27 The Whitney Restaurant | Ghostbar | Gardens 4421 Woodward Avenue, Detroit | 313-832-5700 | thewhitney.com 4421 Woodward Avenue, Detroit | 313 832 5700 | thewhitney.com Welcome Back �e Whitney is so proud to continue our long-lasting relationship with DSO concert-goers. Celebrating the art & beauty of Detroit is a core value for �e Whitney and we are so pleased to be a part of your memorable experience. �e Whitney Early Evening Menu is back! Enjoy a 2 course meal at �e Whitney Wednesday, �ursday and Friday from 5-7 pm, and on Sunday from 4-7 pm! �e Whitney: Detroit’s first choice for pre-concert dining. *Not available on Saturdays. Can not be combined with any other discounts or promotions*
Davóne Tines by Noah Morrison
17-39
Program Notes
Discover rich insights about each
4 Welcome 5 Orchestra Roster 6 Behind the Baton 8 Board Leadership 14 Transformational Support 40 Donor Roster 49 Upcoming Concerts 50 Maximize Your Experience 52 DSO Administrative Staff Read Performance anytime, anywhere at dso.org/performance The Detroit Symphony Orchestra impacts lives through the power of unforgettable musical experiences by sustaining a world class orchestra for our city and the global community. WINTER • 2022–2023 SEASON PERFORMANCE
Music
10 Classical Roots: Beyond the
Hear from Anthony Davis and Davóne Tines
16 Community & Learning
THE COVER:
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 3 dso.org #IAMDSO
concert
ON
2023 Classical Roots artists Anthony Davis (by Erik Jepsen), Davóne Tines (by Bowie Verschuuren), and Anthony McGill (by Eric Rudd).
Dear Friends,
Welcome to Orchestra Hall! Whether it’s your first concert or your fiftieth, thank you for joining us to experience the joy of music with your Detroit Symphony Orchestra.
As we begin a new year, we also reflect on the successes of 2022. At our Annual Meeting in December, we were thrilled to announce a tenth consecutive balanced budget and renewed support for our DSO Impact Campaign, ensuring our organization remains a cultural beacon in Detroit for generations. We also celebrated the passionate leadership of Music Director Jader Bignamini. Under Jader, our orchestra shines, creating indelible musical moments that invigorate our creative spirit. This Spring, Jader will conduct programs with pianists Alexander Gavrylyuk (February 23-25) and George Li (March 24-26), and violinist Anne Akiko Meyers (March 30-April 1), plus the world premiere of Carlos Simon’s Trombone Concerto with DSO Principal Trombone Ken Thompkins in May.
The DSO continues to push boundaries with innovative programming. From a concert by the DSO Cello Section fusing classical repertoire with pop hits in The Cube on February 9—to The Princess Bride in Concert on Valentine’s Day and the Classical Roots Celebration in March (read our cover story in this issue)—the DSO spans genres and interests, uniting us all around a shared community in a love of music.
The William Davidson Neighborhood Concert Series returns for a twelfth year, bringing DSO performances and chamber recitals to seven Metro Detroit communities from January to June. Highlights include Reinecke’s Flute Concerto with DSO Principal Flute Hannah Hammel Maser and appearances by saxophonist Timothy McAllister, violinist Tai Murray, and conductor/violinist/countertenor Dmitry Sinkovsky. Jader will make his Neighborhood debut this May, conducting music by Paganini and Tchaikovsky in Southfield, Monroe, and Beverly Hills.
We also acknowledge renewed organizational leadership with the announcement of David T. Provost as the DSO’s new Chair of the Board of Directors. In addition to David’s election at our Annual Meeting, we paid tribute to outgoing Chair Mark Davidoff. Across Mark’s seven years of exemplary leadership, he’s left an undeniable impression on our organization, and we are forever grateful for his immeasurable contributions to making the DSO the thriving organization we know today. Mark has set a remarkable precedent that we will strive to uphold. We’re delighted to work together to make our orchestra the best it can be by securing continued financial stability through the DSO Impact Campaign, advocating for our robust education programs, and celebrating the jewel that we have in Orchestra Hall and The Max.
We look forward to welcoming you for a great year of spectacular performances!
Erik Rönmark David T. Provost President and CEO Chair, Board of Directors
WELCOME 4 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
FIRST VIOLIN
Robyn Bollinger CONCERTMASTER
Katherine Tuck Chair
Kimberly Kaloyanides Kennedy
ASSOCIATE CONCERTMASTER
Schwartz and Shapero Family Chair
Hai-Xin Wu
ASSISTANT CONCERTMASTER
Walker L. Cisler/Detroit Edison Foundation Chair
Jennifer Wey Fang
ASSISTANT CONCERTMASTER
Marguerite Deslippe*
Laurie Goldman*
Rachel Harding Klaus*
Eun Park Lee*
Adrienne Rönmark*
Alexandros Sakarellos*
Drs. Doris Tong and Teck Soo Chair
Laura Soto*
Greg Staples*
Jiamin Wang*
Mingzhao Zhou*
SECOND VIOLIN
Adam Stepniewski
ACTING PRINCIPAL
The Devereaux Family Chair
Will Haapaniemi*
David and Valerie McCammon Chairs
Hae Jeong Heidi Han*
David and Valerie McCammon Chairs
Elizabeth Furuta*
Sheryl Hwangbo Yu*
Daniel Kim*
Sujin Lim*
Hong-Yi Mo *
Marian Tanau*
Alexander Volkov*
Jing Zhang*
VIOLA
Eric Nowlin
PRINCIPAL
Julie and Ed Levy, Jr. Chair
James VanValkenburg
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Caroline Coade
Henry and Patricia Nickol Chair
Glenn Mellow
Hang Su
Shanda Lowery-Sachs
Hart Hollman
Han Zheng
Mike Chen
CELLO
Wei Yu
PRINCIPAL
Abraham Feder
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
TERENCE
Dorothy and Herbert Graebner Chair
Robert Bergman*
Jeremy Crosmer*
Victor and Gale Girolami Cello Chair
David LeDoux*
Peter McCaffrey*
Joanne Deanto and Arnold Weingarden Chair
Una O’Riordan*
Mary Ann & Robert Gorlin Chair
Cole Randolph*
BASS
Kevin Brown
PRINCIPAL
Van Dusen Family Chair
Stephen Molina
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Christopher Hamlen
Brandon Mason
Nicholas Myers^
HARP
OPEN
PRINCIPAL
Winifred E. Polk Chair
FLUTE
Hannah Hammel Maser
PRINCIPAL
Alan J. and Sue Kaufman and Family Chair
Amanda Blaikie
Morton and Brigitte Harris Chair
Sharon Sparrow
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Bernard and Eleanor Robertson Chair
Jeffery Zook
Shantanique Moore §
PICCOLO
Jeffery Zook
Shari and Craig Morgan Chair
OBOE
Alexander Kinmonth
PRINCIPAL
Jack A. and Aviva Robinson Chair
Sarah Lewis
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Monica Fosnaugh
ENGLISH HORN
Monica Fosnaugh
Shari and Craig Morgan Chair
CLARINET
Ralph Skiano PRINCIPAL
Robert B. Semple Chair
Jack Walters
PVS Chemicals Inc./ Jim and Ann Nicholson Chair
Shannon Orme
E-FLAT CLARINET OPEN
BASS CLARINET
Shannon Orme Barbara Frankel and Ronald Michalak Chair
BASSOON
Conrad Cornelison
PRINCIPAL Byron and Dorothy Gerson Chair
Michael Ke Ma
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Marcus Schoon
Jaquain Sloan §
CONTRABASSOON
Marcus Schoon
HORN
Karl Pituch
PRINCIPAL
Johanna Yarbrough
Scott Strong
Ric and Carola Huttenlocher Chair
David Everson
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Mark Abbott
TRUMPET
Hunter Eberly
PRINCIPAL
Lee and Floy Barthel Chair
Stephen Anderson
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
William Lucas
TROMBONE
Kenneth Thompkins
PRINCIPAL
David Binder
Adam Rainey
BASS TROMBONE
Adam Rainey
TUBA
Dennis Nulty
PRINCIPAL
TIMPANI
Jeremy Epp
PRINCIPAL
Richard and Mona Alonzo Chair
James Ritchie
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
PERCUSSION
Joseph Becker
PRINCIPAL
Ruth Roby and Alfred R. Glancy III Chair
Andrés Pichardo-Rosenthal
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
William Cody Knicely Chair
James Ritchie
LIBRARIANS
Robert Stiles
PRINCIPAL
Ethan Allen
LEGACY CHAIRS
Principal Flute
Women’s Association for the DSO
Principal Cello
James C. Gordon
Personnel Managers
Patrick Peterson
DIRECTOR OF ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL
Benjamin Tisherman
MANAGER OF ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL
Nolan Cardenas
AUDITION AND OPERATIONS COORDINATOR
Stage Personnel
Dennis Rottell
STAGE MANAGER
William Dailing DEPARTMENT HEAD
Ryan DeMarco DEPARTMENT HEAD
Kurt Henry
DEPARTMENT HEAD
Steven Kemp
DEPARTMENT HEAD
Matthew Pons
DEPARTMENT HEAD
LEGEND
* These members may voluntarily revolve seating within the section on a regular basis
^ Extended Leave
§ African American Orchestra Fellow
JA DER BIGNA M I NI MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JA DER BIGNA M I NI MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JA DER BIGNA M I NI MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA JA DER BIGNA M I NI MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JADER BIGNAMINI , Music Director Music Directorship endowed by the Kresge Foundation
BLANCHARD
A. Erb Jazz Creative
Fred
Director Chair
Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador
NEEME JÄRVI Music Director Emeritus LEONARD SLATKIN Music Director Laureate
JEFF TYZIK Principal Pops Conductor
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 5 dso.org #IAMDSO
Jader Bignamini
MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP ENDOWED BY THE KRESGE FOUNDATION
Jader Bignamini was introduced as the 18th music director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in January 2020. The DSO’s 2022-2023 season marks his second full year as DSO Music Director, and his infectious passion and artistic excellence have set the tone for the DSO on stage, establishing a close relationship with the orchestra and creating extraordinary music together. A jazz aficionado, he has immersed himself in Detroit’s rich jazz culture and the influences of American music.
A native of Crema, Italy, Jader studied at the Piacenza Music Conservatory and began his career as a musician (clarinet) with Orchestra Sinfonica La Verdi in Milan, later serving as the group’s resident conductor. Captivated by the symphonies of greats like Mahler and Tchaikovsky, Jader explored their complexity and power, puzzling out the role that each instrument played in creating a larger-than-life sound. When he conducted his first professional concert at the age of 28, it didn’t feel like a departure, but an arrival.
In the years since, Jader has conducted
some of the world’s most acclaimed orchestras and opera companies in venues across the globe including working with Riccardo Chailly on concerts of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony in 2013 and his concert debut at La Scala in 2015 for the opening season of La Verdi Orchestra. Recent highlights include debuts with The Cleveland Orchestra, New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and Minnesota Orchestra; the Osaka Philharmonic and Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra in Tokyo; Madama Butterfly with the Metropolitan Opera, Vienna State Opera, and Dutch National Opera; Gianni Schicchi with Canadian Opera Company; Rigoletto with Oper Frankfurt; La Traviata with Bayerische Staatsoper; I Puritani in Montpellier for the Festival of Radio France; Traviata in Tokyo directed by Sofia Coppola; Andrea Chénier at New National Theatre in Tokyo; Rossini’s Stabat Mater at Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro, Italy; Rossini’s Petite messe solennelle at Teatro dell’Opera in Rome; return engagements with Oper Frankfurt (La forza del destino) and Santa Fe Opera (La Bohème); Manon Lescaut at the Bolshoi; Traviata, Madama Butterfly, and Turandot at Arena of Verona; Il Trovatore and Aida at Rome’s Teatro dell’Opera; Madama Butterfly, I Puritani, and Manon Lescaut at Teatro Massimo in Palermo; Simon Boccanegra and La Forza del Destino at the Verdi Festival in Parma; and La Bohème, Madama Butterfly, and Elisir d’amore at La Fenice in Venice.
When Jader leads an orchestra in symphonic repertoire, he conducts without a score, preferring to make direct eye contact with the musicians. He conducts from the heart, forging a profound connection with his musicians that shines through both onstage and off. Jader both embodies and exudes the excellence and enthusiasm that has long distinguished the DSO’s artistry.
BEHIND THE BATON
6 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
Jeff Tyzik
PRINCIPAL POPS CONDUCTOR
Grammy Award winner Jeff Tyzik is one of America’s most innovative and sought-after pops conductors. Tyzik is recognized for his brilliant arrangements, original programming, and engaging rapport with audiences of all ages. In addition to his role as Principal Pops Conductor of the DSO, Tyzik holds The Dot and Paul Mason Principal Pops Conductor’s Podium at the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and serves as principal pops conductor of the Oregon Symphony, Florida Orchestra, and Rochester Philharmonic—a post he has held for over 20 seasons.
Frequently invited as a guest conductor, Tyzik has appeared with the Boston Pops, Cincinnati Pops, Milwaukee Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony, Toronto Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony, The Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Royal Scottish National Orchestra.
Committed to performing music of all genres, Tyzik has collaborated with such diverse artists as Megan Hilty, Chris Botti, Matthew Morrison, Wynonna Judd, Tony Bennett, Art Garfunkel, Dawn Upshaw, Marilyn Horne, Arturo Sandoval, The Chieftains, Mark O’Connor, Doc Severinsen, and John Pizzarelli. He has created numerous original programs that include the greatest music from jazz and classical to Motown, Broadway, film, dance, Latin, and swing. Tyzik holds Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees from the Eastman School of Music.
Visit jefftyzik.com for more.
Terence Blanchard
FRED A. ERB JAZZ CREATIVE DIRECTOR CHAIR
Trumpeter, bandleader, composer, and educator Terence Blanchard has served as the DSO’s Fred A. Erb Jazz Creative Director Chair since 2012. Blanchard has performed and recorded with many of jazz’s superstars and currently leads the celebrated E-Collective. He is also wellknown for his decades-long collaboration with filmmaker Spike Lee, scoring more than 15 of Lee’s movies since the early 1990s. 2018’s BlacKkKlansman earned Blanchard his first Academy Award nomination, with a second Academy Award nomination in 2021 for Da 5 Bloods. In and out of the film world, Blanchard has received 14 Grammy nominations and six wins, as well as nominations for Emmy, Golden Globe, Sierra, and Soul Train Music awards.
Blanchard’s second opera Fire Shut Up in My Bones, based on the memoir of New York Times columnist Charles Blow, opened The Metropolitan Opera’s 20212022 season, making it the first opera by an African American composer to premiere at the Met. With a libretto by Kasi Lemmons, the opera was commissioned by Opera Theatre of Saint Louis where it premiered in 2019. The New York Times called it “inspiring,” “subtly powerful,” and “a bold affecting adaptation of Charles Blow’s work.” Blanchard’s first opera, Champion, also premiered to critical acclaim in 2013 in St. Louis and starred Denyce Graves with a libretto from Pulitzer Prize Winner Michael Cristofer. Visit terenceblanchard.com for more.
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 7 dso.org #IAMDSO
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, INC.
LIFETIME DIRECTORS
Samuel Frankel◊
Stanley Frankel
David Handleman, Sr.◊
Dr. Arthur L. Johnson ◊
James B. Nicholson
Floy Barthel
Chacona Baugh
Penny B. Blumenstein
Richard A. Brodie
Lois Cohn
Marianne Endicott
Anne Parsons, President Emeritus ◊
Barbara Van Dusen
Clyde Wu, M.D.◊
CHAIRS EMERITI
Peter D. Cummings
Mark A. Davidoff
Phillip Wm. Fisher
DIRECTORS EMERITI
Sidney Forbes
Barbara Frankel
Herman H. Frankel
Dr. Gloria Heppner
Ronald Horwitz
Bonnie Larson
Arthur C. Liebler
Harold Kulish
David McCammon
David R. Nelson
William F. Pickard, Ph.D.
Marilyn Pincus
David T. Provost Chair
Erik Rönmark President & CEO
Stanley Frankel
Robert S. Miller
James B. Nicholson
Lloyd E. Reuss
Marjorie S. Saulson
Alan E. Schwartz
Jane Sherman
Arthur A. Weiss
OFFICERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Faye Alexander Nelson Vice Chair
Laura Trudeau Treasurer
James G. Vella Secretary
Ralph J. Gerson Officer at Large
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Glenda D. Price, Ph.D. Officer at Large
Shirley Stancato Officer at Large
Directors are responsible for maintaining a culture of accountability, resource development, and strategic thinking. As fiduciaries, Directors oversee the artistic and cultural health and strategic direction of the DSO.
David Assemany, Governing Members Chair
Michael Bickers
Amanda Blaikie Orchestra
Representative
Elena Centeio
Dave Everson Orchestra Representative
Aaron Frankel
Herman B. Gray, M.D., M.B.A.
Laura HernandezRomine
Rev. Nicholas Hood III
Richard Huttenlocher
Renato Jamett Trustee Chair
Daniel J. Kaufman
Michael J. Keegan
Xavier Mosquet
David Nicholson
Arthur T. O’Reilly
Stephen Polk
Bernard I. Robertson
Nancy Tellem
Laura J. Trudeau
David M. Wu, M.D.
Ellen Hill Zeringue
◊ Deceased 8 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Renato Jamett, Chair
Trustees are a diverse group of community leaders who infuse creative thinking and innovation into how the DSO strives to achieve both artistic vitality and organizational sustainability.
