February 3 & 4 Knight Theater
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I’m delighted to welcome you back to another exciting month at the Charlotte Symphony! As we begin the celebration of Black History Month, it feels important to reflect on the immense contributions of Black composers and performers in orchestral music. Throughout February, we will be sharing notable performances of works by Black composers, the history of Black pioneers in classical music, and information about the Black composers and artists of today who are enriching the classical music scene and inspiring countless future musicians.
I invite you to visit our website to learn more about how we are showcasing the music of Black composers and artists in our programming this season, including in a recently announced concert at Johnson C. Smith University on March 21 that showcases the music programs of JCSU side by side with the Charlotte Symphony.
We also continue to share the joy of music with children in communities across the region through our many education and community engagement programs. We believe that music has the power to change lives, and we are committed to making sure that everyone has access to exceptional performances and educational resources.
I hope you will join us in celebrating Black History Month by experiencing the music and stories of these important figures in the world of classical music. It is our goal to make the Charlotte Symphony a welcoming and inclusive space for our entire community. I look forward to seeing you at the Symphony.!
David Fisk President & CEODid you know that the Charlotte Symphony is much more than what you see on the Belk and Knight Theater stages? Beyond the Classical, Pops, Family, and Movie Series in the theaters, we work to uplift, entertain, and educate our community through inclusive education programs and community performances.
• The CSO has three programs for young musicians: the Youth Orchestra, the Youth Philharmonic, and the Youth Ensemble. CSO musicians participate in coaching throughout the year, and even perform with the young musicians!
• Reaching approximately 15,000 students each season, we also have extensive school programs, including Project Harmony, “Music and the Holocaust,” and “One Musical Family” Education Concerts.
• We perform throughout the region, from community parks and schools to breweries, senior care centers, and places of worship all season long.
The CSO is…FOR EVERYONE .
To learn more, visit charlottesymphony.org
Friday, February 3, 2023 at 7:30pm
Saturday, February 4, 2023 at 7:30pm
Knight Theater at Levine Center for the Arts
Vinay Parameswaran, conductor
Alexandra Smither, soprano
GABRIELLA SMITH (b. 1991)
Field Guide
BENJAMIN BRITTEN (1913-1976)
Les Illuminations, Op. 18
I. Fanfare: Maestoso (poco presto)
II. Villes: Allegro energico
IIIa. Phrase: Lento ed estatico
IIIb. Antique: Allegretto, un poco mosso
IV. Royauté: Allegro maestoso
V. Marine: Allegro con brio
VI. Interlude: Moderato ma comodo
VII. Being Beauteous: Lento ma comodo
VIII. Parade: Alla marcia
IX. Départ: Largo mesto
Alexandra Smither, soprano
INTERMISSION
WILLIAM GRANT STILL (1895-1978)
Poem for Orchestra
JEAN SIBELIUS (1865-1957)
Symphony No. 5 in E-Flat major, Op. 82
I. Tempo molto moderato
II. Andante mosso, quasi allegretto
III. Allegro molto - Misterioso
concert duration: approximately 1 hour, 40 minutes. There will be one 20-minute intermission.
This weekend’s concerts are made possible in part by the generosity of Mark & Judith Brodsky
Internationally recognised for his energetic presence, imaginative programming, and compelling musicianship, Vinay Parameswaran is one of the most exciting and versatile young conductors on the podium today.
Highlights of the 2022/23 season include Parameswaran’s debut with the Charlotte Symphony and return appearances with the Nashville Symphony and Rochester Philharmonic orchestras. He also conducts a series of education concerts with the Chicago Symphony. In the 2021/22 season, Parameswaran concluded five seasons with the Cleveland Orchestra, where he was Assistant Conductor from 2018/19 and promoted to Associate Conductor in 2021. During this period, he conducted many concerts each season at Severance Hall, Blossom Music Festival, and on tour. As Music Director, he led the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra on an acclaimed four-city European tour that included a performance at the Musikverein in Vienna.
Prior to his time with the Cleveland Orchestra, Parameswaran was the Associate Conductor of the Nashville Symphony for three seasons and led over 150 performances, which included his subscription debut with the Orchestra in 2016/17, conducting works by Gabriella Smith, Grieg, and Prokofiev. Other highlights have included debuts with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Detroit Symphony, National Symphony Orchestra, Louisville Orchestra, North Carolina Symphony, Grant Park Orchestra, Milwaukee Symphony, and Jacksonville Symphony.
Equally at home in symphonic and operatic repertoire, and in the recording studio, Parameswaran has led performances of Mozart’s The Magic Flute and Donizetti’s The Elixir of Love with Curtis Opera Theater. In Cleveland, he has assisted Franz Welser-Möst on productions of Verdi’s Otello, Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen, Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde and Strauss’ Ariadne auf Naxos. With the Curtis Ensemble 20/21 and violinists Jaime Laredo and Jennifer
Koh, Parameswaran recorded the album Two x Four, featuring works by Bach, David Ludwig, Philip Glass, and Anna Clyne. In 2020/21, Parameswaran recorded a selection of concerts with the Cleveland Orchestra for the Orchestra’s digital streaming platform.
Parameswaran was a Conducting Fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, and has participated in conducting masterclasses with David Zinman at the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa, as well as with Marin Alsop and Gustav Meier at the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music. Parameswaran was a recipient of a Career Assistance Award by the Solti Foundation U.S. in May 2021.
A native of the San Francisco Bay Area, Parameswaran graduated with honours from Brown University with a Bachelor of Arts in music and political science. At Brown, he began his conducting studies with Paul Phillips. He received an Artist Diploma in conducting from the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied with renowned pedagogue Otto-Werner Mueller as the Albert M. Greenfield Fellow.
An adventurous performer and one of the CBC’s 2017 “30 Young Hot Classical Musicians Under 30”, Canadian soprano Alexandra Smither is a fresh fixture on the worldwide stage. Her “sunny, cloudless top” and “silky, light, soprano” are an organic fit in staple repertoire of Mozart and Monteverdi. Ms. Smither’s signature rapport with new music shows her as “an extraordinarily adept soprano, one who can shriek, gurgle, cackle, mutter, gesture, and declaim as well as sing beautifully” (The Threepenny Blog). During the 2021-2022 season, Ms. Smither sings Iphigenia #1 in Wayne Shorter and esperanza spalding’s new opera Iphigenia at MASSMoCA, ArtsEmerson, The Kennedy Center, Cal Performances at UC Berkeley, and The Broad Stage in Los Angeles as well as her debut with California Symphony as the soloist in Katherine Balch’s Illuminate and a return to Ars Lyrica to sing Belinda in Dido and Aeneas.
