must be turned off prior to the start of any event.

lAte seAtingAs a courtesy to the performers and other audience members, each performance will have designated breaks when latecomers are seated. those arriving after a performance begins will be asked to remain outside the entrance door nearest their ticketed seats until the appropriate break.

volunteerthe nashville symphony offers a wide variety of opportunities to engage volunteers from nashville and surrounding communities. tasks include providing office support, assisting on concert nights and much more. you’ll have the opportunity to meet fellow music lovers and to help out behind the scenes at the schermerhorn! volunteers can customize their schedules to fit their lifestyles. for more information, visit nashvillesymphony.org/volunteer.

nAshville symphony orchestrA leAguethe nashville symphony orchestra league (nsol) is a membership-driven organization committed to supporting the work of the nashville symphony. members help make a difference in our community by assisting with the nashville symphony’s music education programs, presenting pre-concert talks, providing administrative support to the symphony spring fashion show and more. for more information, visit nashvillesymphony.org/nsol.

crescendo clubthe crescendo club is a newly launched group of community leaders, philanthropists and music enthusiasts, ages 21 to 40-ish, who are interested in supporting the nashville symphony by participating in unique social events, fundraising initiatives and other music educational activities. for more information, visit nashvillesymphony.org/crescendoclub.

nAshville symphony chorushave you got an urge to sing? consider joining the nashville symphony chorus! now numbering more than 130 voices in concert, the chorus performs at least twice each season as part of the nashville symphony’s suntrust classical series, in addition to handel’s messiah each december. for more information, including how to audition, visit nashvillesymphony.org/nashvillesymphonychorus.

VISTING THE SCHERMERHORN

GET INVOLVED!

guest I n F o r M AT I o n

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TICKET SALES

HOW MAY WE ASSIST YOU?

PARKING & TRANSPORTATIONNEW! FREE PARKING!New for the 2012/13 season, FREE parking is available in Lot R at LP Field, with shuttles running to and from the lot for just $3 per person roundtrip. This shuttle service is available for all SunTrust Classical, Bank of America Pops and Jazz Series concerts, along with many special events. For more information, call our Box Office at 615.687.6400.

PARKING AT THE PINNACLELocated directly across Third Avenue from the Schermerhorn, the Pinnacle at Symphony Place offers Symphony patrons pre-paid parking at a discount! To purchase, please call 615.687.6401.

VALETValet parking, provided by Parking Management Company, is available on Symphony Place, on the north side of the building between Third and Fourth avenues. We also offer pre-paid valet parking; for more details, call 615.687.6401.

CHAUFFEURED TRANSPORTATIONOfficial transportation provider for the Nashville Symphony, Grand Avenue offers town cars, sedans, limousines and bus transport for individuals and groups of all sizes. To help drive the spirit and vi-tality of Middle Tennessee, the Grand Gives Back program contributes a portion of proceeds from every transaction to community nonprofits. To learn more, email [email protected] or call 615.714.5466. Mention the code “sym-phony1” when making your reservation, and the Nashville Symphony will receive a portion of the proceeds.

CONCERT CONCIERGEHave a question, request or comment? Please visit our Concert Concierge, which is available to help you with anything you might need during your visit. Located in the Main Lobby, Concert Concierge is open through the end of intermission.

SERVICES FOR GUESTS WITH DISABILITIESSchermerhorn Symphony Center has been carefully designed to be barrier-free and meets or exceeds all criteria established by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). All public spaces, restrooms, meeting rooms, offices, backstage dressing rooms and orchestra lounge, and production control rooms will accommodate performers, staff and guests with disabilities. Interior signage and all elevators make use of Braille lettering for directional signs in both public and backstage areas, including all room signs.

An infrared hearing system is available for guests who are hearing impaired. Headsets are available at no charge on a first-come, first-served basis from the coat-check area on the Lounge Level, and from the Concert Concierge.

Accessible and companion seating are available at all seating and price levels with excellent acoustics and sight lines to the stage. Transfer seating is also available to allow guests in wheelchairs to transfer easily to seats in the hall. Please arrange in advance for accessible seating by calling a customer service representative at 615.687.6400.

EMERGENCY MESSAGESGuests expecting urgent calls may leave their name and exact seat information (seating level, door number, row and seat number) with any usher. Anyone needing to reach guests during an event may call the Security Desk at 615.687.6610.

LOST AND FOUNDPlease check with the House Manager’s office for any items that may have been left in the building. The phone number for Lost and Found is 615.687.6450.

The Box Office is on the Fourth Avenue side of the building closest to Symphony Place. Tickets may be purchased with MasterCard, VISA, American Express, Discover, cash or local personal checks. Limited 15-minute parking is available on Fourth Avenue just outside the Box Office.

Regular Hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday

Hours on Concert Days: 10 a.m. to intermission Monday-Saturday Call for hours on SundayTickets are also available by visiting NashvilleSymphony.org or by phoning the Box Office at 615.687.6400.

CAN’T MAKE A CONCERT?If you cannot attend a concert, exchanges must be made at least 10 business days prior to the perfor-mance date; otherwise, you may donate your tickets for resale. You may also choose to put the value of your tickets on account no later than 10 business days prior to the performance. On-account money may be used for any concert in which we are allow-ing exchanges; please contact your Patron Services Specialist for details or contact the box office at 615.687.6400.

GUEST I N F O R M AT I O N

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buy TIcKeTS AT:NashvilleSymphony.org

615.687.6400CLASSICAL SERIES

Artwork by Lesley Patterson-Marx, a printmaker and mixed-media artist living in Nashville, Tennessee. View more of her work at LesleyPattersonMarx.com.

Experience an enchanted evening when Nashville Symphony performs debussy’s captivating Nocturnes, along with one of the most brilliant pieces ever written, Brahms’ Fourth Symphony.

DEBUSSY & BRAHMsMAY 2-4

Concert presented in honor of the Ozgener Family.

Page 83: InConcert April 201

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