Renato Jamett, Trustee Chair
Ismael Ahmed
Richard Alonzo
Hadas Bernard
Janice Bernick
Elizabeth Boone
Gwen Bowlby
Dr. Betty Chu
Karen Cullen
Joanne Danto
Stephen D’Arcy
Maureen T. D’Avanzo
Jasmin DeForrest
Afa Sadykhly Dworkin
James C. Farber
Abe Feder, Musician Representative
Linda Forte
Carolynn Frankel
Maha Freij
Christa Funk
Robert Gillette
Jody Glancy
Malik Goodwin
Mary Ann Gorlin
Donald Hiruo
Michelle Hodges
Julie Hollinshead
Sam Huszczo
John Jullens
Laurel Kalkanis
Jay Kapadia
David Karp
Joel D. Kellman
John Kim
Jennette Smith Kotila
Leonard LaRocca
William Lentine
Linda Dresner Levy
Florine Mark
Anthony McCree
Kristen McLennan
Tito Melega
Lydia Michael
H. Keith Mobley
Scott Monty
Shari Morgan
Sandy Morrison
Frederick J. Morsches
Jennifer Muse, NextGen Chair
Sean M. Neall
Eric Nemeth
Maury Okun
Jackie Paige
Vivian Pickard
Denise Fair Razo
Gerrit Reepmeyer
James Rose, Jr.
Laurie Rosen
Elana Rugh
Marc Schwartz
Carlo Serraiocco
Lois L. Shaevsky
Mary Shafer
Ralph Skiano, Musician Representative
Richard Sonenklar
Rob Tanner
Yoni Torgow
Gwen Weiner
Donnell White
Jennifer Whitteaker
R. Jamison Williams
Margaret E. Winters
MAESTRO CIRCLE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Gregory Haynes
Bonnie Larson
Lois Miller
Richard Sonenklar
Janet & Norm Ankers, Chairs
Cecilia Benner
Joanne Danto
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 9 dso.org #IAMDSO
classical roots Beyond the music
By Hannah Engwall
This March, the DSO will honor composer and pianist Anthony Davis and Reverend Dr. Charles G. Adams at the 22ND ANNUAL ARTHUR L.
JOHNSON-HONORABLE DAMON JEROME KEITH CLASSICAL ROOTS CELEBRATION. Originated in 1978, Classical Roots honors African American composers, musicians, educators, and leaders for lifetime achievement and raises funds to support the DSO’s African American music and musician development programs.
This year’s Classical Roots concerts will be conducted by DSO Assistant Conductor Na’Zir McFadden and include John Rosamond Johnson’s Lift Every Voice and Sing (arr. Roland Carter) and Florence Price’s Concert Overture No. 2 alongside works by contemporary Black artists: You Have the Right to Remain Silent by Anthony Davis and Concerto No. 1: SERMON, an array of music and literary texts assembled by bass-baritone Davóne Tines.
We sat down with Davis and Tines to discuss their works and what it means to be part of Classical Roots.
Davis’s You Have the Right to
Remain Silent is a four-movement concerto inspired by the composer’s own experience of “driving while Black” in the 1970s. A person matching Davis’s description had robbed a bank, and in a case of mistaken identity, Davis and his wife were pulled over by police.
“To have a policeman point a gun at you is scary, and it showed me how perilous it is that certain assumptions were made,” said Davis. “For Black people, particularly Black males of a certain age, this is something that we all experience while driving.”
Davis emerged physically unharmed, but the encounter left a lasting impression that he later channeled in You Have the Right to Remain Silent.
In the piece’s first movement,
Interrogation, Davis explores the vulnerability of the solo instrument’s relationship to the orchestra. “When I began the project, the first thing I thought about was the orchestra interrogating the clarinetist. The piece starts almost as if it’s in the middle of a scene—I wanted this feeling of being plunged into something right away.”
With the DSO at Classical Roots, the piece will feature Anthony McGill, Principal Clarinet of the New York Philharmonic and a champion of Davis’s work in recent years. McGill previously performed at Classical Roots in 2021, under conductor William Eddins.
“McGill is a brilliant clarinetist who brings a certain vulnerability and emotion to the piece,” said Davis. “With him, the clarinet becomes a
10 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
character, and he finds moments of real lyricism.”
Alongside avant-garde pioneer Earl Howard on the Kurzweil synthesizer, McGill explores multiphonics and other more extended techniques on the contra-alto clarinet.
In the Incarceration movement, we hear the speech rhythms of the complete Miranda warning accompanied by percussion, expanding upon the haunting “you have the right to remain silent” refrain that is prominent throughout the work.
The final movement, Dance of the Other, expresses what it’s like to walk or dance in someone else’s shoes. “It’s about the hope for transcending these negative experiences, and the fact that we can empathize,” said Davis.
“When the piece begins, it has the percussion and the clarinet. It’s almost like an African folk song, which is what I wanted to evoke. There’s a sense of the hopefulness in that, and the idea of reclaiming one’s innocence—meaning innocence at all levels: in terms of being charged with a crime, and then innocence in terms of not being jaded, not being so affected by these experiences that we can’t accept love or compassion from others.”
For Tines, Concerto No. 1: SERMON was born of an invitation he received in late 2020 to perform with The Philadelphia Orchestra.
The original invitation was to do John Adams’s The Wound-Dresser, but Tines felt compelled to go in a different direction. “I wanted to explore what else I could I say with this opportunity to sing something in the contemporary vein, but that was also truer to what I felt like I needed to say at that time in our collective history, which was some sort of statement that dealt head-on with this revitalized racial reckoning. Concerto No. 1: SERMON was my attempt to speak honestly in this context where art about Black trauma was being expected.”
For the work, Tines assembled an array of music and literary texts, including musical selections by Davis (“You Want the Truth, but You Don’t Want to Know” from X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X ) and John Adams, along with a piece Tines co-wrote with Igée Dieudonné and Matthew Aucoin. The texts include excerpts by James Baldwin, Langston Hughes, and Detroit poet jessica Care moore, who is also featured in the performance.
Tines originally met moore during his
Anthony McGill performs at a 2021 Classical Roots concert (by Sarah Smarch)
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 11 dso.org #IAMDSO
Internationally renowned poet, playwright, performance artist, and producer jessica Care moore (by Kennette Lamar, Annistique Photography)
residency at Detroit Opera, which culminated in May 2022 with his performance in the title role of Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X . With Moore, Tines felt an immediate connection, one that grew as he became more familiar with her work and the broader network of artists that she was a part of. “I realized the depth of her love for her city, and her conviction about telling the truth of her experience.”
Concerto No. 1: SERMON draws audiences in with the proclamation that “I am going to shake heaven and earth,” something that Tines achieves not through anger or aggression, but through a simple display of humanity and emotion. The piece aims to hold a mirror to the audience, inviting them to interrogate why it is even necessary to make art that calls out the degradation of humanity.
“Jessica is able to address Black lived experience in a very direct, clear, and poetic way,” said Tines. “Having her writing as the centerpiece does exactly what we need it to do—turn the proposition on its head and say yes, I’m here, proving my humanity to you, but why is it even necessary for me to do that in the first place?”
Through previous collaborations, Davis and Tines have built a strong mutual respect and appreciation for one another.
“He’s an incredible artist and I really enjoy working with him,” said Davis of Tines. “He’s been a real trailblazer in devising and transforming the role of what the opera singer/soloist is supposed to be by creating his own programs using other music to tell a different kind of story.”
Of Davis, Tines shares similar admiration: “Anthony is a genius in many ways. He creates music that is at the intersection of so many different ideas, histories, aesthetics, and ways of being, and I find myself contending with those
intersections as well. It was amazing to meet somebody who had done such incredible work to coalesce the diversity of their experience and the Black experience and make that incarnate within a classical music context, generations before myself.”
Born in 1951, Davis has been active for decades as a composer, educator, and pianist, and in the 1990s, took part in the DSO’s Unisys African American Composer Residency Program. Both he and Tines look forward to continuing the legacy of African American music at the DSO with Classical Roots.
“I’ve enjoyed my experiences in Detroit and am excited to bring this piece to the city,” said Davis. “Detroit is a serious center for African and African American music from R&B and jazz to classical, and Classical Roots sheds light on the fact that African Americans are deeply involved in classical music and that it is part of our whole spectrum of expression.”
Tines echoed Davis’s sentiments: “All of the people that I’ve engaged with in Detroit are very passionate and curious about what’s going on in their city. There’s a certain je ne sais quois about the Detroit energy and spirit that is unique from other places. I’ve seen a certain kind of unified identity that also is unable to fully articulate itself, but you can actually feel it. And that’s something I’m thrilled to experience again.”
“I’m very glad that the work that I make, that engages identity, can be experienced in a context where people are open minded in that way. Concerto No. 1: SERMON is very direct to the exact context in which Classical Roots is also trying to make change, and I hope that I’m able to show a contemporary method for addressing the necessity for equitable engagement of other histories by predominantly white institutions. I hope that the work strikes a chord with people to try to interrogate how they are contributing to making change.”
12 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
Davóne Tines
The Community Foundation is dedicated to supporting and enhancing the arts in southeast Michigan.
For decades, we have partnered and collaborated with organizations like the Detroit Symphony Orchestra along with other hyperlocal projects to enrich our region through the arts.
We have helped hundreds of donors who want to support local arts and culture find the best way to make a lasting impact.
MAKE AN IMPACT
When you are ready to make a lasting impact on arts and culture, the Community Foundation is here to help. Visit: cfsem.org/arts-culture or call 313.961.6675
Jeffery Zook & David Assemany: Living Legacy
An acclaimed musician and educator, DSO Flute and Piccolo Jeffery Zook (Shari and Craig Morgan Chair) is currently in his 30th season with the orchestra. Together with his husband, DSO Governing Member Chair David Assemany, the pair gives back to the organization that has given them so much.
It was within the DSO universe that they first met in 1996 and fell in love. Since then, the DSO has been a constant presence in their lives— evolving from a patron and musician-only based relationship to high-level donor status.
The harmonious oneDSO culture initially cultivated by DSO Chair Emeritus Phillip Fisher inspired Zook and Assemany to deepen their investment in the prosperity of the DSO.
Assemany became a Governing Member from the beginning and is now serving in his third year as Chair of the Governing Members. His ambassadorial role is essential to the artistic and cultural health and strategic direction of the DSO.
When the Musicians Fund was established, I immediately knew I wanted us to contribute because I feel strongly that excellence is the most important one of the DSO’s core values. Without excellence, nothing is going to be successful. It was also important to us to give a gift to the Anne Parsons Leadership Fund while Anne was still alive. We respected her immensely and were grateful that we were able to do that before she passed away.”
David Assemany, Governing Member Chair
Living at the intersection of music and community, the sociable duo impacts everyone they meet. They open their home as an entertainment venue for student recitals, open mics, workshops, musical feasts, and fundraisers. As DSO advocates, their legacy gifts to the DSO Musicians Fund for Artistic Excellence and the Anne Parsons Leadership Fund contribute to the future sustainability of Detroit’s world-class orchestra. Within their world of music, advocacy, and community-building through the arts, Dave and Jeff are building a living legacy with their purposeful generosity.
TRANSFORMATIONAL SUPPORT
14 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
The DSO is grateful to the donors who have made extraordinary endowment investments through the DSO Impact Campaign or multi-year, comprehensive gifts to support general operations, capital improvements, or special programs.
FOUNDING FAMILIES
Mr. & Mrs. Lee Barthel
Julie & Peter Cummings APLF
The Davidson-Gerson Family and the William Davidson Foundation
The Richard C. Devereaux Foundation
Erb Family and the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation
The Fisher Family and the Max M. & Marjorie S. Fisher Foundation
Stanley & Judy Frankel and the Samuel & Jean Frankel Foundation
Danialle & Peter Karmanos, Jr.
Mort & Brigitte Harris Foundation APLF
Linda Dresner & Ed Levy, Jr.APLF
James B. & Ann V. Nicholson and PVS Chemicals, Inc. APLF
Bernard & Eleanor Robertson
Mrs. Richard C. Van Dusen
Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Foundation
Clyde & Helen Wu◊
VISIONARIES
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. AlonzoAPLF
Penny & Harold BlumensteinAPLF
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip Wm. FisherAPLF,MM
Alan J. & Sue Kaufman and Family MM
Shari & Craig Morgan APLF, MM
CHAMPIONS
Mandell & Madeleine Berman Foundation APLF
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Cracchiolo
Joanne Danto & Arnold Weingarden
Vera and Joseph Dresner Foundation
DTE Energy Foundation
Ford Motor Company Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Morton E. Harris ◊
John S. & James L. Knight Foundation
The Kresge Foundation
Mrs. Bonnie Larson APLF
Brian Meer & Lisa
Keramedjian Meer
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Ms. Deborah Miesel
Dr. William F. Pickard
The Polk Family
Stephen M. Ross
Family of Clyde and Helen Wu APLF
LEADERS
Applebaum Family Philanthropy
Charlotte Arkin Estate
Marvin & Betty Danto Family Foundation APLF
Adel & Walter Dissett MM
Herman & Sharon Frankel
Ruth & Al◊ Glancy
Mary Ann & Robert Gorlin APLF
Ronald M. & Carol◊ Horwitz
Richard H. & Carola
Huttenlocher MM
John C. Leyhan Estate
Bud & Nancy Liebler
Richard & Jane Manoogian Foundation
David & Valerie McCammon
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene A. Miller
Pat & Hank◊ Nickol
Jack & Aviva Robinson◊
Martie & Bob Sachs
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Alan E. Schwartz
Drs. Doris Tong & Teck Soo
Paul & Terese Zlotof
BENEFACTORS
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Robert A. Allesee
Mr. David Assemany & Mr. Jeffery Zook APLF, MM
W. Harold & Chacona W. Baugh
APLF
Robert & Lucinda Clement
Lois & Avern Cohn MM
Jack, Evelyn, and Richard Cole
Family Foundation
Mary Rita Cuddohy Estate
Margie Dunn & Mark Davidoff
APLF, MM
DSO Musicians MM
Bette Dyer Estate
Marjorie S. Fisher Fund MM
Dr. Marjorie M. Fisher & Mr. Roy Furman
Ms. Mary D. Fisher
Mr. & Mrs. Aaron Frankel MM
Barbara Frankel & Ronald Michalak MM
Victor◊ & Gale Girolami Fund
The Glancy Foundation, Inc. APLF
Herbert & Dorothy Graebner ◊
Richard Sonenklar & Gregory Haynes MM
Mr. & Mrs. David Jaffa
Renato & Elizabeth Jamett MM
Allan & Joy Nachman MM
Ann & Norman◊ Katz
Dr. Melvin A. Lester ◊
Florine Mark
Michigan Arts & Culture Council
Dr. Glenda D. Price
Ruth Rattner
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Lloyd E. Reuss
Mr. & Mrs. Fred Secrest◊
Jane & Larry Sherman
Cindy McTee & Leonard Slatkin
Marilyn Snodgrass Estate
Mr. and Mrs. Arn Tellem APLF
Nancy Schlichting & Pamela
Theisen APLF
Mr. James G. Vella MM
Eva von Voss and Family MM
Key: MM DSO Musicians Fund for Artistic Excellence
APLF Anne Parsons Leadership Fund
◊ Deceased
◊ Deceased
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 15 dso.org #IAMDSO
Sensory-Friendly Spotlight: Relaxed Open Rehearsals
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra is an inclusive and culturally relevant community where all people can experience their world through music. Each season, the DSO holds Relaxed Open Rehearsals and sensory-friendly events for individuals who may not feel comfortable in a traditional concert environment. Special focus is given to audience members on the autism spectrum and those with other sensory sensitivities.
The culture of attending live performances can be unforgiving for those who are unable to conform to the standard concert etiquette of quietly sitting still for extended periods, including those who may express emotions such as joy or excitement through vocalization. The DSO’s Relaxed Open Rehearsals aim to remove barriers, enabling participants to be themselves and enjoy a musical experience in a safe and judgement-free environment.
Kiersten Alcorn, the DSO’s Community Engagement Manager, is passionate about the organization’s commitment to advancing accessibility measures. “This programming is so important because it embodies our mission of cultivating an inclusive community
and musical experiences that are accessible to all,” said Alcorn. “Through this work, more people can enjoy the magic of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in ways that empower our community and prioritize comfort and safety.”
On September 22, 2022, 50 attendees enjoyed a Relaxed Open Rehearsal as DSO musicians prepared for a weekend of DTE Community Concerts under the baton of DSO Assistant Conductor Na’Zir McFadden (Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador). Attendees had access to resources to prepare for the event including a program guide, social story, and Spotify playlist to hear selections in advance. The DSO removed barriers to this event by hosting a limited number of audience members and providing other accommodations including noisereducing headphones and fidgets, a quiet area to take a break from the rehearsal if needed, and the opportunity to see and touch instruments beforehand.
The event was well received by those who attended, and filled a community need that is sometimes overlooked. “It is an environment where it feels safe to enjoy the music/experience in the way each of us enjoys it—some clapping, some singing, some helping the conductor, and some just listening in a way not usually available to us,” said one attendee.
The DSO looks forward to hosting more Relaxed Open Rehearsals in the future and continuing efforts to promote accessibility throughout The Max and community venues. Thanks to a donation from the Mid-Michigan Autism Association, the DSO now offers sensory toolkits (including noise-cancelling headphones and fidget toys) and a quiet room, available for patrons to use at every performance, beyond the dedicated sensory-friendly events. Visit the Accessibility tab at dso.org/yourexperience to learn more.