Ms. Smither’s 2020-2021 season saw her debut with Tapestry Opera in a workshop of Brian Current and Liza Balkan’s Gould’s Wall. A welcome presence at Houston Grand Opera, she covered all seven von Trapp children in their spring 2021 event, My Favorite Things: Songs from The Sound of Music.
In 2019, Ms. Smither debuted with the Boston Symphony, and earned rave reviews in her role debut as Susanna in Against the Grain Theatre’s contemporary adaptation of Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro, Figaro’s Wedding.
In recent seasons, Ms. Smither has cemented her place as an interpreter and champion of even the most intricate new music scores. In 2018 she made her New York debut at the Baryshnikov Arts Centre, performing Luciano Berio’s Sequenza III to enthusiastic reviews. Her impactful 2017 debut with Houston Grand Opera as Younger Alyce in Tom Cipullo’s Glory Denied, was followed by her return to HGO as Diana in their acclaimed mariachi opera, Cruzar la cara de la Luna. Ms. Smither is a two-time Fellow at the Tanglewood Festival, where she debuted at Seiji Ozawa Hall for Schubert’s
“Der Hirt auf dem Felsen” with Emanuel Ax and Bill Hudgins; her time at Tanglewood also included Berg’s Sieben frühe Lieder, Oliver Knussen’s Where the Wild Things Are, the world premiere of Theo Chandler’s “Two Taylor Songs”, and performances under the batons of John Harbison and Thomas Adès. In 2017, Ms. Smither was the Grand Prize winner at the Eckhardt-Gramatté Competition, earning wins for first prize and the prize for best performance of the year’s commissioned work, “Malfunctionlieder” by Canadian composer and turntablist Nicole Lizée.
When she’s not singing, Ms. Smither is a volunteer for West Street Recovery, a non-profit organization working to rebuild homes damaged by disasters, and an organizer with Stop TxDOT I-45, which opposes the expansion of Houston’s I-45 freeway.
Christopher Warren-Green, Conductor Laureate & Music Adviser
Christopher James Lees, Resident Conductor
FIRST VIOLINS
Calin Ovidiu Lupanu, Concertmaster
The Catherine & Wilton Connor Chair
Joseph Meyer, Associate Concertmaster
Kari Giles, Assistant Concertmaster
Ernest Pereira°*
Susan Blumberg°°
Jane Hart Brendle
Emily Chatham°°
Ayako Gamo
Jenny Topilow°°
Dustin Wilkes-Kim
Hanna Zhdan
SECOND VIOLINS
Oliver Kot, Principal
The Wolfgang Roth Chair
Kathleen Jarrell, Assistant Principal
The Pepsi-Cola Foundation of Charlotte Chair
Carlos Tarazona°
Monica Boboc
Tatiana Karpova
Ellyn Stuart
Martha Geissler
Sakira Harley
VIOLAS
Benjamin Geller, Principal
The Zoe Bunten Merrill Principal Viola Chair
Alaina Rea, Assistant Principal *
Chihiro Tanaka, Acting Asst. Principal
Ellen Ferdon
Cynthia Frank
Viara Stefanova
Ning Zhao
Matthew Darsey †
CELLOS
Jonathan Lewis, Principal
The Kate Whitner McKay Principal Cello Chair
Allison Drenkow, Assistant Principal
Alan Black, Principal Emeritus
Marlene Ballena
Jeremy Lamb
Sarah Markle
DOUBLE BASSES
Kurt Riecken, Principal
Judson Baines, Assistant Principal
Jeffrey Ferdon
Jason McNeel
FLUTES
Victor Wang, Principal
The Blumenthal Foundation Chair
Amy Orsinger Whitehead
Erinn Frechette
PICCOLO
Erinn Frechette
OBOES
Hollis Ulaky, Principal
The Leo B. Driehuys Chair‡
Erica Cice
Terry Maskin
ENGLISH HORN
Terry Maskin
CLARINETS
Taylor Marino, Principal
The Gary H. & Carolyn M. Bechtel Chair
Samuel Sparrow
Allan Rosenfeld
E♭ CLARINET
Samuel Sparrow
BASS CLARINET
Allan Rosenfeld
BASSOONS
Joseph Merchant, Principal
Joshua Hood
Naho Zhu†
CONTRABASSOON
Naho Zhu†
HORNS
Byron Johns, Principal
The Mr. & Mrs. William H. Van Every Chair
Andrew Fierova
Robert Rydel
Richard Goldfaden
Philip Brindise†
TRUMPETS
Alex Wilborn, Principal
The Betty J. Livingstone Chair
Jonathan Kaplan
Gabriel Slesinger, Associate Principal*
The Marcus T. Hickman Chair
TROMBONES
John Bartlett, Principal
Thomas Burge
BASS TROMBONE
Scott Hartman, Principal
TUBA
Colin Benton, Principal
The Governor James G. Martin Chair
TIMPANI
Jacob Lipham, Principal
The Robert Haywood Morrison Chair
PERCUSSION
Brice Burton, Principal
HARP
Andrea Mumm Trammell, Principal
The Dr. Billy Graham Chair
This roster lists the full-time members of the Charlotte Symphony. The number and seating of musicians onstage varies depending on the piece being performed.
° Non-revolving position
°° Alternates between first and second violins
† Acting member of the Charlotte Symphony
‡ Funded by The Symphony Guild of Charlotte, Inc.
* On leave
ARTISTIC OPERATIONS
Michael Reichman, VP of Artistic Operations & General Manager
Carrie Graham, Director of Artistic Planning
Tim Pappas, Acting Director of Operations
Nixon Bustos, Principal Music Librarian
Bradley Geneser, Assistant Librarian
Erin Eady, Acting Personnel Manager
John Jarrell, Stage Manager
Member of CSO since 2017 hometown: Durham, NC
• I am a NC native from Durham, NC and received my Bachelor of Music in Clarinet Performance from the Manhattan School of Music.
• I grew up on a small sheep farm with many other animals (including a llama) and used to exhibit sheep in the NC State Fair!
• I love a good adrenaline rush! I’m a big rollercoaster fan, and rode the world’s largest free-fall swing a few years ago in New Zealand!
For more information about Charlotte Symphony musicians, visit charlottesymphony.org
One of the premier music organizations in the Southeastern United States and the oldest operating symphony orchestra in the Carolinas, the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra (CSO) connects with more than 100,000 music lovers each year through its lively season of concerts, broadcasts, community events, and robust educational programs. The CSO is committed to its mission of uplifting, entertaining, and educating the diverse communities of Charlotte-Mecklenburg and beyond through exceptional music experiences.
The Charlotte Symphony upholds the highest artistic integrity and takes bold steps to engage with its community through music. Its 62 professional, full-time musicians perform throughout the region — from community parks and breweries, to places of worship and senior care centers — and offer significant educational support, aimed at serving the underresourced areas of our community.
The Charlotte Symphony is deeply committed to the notion that music, accessible to all and experienced in its many forms, enriches and unifies our community. The CSO believes in equity and inclusion and strives to be an industry leader in imaginative, relevant programming by intentionally seeking out women conductors, underrepresented in our industry, and conductors, composers, and guest artists of color.
Founded in 1932, the Charlotte Symphony plays a leading cultural role in the Charlotte area and aims to serve the community as a civic leader, reflecting and uniting our region through the transformative power of live music.
The Charlotte Symphony uplifts, entertains, and educates the diverse communities of Charlotte-Mecklenburg and beyond through exceptional musical experiences.
Reaching out through the transformative power of live music, the Charlotte Symphony will be a civic leader, reflecting and uniting our region.
For more information, visit us online at charlottesymphony.org
2022 was a huge year for the Charlotte Symphony. Thank you for making our favorite moments possible and for being a part of our CSO family. Let’s take a look back!
JANUARY
Jessica Cottis makes her debut conducting the Charlotte Symphony premiere of Kurt Weill’s witty and theatrical The Seven Deadly Sins
FEBRUARY
The CSO launches its Youth Ensemble, a training ensemble designed to bridge early music education with the Youth Orchestras.
MARCH
The Symphony celebrates its 90th birthday with a concert featuring Vaughan Williams’s Dona Nobis Pacem, dedicated to the people of Ukraine, and launches a digital archive, honoring the CSO’s storied history.
APRIL
The CSO welcomes Atlanta-based Orchestra Noir for a sold-out performance of R&B and hip-hop hits of the ’90s performed side by side with Beethoven.
MAY
In his final concert as Music Director, Christopher Warren-Green leads the Charlotte Symphony and Charlotte Master Chorale in one of the greatest works of all time – Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9.
JUNE
The Charlotte Symphony’s iconic Summer Pops Series returns to Symphony Park for the first time since 2019.
JULY
Resident Conductor Christopher James Lees leads the CSO in an exciting program of patriotic music at Village Park in Kannapolis, one of the Symphony’s many free concerts for the community.
AUGUST
The Charlotte Symphony Orchestra reaches a two-year agreement with its musicians, creating stability for the Symphony and allowing for a more innovative, united, and diverse organization that reflects our community.
SEPTEMBER
After two years of virtual and hybrid instruction, Project Harmony returns to inperson instruction.
OCTOBER
Just in time for Halloween, the Charlotte Symphony presents Jordan Peele’s groundbreaking social thriller Get Out, with Michael Abels’ award-winning score performed live to the complete film.
NOVEMBER
The Charlotte Symphony welcomes superstar vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Rhiannon Giddens to the stage for the CSO’s 2022 Annual Gala.
DECEMBER
Awe-inspiring acrobatics and feats of strength take place above the musicians of the Charlotte Symphony while they perform for three packed houses at Cirque de Noël.
born: December 26, 1991 in Berkeley, California
“In the past few years, I have become obsessed with making field recordings everywhere I go. It began with my desire to record the unfolding and trajectory of the dawn choruses I remember hearing every early Sunday morning as a teenager on the drive out to Point Reyes Bird Observatory, where I would volunteer as a bird bander. It would always start just as we drove past Lagunitas Creek, about thirty minutes before sunrise, and we’d turn off the music and roll down the windows and let in the glorious cacophony and cold morning air. Since then I have recorded dawn choruses and many other natural and human-produced soundscapes around the world, while backpacking in the Sierras, Cascades, and Andes, in temperate and tropical rainforest, in desert, in coastal scrub, in oceans, tide pools, bays, lakes, and glacial streams, recording underwater sounds with my hydrophone, and in the streets and parks and subways of the cities I have spent time in. I envisioned Field Guide as a collage inspired by these various recordings, my improvisations with them on violin and voice, and experiments processing them electronically. Many thanks to the Cabrillo Festival for commissioning this piece in honor of John Adams’ 70th birthday. John, I dedicate this piece to you in celebration of your birthday and especially in gratitude for the many ways you and your music have inspired me over the years.”
—Gabriella Smithborn: November 22, 1913 in Lowestoft, England died: December 4, 1976 in Aldeburgh, England
Opus 18 (1939)
premiere: January 30, 1940 in London
In 1939, composer Benjamin Britten and tenor Peter Pears left England for the United States. Britten was disappointed with the English public’s lack of acceptance of his works. Further, Britten, a committed pacifist, was distraught over the cloud of war that was enveloping Europe. Poet W.H. Auden, whom Britten greatly admired, advised the young composer that America could provide an artistic and political haven. When Aaron Copland learned of the news, he wrote to Britten: “Dear Benjie, How perfectly extraordinary to think of you here on this side of the water! I can’t get used to the idea — but I will.”
After Britten arrived in the US, he began to experience grave doubts about his decision. Copland encouraged him to remain in America: “You owe it to England to stay here. After all, anyone can shoot a gun — but how many can write music like you?” But eventually, Britten’s love for his native land proved too strong. Britten and Pears returned to England in the spring of 1942. However, during his relatively brief American stay, Britten composed several important works, including his song cycles Les illuminations (1939) and Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo (1940), the Sinfonia da requiem (1940), his first String Quartet (1941) and, in collaboration with W.H. Auden, his first opera, Paul Bunyan (1941).
It was Auden who suggested to Britten that he consider composing a work based upon Arthur Rimbaud’s (18541891) collection of poems, published under the title Les Illuminations. Britten began the work in England, in the spring of 1939. That October, after his move to the United States, Britten completed Les Illuminations, scored for high voice and strings.
In a 1940 program note, Britten offered the following description:
(Rimbaud’s) short life as a poet was an erratic and turbulent one, generally near starvation and often homeless, sometimes with his friend Verlaine, sometimes alone, and much of it was set in the most sordid surroundings, in Paris, Brussels, and London; but throughout it, the boy’s inspiration remained radiant and intense. The word ‘Illuminations’ suggests both the vision of a mystic and a brightly coloured picture …. The composer has taken seven of these poems, six in prose and one in verse, and has made them into a cycle. In Les Illuminations Britten, still in his mid-20s, demonstrates many of the qualities associated with his musical voice. The brilliant writing for string orchestra (previously showcased in the 1937 Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge, Opus 10) is characteristic of Britten’s mastery in instrumental writing. The sensitive, expressive vocal settings of Rimbaud’s poetry attended Britten’s song, operatic, and oratorio works. And throughout, there is a powerful sense of a composer’s autobiographical expression.