COMMUNITY & LEARNING
Karisa Antonio, the DSO’s Director of Social Innovation, guides participants as they interact with instruments ahead of the Relaxed Open Rehearsal on September 22
16 DSO PERFORMANCE
WINTER 2022–2023
MAGAZINE
will visit the DSO.”
MEET NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
Commencing with the 2022-2023 season, American conductor
Na’Zir McFadden is the Assistant Conductor and Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.
In this role, he works closely with Music Director Jader Bignamini and guest conductors on both the PVS Classical Series and William Davidson Neighborhood Concert Series. He also leads pre-concert lectures at Orchestra Hall and conducts a variety of programs on the Educational Concert Series, Young People’s Family Concert Series, and PNC Pops Series.
In fall 2022, he led DTE Community Concerts at five venues across Metro Detroit, powered by the DTE Energy Foundation. The yearly tradition signaled the start of the new season, and for McFadden, the start of his role with the DSO.
Previously, McFadden was the inaugural Apprentice Conductor of the Philadelphia Ballet Orchestra from 2020 to 2022, where he worked with Music Director Beatrice Jona Affron. He also served as the Robert L. Poster Conducting Apprentice of the New York Youth Symphony from 2020 to 2021.
SEE NA’ZIR IN ACTION AT ORCHESTRA HALL
Get tickets at dso.org
PNC
CLASSICAL
March 3-4
SYMPHONIC SUPERHEROES
March 11
YOUNG PERSON’S GUIDE TO THE ORCHESTRA
May 20
THE MUSIC OF ELTON JOHN FEATURING MICHAEL CAVANAUGH
May 13
RESPECT: A TRIBUTE TO ARETHA FRANKLIN
May 26-28
“Not only have I been inspired by the stellar performances given by the DSO through the years, but also by its commitment to preserving the highest of artistic standards while imagining a new bright future for classical music. I am eager to work and learn alongside Music Director Jader Bignamini and the many guest conductors who
—Na’Zir McFadden
PVS Classical Series
ROOTS
Young People’s Family Concert Series
Pops Series
FEATURE DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 17 dso.org #IAMDSO
Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador, and Music Director of the Detroit Symphony Youth Orchestra
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
JEFF TYZIK Principal Pops Conductor
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES
Title Sponsor:
NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN & GAVRYLYUK PLAYS GRIEG
Thursday, February 23, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, February 24, 2023 at 8 p.m.
Saturday, February 25, 2023 at 8 p.m. at Orchestra Hall
JADER BIGNAMINI, conductor ALEXANDER GAVRYLYUK, piano
Modest Mussorgsky Night on Bald Mountain (1839 - 1881)
Orch. Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Edvard Grieg Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in A minor, Op. 16 (1843 - 1907)
I. Allegro molto moderato
II. Adagio
III. Allegro moderato molto e marcato
Alexander Gavrylyuk, piano
Intermission
Dora Pejačević Symphony in F Sharp minor, Op.41 (1885 - 1923)
Andante maestoso – Allegro con moto
Andante sostenuto
Scherzo: Molto allegro
Allegro appassionato
Saturday’s performance will be webcast via our exclusive Live From Orchestra Hall series, presented by Ford Motor Company Fund and made possible by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
A
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR
COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
JADER BIGNAMINI , Music Director Music Directorship endowed by the Kresge Foundation
TERENCE BLANCHARD
Fred A. Erb Jazz Creative Director Chair
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador
NEEME JÄRVI Music Director Emeritus
LEONARD SLATKIN Music Director Laureate
18 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE | NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN & GAVRYLYUK PLAYS GRIEG
Underground Renegades
Some of the world’s most notable and beloved musical masterpieces were the fruit borne from great risk. Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain was unorthodox for its time. Though he was a brilliant composer, Mussorgsky published very little during his lifetime, and his struggles with alcoholism led to his untimely death at age 42. Night on Bald Mountain was never officially published, but was revived, corrected, and premiered 5 years after his death by his former roommate and colleague Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Edvard Grieg’s Piano Concerto in A minor, although well-received by the public, never fully satisfied the composer himself. After receiving encouragement from Franz Liszt, the work was finally published, but Grieg continued to pen revisions until his death. Dora Pejačević was a composer whose legacy succeeded her. As a female composer during a highly prejudiced time, she dedicated her life to composing and wrote only one symphony—her Symphony in F-sharp minor—which was so beloved that renowned conductor Arthur Nikisch performed and championed the work. These composers took risks, and thanks to those who believed in them, we may now enjoy these incredible works as part of the modern canon.
PROGRAM NOTES
Night on Bald Mountain
MODEST MUSSORGSKY ARR. RIMSKY-KORSAKOV
B. March 21, 1839, Karevo, Russia
D. March 28, 1881, St. Petersburg, Russia
Scored for 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, and strings. (Approx. 12 minutes)
Mussorgsky is remembered as somewhat of a renegade of Russian music. This reputation had been acquired over time and reinforced by the thundering climaxes and raw emotion that bleed out of his compositions. He was a man led by his passions, and his work is largely branded by drama, bold harmonies, and dark textures. His compositional voice was judged by his colleagues as being highly exciting and expressive, but raw and unrefined. Perhaps this is what made him so unique, as this vivid expression suggests a strong visual component in his repertoire. In Night on Bald Mountain, we can almost see and feel the violence depicted throughout. This piece is a tone poem depicting a witches’ Sabbath on St. John’s Eve, which so happened to be the very night he completed this work, on
June 23, 1867. This piece itself never came to fruition, as his mentor Mily Balakirev expressed disdain for this work largely due to its innovative form and subject matter. While Mussorgsky recycled some of its musical materials in his operas Mlada and The Fair at Sorochyntsi, he never heard Night on Bald Mountain in its entirety during his lifetime.
ModestThe version of this tone poem that is performed today is an arrangement of the piece by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, based on the excerpts of the piece Mussorgsky used in The Fair at Sorochyntsi. Its concert premiere was given in St. Petersburg in 1886, and the piece achieved immediate success. Mussorgsky originally composed this piece as a “vivid tone-painting of craggy peak [Bald Mountain] at night in bad weather,” but Rimsky-Korsakov’s arrangement brought out a new world of modern interpretations and textural depictions within the intricate orchestration. The tone of this piece is eerie, and the score is filled with bone-chilling elements like the sinister roll of the bass drum and slithering descending phrases emulating serpents. This piece possesses a clear, four-part structure outlined as such: “[1] an underground noise of inhuman voices. Appearance of the Spirits of Darkness followed by an appearance of Satan and [2] his adoration. [3] A Black Mass. [4] Joyful dancing of the Witches’
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Sabbath.”
In the Western world, we typically associate Night on Bald Mountain with the notable collaboration between Leopold Stokowski and Disney studios in the 1940 classic film Fantasia. This piece’s legacy is long-lasting, having not only secured a scene in this movie, but also introducing a new and shocking compositional strategy of parodying religious chants. In the original Night on Bald Mountain score’s “Black Mass” section, Mussorgsky included a parody of a Russian Orthodox chant that would have been immediately recognized by Russian audiences—a technique later used by Hector Berlioz in his Symphonie fantastique but removed from the new Bald Mountain arrangement in its entirety by Rimsky-Korsakov.
The DSO most recently performed Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain in October 2021 at a family concert, conducted by Kelly Corcoran. The DSO first performed the piece in March 1924, conducted by Victor Kolar.
Concerto in A minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 16
Composed 1868 | Premiered April 3, 1869 EDVARD
GRIEG
B. June 15, 1843, Bergen, Norway
D. September 4, 1907, Bergen, Norway
Scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani, and strings. (Approx. 30 minutes)
Edvard Grieg once allowed that “my music has a taste of codfish in it,” and his compositions were indeed always inflected with the accent of his native Norway. He became famous around the world for his many dances, songs, piano pieces, and other miniatures imbued with the spirit and style of his homeland, but he also occasionally ventured into the larger genres for orchestra and chamber ensembles.
The most famous of these large-scale works, and one of the most beloved entries in the entire keyboard repertory, is his Piano Concerto of 1868.
Grieg completed his studies at the Leipzig Conservatory in 1863. Rather than heading directly home to Norway, however, he settled in Copenhagen to study privately with Niels Gade, Denmark’s most prominent musician at that time and generally regarded as the founder of the modern Scandinavian school of composition. After returning to Norway, Grieg concentrated his creative work on the large forms advocated by his Leipzig teachers and by Gade. He also carried on his work to promote native music and gave an unprecedented concert exclusively of Norwegian compositions in 1866. Its success brought him an eminence that lifted him to the front rank of Scandinavian musicians: He was appointed conductor of the Philharmonic Society in Christiania (Oslo), had a full schedule of pupils, and was popular as a piano recital artist. Grieg arranged to have the summer of 1868 free of duties, and he returned to Denmark for an extended vacation at a secluded retreat at Sölleröd. He thoroughly enjoyed that summer, sleeping late, taking long walks, eating well, and tipping a glass in the evenings with friends at the local inn. The sylvan setting also spurred his creative energies, and he composed freely for several hours each afternoon, largely completing his Piano Concerto by the time he returned to Norway in the fall.
The concerto’s first movement opens with a bold summons by the soloist. The main theme is given by the woodwinds and taken over almost immediately by the piano. A flashing transition, filled with skipping rhythms, leads to the second theme—a tender cello melody wrapped in the warm harmonies of the trombones. An episodic development section, launched by the full orchestra playing the movement’s opening motive, is largely based on the main theme in dialogue. The recapitulation returns the earlier themes,
20 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
after which the piano launches into a tightly woven cadenza. The stern introductory measures are recalled to close the movement. The adagio begins with a song filled with sentiment and nostalgia played by the strings and rounded off by touching phrases in the solo horn. The soloist weaves elaborate musical filigree above the simple accompaniment before the lovely song returns in an enriched setting. The themes of the finale’s outer sections are constructed in the rhythms of a popular Norwegian dance, the halling. The movement’s central portion presents a wonderful melodic inspiration, introduced by the solo flute, that derives from the dreamy atmosphere of the preceding movement.
The DSO most recently performed Grieg’s Concerto in A minor for Piano and Orchestra in June 2015, conducted by Marcelo Lehninger and featuring pianist Andrew von Oeyen. The DSO first performed the piece in November 1914, conducted by Weston Gales and featuring pianist Kathryn Goodson.
Symphony in F-sharp minor, Op. 41
Composed 1916-1917 | Premiered 1917
DORA PEJAČEVIĆ
B. September 10, 1885, Budapest, Hungary
D. March 5, 1923, Munich, Germany
Scored for 3 flutes (2 doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, english horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, contrabassoon, 6 horns, 4 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, and strings. (Approx. 47 minutes)
Dora Pejačević was one of the most prominent and talented female composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Although mainly selftaught, she developed her compositional prowess over time through contact with various artists and intellectuals including Karl Kraus. Pejačević
additionally studied in Zagreb at the Croatian Music Institute, in Dresden with Sherwood, and in Munich with Courvoisier. Due to societal limitations of the time, it was very uncommon for women to compose or participate in classical music—making Pejačević’s career all the more remarkable.
Born in Budapest, Hungary, she was a descendant of the noble Pejačević family of Croatia on her father’s side. Her mother, a Hungarian countess and pianist, taught Dora her first piano lessons. As a member of the aristocracy, Dora was very engaged with culture and education and was able to speak and read several languages. Despite her noble status, she was said to be very down to earth, holding special empathy for the common people following the suffering of World War I. Pejačević dedicated her life to her art and produced many notable compositions, though just one symphony: the Symphony in F-sharp minor.
The work was released in two versions, with the first finished in August 1917 and the second completed in 1920 with compressed versions of some original sections and a widening of the orchestral instrumentation in the new, final movement. The piece is written in a traditional Romantic four-movement disposition and follows the typical progression of tempi for each movement: a fast and dramatic first movement, a slow and lyrical second movement, a scherzo third movement, and ending with a fast and passionate final movement. Its rich instrumentation (featuring a sizeable horn and brass section) follows the late-Romantic style, and it served as one of the first modern symphonies by a Croatian composer. The work was premiered in Dresden in 1920 and was so well-received that prominent conductor Arthur Nikisch wanted to program and conduct it. Pejačević had an excellent sense of orchestral color, a strong rhythmic and melodic gift, and continued to evolve her compositional style over time from a late Romantic idiom to a modern and mature style enriched with
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 21 dso.org #IAMDSO
impressionist harmonies. The maturity of her talents seep into each performance of the piece, allowing the audience to reveal new and lovely nuances with each listen.
PROFILES
Jader Bignamini biography, see page 6.
ALEXANDER GAVRYLYUK
Astunningly virtuosic pianist, Alexander Gavrylyuk is internationally recognized for his electrifying and poetic performances. Highlights of the 2021-2022 season included debuts with San Diego Symphony, Dallas Symphony, Bergen Philharmonic, Rheinische Philharmonie, and Antwerp Symphony Orchestras, as well as return visits to Chicago Symphony, Sydney Symphony, New Mexico Philharmonic, and Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra.
Born in Ukraine in 1984 and holding Australian citizenship, Gavrylyuk began his piano studies at the age of seven and gave his first concerto performance when he was nine years old. At the age of 13, Gavrylyuk moved to Sydney, where he lived until 2006. He won First Prize and Gold Medal at the Horowitz International Piano Competition (1999), First Prize at the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition (2000), and Gold Medal at the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Masters Competition (2005).
He has since gone on to perform with many of the world’s leading orchestras, including the New York, Los Angeles, Czech, Warsaw, Moscow, Seoul, Israel, and Rotterdam philharmonics. He has collaborated with conductors including Vladimir Ashkenazy, Alexandre Bloch, Herbert Blomstedt, Andrey Boreyko, Thomas Dausgaard, Valery Gergiev, Neeme Järvi, Vladimir Jurowski, Sebastian Lang-Lessing, Kirill Karabits,
This performance marks the DSO premiere of Pejačević’s Symphony in F-sharp minor.
Louis Langrée, Cornelius Meister, Vassily Petrenko, Rafael Payare, Alexander Shelley, Yuri Simonov, Vladimir Spivakov, Markus Stenz, Sir Mark Elder, Thomas Søndergård, Gergely Madaras, Mario Venzago, Enrique Mazzola, and Osmo Vänskä.
Gavrylyuk has appeared at many of the world’s foremost festivals, including the Hollywood Bowl, Bravo! Vail in Colorado, Mostly Mozart, the Ruhr Festival, the Kissinger Sommer International Music Festival, and the Gergiev Festival in Rotterdam.
As a recitalist, Gavrylyuk has performed at the Musikverein in Vienna, Tonhalle Zurich, Victoria Hall Geneva, Southbank Centre’s International Piano Series, Wigmore Hall, Concertgebouw
Master Pianists Series, Suntory Hall, Tokyo Opera City Hall, Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory, Cologne
Philharmonie, Tokyo City Concert Hall, San Francisco, Sydney Recital Hall, and Melbourne Recital Centre. Gavrylyuk also performs regularly with recital partner Janine Jansens throughout Europe.
Gavrylyuk is Artist-in-Residence at Chautauqua Institution, where he leads the piano program as an artistic advisor. He supports a number of charities including the Theme and Variations Foundation, which aims to provide support and encouragement to young, aspiring Australian pianists as well as Opportunity Cambodia, which has built a residential educational facility for Cambodian children.
Alexander Gavrylyuk is a Steinway Artist.
22 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
JEFF TYZIK Principal Pops Conductor
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
JADER BIGNAMINI , Music Director Music Directorship endowed by the Kresge Foundation
MUSIC DIRECTOR
TERENCE BLANCHARD
Fred A. Erb Jazz Creative Director Chair
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES
Title Sponsor:
CLASSICAL ROOTS
Friday, March 3, 2023 at 10:45 a.m. • Saturday, March 4, 2023 at 8 p.m. at Orchestra Hall
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN, conductor • ANTHONY MCGILL, clarinet^ • EARL HOWARD, Kurzweil synthesizer‡ DAVÓNE TINES, bass-baritone ∞ • JESSICA CARE MOORE, poet* BRAZEAL DENNARD CHORALE, ALICE MCALLISTER TILLMAN, Artistic Director ±
John Rosamond Johnson (1873 - 1954) Lift Every Voice and Sing±
Lyrics by James Weldon Johnson arr. Roland Carter
Adolphus Hailstork (b. 1941) O Praise the Lord± Rochelle Mitchell, Yvonne Turner, Darrius Washington
Traditional/arr. Norah Duncan IV Hold On!± Alice McCallister Tillman, Tuesday Rambo McCall
Anthony Davis (b. 1951) You Have the Right to Remain Silent, Concerto for Clarinet/contra-alto clarinet, Kurzweil synthesizer, and ensemble in four movements^ ‡
I. Interrogation • II. Loss
III. Incarceration • IV. Dance of the Other Intermission
Florence Price Concert Overture No. 2 (“Go Down Moses,” “Ev’ry Time I (1887 - 1953) Feel the Spirit,” “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen”)
Various Concerto No. 1: SERMON, devised by Davóne Tines ∞ *
Movement 1
Recitation: Excerpt from The Fire Next Time, by James Baldwin
John Adams, “Shake the Heavens” from El Niño (A Nativity Oratorio)
Movement 2
Recitation: Hope, by Langston Hughes
Igee Dieudonné & Davóne Tines, “Vigil”
Movement 3
EXEGESIS, by jessica Care moore
Anthony Davis, “You Want the Truth, but You Don’t Want to Know,” from X: The Life and Times of Malcom X (1986)
Saturday’s performance will be webcast via our exclusive Live From Orchestra Hall series, presented by Ford Motor Company Fund and made possible by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
JA DER B I G NA M I N I
NEEME JÄRVI Music Director Emeritus LEONARD SLATKIN Music Director Laureate
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 23 dso.org #IAMDSO
PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE | CLASSICAL ROOTS
Celebrating Classical Roots
The Classical Roots mission seeks to increase awareness of the significant contributions African American composers and musicians have made to classical music. This year’s Classical Roots program includes Florence Price’s Concert Overture No. 2, Anthony Davis’s You Have the Right to Remain Silent with Anthony McGill (clarinet) and Earl Howard (Kurzweil synthesizer), and the DSO premiere of Davóne Tines’s devised Concerto No. 1: SERMON with Detroit-based poet jessica Care moore.