Les Illuminations is adapted from the suite of prose poems by the French poet Arthur Rimbaud (18541891), written c. 1873-5 during his tempestuous relationship with fellow poet Paul Verlaine. The work was published in 1886 without Rimbaud’s knowledge: by then, he had abandoned writing and was living as a trader in the Horn of Africa.
Britten dedicated Les Illuminations to Anglo-Swiss soprano Sophie Wyss (1897 – 1983), who also performed in the work’s premiere. Wyss also sang the premiere of Britten’s orchestral song cycle Our Hunting Fathers (1936).
J’ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage.
Ce sont des villes! C’est un peuple pour qui se sont montés ces Alleghanys et ces Libans de rêve!
[Ce sont des villes!] Des chalets de cristal et de bois se meuvent sur des rails et des poulies invisibles. Les vieux cratères ceints de colosses et de palmiers de cuivre rugissent mélodieusement dans les feux.
[Ce sont des villes!] Des cortèges de Mabs en robes rousses, opalines, montent des ravines. Là-haut, les pieds dans la cascade et les ronces, les cerfs tettent Diane. Les Bacchantes des banlieues sanglotent et la lune brûle et hurle. Vénus entre dans les cavernes des forgerons et des ermites. Des groupes de beffrois chantent les idées des peuples. Des châteaux bâtis en os sort la musique inconnue.
[Ce sont des villes! Ce sont des villes!]
Le paradis des orages s’effondre. Les sauvages dansent sans cesse la fête de la nuit. [Ce sont des villes!]
Quels bons bras, quelle belle heure me rendront cette région d’où viennent mes sommeils et mes moindres mouvements?
I alone have the key to this savage parade.
These are cities! This is a people for whom arose these Alleghenies and Lebanons from dreams! [These are cities!] Chalets of crystal and wood move on invisible rails and pulleys. Old craters encircled by colossuses and copper palm-trees, roar melodiously in the fires.
[These are cities!] Processions of Mabs in russet, opaline gowns climb the ravines. Farther up, with their feet in the waterfall and the brambles, stags suckle Diana. The Bacchantes of the suburbs sob, and the moon burns and howls. Venus enters into the caverns of blacksmiths and hermits. Groups of belfries sing the ideas of the people. Unknown music pours forth from castles built of bone.
[These are cities! These are cities!]
The paradise of storms collapses. Savages ceaselessly dance out the festival of the night. [These are cities!]
What lovely arms, what beautiful hour will give me back that region from where my sleep and my slightest movements come?
J’ai tendu des cordes de clocher à clocher; des guirlandes de fenêtre à fenêtre; des chaînes d’or d’étoile à étoile, et je danse.
Gracieux fils de Pan! Autour de ton front couronné de fleurettes et de baies, tes yeux, des boules précieuses, remuent. Tachées de lies brunes, tes joues se creusent. Tes crocs luisent. Ta poitrine ressemble à une cithare, des tintements circulent dans tes bras blonds. Ton cœur bat dans ce ventre où dort le double sexe. Promène-toi, la nuit en mouvant doucement cette cuisse, cette seconde cuisse et cette jambe de gauche.
Un beau matin, chez un peuple fort doux, un homme et une femme superbes criaient sur la place publique: “Mes amis, je veux qu’elle soit reine!” “Je veux être reine!” Elle riait et tremblait. Il parlait aux amis de révélation, d’épreuve terminée. Ils se pâmaient l’un contre l’autre.
En effet ils furent rois toute une matinée où les tentures carminées se relevèrent sur les maisons, et tout l’après-midi, où ils s’avancèrent du côté des jardins de palmes.
I stretched some cord from steeple to steeple; some garlands from window to window; some chains of gold from star to star, and I dance.
Gracious son of Pan! Around your forehead crowned with tiny flowers and berries, your eyes — precious globes — stir. Stained by brown lees, your cheeks grow gaunt. Your fangs gleam. Your bosom resembles a zither, ringing sounds circulate between your blond arms. Your heart beats in that belly where the double sex sleeps. Walk, the night gently moving that thigh, that second thigh, and that left leg.
One beautiful morning, in the land of a very gentle people, a superb man and woman cried out in the public square, “Friends, I want her to be queen!” “I want to be queen!” She laughed and trembled. He spoke to his friends of revelation, of hard trials finished. They swooned, one against the other.
In effect, they were kings for a whole morning as crimson hangings were raised on the houses, and all afternoon as they advanced towards the gardens of palms.
Les chars d’argent et de cuivre — Les proues d’acier et d’argent — Battent l’écume — Soulèvent les souches des ronces. Les courants de la lande, Et les ornières immenses du reflux, Filent circulairement vers l’est, Vers les piliers de la forêt — Vers les fûts de la jetée, Dont l’angle est heurté par des tourbillons de lumière.
J’ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage.
Devant une neige un Être de Beauté de haute taille. Des sifflements de mort et des cercles de musique sourde font monter, s’élargir et trembler comme un spectre ce corps adoré: des blessures écarlates et noires éclatent dans les chaires superbes. Les couleurs propres de la vie se foncent, dansent, et se dégagent autour de la Vision, sur le chantier. Et les frissons s’élèvent et grondent, et la saveur forcenée de ces effets se chargeant avec les sifflements mortels et les rauques musiques que le monde, loin derrière nous, lance sur notre mère de beauté — elle recule, elle se dresse. O! nos os sont revêtus d’un nouveau corps amoureux.
Ô la face cendrée, l’écusson de crin, les bras de cristal! le canon sur lequel je dois m’abattre à travers la mêlée des arbres et de l’air léger!
Chariots of silver and copper —
Prows of steel and silver — Beat the foam —
Heave up the roots of bramble, The currents of the heath, And the immense ruts of the ebb-tide, Flowing in circles towards the east, Towards the pillars of the forest — Towards the posts of the jetty, Whose angle is struck by the turbulent whirlpool of light.
I alone have the key to this savage parade.
Against snow, a Being of Beauty of heightened size. The hissing of death and circles of muted music make this adored body rise, enlarge and tremble like a specter 1 : wounds of scarlet and black burst in the superb flesh. The proper colors of life darken, dance, and emerge around the Vision, on the site. And shivers rise and rumble, and the frenetic flavor of these effects, charged with the mortal hissing and raucous music that the world, far behind us, hurls on our mother of beauty — she recoils, she rises up. Oh! Our bones are dressed once more in a new loving body.
Oh, the ashen face, the shield of horsehair, the arms of crystal! the cannon on which I must strike through the melee of trees and the light air!
Des drôles très solides. Plusieurs ont exploité vos mondes. Sans besoins, et peu pressés de mettre en œuvre leurs brillantes facultés et leur expérience de vos consciences. Quels hommes mûrs! Des yeux hébétés à la façon de la nuit d’été, rouges et noirs, tricolores, d’acier piqué d’étoiles d’or; des faciès déformés, plombés, blêmis, incendiés; des enrouements folâtres! La démarche cruelle des oripeaux! Il y a quelques jeunes.
Ô le plus violent Paradis de la grimace enragée !
Chinois, Hottentots, bohémiens, niais, hyènes, Molochs, vieilles démences, démons sinistres, ils mêlent les tours populaires, maternels, avec les poses et les tendresses bestiales. Ils interpréteraient des pièces nouvelles et des chansons « bonnes filles ». Maîtres jongleurs, ils transforment le lieu et les personnes, et usent de la comédie magnétique...
J’ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage
Assez vu. La vision s’est rencontrée à tous les airs.
Assez eu. Rumeurs des Villes, le soir, et au soleil, et toujours.
Assez connu. Les arrêts de la vie.
O Rumeurs et Visions! Départ dans l’affection et le bruit neufs!
Some very ‘solid’ jesters. Several have exploited your worlds. Without needs, and in no hurry to put to work their brilliant faculties and their experience of your consciences. What mature men! Eyes dazed, fashioned like a summer night, red and black, tricolored, steel studded with golden stars; features deformed, leaden, pallid, incendiary; hoarse-throated frolickers! The cruel swagger of rags! There are a few young ones.
Oh the most violent paradise of the enraged grimace!
Chinese, Hottentots, bohemians, naïve deniers, hyenas, Molochs, old insanities, sinister demons, they mingle populist, maternal tricks with bestial poses and tenderness. They would interpret new pieces and “nice girl” songs. Master jugglers, they transform places and people and use magnetic comedy...
I alone have the key to this wild parade.
Enough seen. The vision has been encountered under all skies.
Enough had. Sounds of cities, at evening, in the sun, and always.
Enough known. The stopping of life.
Oh Sounds and Visions! Depart into new affection and noise.
born: May 11, 1895 in Woodville, Mississippi died: December 3, 1978 in Los Angeles, California
William Grant Still, often referred to as the “Dean of AfricanAmerican Composers,” was born in Woodville, Mississippi. He studied at Wilberforce College and the Oberlin Conservatory. Still worked with W.C. Handy, and studied privately with George Whitefield Chadwick and Edgar Varèse. He composed successfully in a wide variety of genres, including symphonies, operas, sacred musical, assorted instrumental works, and popular songs, as well as television and film scores. William Grant Still also conducted, and created arrangements of spirituals.
The Kulas American Composers’ Fund commissioned Still’s Poem for Orchestra for the Cleveland Orchestra. The premiere took place on December 7, 1944, with Rudolf Ringwall conducting. On April 4, 1946 at Carnegie Hall, the New York Philharmonic and Music Director Artur Rodziński performed the New York premiere of Still’s Poem in a concert that also featured the celebrated African-American contralto Marian Anderson, singing music by Mahler and Donizetti, as well as spirituals.
According to Still’s wife, pianist, and writer Verna Arvey, the Poem for Orchestra was “inspired by the concept of a world being reborn spiritually after a period of darkness and desolation.” The work’s journey from its agitated opening to resplendent closing pages culminates in a final chord that suggests that challenges nonetheless remain.
born: December 8, 1865 in Hämeenlinna, Finland died: September 20, 1957 in Järvenpää, Finland
Opus 82 (1915, rev. 1916, 1919)
premiere: December 8, 1915 in Helsinki, Finland
The Symphony No. 5 is Jean Sibelius’s most important largescale work from World War I. The start of composition was in close proximity to the outbreak of the conflict (although Sibelius may have been contemplating the work as early as 1912). Sibelius completed the first version of his Fifth Symphony in time for its premiere in Helsinki on December 8, 1915. The composer led the concert, given in honor of his fiftieth birthday. Sibelius revised the score of his Fifth Symphony the following year. However, it was not until 1919 that Sibelius penned the familiar third, final version of his Symphony No. 5.
It’s not surprising that the period during which Sibelius composed the Fifth Symphony often found him in a reflective, somber mood. A few months after the outbreak of war, he wrote: “My heart sings, full of sadness—the shadows lengthen.” Without question, Sibelius’s Fifth Symphony has moments of gloom and conflict. However, like another famous Symphony No. 5 — Ludwig van Beethoven’s C-minor, Opus 67 (1808) — the struggle depicted in the Sibelius Fifth culminates in triumph.
In September of 1915, shortly after he began work on the Fifth Symphony, Sibelius wrote in his diary: “In a deep dell again. But I already begin dimly to see the mountain I shall surely ascend…God opens his door for a moment and his orchestra plays the Fifth Symphony.” Jean Sibelius died in the evening of September 20, 1957, at the age of 91. At the moment of his passing, a concert was taking place in Helsinki. Conductor Sir Malcolm Sargent and the orchestra were performing the music of Sibelius — his Symphony No. 5.
The opening movement of the Sibelius Fifth (Tempo molto moderato; Allegro moderato; Presto) is based upon four principal themes. Rather than immediately proceed to the traditional development section, Sibelius first offers a varied second exposition of the principal themes, followed by a
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mysterious development section. A quicksilver episode in 3/4 time serves the dual function of the opening movement’s rather free recapitulation and the work’s scherzo. The coda gathers impressive momentum, bringing the opening movement to a rousing close. The slow-tempo second movement (Andante mosso, quasi allegretto) is a theme and set of variations, some of which offer hints of the ensuing finale. That final movement (Allegro molto; Misterioso) opens with a flurry of activity in the strings. This ultimately gives way to a majestic theme, introduced by the horns. The two themes return throughout in music notable for its energy and inexorable momentum. In the closing measures, the second theme reigns supreme until the work’s stunning conclusion — six hammer blow chords.