Beyond Orchestra Hall, the Classical Roots festivities extend to The Cube for a performance by renowned pianist and composer BLKBOK. In the community, DSO African American Orchestra Fellow Jaquain Sloan (bassoon) performs at Hartford Memorial Baptist Church in Detroit; at the Plymouth United Church of Christ, a DSO chamber ensemble is joined by choir to perform repertoire by Black composers. Across Metro Detroit, we celebrate the contributions of Black artists to the rich heritage of classical music.
PROGRAM NOTES
Lift Every Voice and Sing
JOHN ROSAMOND JOHNSON/ ARR. CARTER
Scored for 2 flutes, oboe, 2 clarinets, bassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, and strings (Approx. 5 minutes)
Lift Every Voice and Sing was first performed, in poetry form, in commemoration of President Lincoln’s birthday on February 12, 1900, by a choir of 500 schoolchildren from the segregated Stanton School in Jacksonville, Florida—hometown of sibling creators John Rosamond and James Weldon Johnson. The poem was set to music five years later.
Voicing the cry for liberation and affirmation for African American people, the song was declared “The Negro National Anthem” by the NAACP in 1919. It gained new popularity as a protest song during the Civil Rights Movement and was entered into the Congressional Record in the 1990s as the official African American National Hymn.
In his second autobiography Along This Way, James Weldon Johnson describes the emotion in writing Lift Every Voice and
Sing : “I could not keep back the tears, and made no effort to do so.” He later reported that creating the song’s lyrics was the greatest satisfaction of his life.
Lift Every Voice and Sing has been sung at the beginning of every Classical Roots concert since the event’s inauguration in 1978. You are invited to sing along to this historic work and join the Brazeal Dennard Choir in celebration.
“Lift ev’ry voice and sing, ‘Til earth and heaven ring, Ring with the harmonies of Liberty; Let our rejoicing rise
High as the listening skies,
Let it resound loud as the rolling sea.
Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us,
Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us;
Facing the rising sun of our new day begun,
Let us march on ‘til victory is won.
Stony the road we trod, Bitter the chastening rod,
Felt in the days when hope unborn had died;
Yet with a steady beat, Have not our weary feet
Come to the place for which our fathers sighed?
We have come over a way that with tears has been watered,
24 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
We have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered, Out from the gloomy past, ‘Til now we stand at last Where the white gleam of our bright star is cast.
God of our weary years, God of our silent tears, Thou who has brought us thus far on the way; Thou who has by Thy might Led us into the light, Keep us forever in the path, we pray. Lest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met Thee, Lest, our hearts drunk with the wine of the world, we forget Thee; Shadowed beneath Thy hand, May we forever stand, True to our God, True to our native land.”
You Have the Right to Remain Silent
Composed 2007 | Premiered 2007 | Revised 2011
ANTHONY DAVIS
B. February 20, 1951, Paterson, NJ
Scored for solo clarinet (doubling on contra-alto clarinet), Kurzweil synthesizer, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, trumpet, trombone, percussion, harp, and strings (Approx. 25 minutes)
Anthony Davis is an internationally renowned composer of operatic, symphonic, choral, and chamber works, and a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his opera The Central Park Five. He is best known for his operas X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X , Under the Double Moon, The Central Park Five, and Tania
You Have the Right to Remain Silent was written in 2007 for clarinetist J.D. Parran and Kurzweil synthesizer player Earl Howard. Parran and the Perspectives Ensemble premiered the work in 2007 at New York’s Miller Theatre.
Of this piece, Davis writes the following: “You Have the Right to Remain Silent, for solo clarinet, Kurzweil, and chamber ensemble, takes its inspiration from the Miranda warning. The piece was conceived as a concerto for clarinetist J.D. Parran with realtime processing by Earl Howard on the Kurzweil. I tried to approach ‘Silence’ as, rather than John Cage’s apolitical world of ‘white privilege,’ a much more dangerous space. In the first movement, ‘Interrogation,’ I imagined the clarinet being interrogated by the orchestra as the orchestra utters ‘You have the right to remain silent.’ In the second movement, ‘Loss,’ a phasing texture slowly emerges as the orchestration gains momentum through metric modulation, setting up an improvised duet with the contra-alto clarinet and the Kurzweil. This section concludes with an homage to Charles Mingus with a melodic variation for the contra-alto clarinet in F minor that starts as a dirge and ends in swing. The third movement, ‘Incarceration,’ involves the percussion, with more text from the Miranda in contrast to the clarinet and Kurzweil. I have always been fascinated by the relationship of speech to rhythm, from Sprechstimme to hip-hop. The Kurzweil processes both the clarinet and the percussion. The final movement, ‘Dance of the Other,’ begins with a rather simple melody that suggests the fantasy of otherness.”
This performance marks the DSO premiere of Davis’s You Have the Right to Remain Silent
Concert Overture No. 2
Composed 1943 | Premiered 1943
FLORENCE PRICE
B. April 9, 1887, Little Rock, Arkansas
D. June 3, 1953, Chicago, Illinois
Scored for 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, english horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, and strings. (Approx. 14 minutes)
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Florence Beatrice (Smith)
Price was the most widely known African American woman composer from the 1930s until her death in 1953. After graduating as valedictorian of her class at the age of 14, she enrolled at the New England Conservatory of Music where she studied organ and piano performance, and later composition with George Chadwick and Frederick Converse.
Price was the first Black female composer to have a symphony performed by a major American orchestra—her Symphony No. 1 in E minor, premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on June 15, 1933. The premiere brought instant recognition and accolades to Price, yet much of her music eventually fell into neglect due to “a dangerous mélange of segregation, Jim Crow laws, entrenched racism, and sexism” (Women’s Voices for Change, 2013). Price’s compositions reflect a romantic nationalist style, while incorporating African American musical forms.
Price’s Concert Overture No. 2 was composed between her second and third symphonies. The first half of this work is based on three spirituals portrayed in miniature scenes: “Go Down, Moses;” “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen;” and “Ev’ry Time I Feel the Spirit.” Composed in 1943, the musical character of these spirituals moves rapidly in succession from somber, to poignant, to exuberant. The second half of this overture takes excerpts in the form of melodic fragments from the first three sections into a unified portrait closing with a return of “Go Down, Moses” as a symbolic cry for liberation.
Price was known for her settings of spirituals, which have been performed by some of the 20th century’s greatest vocalists including Marian Anderson and Leontyne Price. Although much of Price’s music remained unpublished until after her death, the rights to her work were acquired in 1918 by G. Schirmer, and recent scholarship and research has led to an increase in frequency of orchestras
around the world performing her works. Her Concert Overture No. 2 might have been lost if it wasn’t for the good fortune and hard work of Tom Dillard and Tim Nutt, librarians at the University of Arkansas who found this work among Price’s assets in her late Chicago residence.
This performance marks the DSO premiere of Florence Price’s Concert Overture No. 2.
Concerto No. 1: SERMON
Composed 2021 | Premiered 2021
VARIOUS COMPOSERS DEVISED BY DAVÓNE TINES
Scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 3 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani, percussion, harp, 2 keyboards, and strings. (Approx. 20 minutes)
Of Concerto No. 1: SERMON, Davóne Tines writes the following:
“Before I was a singer, I was a violinist for 14 years. I deeply love the broader orchestral repertoire and, as a young person, dreamed of performing concertos with major orchestras. When I became a singer, I didn’t want to leave that dream behind. With Concerto No. 1: SERMON, I wanted to begin to explore what it might mean for a singer to dialogue with an orchestra in the same way.
The complication that singing adds is the likely necessity of words. And with the addition of words, there is the likely addition of explicit meaning. If a concerto is essentially a statement made by a soloist in dialogue with an orchestra, then what could be expressed if this notion of a ‘statement’ is made more literal or even more personal through words? Should the words be poetic? Prose? Abstract? Direct? The notion of an abstract personal statement is intrinsic in the instrumental (e.g. wordless) concerto form. Solo instrumentalist artists have been doing this for centuries via their readings and
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interpretations of wordless musical texts. We surmise that we get a sense of an individual artist’s persona and personality through their interpretation. Some appreciate the anonymity that abstraction affords the artist and audience alike, but for me, as an artist of classical music in a fraught contemporary context, I find there is an incredible opportunity and need for a classical artist to be in direct, unmitigated, intentional, and non-abstract communication with an audience. So, what did I want to say?
In the Fall of 2020, I was invited by Philadelphia Orchestra Music Director Yannick Nézet-S éguin to perform John Adams’s The Wound Dresser. That beautiful, impressionistic piece, made on a text by Walt Whitman, can be understood as an extolling of the importance of care; but at the particular time, after yet another resurgence in attention paid to the undue deaths of Black people at the hands of police, this time Breonna Taylor and George Floyd, I wanted to say something more personal, less abstract, and utterly direct.
I decided to explore the idea of delivering a sermon to speak to the majority white audience I would encounter; to make an appeal to that group which holds the most power and accountability in the matters of systemic and institutionalized racist violence.
There’s a lot of different kinds of sermons, and I chose the idea of an exegesis sermon, the tradition I was most familiar with growing up in the Black Baptist church of rural Northern Virginia. In an exegesis, a speaker takes scriptures and expounds on them in order to share a principle or value. I wanted to share with an audience what it might mean to be a marginalized identity, wanting to be able to exist in a way in spite of marginalization. So, in order to tell that story, I chose three different poetic and prose texts by Black writers to serve as ‘scriptures,’ and paired them with three arias or songs that elucidate the texts.
The program starts with a text by
James Baldwin excerpted from his A Letter to My Nephew used to introduce his book The Fire Next Time. In the text, Baldwin explores an idea of what it might mean or imply for marginalized people to exist beyond the fixed roles prescribed by their marginalization. That text is followed by John Adams’s Shake the Heavens from his El Niño oratorio which sonically shows a person moving into humanity almost by force, by shaking the heavens and the earth and disrupting reality or the majority expected identity of said person.
The next text is a short poem by Langston Hughes titled Hope. The idea being that a Black person claiming humanity isn’t a violent act, but rather a simple, human act. And what more human act is there than expressing emotion? And in this particular song, I wanted to express the human emotion of hope.
Then there’s an interrogation. At the golden mean, there’s a moment where the audience is asked to contend with the fact that myself or someone of a marginalized identity even ever feels the need to defend their humanity in the first place. The audience has seen me announce my humanity, then demonstrate, and now I ask: ‘Why do I still feel the need to prove my humanity to you?’ I asked my dear colleague and incredible writer jessica Care moore to create a text in response to that question. This text is in lineage with the text of an aria I premiered from John Adams’s opera Girls of the Golden West based on an excerpt from Frederick Douglass’s staggering 1852 speech What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?, which states: ‘Is it not astonishing that, while we are ploughing, planting and reaping,... living, moving, acting, thinking,... we are called upon to prove that we are men!’
What does it mean for someone to be existent in a place where they feel they need to defend the basic fact that they’re human? This critical sentiment is brilliantly expressed in the main aria from Anthony Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X titled ‘You want the truth, but you don’t want to know.’ The aria spells
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out that the crime and violence Malcolm X is accused of is a reflection of the systemically dehumanizing violence that was enacted upon him and his family for his entire life.
So, hopefully this direct personal statement, delivered as a sermon, in the form of a concerto, provokes the audience to question their complicity in a society that
PROFILES
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
American conductor
Na’Zir McFadden is the newly appointed Assistant Conductor and Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.
In this position, he works closely with Music Director Jader Bignamini and guest conductors on both the PVS Classical Series and William Davidson Neighborhood Concert Series. Additionally, he leads pre-concert lectures at Orchestra Hall, and conducts a variety of programs on the Educational Concert Series, Young People’s Family Concert Series, and PNC Pops Series, as well as DTE Community Concerts.
Also commenced with the 2022-2023 season, McFadden serves as Music Director of the Detroit Symphony Youth Orchestra. This season, they will present three programs—exploring the symphonies of Dvořák, Tchaikovsky, and Florence Price.
An advocate for arts education, McFadden strives to provide access to the arts for students in underserved communities. This season, McFadden will make appearances with youth ensembles in Salt Lake City and with the Philadelphia All-City Music Festival. In the past, he’s worked with youth ensembles in Chicago, New York City, St. Louis, and Los Angeles.
Recent engagements include a recording project with the Civic Orchestra of
continues, through generations, to provoke marginalized people, Black people, to prove that we are deserving of the so-called inalienable rights afforded to those who are undeniably human.”
This performance marks the DSO premiere of Concerto No. 1: SERMON devised by Davóne Tines.
Chicago as part of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s “Notes for Peace” initiative— which featured Hilary Hahn as guest soloist.
McFadden was the inaugural Apprentice Conductor of the Philadelphia Ballet Orchestra from 2020 to 2022, where he worked with Music Director Beatrice Jona Affron. He also served as the Robert L. Poster Conducting Apprentice of the New York Youth Symphony from 2020 to 2021.
McFadden conducted his hometown orchestra—The Philadelphia Orchestra— in their “Pop-Up” series in 2017, where he met Music Director Yannick Nézet-S éguin, who has been a mentor ever since. The Philadelphia Inquirer praised his “great stick [baton] technique and energetic presence on the podium” in their review of the concert.
Upcoming engagements include a series of commissions with Orchestra 2001 and appearances with the Utah Symphony and the Philadelphia Ballet.
ANTHONY MCGILL
Hailed for his “trademark brilliance, penetrating sound and rich character” (The New York Times), clarinetist
Anthony McGill is one of classical music’s most recognizable and brilliantly multifaceted figures. In addition to his dynamic international solo and chamber music career,
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McGill is principal clarinet of the New York Philharmonic—the first African American principal player in the organization’s history.
In 2020, he was awarded the Avery Fisher Prize, one of classical music’s most significant awards given in recognition of soloists who represent the highest level of musical excellence. McGill was honored to take part in the 2009 inauguration of President Barack Obama, premiering a piece written for the occasion by John Williams and performing alongside violinist Itzhak Perlman, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, and pianist Gabriela Montero.
McGill appears regularly as a soloist with top orchestras around North America, including the New York Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, and Kansas City Symphony. This season he’ll solo in the US premiere of Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Kínēma for solo clarinet and orchestra with the New York Philharmonic. He’ll also serve as the Orlando Philharmonic’s Artist-in-Residence, and during this series of performances he’ll premiere a new clarinet arrangement of the Bologne (Chevalier de Saint-Georges) Violin Concerto in A major, Op. 5, No. 2.
This past June, he performed as part of The Re-Collective Orchestra, the firstever all-Black orchestra to play the Hollywood Bowl, in a CNN broadcast commemorating the first year Juneteenth was recognized as a federal holiday.
A graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, McGill previously served as the principal clarinet of the Metropolitan Opera and associate principal clarinet of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.
McGill serves on the board of directors for Cedille Records and the Harmony Program, and on the advisory councils for the InterSchool Orchestras of New York and The Time In Children’s Arts Initiative. He is a Vandoren Artist and Buffet Crampon Artist.
EARL HOWARD
EarlHoward has been performing his compositions in the United States and Europe for over fifty years. His recent compositions include music for live electronics, electronic tape music, as well as music for electronics and instruments. Howard’s method of creating orchestrated sounds with electronics and adding live, improvisational performance creates a unique, densely layered composition. Howard creates sounds from scratch using all synthesis (granular, additive, frequency modulation and vector) techniques. Live processing with musicians is central to his work.
Howard has performed at numerous venues including Merkin Hall, the Whitney Museum, The Kitchen, The Knitting Factory, Experimental Intermedia, Roulette, and Carnegie Recital Hall. In 2011, Howard received a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2004, his first sound installation was commissioned for the Tiffany Collection at the Queens Museum of Art. In the spring of 2003, Howard had a Regents Fellowship at UCSD. Howard received three New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships. In 1998, Howard was the recipient of Harvard’s Fromm Foundation Commission. He graduated from California Institute of the Arts in Music Composition in 1974.
Howard has performed frequently with improvisers including Georg Graewe, Mari Kimura, Anthony Davis, Mark Dresser, Anne LeBaron, JD Parran, Gustavo Aguilar, Thomas Buckner, and George Lewis.
Howard has also produced numerous soundtracks for some of the leading film and video artists including Nam June Paik, Mary Lucier, Rii Kanzaki, Bob Harris, and Bill Brand.