We gratefully acknowledge these generous donors to the Charlotte Symphony Annual Fund. This list reflects gifts received between July 1, 2021 through January 1, 2023
$100,000+
Anonymous
Catherine & Wilton Connor
$50,000 – $99,999
Roberta H. Cochran
Ellen M. Fitzsimmons & Greg Rogowski
$25,000 – $49,999
Anonymous
Joan & Mick Ankrom
Richard & Ruth Ault
Dr. Milton & Arlene Berkman Philanthropic Fund
Mark & Judith Brodsky
DG Brungard Foundation
Linda & Bill Farthing
John & Maria Huson
$15,000 – $24,999
Ralph S. Grier
Richard Krumdieck
Betty P. & Jeffrey J. Lee
DeDe & Alex McKinnon
$10,000 – $14,999
Anonymous (3)
Francisco & Jeannette Alvarado
Katharine & Frank Bragg
Mr. & Mrs. R. Alfred Brand III
Lynne & Colby Cathey
Margarita & Nick Clements
Christoph & Robin Feddersen
Karen Fox
Janet M. Haack
Chris & Susan Kearney
Ginger Kelly
Douglas Young
Jane & Hugh McColl
Patricia & Thrus Morton
Patrick J. O’Leary
Richard J. Osborne
Paul & Kathy Reichs
Carolyn Shaw
John & Andromeda Williams
Debbie & Pat Phillips
Judy & Derek Raghavan
Ann & Fritz Rehkopf
Page & Ed Kizer
Ms. Nina Lesavoy
Susan & Loy McKeithen
Alex & Ulrike Miles
Robert Norville
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Richardson
M.A. Rogers
Mike Rutledge
Thomas & Sherry Skains
Richard & Lisa Worf
For more information on how to make a gift to the CSO Annual Fund, please contact Libby Currier, Annual Fund Manager, at 704.714.5137 or lcurrierl@charlottesymphony.org
In Memory of Tess Verbesey
Kevin & Jill Walker
Floyd Wisner & Glenda Colman
$3,500 – $4,999
Wedge & Debbie Abels
Philipp J. Bischoff
Jan & Bob Busch
Judith Carpenter
Brian & Morgan Cromwell
Joan & Parker Foley
H. Clay Furches
Richard I. McHenry & Cynthia L. Caldwell
Mr. & Mrs. Paul McIntosh
Elizabeth J. McLaughlin
Chuck Miller & Marcy Thailer
Mr. Glenn Mincey & Mrs. Macie Mincey
Tony & Linda Pace
Edgar & Karen Whitener
$2,500 – $3,499
Anonymous (3)
Julian Andretta
Mrs. Harriet B. Barnhardt
Bill & Georgia Belk
Cathy Bessant & John Clay
Ms. Melody Birmingham
Si & Michael Blake
Mr. & Mrs. Alan Blumenthal
Dr. & Mrs. O. Robert Boehm
Twig & Barbara Branch
Ann Thomas Colley
Dorothy & Mike Connor
Melissa Cornwell
Alfred & Amy Dawson
Peter De Arcangelis
Phil & Mary Delk
Cheryl DeMaio
Peggy & Charles Dickerson
Mrs. Carolyn Faison
Alex & Patty Funderburg
Timothy & Kara Gallagher
Harvey & Cindy Gantt
Mr. Billy L. Gerhart, in memory of Judith Gerhart
Todd & Andrea Griffith
& David Snyder
Ms. Andrea J. Stevenson
Kevin Taylor
Drs. Jennifer Sullivan & Matthew Sullivan
Chris & Jim Teat
Drs. Chris & Lillian Teigland
Judith & Gary Toman
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Angela & Michael Helms
Ivan Hinrichs
Brian & Juliet Hirsch
Carol A. Hitselberger & Robert Petty
Jim & Peggy Hynes
Shirley & Bob Ivey
David S. Jacobson
Ginger Kemp
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Cotty
Arlene H. Elisha
Mrs. Geraldine S. Emmert
Mr. Peter F. Guild
Katherine G. Hall
Anne J. Henderson
Steven Hershfield & Mary Jo Germain
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Hill, Jr.
Joan Irwin
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Dr. & Mrs. Jack Kramer
Anna Marriott
Ms. Rosemarie Marshall & Mr. Lee Wilkins
Jim & Dottie Martin
Cricket Weston & David Molinaro
Eleanor W. Neal
Caroline Olzinski
Mr. Vincent Phillips & Mr. Paul Pope
Torsten & Kim Pilz
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Larry & Dale Polsky
John & Susan Rae
Mr. & Mrs. Pope A. Shuford
Morris & Patricia Spearman
Robert & Maxine Stein
Ann & Wellford Tabor
Tillie S. Tice
James H. Trexler & Kelly Zellars
Daniel & Kathleen Troy
Mindy & Don Upton
Vera Watson
Grant Webb
Linda & Craig Weisbruch
Mrs. Eugenia N. White
Deems Wilson
Ms. Deborra Wood & Mr. Russell Propst
$1,000 – $1,499
Anonymous (2)
Ashley & Steve Allen
Kathleen & Richard Anderson
JWD Atchison
Mary Lou & Jim Babb
Mr. & Mrs. Lincoln A. Baxter
Morgan Beggs
John & Katherine Beltz
Shirley W. Benfield
Donald H. & Barbara K. Bernstein
Family Foundation
Mr. James Biddlecome
In Memory of Bernadette Zirkuli Biddlecome
Ms. Brett Blumenthal & Mr. David Wax
Carole Bourret
Khary Brown
Herbert Browne
Jane & Larry Cain
Maggie Callen
Ralph & Sam Canfield
Ms. Elizabeth Carr
Bill & Pauline Chinnis
Mr. Mark Copeland & Mrs. Kathleen Goldammer-Copeland
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Hans Teich
Sarah S. Tull
Mrs. William K. Van Allen
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Van Glish
Bill & Rita Vandiver
Dr. & Mrs. Bill Chu & Jin Wang
Pam & Steve West
Peter White
David Wilcox
Bryan Wilhelm
Ms. Judith Wood
Mrs. Anne Yudell
$500 – $999
Anonymous (4)
Michael & Lee Abbott
Mark Abrams & Iris Prandi
Mr. Lester Ackerman & Mr. Layton Campbell
Larry Anderson
Leigh & Rhonda Armistead
Mrs. Natascha A. Bechtler
Bob & Cathy Becker
Dr. John L. Bennett & Mr. Eric T. Johnson
Jeffrey Boghosian
David Bower & Ann Richardson
Ms. Marianne Bragg
James Broadstone
Aram & Scott Bryan
Mr. Charles Budd
Greg & Mary Lou Cagle
Barbara F. Caine
Ms. Lisa Callen
$500 - $999 cont.