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DAVÓNE TINES
Davóne Tines is a pathbreaking artist whose work not only encompasses a diverse repertoire, from early music to new commissions by leading composers, but also explores the social issues of today. A creator, curator, and performer at the intersection of many histories, cultures, and aesthetics, he is engaged in work that blends opera, art song, contemporary classical music, spirituals, gospel, and songs of protest, as a means to tell a deeply personal story of perseverance that connects to all of humanity. His projects include Recital No.
1: MASS, a program exploring the Mass woven through Western European, African American, and 21st century traditions, which he performs this season at Carnegie Hall and other venues; Concerto No. 1: SERMON and Concerto No. 2: ANTHEM, two programs he conceived for voice and orchestra that weave arias and contemporary song, including arrangements by Tines, with poetry; and Everything Rises, a multimedia musical work exploring artistic journeys and family histories, co-created with violinist Jennifer Koh. Tines is Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra & Chorale’s Creative Partner and in January 2023 he becomes Artist-in-Residence at Brooklyn Academy of Music. He recently served as Artist-inResidence at Detroit Opera—an appointment that culminated in his performance in the title role of Anthony Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X , and he is featured on the world premiere recording of X with Odyssey Opera and Boston Modern Orchestra Project, released this fall on BMOP/sound. Tines is a member of AMOC and co-creator of The Black Clown, a music theater experience
commissioned and premiered by The American Repertory Theater. He is Musical America’s 2022 Vocalist of the Year and a recipient of the 2020 Sphinx Medal of Excellence. He is a graduate of The Juilliard School and Harvard University, where he also serves as guest lecturer.
JESSICA CARE MOORE
jessica
Care moore is the CEO of Moore Black Press, Executive Producer of Black WOMEN Rock!, and founder of the literacy-driven Jess Care Moore Foundation. An internationally renowned poet, playwright, performance artist, and producer, she is the 2013 Alain Locke Award Recipient from the Detroit Institute of Arts. moore is the author of The Words Don’t Fit in My Mouth, The Alphabet Verses The Ghetto, God is Not an American, Sunlight Through Bullet Holes, and a memoir, Love is Not The Enemy. Her poetry has been heard on stages including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and the London Institute of Contemporary Arts. She has performed on every continent and believes poems belong everywhere and to everyone.
Born in Detroit, moore first came to national prominence when she won on the legendary “It’s Showtime at the Apollo” competition a record-breaking five times in a row. Her searing performance of the poem “Black Statue of Liberty” earned moore several meetings with high profile publishing companies, but in 1997, she paved her own path and launched a publishing company of her own, Moore Black Press. She released her first book, The Words Don’t Fit In My Mouth, and sold more than 20,000 copies. Along with her own work, she proudly published famed poets such Saul Williams, Shariff Simmons, Def Poetry Jam’s co-founder Danny Simmons, NBA player Etan Thomas, Ras Baraka, and
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former Essence Magazine editor Asha Bandele.
She was the host, writer, and co-Executive Producer of the poetry driven television show, Spoken, which was executive produced by and directed by Robert Townsend and aired on The Black Family Channel. moore’s poetry is featured on Nas’s Nastradamus album, Talib Kweli’s Attack The Block Mix Tape, and she is a returning star of Russell Simmons’s HBO Series, “Def Poetry Jam.”
THE BRAZEAL DENNARD CHORALE
half a century, Detroit’s own Brazeal Dennard Chorale has been committed to remembering, preserving, and discovering the music of African American composers and artists. Nationally known for its expressive renditions of African American music in the choral tradition, the Chorale is one of the oldest organizations of its kind in America.
In 1972, the Brazeal Dennard Chorale was established, with a mission to promote the music of African American composers and to perpetuate the heritage of the Negro Spiritual. This highly skilled group of singers not only preserves this rich musical heritage, but also performs music from all genres of Choral Music repertoire at the highest level. The Chorale has performed at every Classical Roots concert since its inception in 1978.
Under the leadership of Artistic Director Alice McAllister Tillman, the
Chorale continues to maintain a value system that fosters bridge-building, innovation, collaboration, community, inclusivity, and excellence. Through performances, commissions of new choral works, recordings, and engaging with communities across America, the Chorale is continuing the tradition of African Americans who sang unaccompanied melodies which told of the pains of slavery, the yearning to be free, and the hope of God’s salvation. Recently, the Chorale participated in a commission consortium through Chorus America. The work, Make Some Noise, Get in Trouble (Good Trouble, Necessary Trouble), composed by Roland M. Carter commemorates the memory of the Honorable John R. Lewis and was premiered by the Brazeal Dennard Chorale in April of 2022.
ForThe Brazeal Dennard Chorale is an award-winning organization that in 2018 received the Brazeal Wayne Dennard Award (presented by Chorus America) in recognition of the Chorale’s commitment to diversity, inclusiveness, and furthering African American choral traditions and other diverse choral music traditions through performance, research, or the creation of new compositions of significance.
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DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
JADER BIGNAMINI , Music Director
TERENCE BLANCHARD
Fred A. Erb Jazz Creative Director Chair
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
SONDHEIM & BEYOND
TITLE SPONSOR:
Friday, March 10, 2023 at 10:45 a.m. & 8 p.m.
Saturday, March 11, 2023 at 8 p.m.
Sunday, March 12, 2023 at 3 p.m. in Orchestra Hall
ANDY EINHORN, conductor
ANDREA ROSS, vocalist
JIM HOGAN, vocalist
Program to be announced from the stage
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
Music Directorship endowed by the Kresge Foundation
Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador
NEEME JÄRVI Music Director Emeritus
LEONARD SLATKIN Music Director Laureate
JEFF TYZIK
32 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
Principal Pops Conductor
PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE | SONDHEIM & BEYOND
The Glamorous Life of Stephen Sondheim
Stephen Sondheim is fondly remembered as “a giant of musical theater,” creating some of the greatest musicals of all time. He described himself as an “eclectic,” composing a diverse catalogue including musicals A Little Night Music, Pacific Overtures, and Sweeney Todd. Having grown up in an abusive home, Sondheim found love and guidance through the mentorship of the great Oscar Hammerstein II, who empowered him with invaluable lessons to kickstart his long and successful career. Shortly before his death in November 2021, he spoke with Mark Stryker, a former music critic for the Detroit Free Press ahead of the Detroit Opera’s performance of A Little Night Music. In this interview, he was asked about his feelings about his music not being “hummable.” Sondheim stated “As the cliché has it, there are scores where you go into the theater humming the tune, because you know exactly what’s going to come next. I find that kind of music uninteresting and no fun. On the other hand, you don’t have to be supremely dissonant. You just have to have some freshness or surprise going on someplace. At least I have to.” In this program, we celebrate the life and work of Sondheim and his many collaborators—a man who shaped the future of Broadway and whose legacy will live on forever.
PROFILES
ANDY EINHORN
Broadway music director and conductor
Andy Einhorn has led the Indianapolis Symphony, Houston Symphony, Calgary Philharmonic, Tucson Symphony, and Fresno Philharmonic orchestras.
Beginning in April 2017, he conducted Bette Midler in the Broadway revival of Michael Stewart and Jerry Herman’s Hello Dolly!, for which he serves as music director. Einhorn’s other Broadway credits include Irving Berlin’s Holiday Inn, Woody Allen’s Bullets Over Broadway, Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Andrew Lloyd Weber’s Evita, Stu Barker’s music for Brief Encounter, Adam Guettel’s The Light in the Piazza, and Sondheim on Sondheim. He also served as music director and conductor for the Theatre du Châtelet’s production of Sondheim’s Passion in Paris.
Since 2011, Einhorn has served as music director and pianist for six-time Tony Award-winner Audra McDonald, performing with ensembles including The Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, National Symphony
Orchestra, and Los Angeles Opera, and at venues including David Geffen Hall, Carnegie Hall, Walt Disney Concert Hall, and Teatro Real in Madrid. Einhorn has also served as music director for Barbara Cook at Feinstein’s and Toronto’s Royal Conservatory of Music.
His tour work includes Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd, The Light in the Piazza, Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus’s Mamma Mia!, and Elton John’s The Lion King. Einhorn’s work can be heard on the current touring production of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music. He has worked at Goodspeed Opera House, Signature Theatre, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and PaperMill Playhouse. He was principal vocal coach and pianist for Houston Grand Opera’s An Evening with Audra McDonald, a double-bill of Poulenc’s La Voix humaine and LaChiusa’s Send.
Einhorn is an honors graduate of Rice University in Houston, Texas. His recording credits include Bullets Over Broadway, Cinderella, Evita, Sondheim on Sondheim (Grammy nomination), Stage Door Canteen, and McDonald’s newest release, Go Back Home. He served as the music director for HBO’s Peabody
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Award–winning documentary Six by Sondheim and music supervisor for Great Performances’s Peabody Award–winning special Broadway Musicals: A Jewish Legacy on PBS.
ANDREA ROSS
Andrea Ross is an American singer and award-winning actress. At a young age, she was discovered by Andrew Lloyd Webber, who has championed her career for the past decade. Lloyd Webber produced her solo record, Moon River, under the Universal Classics and Jazz label. The album debuted at No. 42 on the UK Album Charts.
In promoting her album, Ross made appearances on the BBC network and performed in legendary venues such as the Hampton Court Palace, St. Martin-inthe-Fields, and the Royal Albert Hall. She was also featured in Princess Diana’s memorial concert at Wembley Stadium, Concert for Diana.
Ross began her theatrical career in Boston, where she was awarded the
prestigious Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Actress. She has since performed principal roles in US national tours and currently resides in New York. Ross sings in symphony orchestra concerts throughout the United States.
JIM HOGAN
Jim Hogan is currently making his Broadway debut in Jeanine Tesori and David LindsayAbaire’s highly acclaimed new musical Kimberly Akimbo, based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name. National touring credits include Waitress, The Phantom of the Opera, and Spring Awakening. Regional credits include The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Voice of Quasimodo), Memphis (Huey), and The Circus in Winter (Gordon). Hogan is a member of T.3 (@t.3official), a viral internet sensation vocal group featured on NBC’s America’s Got Talent. The group signed a record deal with Warner Music and most recently opened for Jay Leno’s comedy tour. Their debut album is slated for release in 2023.
LIVE FROM ORCHESTRA HALL
This season, Live from Orchestra Hall is back with more programming than ever before! View free, live webcasts of PVS Classical Series, Paradise Jazz Series, and Classroom Edition performances, plus Civic Youth Ensembles presentations.
AT DSO.ORG/LIVE
WATCH NOW
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JEFF TYZIK Principal Pops Conductor
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D ORCHESTRA
TERENCE BLANCHARD
Fred A. Erb Jazz Creative Director Chair
JADER BIGNAMINI , Music Director Music Directorship endowed by the Kresge Foundation
NA’ZIR MCFADDEN
Assistant Conductor, Phillip & Lauren Fisher Community Ambassador
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES
Title Sponsor:
LEONARD
SLATKIN Music Director Laureate
BRAHMS’ FOURTH & RACHMANINOFF’S PIANO CONCERTO NO. 2
Friday, March 24, 2023 at 10:45 a.m.
Saturday, March 25, 2023 at 8 p.m.
Sunday, March 26, 2023 at 3 p.m. at Orchestra Hall
JADER BIGNAMINI, conductor GEORGE LI, piano
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Ballade in A minor, Op.33 (1875 - 1912)
Sergei Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18 (1873 - 1943)
I. Moderato
II. Adagio sostenuto
III. Allegro scherzando George Li, piano
Intermission
Johannes Brahms Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 (1833 - 1897)
I. Allegro non troppo
II. Andante moderato
III. Allegro giocoso
IV. Allegro energico e passionato
Director Emeritus
Thank you to the musicians of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, who are playing the March 25 concert as a donated service. We appreciate their continued support and generosity.
Saturday’s performance will be webcast via our exclusive Live From Orchestra Hall series, presented by Ford Motor Company Fund and made possible by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
JA DER B I G NA M I N I MUSIC DIRECTOR A COMMU N I T Y -SU P P ORT E D
ORCHESTRA
NEEME JÄRVI Music
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 35 dso.org #IAMDSO
PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE | BRAHMS’ FOURTH & RACHMANINOFF’S PIANO CONCERTO NO. 2
Career-defining moments
One thing that Johannes Brahms, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor have in common is that they all received significant career momentum driven by a specific piece. The premiere of Rachmaninoff’s Second Piano Concerto marked the most important turning point in the composer’s career, which came about after a period of Rachmaninoff nearly giving up composition in its entirety due to self-doubt. It has since remained one of his most popular works and has been featured prominently in numerous films including Grand Hotel, Brief Encounter, and Rhapsody. Samuel ColeridgeTaylor’s Ballade in A minor set the stage for his career-defining trilogy The Song of Hiawatha, incorporating excerpts from his Ballade and prompting him to skyrocket to global renown as a composer. While Johannes Brahms enjoyed major successes with prior works, his Symphony No. 4 arguably defined his career in being the most authentic in style to Brahms himself as a composer: logical, serious, and fundamentally musical.
PROGRAM NOTES
Ballade in A minor, Op. 33
Composed 1898 | Premiered September 12, 1898
SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR
B. August 15, 1875, Holborn, United Kingdom
D. September 1, 1912, Croydon, United Kingdom
Scored for 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, and strings. (Approx. 11 minutes)
Samuel ColeridgeTaylor’s incredible talent was quickly recognized by the British musical elite of his time— yet his life did not come without its challenges.
Samuel was born in Holborn in 1875 to Alice Hare Martin and Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, a doctor from Sierra Leone. The couple was unwed, and before Samuel’s birth, Dr. Taylor was forced to return to his home country on the grounds that he was not permitted to practice medicine in England. He left the country not knowing he had a son.
Named after poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor began his violin studies at the Royal College of Music. In addition to his musical talent,
Coleridge-Taylor was a prolific writer who composed chamber music, songs, and choral and orchestral works. He found success at the Three Choirs Festival in Gloucester and Worcester and was appointed a professor at the Crystal Palace School of Music, as well as the conductor of the orchestra at the Croydon Conservatory. His interest in African American culture brought him to the United States on many occasions, making such a distinct impression that he was later invited to the White House by President Theodore Roosevelt.
Coleridge-Taylor’s Ballade in A minor was commissioned by the Three Choirs Festival of Britain in 1898 at the suggestion of composer Sir Edward Elgar, one of his primary mentors. This piece proved to be a tremendous success and led him to write a subsequent trilogy based on the story of Hiawatha, a precolonial Native American leader and co-founder of the Iroquois Confederacy, from 1898-1900. Coleridge-Taylor’s Ballade in A minor is a one-movement work full of ravishing melodies and lush string moments inspired by Elgar. This commission was originally offered to Elgar, to which he responded, “I have received a request from the secretary to write a short orchestra thing for the evening concert.
36 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
I am sorry I am too busy to do so. I wish, wish, wish you would ask Coleridge-Taylor to do it. He still wants recognition, and he is far and away the cleverest fellow going amongst the young men. Please don’t let your committee throw away the chance of doing a good act.”
This work is energetic and vivacious from the beginning. It quickly transitions into a lush and sweeping romantic theme, soon reviving the energy exhibited at the beginning of the work a few minutes later. It clearly demonstrates Coleridge-Taylor’s brilliance throughout, particularly his refined orchestration and well-developed melodic shaping. This work developed his own voice while exhibiting influences of his compositional heroes: Brahms, Tchaikovsky, and Dvořák.
This performance marks the DSO premiere of Coleridge-Taylor’s Ballade in A minor.
Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18
Composed 1900-1901 | Premiered November
9, 1901
SERGEI RACHMANINOFF
B. April 1, 1873, Oneg, Russia
D. March 28, 1943, Beverly Hills, California
Scored for solo piano, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, percussion, and strings. (Approx. 32 minutes)
Thepremiere of the Second Piano Concerto in 1901 marked the most important turning point in Sergei Rachmaninoff’s lengthy career. In the preceding years, he had all but given up on composition. After graduating from the Moscow Conservatory with highest honors and receiving significant praise for his works from the great Tchaikovsky himself, he was unprepared for the harsh criticism that followed the dismal 1897 premiere of
his first symphony. Ridiculed by critics, Rachmaninoff took the news badly. In his memoirs he recalled, “A paralyzing apathy possessed me. I did nothing at all…half my days were spent lying on a couch and sighing over my ruined life.”
For the next several years, Rachmaninoff avoided composition, pouring his energy instead into conducting and performing as a pianist. By 1899, however, his temperament had improved. Rachmaninoff’s emotional recovery has been attributed to various factors including a successful, confidence-boosting performance in London, his first major foreign appearance; a meeting with the author Lev Tolstoy who, supposedly, encouraged him to drop the self-pity and resume composing; and two sessions with Dr. Nikolay Dahl, a psychologist and amateur musician renowned for his hypnosis therapy, though it remains unclear whether the composer actually underwent such treatment.
Rachmaninoff began composing seriously again in 1900, and his first major project was the Piano Concerto No. 2. In December, he performed the second and third movements at a concert in Moscow, and the warm reception provided him with the motivation he needed to finish the piece. The concerto was finally premiered in its full form at a Moscow Philharmonic Society concert in early November of 1901. Once again, the work was well received, restoring Rachmaninoff’s confidence as a composer and leading him to embark on new works.
Since the premiere, the Piano Concerto No. 2 has remained one of Rachmaninoff’s most popular compositions and has even been featured prominently in numerous films, including Grand Hotel (1932) and Brief Encounter (1946) in which the concerto serves as the score for the entire film. In Rhapsody (1954), the concerto’s exquisite themes and sumptuous orchestration bring the heroine, played by Elizabeth Taylor, to tears and inspire her to return to the husband she has just
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 37 dso.org #IAMDSO
deserted. While such melodrama is perhaps extreme, it colorfully portrays the profound emotional power that audiences have experienced through Rachmaninoff’s beloved concerto over the past century.
The DSO most recently performed Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in November 2012, conducted by Peter Oundjian and featuring pianist Joyce Yang. The DSO first performed the piece in March 1921, with Ossip Gabrilowitsch as conductor and soloist.
Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98
Composed 1884-1885 | Premiered October 1885
JOHANNES BRAHMS
B. May 7, 1833, Hamburg, Germany
D. April 3, 1897, Vienna, Austria Scored for 2 flutes (1 doubling on piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani, and strings. (Approx. 40 minutes)
in the themes laid out by the cellos and horns, and the lyricism of the entire movement is exquisite.
Brahms’s lighthearted side appears in the third movement, the composer’s first true symphonic scherzo. The lively, lusty Allegro giocoso bounces along with quick rhythms and playful jangling on the triangle—a break from the symphony’s overall sobriety. But the final movement returns to the nostalgic ideas postulated in the first two, tackling the archaic chaconne form of the Baroque era. Brahms has no problem stuffing (and even overstuffing) the sparse chaconne framework with elaborate themes, however; he gradually weaves in 34 variations that build one of the most sublime movements in German music. Some stretches are proud and majestic, others wispy or crystalline. They steadily build in intensity and lead to a monumental finale underlined by the minor-key final cadence.
Johannes
Brahms packs a lot of musical discourse into the four movements of his final symphony. Celebrated for its careful complexity and somber tone, the fourth is the symphony most similar to Brahms himself: logical, serious, and fundamentally musical.
The first movement is concise, unfolding with a series of two-note units full of Brahmsian nostalgia (the composer revered the classical style of Mozart and Haydn). The second movement looks even further back in time, however, all the way to the Renaissance—the music of which was enjoying a renaissance of its own during Brahms’s lifetime. The composer’s love of these historic sounds is on display
The DSO most recently performed Brahms’s Symphony No. 4 on the William Davidson Neighborhood Concert Series in June 2018, conducted by Christoph König. The DSO first performed the piece in January 1922, conducted by Ossip Gabrilowitsch.
38 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
PROFILES
GEORGE LI
Praised by The Washington Post for combining “staggering technical prowess, a sense of command and depth of expression,” pianist George Li possesses an effortless grace, poised authority, and brilliant virtuosity far beyond his years. Since winning the Silver Medal at the 2015 International Tchaikovsky Competition, Li has rapidly established a major international reputation and performs regularly with some of the world’s leading orchestras and conductors.
Recent concerto highlights include performances with the Los Angeles, New York, London, Rotterdam, Oslo, St. Petersburg, and Buffalo philharmonics; the San Francisco, Tokyo, Frankfurt Radio, Sydney, Nashville, New World, North Carolina, Pacific, Valencia, Montreal, and Baltimore symphonies; as well as the Philharmonia, DSO Berlin, and Orchestra National de Lyon. His eight-concert tour of Germany with the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra included performances at the Berlin Philharmonie, Philharmonie am Gasteig Munich, and the Stuttgart Liederhalle. He frequently appears with Valery Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra, including performances at the Paris Philharmonie, Luxembourg
Philharmonie, New York’s Brooklyn Academy of Music, Graffenegg Festival, and in various venues throughout Russia.
In recital, Li has previously performed at venues including Carnegie Hall, Davies Hall in San Francisco, Symphony Center in Chicago, the Mariinsky Theatre,
Elbphilharmonie, Munich’s Gasteig, the Louvre, Seoul Arts Center, Tokyo’s Asahi Hall and Musashino Hall, NCPA Beijing, Shanghai Poly Theater, and Amici della Musica Firenze, as well as appearances at major festivals including the Edinburgh International Festival, Verbier Festival, Ravinia Festival, Festival de Pâques in Aix-en-Provence Festival, and Montreux Festival. An active chamber musician, Li has performed alongside Benjamin Beilman, Noah Bendix-Balgley, James Ehnes, Daniel Hope, Sheku KannehMason, and Kian Soltani.
Li is an exclusive Warner Classics recording artist. His debut recital album was recorded live from the Mariinsky and released in October 2017. His second recording for the label, released in 2019, features Liszt solo works and Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No.1, which was recorded live with Vasily Petrenko and the London Philharmonic.
Li gave his first public performance at Boston’s Steinway Hall at the age of ten, and in 2011 performed for President Obama at the White House in an evening honoring Chancellor Angela Merkel. Among Li’s many prizes, he was the recipient of the 2016 Avery Fisher Career Grant, a recipient of the 2012 Gilmore Young Artist Award, and the First Prize winner of the 2010 Young Concert Artists International Auditions. He is currently pursuing an Artist Diploma at the New England Conservatory, continuing to work with Wha Kyung Byun. When not playing piano, George is an avid reader and photographer, as well as a sports fanatic.
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 39 dso.org #IAMDSO
Jader Bignamini biography, see page 6.
THE ANNUAL FUND
Gifts received between September 1, 2021 and November 30, 2022.
The DSO is a community-supported orchestra, and you can play your part through frequent ticket purchases and generous annual donations. Your tax-deductible Annual Fund donation is an investment in the wonderful music at Orchestra Hall, around the neighborhoods, and across the community. This honor roll celebrates those generous donors who made a gift of $1,500 or more to the DSO Annual Fund Campaign. If you have questions about this roster or would like to make a donation, please contact 313.576.5114 or go to dso.org/donate.
PARAY SOCIETY - GIVING OF $250,000 & MORE
Mr. & Mrs. Lee Barthel
Penny & Harold Blumenstein
Julie & Peter Cummings
Ms. Leslie C. Devereaux
Linda Dresner & Ed Levy, Jr.
DORATI SOCIETY - GIVING OF $100,000 & MORE
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Alonzo
James & Patricia Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond M. Cracchiolo
Joanne Danto & Arnold Weingarden
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip Wm. Fisher
EHRLING SOCIETY - GIVING OF $50,000 & MORE
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Brodie
Lois & Avern ◊ Cohn
Mr. & Mrs. Aaron Frankel
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Gerson
Mary Ann & Robert Gorlin
Mr. & Mrs. James Grosfeld
Ric & Carola Huttenlocher
Renato & Elizabeth Jamett
JÄRVI SOCIETY — GIVING OF $25,000 & MORE
Pamela Applebaum
Ms. Sharon Backstrom
Mrs. Cecilia Benner
Mr. Michael J. Fisher
Madeline & Sidney Forbes
Mr. & Mrs. Edsel B. Ford II/Henry Ford II Fund
Mrs. Martha Ford
Dale & Bruce Frankel
Mr. Steven Goldsmith
Ronald M. & Carol◊ Horwitz
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Norman D. Katz
Morgan & Danny Kaufman
Betsy & Joel Kellman
Emory M. Ford, Jr.◊ Endowment
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Frankel
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Karmanos, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Nicholson
Mrs. Richard C. Van Dusen
David & Valerie McCammon
Shari & Craig Morgan
The Polk Family
Bernard & Eleanor Robertson
Drs. David & Bernadine Wu
Mrs. Bonnie Larson
Nicole & Matt Lester
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene A. Miller
Patricia & Henry ◊ Nickol
Nancy Schlichting & Pamela Theisen
Donald R. & Esther Simon Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Arn Tellem
Paul & Terese Zlotoff
Mr. & Mrs. David Provost
Ms. Ruth Rattner
Martie & Bob Sachs
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Alan E. Schwartz
Mrs. Patricia Finnegan Sharf
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Sherman
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Sherman
Richard Sonenklar & Gregory Haynes
Mr. & Mrs. John Stroh III
Dr. Doris Tong & Dr. Teck M. Soo
Mr. & Mrs. Gary Torgow
And one who wishes to remain anonymous
◊ Deceased 40 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Robert A. Allesee
Dr. Lourdes V. Andaya
Janet & Norman Ankers
Drs. Brian & Elizabeth Bachynski
W. Harold & Chacona W. Baugh
Drs. John & Janice Bernick
Dr. George & Joyce Blum
Gwen & Richard Bowlby
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Brownell
Michael & Geraldine Buckles
Ms. Elena Centeio
Thomas W. Cook & Marie L. Masters
Gail Danto & Art Roffey
Mr. Kevin S. Dennis & Mr. Jeremy J. Zeltzer
Eugene ◊ & Elaine C. Driker
Mr. Charles L. Dunlap & Mr. Lee V. Hart
Margie Dunn & Mark Davidoff
Mr. Peter Falzon
Jim & Margo Farber
Sally & Michael Feder
Barbara & Alfred J. Fisher III
Dr. Saul & Mrs. Helen Forman
Barbara Frankel & Ronald Michalak
Mrs. Janet M. Garrett
Victor ◊ & Gale Girolami
GIVING OF $5,000 & MORE
Mrs. Denise Abrash
Mrs. Jennifer Adderley
Richard & Jiehan Alonzo
Mr. David Assemany & Mr. Jeffery Zook*
Ms. Ruth Baidas
Dr. David S. Balle
Mr. Patrick Barone
Ms. Therese Bellaimey
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Bernard
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey A. Berner
Timothy J. Bogan
John ◊ & Marlene Boll
Ms. Debra Bonde
Ms. Nadia Boreiko
Mr. Anthony F. Brinkman
Claire P. & Robert N. Brown
Philip & Carol Campbell
Mrs. Carolyn Carr
Mr. & Mrs. François Castaing
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Christians
Mr. Fred J. Chynchuk
Bob & Rebecca Clark
Dr. & Mrs. Charles G. Colombo
Ms. Elizabeth Correa
Ruth & Al◊ Glancy
Dr. Robert T. Goldman
Dr. Herman & Mrs. Shirley Mann Gray
Mr.◊ & Mrs. James A. Green
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hage
Judy ◊ & Kenneth Hale
Ms. Nancy B. Henk
Michael E. Hinsky & Tyrus N. Curtis
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Norman H. Hofley
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Jessup
William & Story John
Lenard & Connie Johnston
Dr. David & Mrs. Elizabeth Kessel
Mr. Daniel Lewis
Bud & Nancy Liebler
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Joseph Lile
Dana Locniskar & Christine Beck
Alexander & Evelyn McKeen
Ms. Deborah Miesel
Dr. Robert & Dr. Mary Mobley
Cyril Moscow
Geoffrey S. Nathan & Margaret E. Winters
David Robert & Sylvia Jean Nelson
Eric & Paula Nemeth
Jim & Mary Beth Nicholson
Gloria & Stanley Nycek
George & Jo Elyn Nyman
Debra & Richard Partrich
Dr. Glenda D. Price
Maurcine ◊ & Lloyd Reuss
Seth & Laura Romine
Dr. Erik Rönmark* & Mrs. Adrienne Rönmark*
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Rosowski
Peggy & Dr. Mark B. Saffer
Schwartz Shapero Family
Elaine & Michael Serling
Lois & Mark Shaevsky
William H. Smith
Charlie & John Solecki
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Tobias
Mr. James G. Vella
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Jonathan T. Walton
Gary L. Wasserman & Charles A. Kashner
S. Evan & Gwen Weiner
Mr. & Mrs. R. Jamison Williams
Ms. Mary Wilson
And four who wish to remain anonymous
Mr. & Mrs. Gary L. Cowger
Mrs. Barbara Cunningham
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Dare
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. DeVore
Adel & Walter Dissett
Ms. Ruby Duffield
Dr. & Mrs. A. Bradley Eisenbrey
Mr. Lawrence Ellenbogen
Marianne T. Endicott
Mr. & Mrs. Francis A. Engelhardt
Fieldman Family Foundation
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Richard M. Gabrys
Alan M. Gallatin
Allan D. Gilmour & Eric C. Jirgens
Dr. Kenneth ◊ & Roslyne Gitlin
Dr. & Mrs. Theodore Golden
Goodman Family Charitable Trust
Mr. Sanford Hansell & Dr. Raina Ernstoff
Dr. Gloria Heppner
Ms. Doreen Hermelin
Mr. Eric J. Hespenheide & Ms. Judith V. Hicks
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Hollinshead
Mr. Matthew Howell & Mrs. Julie Wagner
Elanah Nachman Hunger
Mr. & Mrs. A. E. Igleheart
Mr. & Mrs. Kent Jidov
Carol & Rick Johnston
Paul & Marietta Joliat
Faye & Austin Kanter
Judy & David Karp
Mike & Katy Keegan
Barbara & Michael Kratchman
Richard & Sally Krugel
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Kulish
Dr. Raymond Landes & Dr. Melissa McBrien-Landes
Bill & Kathleen Langhorst
Mr. Leonard LaRocca
Max Lepler & Rex L. Dotson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Leverenz
Daniel & Linda* Lutz
Bob & Terri Lutz
Mrs. Sandra MacLeod
Mr. & Mrs. Winom J. Mahoney
Dr. Stephen & Paulette Mancuso
Maurice Marshall
Mr. Edward McClew
GABRILOWITSCH SOCIETY - GIVING OF $10,000 & MORE ◊ Deceased
*Current DSO Musician or Staff DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 41 dso.org #IAMDSO
Patricia A.◊ & Patrick G. McKeever
Ms. Evelyn Micheletti
Mr. Frederick Morsches & Mr. Kareem George
Xavier & Maeva Mosquet
Robert & Paulina Treiger Muzzin
Joy & Allan Nachman
Mr. & Mrs. Albert T. Nelson, Jr.
Dr. William W. O’Neill
Anne Parsons ◊ & Donald Dietz
Mr. David Phipps & Ms. Mary Buzard
William H. & Wendy W. Powers
Charlene & Michael Prysak
GIVING OF $2,500 & MORE
Nina Dodge Abrams
Mr. & Mrs. Joel Adelman
Mr. Juan Alvarez
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Anthony
Dr. & Mrs. Joel Appel
Drs. Kwabena & Jacqueline Appiah
Dr. & Mrs. Ali-Reza R. Armin
Pauline Averbach & Charles Peacock
Mr. Joseph Aviv & Mrs. Linda Wasserman
Mrs. Jean Azar
James A. Bannan
Nora & Guy Barron
Mr. Mark G. Bartnik & Ms. Sandra J. Collins
Mr. Joseph Bartush
Mr. & Mrs. Martin S. Baum
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Beaubien
Mr. Abraham Beidoun
Martha ◊ & G. Peter Blom
Nancy & Lawrence Bluth
The Achim & Mary Bonawitz Family
The Honorable Susan D. Borman & Mr. Stuart Michaelson
Don & Marilyn Bowerman
Mr. & Mrs. Marco Bruzzano
Mr. & Mrs. Mark R. Buchanan
Dr. & Mrs. Roger C. Byrd
Mr. & Mrs. Brian C. Campbell
Dr. & Mrs.◊ Thomas E. Carson
Dr. Carol S. Chadwick & Mr. H. Taylor Burleson
Ronald & Lynda Charfoos
Nina & Richard Cohan
Jack, Evelyn and Richard Cole Family
Foundation
Mr. William Cole & Mrs. Carol Litka Cole
Mr. & Mrs. Brian G. Connors
Patricia & William ◊ Cosgrove, Sr.