Amanda & Kevin Chheda
Hobart B. Cheyne
Ms. Michele T. Classe
Mr. Brent Clevenger
Dr. W. Gerald Cochran & Mr. Timothy D. Gudger
Mr. Thomas E. Collins, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Charles E. Cook
Dr. Kilian Cooley
Dr. & Mrs. Mark Couture
Mr. & Mrs. Alpo F. Crane
Ellen M. Crowley
Mrs. Judy Crozier
Craig Selimotic Danforth
Dr. Roy E. DeMeo, Jr. & Ms. Linda A. Evanko
Thomas & Kris Duffy
Virginia Dulaney
Ms. Helen Edwards
Rebecca Elliott
Martin Ericson, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. J. Murray Fadial
Doug Faris
Tom & Gail Fennimore
Lawrence W. Fetner, Jr.
Robert & Catherine Flynn
Melisa & Frank Galasso
Dr. John & Eileen Gardella
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Qasim
Dr. & Mrs. R. Pinkney Rankin, Jr.
Haywood & Sabine Rankin
Jane & Milburn Ratteree
Brendan Reen
Casey Rentch
Nancy Rutledge & Jim Rutledge
Robert & Christine Rydel
Mr. & Mrs. William Seifert
John Schroeder, in honor of Patty McArthur
Mr. Andrew Silliker
Carol Smith
Dr. & Mrs. Henry L. Smith II
Rebecca & Eric Smith
Scott Smith
John-Palmer Smith
Julia J. Souther
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Stern
Kathryn Stewart
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George & Brenda Sweet
Ms. Sarah Teague
Tim Timson
Jenny & Ken Tolson
James & Melanie Twyne
Greg & Sandy Vlahos
Lyman Welton
Barnet & Harriet Weinstock
Dr. Thomas H. White
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Yakob
Ms. Barbara Yarbrough
Dan & Susan Yardley
Dr. & Mrs. T. Price Zimmermann
$250 – $499
Anonymous (3)
Paula Andretta
Andrew & Karen Antoszyk
Judi Bainbridge
Dr. & Mrs. Michael J. Bell
Sam & Nancy Bernstein
Ms. Deborah Berry
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Bierce
Stuart Blackmon
Lawton & Janette Blandford
Megan Blankemeyer List
Ken & Nelle Brown
Mr. Nicholas Bonevac
Steve Bost
David H. & Barbara J. Burns
John Carr
Robert & Jo Anne Caruso
Mary Case
Amy Cathey
Rev. Janice Chalaron
Ms. Catherine Choudary
Gray Clark
Mortimer & Josephine Cohen Fund
Ms. Dorothy Cole
Ron & Shirley Coffman
Tom Covington
Mr. Todd Croy
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Stephanie McGarvey
Eric Miller
Kimberly Moore-Wright
Glenn A. Muegel
David H. Nance & Jennifer Nance
Sara & Tom Nolan
Dr. & Mrs. Michael E. Norman
Dimitris & Jennifer Papageorgiou
Cookie & Jerry Parnell
Rose & Bailey Patrick
Bradley & Sharon Patterson
Mr. Conrad Puckett
Mr. Mason & Dr. Krista Rankin
Stephen & Melissa Ratliff
$250 - $499 cont.
Emily & Brian Reinicker
Dr. Livia Robicsek
Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Rodgers
Sarah E. Schoedinger
Eileen Scholl
Merle & Judy Schuh
Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Shapiro
Ginny Shaw
Fred H. Smith
James & Ellie Stephens
William & Catherine Stone
Larry Stratemeyer
Charlene Sturgill
Brenda Gail Summers
Ms. Jena M. Summerville
Carrie & Jeffrey Teixeira
Nancy & Dick Thigpen
Gretchen & Jean-Claude Thill
Melissa M. Tolin
Patti Tracey & Chris Hudson
Cynthia Turner
Sarah & Tim Turner
Rebecca Valenstein
Minyan Wang
Jenny & Henry Ward
Ms. Leslie Webster
Mr. Erik Weghorst
Mr. & Mrs. Tom Weidman
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Wertheimer
Mrs. Carol Wilson
Allen & Clara Wolfe
Karen & Charles Wolff
We are grateful for the following outstanding corporate funders:
$250,000 +
$100,000 - $249,999
$20,000 - $49,999
$10,000 - $19,999
$5,000 - $9,999
Atrium Health Kingfisher Capital The Dunhill Hotel
For more information, please contact Amanda LoCascio, AVP - Institutional Philanthropy at 704.714.5138 or alocascio@charlottesymphony.org
We are grateful for the following outstanding foundation and government funders:
$100,000 +
$50,000 - $99,999
$20,000 - $49,999
DG Brungard Foundation
Mariam & Robert Hayes Charitable Trust
The Trexler Foundation
$10,000 - $19,999
Blumenthal Foundation
Charlotte Mecklenburg Community Foundation
Cole Foundation
Dunspaugh-Dalton Foundation, Inc.
John S. & James L. Knight Foundation
The Maurer Family Foundation
$5,000 - $9,999
AT&T Foundation
The George W. & Ruth R. Baxter Foundation
The Jack H & Ruth C. Campbell Foundation
The Charlotte Assembly
$2,500 - $4,999
Barnhardt/Thomas Trust
Kathryn Stephenson Pipe Organ Endowment Foundation
Stanly County Community Foundation
Winer Family Foundation
For more information, please contact Toni Freeman, Grant Writer at development@charlottesymphony.org
We invite your firm to join this special group of corporate supporters committed to keeping the music alive — enriching Charlotte and the surrounding communities as a first-class place to work and live.
$2,500 - $4,999
GreerWalker
Moore & VanAllen Park Inc.
$5,000 + $500 - $2,499
Carter Troutman Pepper LLP
World Famous Golf Carts of South Carolina
For more information, please contact Amanda LoCascio, AVP - Institutional Philanthropy at 704.714.5138 or alocascio@charlottesymphony.org
The Charlotte Symphony Orchestra recognizes donors of exceptional generosity whose cumulative giving to the CSO exceeds $1 million with the designation of Music Director Society.
Anonymous (2)
Bank of America Corporation
Catherine & Wilton Connor
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
The Leon Levine Foundation
John S. & James L. Knight Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh L. McColl, Jr.
Robert Haywood Morrison Foundation
C. D. Spangler Foundation
The Symphony Guild of Charlotte, Inc.
Wells Fargo Corporation
For more information, please contact Leslie Antoniel, AVP of Development, at 704.714.5139 or lantoniel@charlottesymphony.org.
The Encore Society includes individuals who have made provisions for the CSO in their estate plans. We are honored to recognize their support:
Anonymous (3)
Geraldine I. Anderson†
Richard & Ruth Ault
Baldwin Family Trust
Barnhardt Thomas Trust
Larry & Joyce† Bennett
Donald H. & Barbara K. Bernstein
Mark & Louise Bernstein†
Twig & Barbara Branch
Saul Brenner
Mike & Joan Brown†
Mrs. Joan Bruns †
Jan & Bob Busch
Dr. Helen G. Cappleman, Ph.D.†
Jim Cochran†
Robin Cochran
Tom Covington
Charles & Peggy Dickerson
Mr. Martin Ericson, Jr.
David J.L. Fisk & Anne P. O’Bryne
Peter & Ann Guild
William G. & Marguerite K. Huey Fund†
Dr. Nish Jamgotch, Jr.
Betty & Stanley Livingstone†
† Deceased
Nellie McCrory †
M. Marie Mitchell†
Cricket Weston & David Molinaro
Joan & Richard Morgan
Don C. Niehus
Eva Nove
Richard J. Osborne
Gwen Peterson & Tom Hodge
James Y. Preston†
Mrs. Clayton (Dusty) Pritchett
Ann & Fritz Rehkopf
Elizabeth Waring Reinhard
Nancy W. Rutledge
Mike Rutledge
Harriet Seabrook
Mr. & Mrs. William Seifert
Morris & Patricia Spearman
Bob & Maxine Stein
Dr. Ben C. Taylor III
Mr. & Mrs. Hans Teich
Cordelia G. Thompson
Tim Timson
Jenny & Ken Tolson
Ms. Debora Wood & Mr. Russell Propst
Leave a lasting legacy of great music through your planned gift. For more information, contact Leslie Antoniel at 704.714.5139.
With your gift, the Charlotte Symphony uplifts, entertains, and educates the diverse communities of Charlotte-Mecklenburg and beyond through exceptional musical experiences.
Joshua Weilerstein, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
February 10 & 11 Belk Theater
“Enthusiastic” (LA Times) guest conductor Joshua Weilerstein conducts Brahms’s hauntingly beautiful Symphony No. 4 and Grieg’s stunning Piano Concerto.
SMYTH On the Cliffs of Cornwall
GRIEG Piano Concerto in A minor
BRAHMS Symphony No. 4
Multimillion Dollar Commitment City of Charlotte
$1.5 million and above Bank of America
C.D. Spangler Foundation / National Gypsum Company
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
Trane Technologies
$600,000 - $1 million
Albemarle Foundation
Atrium Health
Barings
Duke Energy
Honeywell
JELD-WEN, Inc.
LendingTree Foundation
Lowe’s Companies, Inc.
Novant Health
Red Ventures
Truist
$300,000-$600,000
Ally Financial
The Centene Charitable Foundation
Childress Klein Properties
Coca-Cola Consolidated
Deloitte
EY
The Gambrell Foundation
Moore & Van Allen
PwC
Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson, P.A.
Rodgers Builders
Wells Fargo
Up to $300,000
Fifth Third Bank
Foundation For The Carolinas
Deidre and Clay Grubb
Leslie and Michael Marsicano
Jane and Hugh McColl
Nucor Corporation
PNC Bank
Premier, Inc.
Jane and Nelson Schwab
The Charlotte Symphony is supported, in part, by the Infusion Fund and its generous donors.BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Linda McFarland Farthing
Chair
John Williams
Vice Chair
Mick Ankrom
Treasurer
David Fisk
President & CEO
Melissa Anderson
Joye D. Blount
Mike Butterworth
Nick Clements
Catherine Connor
Mary Delk*
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Richard Osborne, Chair
Ruth & Richard Ault
Kat Belk
Arlene & Milton Berkman
Jason & Tiffany Bernd
Frank Bragg
Robin & Bill Branstrom
Derick & Sallie Close
Robin Cochran
Wilton Connor
Jeanie & T. Thomas Cottingham III
Brian Cromwell
Alessandra & Pasquale De Martino
Alvaro & Donna de Molina
Peggy & Richard Dreher
Lisa Hudson Evans
Todd Gorelick
Janet Haack
Reginald B. Henderson, Esq.
Mark & Whitney Jerrell
Jeff Lee
Gov. James G. Martin
Denise DeMaio
Richard Krumdieck
Alex McKinnon
Ulrike W. Miles
Glenn Mincey
Robert Rydel*
Ylida Scott
Melinda Snyder
Jennifer Sullivan
Jenny Tolson*
Jenny Topilow*
Kevin Walker
*ex officio
Jane & Hugh McColl
Susan & Loy McKeithen
Elizabeth J. McLaughlin
George McLendon
Patrick J. O’Leary
Debbie & G. Patrick Phillips
Paul Reichs
Nancy & Charles Robson
Patricia A. Rodgers
M.A. Rogers
Dan & Sara Garces Roselli
Laura & Mike Schulte
Carolyn Shaw
Tom Skains
Emily & Zach Smith
Bob & Marsha Stickler
Adam Taylor
Cynthia Tyson
Braxton Winston
Richard Worf
Albert Zue
EXECUTIVE
David J. L. Fisk, President & CEO
Samantha Hackett, Executive Administrator
ARTISTIC OPERATIONS (see p. 11)
DEVELOPMENT
Shayne Doty, Vice President of Development
Leslie Antoniel, Associate Vice President of Development
Amanda LoCascio, Associate Vice President, Institutional Philanthropy
Libby Currier, Annual Fund Manager
Tammy Matula, Database Manager
Jennifer Gherardi, Campaign Coordinator
Senta Harvey, Annual Fund & Sponsorships Associate
FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION
Angel Adams, Vice President of Finance & Administration
Lissette Rodriguez, Staff Accountant
Chazin & Company, Financial Services
Amy Hine, Office Administrator
HUMAN RESOURCES
Maribeth Baker (Catapult), Human Resources Counselor
LEARNING & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Aram Kim Bryan, Vice President of Learning & Community Engagement
Emily Gordon, Project Harmony Manager
Dylan Lloyd, Youth Orchestras Manager
Peyton Wulff, Learning Manager
Jirah Montgomery, Youth Orchestras Assistant
MARKETING
Mical Hutson, Vice President of Marketing & Audience Development
Deirdre Roddin, Director of Institutional Marketing & Communications
Nicole Glaza, Senior Manager of Digital Marketing
Chad Calvert, Visual Communications Manager
Laura Thomas, Marketing Manager
Meghan Starr, Patron Communications Manager
Garrett Whiffen, Ticketing Manager
Mei-Ann Chen, conductor
Calin Ovidiu Lupanu, violin
Bruch’s Violin Concerto is one of the best-loved works of the Romantic period. “Vivid” (San Francisco Classical Voice) guest conductor Mei-Ann Chen leads this program, featuring Concertmaster Calin Lupanu.