Ms. Joy Crawford* & Mr. Richard Aude
Robert J. Crutcher Family Trust
Dr. Edward & Mrs. Jamie Dabrowski
Suzanne Dalton & Clyde Foles
Maureen & Jerry ◊ D’Avanzo
Lillian & Walter Dean
Drs. Yaddanapudi Ravindranath & Kanta
Bhambhani
Mr. & Mrs. Dave Redfield
Dr. Heather Richter
Dr. & Mrs. John Roberts
Steven Della Rocca Memorial Fund/ Courtenay A Hardy
Mr. Ronald Ross & Ms. Alice Brody
Mr. David Salisbury & Mrs. Terese
Ireland Salisbury
Marjorie Shuman Saulson
Mr. & Mrs. Donald and Janet Schenk
Robert & Patricia Shaw
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Ditkoff
Diana & Mark Domin
Paul◊ & Peggy Dufault
Edwin & Rosemarie ◊ Dyer
Dr. Leo & Mrs. Mira Eisenberg
Randall & Jill* Elder
Ms. Laurie Ellias & Mr. James Murphy
Mrs. Marjory Epstein
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Erb
Dave & Sandy Eyl
Ellie Farber & Mitch Barnett
Hon. Sharon Tevis Finch
Ms. Joanne Fisher
Dorothy A. & Larry L. Fobes
Amy & Robert Folberg
Ms. Linda Forte & Mr. Tyrone Davenport
Dr. & Mrs. Franchi
Ms. Marci Frick
Kit & Dan Frohardt-Lane
Lynn & Bharat Gandhi
Mr. Max Gates
Stephanie Germack
Thomas M. Gervasi
Mr. & Mrs. James Gietzen
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Gillette
Ms. Jody Glancy
Mr. Lawrence Glowczewski
Paul & Barbara C. Goodman
Dr. William & Mrs. Antoinette Govier
Ms. Jacqueline Graham
Mr. & Mrs. Saul Green
Dr. & Mrs. Joe L. Greene
Anne & Eugene Greenstein
Sharon Lopo Hadden
Dr. & Mrs. David Haines
Robert & Elizabeth Hamel
Cheryl A. Harvey
Ms. Barbara Heller
Dr. William Higginbotham III MD
Mr. Donald & Marcia Hiruo
The Honorable Denise Page Hood & Reverend Nicholas Hood III
James Hoogstra & Clark Heath
Mrs. Sharon Shumaker
Mr. Norman Silk & Mr. Dale Morgan
Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Simoncini
Michael E. Smerza & Nancy Keppelman
Mrs. Kathleen Straus & Mr. Walter Shapero
Joel & Shelley Tauber
Alice ◊ & Paul Tomboulian
Mrs. Eva von Voss
Mr. William Waak
Peter & Carol Walters
Dr. & Mrs. Ned Winkelman
Cathy Cromer Wood
Ms. June Wu
And one who wishes to remain anonymous
Mr. F. Robert Hozian
Dr. Karen Hrapkiewicz
Mr. Fred Hunter & Mrs. Viva Foster
Larry & Connie Hutchinson
Ms. Carole Ilitch
Dr. Raymond E. Jackson & Dr. Kathleen Murphy
Mr. Arthur Johns
Mr. John S. Johns
Mr. George G. Johnson
Paul & Karen Johnson
Mr. William & Mrs. Connie Jordan
Mr. & Mrs. John Jullens
Diane & John Kaplan
Bernard & Nina Kent Philanthropic Fund
Mrs. Frances King
Dr. & Mrs. Edward L. Klarman
Aileen & Harvey Kleiman
Tom ◊ & Beverly Klimko
Mr. Joseph Kochanek
Mr. & Mrs. Ludvik F. Koci
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Koffron
Dr. Sandy Koltonow & Dr. Mary Schlaff
Ms. Susan Konop
Douglas Korney & Marieta Bautista
James Kors & Victoria King
George M. Krappmann & Lynda
Burbury-Krappmann
Mr. Michael Kuhne
Mrs. Maria E. Kuznia
Mr. & Mrs. Robert LaBelle
Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Laker
Mr. David Lalain & Ms. Deniella
Ortiz-Lalain
Drs. Lisa & Scott Langenburg
Ms. Sandra Lapadot
Ms. Anne T. Larin
Dr. Lawrence O. Larson
Mr. Henry P. Lee
Drs. Donald & Diane Levine
Arlene & John Lewis
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Loebl
Mr. John Lovegren & Mr. Daniel Isenschmid
◊ Deceased
42 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
GIVING OF $2,500 & MORE, CONTINUED
Cis Maisel
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Manke, Jr.
Ms. Florine Mark
Melissa & Tom Mark
Brian & Becky McCabe
Dr. & Mrs. Peter M. McCann, M.D.
Mr. Anthony Roy McCree
Ms. Mary McGough
Ms. Kristen McLennan
Dr. Donald & Barbara Meier
Dr. & Mrs. David Mendelson
Olga Sutaruk Meyer
Bruce & Mary Miller
John & Marcia Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Randall Miller
Steve & Judy Miller
J.J. & Liz Modell
Dr. Susan & Mr. Stephen* Molina
Dr. Van C. Momon, Jr. & Dr. Pamela Berry
Eugene & Sheila Mondry Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. Moore
Ms. A. Anne Moroun
Ms. Sandra Morrison
Mr. & Mrs. Germano Mularoni
Ms. Jennifer Muse
Ms. I. Surayyah R. Muwwakkil
Mariam C. Noland & James A. Kelly
Megan Norris & Howard Matthew
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Obringer
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur T. O’Reilly
Terry E. Packer
Mark Pasik & Julie Sosnowski
Ms. Pricilla Perkins
Mr. Peter Perlman
Wolfgang & Kristine Peterman
Ms. Alice Pfahlert
Benjamin B. Phillips
GIVING OF $1,500 & MORE
William Aerni & Janet Frazis
Dr. & Mrs. Gary S. Assarian
Drs. Richard & Helena Balon
Mr. & Mrs. David W. Berry
Mrs. Marilyn Bishop
Ms. Kristin Bolitho
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Burstein
Mr. & Mrs. Byron Canvasser
Steve & Geri Carlson
Mr. & Mrs. Tom Compton
Ms. Laurie DeMond-Rosen
Gordon & Elaine Didier
Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Douglas
Mrs. Connie Dugger
Ms. Jodie Elrod
Mr. Howard O. Emorey
Mr. Joseph & Mrs. Lois Gilmore
Howard & Francina Graef
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Hirt
Jill M.* & Michael J. Rafferty
Drs. Stuart & Hilary Ratner
Mr. Tony Raymaker
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Reed
Mr. & Mrs. Gerrit Reepmeyer
Dr. Claude & Mrs. Sandra Reitelman
Denise Reske
Mr. & Mrs. John Rieckhoff
Ms. Linda Rodney
Michael & Susan Rontal
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Gerald F. Ross
Ms. Elana Rugh
Linda & Leonard Sahn
Ms. Martha A. Scharchburg & Mr. Bruce Beyer
Shirley Anne & Alan Schlang
Joe & Ashley Schotthoefer
Catherine & Dennis B. Schultz
Sandy & Alan Schwartz
Mrs. Rosalind B. Sell
Mr. Jeffrey S. Serman
Carlo & Nicole Serraiocco
Nancy & Sam Shamie
Shapero Foundation
Bill & Chris Shell
Dr. Les Siegel & Ellen Lesser Siegel
Dean P. & D. Giles Simmer
William & Cherie Sirois
Mr. Michael J. Smith & Mrs. Mary C. Williams
Ms. Susan Smith
Shirley R. Stancato
Peter & Patricia Steffes
Dr. Gregory Stephens
Mr. Mark Stewart & Mr. Anonio
Gamez-Galaz
Nancy C. Stocking
Jean Hudson
Ms. Nadine Jakobowski
Carole Keller
Ms. Ida King
Elissa & Daniel Kline
Miss Kathryn Korns
Ms. Jennette Smith Kotila
Mr. and Mrs. William Kroger, Jr.
Mrs. Mary Ann LaMonte
Ms. Christine M. Leonard
Mr. Jeffrey Marraccini
Barbara J. Martin
Steve & Brenda Mihalik
Muramatsu America Flutes
Mr. & Mrs. George Nicholson
Mrs. Ruth Nix
Mr. & Mrs. Mark H. Peterson
Drs. Renato & Daisy Ramos
Mr. & Mrs. Rodney Rask
Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Stollman
Dr. & Mrs. Choichi Sugawa
David Szymborski & Marilyn Sicklesteel
Dr. Neil Talon
Mr. Rob Tanner
Sandra & Frank Tenkel
Dr. & Mrs. Howard Terebelo
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Throop
Dr. Barry Tigay
Gregory Tocco & Erin Sears
Yoni & Rachel Torgow
Barbara & Stuart Trager
Tom & Laura Trudeau
Amanda Van Dusen & Curtis Blessing
Charles & Sally Van Dusen
Gerald & Teresa Varani
Dr.◊ & Mrs. Ronald W. Wadle
Mr. Michael A. Walch & Ms. Joyce Keller
Mr. Patrick Webster
David R. Weinberg, Ph.D.
Janis & William Wetsman/ The Wetsman Foundation
Beverly & Barry Williams
Elizabeth & Michael Willoughby
Rissa & Sheldon Winkelman
Deborah Lamm
Ms. Andrea L. Wulf
Ms. Eileen Wunderlich
Dr. Sandra & Mr. D. Johnny Yee
Mr. & Mrs. Wesley Yee
Ms. Gail Zabowski
Lucia Zamorano, M.D.
Ms. Ellen Hill Zeringue
Milton Y. Zussman ◊
And seven who wish to remain anonymous
Cheryl & Paul Robertson
Mr. & Mrs. George Roumell
Mr. & Mrs. James P. Ryan
Dr. & Mrs. Hershel Sandberg
Ms. Joyce E. Scafe
Dr. & Mrs. Richard S. Schwartz
Mr. & Mrs. Kingsley G. Sears
Ms. Sandra Shetler
Mrs. Andreas H. Steglich
Mr. Jt Stout
Mr. & Mrs.◊ John Streit
Mr. William Thom
David & Lila Tirsell
Dennis & Jennifer Varian
Ms. Janet Weir
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Richard Wigginton
Dr. M. Roy & Mrs. Jacqueline Wilson
Mr. Peter Zubrin
And two who wish to remain anonymous
*Current DSO Musician or Staff
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 43 dso.org #IAMDSO
CELEBRATING YOUR LEGACY SUPPORT
BARBARA VAN DUSEN, Honorary Chair
The 1887 Society honors individuals who have made a special legacy commitment to support the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Members of the 1887 Society ensure that future music lovers will continue to enjoy unsurpassed musical experiences by including the DSO in their estate plans.
Ms. Doris L. Adler
Dr. & Mrs. William C. Albert
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Robert A. Allesee
Dr. Lourdes V. Andaya
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Applebaum ◊
Dr. Augustin & Nancy ◊ Arbulu
Mr. David Assemany & Mr. Jeffery Zook
Ms. Sharon Backstrom
Sally & Donald Baker
Mr. & Mrs. Lee Barthel
Mr. Mark G. Bartnik & Ms. Sandra J. Collins
Stanley A. Beattie
Mr. & Mrs. Mandell L. Berman ◊
Mrs. Betty Blair
Ms. Rosalee Bleecker
Mr. Joseph Boner
Gwen & Richard Bowlby
Mr. Harry G. Bowles ◊
Judith Mich ◊
Mrs. Ellen Brownfain
William & Julia Bugera
CM Carnes
Cynthia Cassell, Ph. D.
Eleanor A. Christie
Ms. Mary F. Christner
Mr. Gary Ciampa
Robert & Lucinda Clement
Lois & Avern ◊ Cohn
Mrs. RoseAnn Comstock◊
Mr. Scott Cook, Jr.
Mr. & Ms. Thomas Cook
Dorothy M. Craig
Mr. & Mrs. John Cruikshank
Julie & Peter Cummings
Joanne Danto & Arnold Weingarden
Mr. Kevin S. Dennis & Mr. Jeremy J. Zeltzer
Ms. Leslie C. Devereaux
Mr. John Diebel◊
Mr. Stuart Dow
Katherine D. Rines
Mr. Roger Dye & Ms. Jeanne A. Bakale
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Eidson
Marianne T. Endicott
Mrs. Rema Frankel
Virginia B. Bertram
Patricia Finnegan Sharf
Ms. Dorothy Fisher
Mrs. Marjorie S. Fisher
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip Wm. Fisher
Dorothy A. & Larry L. Fobes
Samuel & Laura Fogleman
Mr. Emory Ford, Jr.◊ Endowment
Dr. Saul & Mrs. Helen Forman
Barbara Frankel & Ron Michalak
Herman & Sharon Frankel
Jane French
Mark & Donna Frentrup
Mr. Alan M. Gallatin
Janet M. Garrett
Dr. Byron P. & Marilyn Georgeson
Jim & Nancy Gietzen
Mr. Joseph & Mrs. Lois Gilmore
Victor ◊ & Gale Girolami
Ruth & Al◊ Glancy
David & Paulette Groen
Rosemary Gugino
Mr. & Mrs. William Harriss
Donna & Eugene Hartwig
Ms. Nancy B. Henk
Joseph L. Hickey
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Hitchman
Ronald M. & Carol◊ Horwitz
Andy Howell
Carol Howell
Paul M. Huxley & Cynthia Pasky
David & Sheri Jaffa
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Jeffs II
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Jessup
Mr. George G. Johnson
Lenard & Connie Johnston
Ms. Carol Johnston
Carol M. Jonson
Drs. Anthony & Joyce Kales
Faye & Austin Kanter
Norb ◊ & Carole Keller
Dr. Mark & Mrs. Gail Kelley
Dr. Mark & Mrs. Gail Kelley
June K. Kendall◊
Dimitri ◊ & Suzanne Kosacheff
Douglas Koschik
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Arthur J. Krolikowski
Mary Clippert LaMont ◊
Ms. Sandra Lapadot
Mrs. Bonnie Larson
Ann C. Lawson ◊
Allan S. Leonard
Max Lepler & Rex L. Dotson
Dr. Melvin A. Lester ◊
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Joseph Lile
Harold Lundquist ◊ & Elizabeth
Brockhaus Lundquist
Eric & Ginny Lundquist
Roberta Maki
Eileen & Ralph Mandarino
Judy Howe Masserang
Ms. Marilyn Snodgrass ◊
Ms. Elizabeth Maysa
Mary Joy McMachen, Ph.D.
Judith Mich ◊
Rhoda A. Milgrim
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene A. Miller
John & Marcia Miller
Jerald A. & Marilyn H. Mitchell
Mr.◊ & Mrs. L. William Moll
Shari & Craig Morgan
Ms. I. Surayyah R. Muwwakkil◊
Joy & Allan Nachman
Mr. Herman Weinreich ◊
Beverley Anne Pack
David & Andrea Page ◊
Edna J. Shin
Mr. Dale J. Pangonis
Ms. Mary Webber Parker ◊
Mr. John Diebel◊
Mrs. Sophie Pearlstein ◊
Helen & Wesley Pelling ◊
Dr. William F. Pickard
Mrs. Bernard E. Pincus
Ms. Christina Pitts
Mrs. Robert Plummer ◊
Mr. & Mrs. P. T. Ponta
Mrs. Mary Carol Prokop ◊
Ms. Linda Rankin & Mr. Daniel Graschuck
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas J. Rasmussen
Deborah J. Remer
Mr. & Mrs.◊ Lloyd E. Reuss
Mr. Robert E. Wilkins ◊
Ms. Marianne Reye
Lori-Ann Rickard
Bernard & Eleanor Robertson
Ms. Barbara Robins
Jack & Aviva Robinson ◊
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Gerald F. Ross
Mr. & Mrs. George Roumell
Marjorie Shuman Saulson
Mr. & Mrs. Donald & Janet Schenk
Ms. Yvonne Schilla
Mr. & Mrs. Fred G. Secrest ◊
Ms. Marla K. Shelton
Ms. June Siebert
Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Simon ◊
Ms. Marilyn Snodgrass ◊
Mrs. Margot Sterren ◊
Mr. & Mrs. Walter Stuecken
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Alexander C. Suczek
David Szymborski & Marilyn Sicklesteel
Alice ◊ & Paul Tomboulian
Roger & Tina Valade
Charles & Sally Van Dusen
Mr. & Mrs. Melvin VanderBrug
Mrs. Inge A. Vincent ◊
Christine & Keith C. Weber
Mr. Herman Weinreich ◊
John ◊ & Joanne Werner
Mr.◊ & Mrs. Arthur Wilhelm
Mr. Robert E. Wilkins ◊
Mrs. Michel Williams
Ms. Nancy S. Williams ◊
Mr. Robert S. Williams & Ms. Treva Womble
Ms. Barbara Wojtas
Elizabeth B. Work◊
Dr. Melissa J. Smiley & Dr. Patricia A. Wren
Ms. Andrea L. Wulf
Mrs. Judith G. Yaker
Milton & Lois Zussman ◊
And seven who wish to remain anonymous ◊ Deceased
◊
◊
◊
◊
44 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The DSO’s Planned Giving Council recognizes the region’s leading financial and estate professionals whose current and future clients may involve them in their decision to make a planned gift to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Members play a critical role in shaping the future of the DSO through ongoing feedback, working with their clients, supporting philanthropy and attending briefings twice per year.
Linda Wasserman, Chair
Mrs. Katana H. Abbott*
Mr. Joseph Aviv
Mr. Christopher Ballard*
Ms. Jessica B. Blake, Esq.
Ms. Rebecca J. Braun
Mr. Timothy Compton
Ms. Wendy Zimmer Cox*
Mr. Robin D. Ferriby*
Mrs. Jill Governale*
Mr. Henry Grix*
Mrs. Julie Hollinshead, CFA
Mr. Mark W. Jannott, CTFA
Ms. Jennifer Jennings*
Ms. Dawn Jinsky*
Mrs. Shirley Kaigler*
Mr. Robert E. Kass*
Mr. Christopher L. Kelly
Mr. Bernard S. Kent
Ms. Yuh Suhn Kim
Mr. Henry P. Lee*
Mrs. Marguerite Munson Lentz*
Mr. J. Thomas MacFarlane
Mr. Christopher M. Mann*
Mr. Curtis J. Mann
Mrs. Mary K. Mansfield
Mr. Mark E. Neithercut*
Mr. Steve Pierce
Ms. Deborah J. Renshaw, CFP
Mr. James P. Spica
Mr. David M. Thoms*
Mr. John N. Thomson, Esq.
Mr. Jason Tinsley*
Mr. William Vanover
Mr. William Winkler
*Executive Committee Member
Share the music of the DSO with future generations
INCLUDE THE DSO AS A BENEFICIARY IN YOUR WILL
Remembering the DSO in your estate plans will support the sustainability and longevity of our orchestra, so that tomorrow’s audience will continue to be inspired through unsurpassed musical experiences. If you value the role of the DSO—in your life and in our community—
please consider making a gift through your will, trust, life insurance, or other deferred gift.
To learn more please call Alexander Kapordelis at 313.576.5198 or email akapordelis@dso.org
DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 45 dso.org #IAMDSO
CORPORATE, FOUNDATION, AND GOVERNMENT GIVING
Giving of $500,000 & more SAMUEL & JEAN FRANKEL FOUNDATION
Giving of $200,000 & more
Giving of $100,000 & more
MARVIN & BETTY DANTO FAMILY FOUNDATION
46 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
MICHIGAN STATE POLICE
Giving of $50,000 & more
Paul M. Angell Family Foundation
Broder Sachse
Marvin & Betty Danto Family Foundation
Edward C. & Linda Dresner Levy Foundation
MASCO Corporation
MGM Grand Detroit
Milner Hotels Foundation
Penske Foundation, Inc.
Giving of $20,000 & more
Mandell & Madeleine Berman Foundation
Blue Star Catering
The Clinton Family Fund
DeRoy Testamentary Foundation
Eleanor & Edsel Ford Fund
Henry Ford II Fund
Hudson-Webber Foundation
Michigan Council for Arts & Cultural Affairs
Myron P. Leven Foundation
Schneider-Engstrom Foundation
Wolverine Packing Company
Giving of $10,000 & more
Laskaris-Jamett Advisors of Raymond James
Oliver Dewey Marcks Foundation
Karen & Drew Peslar Foundation
Stone Foundation of Michigan
Sun Communities Inc.
Burton A. Zipser & Sandra D. Zipser Foundation
Giving of $5,000 & more
Applebaum Family Philanthropy
Creative Benefit Solutions
Benson & Edith Ford Fund
Honigman LLP
Jaffe, Raitt, Heuer and Weiss
Marjorie & Maxwell Jospey Foundation
PNC Bank – Southeast Florida
KPMG LLP
Sigmund & Sophie Rohlik Foundation
Speyer Foundation
Warner Norcross + Judd
And one who wishes to remain anonymous
Giving of $1,000 & more
The Children’s Foundation
Coffee Express Roasting Company
Frank & Gertrude Dunlap Foundation
Enterprise Holdings Foundation
EY
James and Lynelle Holden Fund
Japan Business Society of Detroit Foundation
Josephine Kleiner Foundation
Dolores & Paul Lavins Foundation
Ludwig Foundation Fund
Madison Electric Company
Michigan First Credit Union
Plante and Moran, PLLC
Renaissance (MI) Chapter of the Links
Save Our Symphony
Louis & Nellie Sieg Foundation
Samuel L. Westerman Foundation
And one who wishes to remain anonymous
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 47 dso.org #IAMDSO
TRIBUTE GIFTS
Gifts received September 1, 2021 - October 31, 2022
Tribute gifts to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra are made to honor accomplishments, celebrate occasions, and pay respect in memory or reflection. These gifts support current season projects, partnerships and performances such as DSO concerts, education programs, free community concerts, and family programming. For information about making a tribute gift, please call 313.576.5114 or visit dso.org/donate.
The DSO wishes to thank those who donated in memory of President Emeritus Anne Parsons. Please visit dso.org/rememberinganne for the full list of donors.
In Honor
Mr. Peter D. Cummings
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Sherman
Denise Figlewicz and Thomas Kozina
Ms. Dianne Lattemann
Mrs. Linda Lutz
Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon N. Kaftan
Alex Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Marshall
Mr. Stanley Nycek
Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Partrich
In Memory
Mr. John A. Boll, Sr.
Ms. Joanne Danto and Dr. Arnold Weingarden
Mrs. Sylvia Graham
Nick Brien
Mrs. Geraldine Kruse
Paul and Ronia Kruse
Mrs. Mado O. Lie
Ms. Paula-Rose Stark
Mr. Joseph J. Plaza Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome J. Skiba
Mrs. Arlene Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Dubrinsky
Mrs. Annette K. Sipher
Mrs. Edna Freier
Mr. Hai-Xin Wu
Dr. Yuson Jung
Mr. Jeffery Zook
Dr. Yan Yin
Mr. Ross Tatro
Ms. Linda Tatro
Mr. Alexander Thomas
Ms. Joanne Danto and Dr. Arnold Weingarden
David and Meredith Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. David Sillman
Dr. and Mrs. Martin Tessler
Dr. and Mrs. Martin L. Weissman
48 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
UPCOMING CONCERTS & EVENTS
TICKETS & INFO
313.576.5111 or dso.org
PNC POPS SERIES FRANK & THE GREAT LADIES OF SONG
Fri, Feb 10 - Sun, Feb 12
DSO PRESENTS THE PRINCESS BRIDE IN CONCERT
Tues, Feb 14 - Wed, Feb 15
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES SHOSTAKOVICH’S FIFTH SYMPHONY & SAXOPHONE CONCERTO WORLD PREMIERE
Sat, Feb 18 - Sun, Feb 19
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES BIGNAMINI CONDUCTS NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN & GRIEG
Thu, Feb 23 - Sat, Feb 25
Alexander Gavrylyuk
February 23-25
Tai Murray
March 16-19
Frank and the Great Ladies of Song
February 10-12
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES CLASSICAL ROOTS
Fri, Mar 3 - Sat, Mar 4
WILLIAM DAVIDSON
NEIGHBORHOOD CONCERT SERIES SINKOVSKY PLAYS BACH
Thu, Mar 9 - Sun, Mar 12
PNC POPS SERIES SONDHEIM & BEYOND
Fri, Mar 10 - Sun, Mar 12
TINY TOTS CONCERT SERIES GEMINI
Tiny Tots (Ages 2-5)
Sat, Mar 11 at 10 AM
YOUNG PEOPLE’S FAMILY CONCERT SERIES SYMPHONIC SUPERHEROES
Young People’s Family Concert (Ages 6+)
Sat, Mar 11 at 11 AM
WILLIAM DAVIDSON
NEIGHBORHOOD CONCERT SERIES DVOŘÁK’S VIOLIN CONCERTO
Thu, Mar 16 - Sun, Mar 19
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES BRAHMS’ FOURTH SYMPHONY & RACHMANINOFF PIANO CONCERTO NO. 2
Fri, Mar 24 - Sun, Mar 26
PVS CLASSICAL SERIES JADER CONDUCTS STRAVINSKY’S FIREBIRD
Thu, Mar 30 - Sat, Apr 1
For complete program listings, including Live from Orchestra Hall webcast dates, visit dso.org
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 49 dso.org #IAMDSO
WELCOME TO THE MAX
Our Home on Woodward Avenue
The Max M. and Marjorie S. Fisher Music Center is one of Detroit’s most notable cultural campuses. The Max includes three main performance spaces: historic Orchestra Hall, the Peter D. and Julie F. Cummings Cube (The Cube), and Robert A. and Maggie Allesee Hall. All are accessible from the centrally located William Davidson Atrium. The Jacob Bernard Pincus Music Education Center is home to the DSO’s Wu Family Academy and other music education offerings. The DSO is also proud to offer The Max as a performance and administrative space for several local partners, including Detroit Youth Volume.
Parking
The DSO Parking Deck is located at 81 Parsons Street. Self-parking in the garage costs $10 for most concerts (credit card payment only). Accessible parking is available on the first and second floors of the garage. Note that handicapped parking spaces go quickly, so please arrive early!
What Should I Wear?
You do you! We don’t have a dress code, and you’ll see a variety of outfit styles. Business casual attire is common, but sneakers and jeans are just as welcome as suits and ties.
Food and Drink
Concessions are available for purchase on the first floor of the William Davidson Atrium at most concerts, and light bites are available in the Paradise Lounge on the second floor. Bars are located on the first and third floors of the William Davidson Atrium and offer canned sodas (pop, if you prefer), beer, wine, and specialty cocktail mixes.
Patrons are welcome to bring drinks to their seats at all performances except Friday morning Coffee Concerts; food is not allowed in Orchestra Hall. Please note that outside food and beverages are prohibited.
Accessibility
Accessibility matters. Whether you need ramp access for your wheelchair or are looking for sensory-friendly concert options, we are thinking of you.
• The Max has elevators, barrierfree restrooms, and accessible seating on each level. Security staff are available at all entrances to help patrons requiring extra assistance in and out of vehicles.
• The DSO’s Sennheiser MobileConnect hearing assistance system is available for all performances in Orchestra Hall. You can use your own mobile device and headphones by downloading the Sennheiser MobileConnect app, or borrow a device by visiting the Box Office. This system is made possible by the Michigan Ear Institute.
• Available at the Box Office during all events at The Max, the DSO offers sensory toolkits to use free of charge, courtesy of the Mid-Michigan Autism Association. The kits contain items that can help calm or stimulate a person with a sensory processing difference, including noise-reducing headphones and fidget toys. The DSO also has a quiet room, available for patrons to use at every performance
• Check out the Accessibility tab on dso.org/yourexperience to learn more
THE MAX M. & MARJORIE S.
FISHER MUSIC CENTER
3711 Woodward Avenue
Detroit, MI 48201
Box Office: 313.576.5111
Group Sales: 313.576.5111
Administrative Offices: 313.576.5100
Facilities Rental Info: 313.576.5131
Visit the DSO online at dso.org
For general inquiries, please email info@dso.org
WiFi
Complimentary WiFi is available throughout The Max. Look for the DSOGuest network on your device. And be sure to tag your posts with #IAMDSO!
Shop @ The Max
Our brick and mortar shop is closed, but DSO fans can visit dso.org/shop to purchase DSO merchandise anytime!
The Herman and Sharon Frankel Donor Lounge
Governing Members can enjoy complimentary beverages, appetizers, and desserts in the Donor Lounge, open 90 minutes prior to each concert through the end of intermission. For more information on becoming a Governing Member, contact Leslie Groves at 313.576.5451 or lgroves@dso.org.
Gift Certificates
Gift certificates are available in any denomination and may be used towards tickets to any DSO performance. Please contact the Box Office for more information.
Rent The Max
Elegant and versatile, The Max is an ideal setting for a variety of events and performances: weddings, corporate gatherings, meetings, concerts, and more. Visit dso.org/rentals or call 313.576.5131 for more information.
50 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
POLICIES HEALTH & SAFETY
n The DSO no longer requires audiences to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test to attend performances.
n Masks are optional although strongly recommended at DSO performances, particularly when Wayne County and surrounding communities are in the high or “red” category as defined by the CDC.
n We ask all audience members to do their part to create a safe environment for everyone and encourage those who are not feeling well to stay home.
n We will continue to communicate our policies to ticketholders in advance of their concerts and will provide updates should protocols change throughout the season.
SEATING
Please note that all patrons (of any age) must have a ticket to attend concerts. If the music has already started, an usher will ask you to wait until a break before seating you. The same applies if you leave Orchestra Hall and re-enter. Most performances are broadcast (with sound) on a TV in the William Davidson Atrium.
TICKETS, EXCHANGES, AND CONCERT CANCELLATIONS
n All sales are final and non-refundable.
n Even though we’ll miss you, we understand that plans can change unexpectedly, so the DSO offers flexible exchange and ticket donation options.
n Please contact the Box Office to exchange tickets and for all ticketing questions or concerns.
n The DSO is a show-must-go-on orchestra. In the rare event a concert is cancelled, our website and social media feeds will announce the cancellation, and patrons will be notified of exchange options.
PHONES
Your neighbors and the musicians appreciate your cooperation in turning your phone to silent and your brightness down while you’re keeping an eye on texts from the babysitter or looking up where a composer was born!
PHOTOGRAPHY & RECORDING
We love a good selfie (please share your experiences using @DetroitSymphony and #IAMDSO) but remember that photography
can be distracting to musicians and audience members. Please be cautious and respectful if you wish to take photos.
Flash photography, video recording, tripods, and cameras with detachable lenses are strictly prohibited.
NOTE: By entering event premises, you consent to having your likeness featured in photography, audio, and video captured by the DSO, and release the DSO from any liability connected with these materials. Visit dso.org for more.
SMOKING
Smoking and vaping are not allowed anywhere in The Max.
To report an emergency during a concert, immediately notify an usher or DSO staff member. If an usher or DSO staff member is not available, please contact DSO Security at 313.576.5199
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 51 dso.org #IAMDSO
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Erik Rönmark President and CEO
James B. and Ann V. Nicholson Chair
Jill Elder Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer
Linda Lutz
Vice President and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer
Joy Crawford
Executive Assistant to the President and CEO
Serena Donadoni Executive Assistant to the Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer
Anne Parsons ◊ President Emeritus
ARTISTIC OPERATIONS
ARTISTIC PLANNING
Jessica Ruiz
Senior Director of Artistic Planning
Jessica Slais
Creative Director of Popular and Special Programming
D. Kenji Lee
Jazz and @ THE MAX Coordinator
Claudia Scalzetti Artistic Coordinator
Lindzy Volk Artist Liaison
Goode Wyche
Manager of Jazz and @ THE MAX
LIVE FROM ORCHESTRA HALL
Marc Geelhoed
Executive Producer of Live from Orchestra Hall
ORCHESTRA OPERATIONS
Kathryn Ginsburg General Manager
Patrick Peterson Director of Orchestra Personnel
Dennis Rottell Stage Manager
Benjamin Brown Production Manager
Nolan Cardenas Audition and Operations Coordinator
Bronwyn Hagerty Orchestra and Training Programs Librarian
Benjamin Tisherman Manager of Orchestra Personnel
ADVANCEMENT
Alex Kapordelis Senior Director, Campaign
Jill Rafferty Senior Director of Advancement
Audrey Kelley Director of Executive and Board Operations
Amanda Tew Director, Advancement Operations
Beth Carlson Stewardship Coordinator
Damaris Doss Major Gift Officer
Leslie Groves Major Gift Officer
Ali Huber
Signature Events Manager
Jane Koelsch Fulfillment Coordinator
Colleen McLellan Institutional Gift Officer
Juanda Pack Advancement Benefits Concierge
Susan Queen Gift Officer, Corporate Giving
Cassidy Schmid Manager of Campaign Operations
Shalynn Vaughn Major Gift Officer
BUILDING OPERATIONS
Ken Waddington Senior Director of Facilities and Engineering
Cedric Allen EVS Technician
Teresa Beachem Chief Engineer
Demetris Fisher Manager of Environmental Services (EVS)
William Guilbault EVS Technician
Robert Hobson Chief Maintenance Technician
Daniel Speights EVS Technician
CATERING AND RETAIL SERVICES
Christina Williams Director of Patron and Event Experience
Neva Kirksey Manager of Events and Rentals
Alison Reed, CVA Manager of Volunteer and Patron Experience
Andre Williams Beverage Manager
COMMUNICATIONS
Matt Carlson Senior Director, Communications and Media Relations
Sarah Smarch
Director of Content and Storytelling
Natalie Berger Video Content Specialist
LaToya Cross Communications and Advancement Content Specialist
Hannah Engwall Public Relations Manager
Francesca Leo Public Relations Coordinator
COMMUNITY & LEARNING
Karisa Antonio Director of Social Innovation
Damien Crutcher Managing Director of Detroit Harmony
Debora Kang Director of Education
Clare Valenti
Director of Community Engagement
Kiersten Alcorn Manager of Community Engagement
Chris DeLouis Training Ensembles Operations Coordinator
Erin Dowler
Detroit Harmony Operations Assistant
Joanna Goldstein Training Ensembles Student Development Coordinator
Anne Leech Detroit Strategy Specialist
Kendra Sachs
Training Ensembles Recruitment and Communications Coordinator
◊ Deceased 52 DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE WINTER 2022–2023
FINANCE
Michelle Cooper Senior Director of Accounting and Finance
Adela Löw Director of Accounting and Financial Reporting
Sandra Mazza Senior Accountant, Business Operations
Sarah Nawrot Accounting Clerk
HUMAN RESOURCES
Hannah Lozon Senior Director of Talent and Culture
Angela Stough Director of Human Resources
Shuntia Perry Recruitment and Employee Experience Specialist
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
William Shell Director of Information Technology
Michelle Koning Web Manager
Len Messing Systems Administrator
Aaron Tockstein Database Administrator
MARKETING & AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT
Charles Buchanan Senior Director of Marketing and Audience Development
Teresa Alden Director of Growth and Acquisition
Rebecca Villarreal Director of Subscriptions and Loyalty
Dorian Dillard Marketing and Promotions Coordinator
Jay Holladay Brand Graphic Designer
Crystal Mann Loyalty Marketing Strategist
LaHeidra Marshall Marketing Projects Specialist
Connor Mehren Digital Marketing Strategist
Kristin Pagels-Quinlan Content Marketing Strategist
PATRON SALES & SERVICE
Michelle Marshall Director of Patron Sales and Service
Sharon Gardner Carr Assistant Manager of Tessitura and Ticketing Operations
Rollie Edwards Patron Sales and Service Specialist
James Sabatella Group and Patron Services Specialist
SAFETY
&
SECURITY
George Krappmann Director of Safety and Security
Willie Coleman Security Officer
Norris Jackson Security Officer
Tony Morris Security Officer
Johnnie Scott Safety and Security Manager
Antonio Thomas Security Officer
PERFORMANCE
Winter • 2021-2022 Season
Hannah Engwall, editor hengwall@dso.org
•
ECHO PUBLICATIONS, INC. Tom Putters, publisher James Van Fleteren, designer echopublications.com
•
Cover design by Jay Holladay
•
To advertise in Performance: call 248.582.9690 or email info@echopublications.com
Read Performance anytime! dso.org/performance
Activities of the DSO are made possible in part with the support of the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and the National Endowment for the Arts.
DSO PERFORMANCE MAGAZINE 53 dso.org #IAMDSO
MARIA SCHNEIDER ORCHESTRA
SUNDAY, MARCH 12 4 PM
JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET
THURSDAY, MARCH 30 7:30 PM
MARIA JOÃO PIRES & PARTITURA PIANISTS
SUNDAY, MAY 21 4 PM
JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET
RENÉE FLEMING EVGENY KISSIN
SATURDAY, MAY 27 8 PM
EXPLORE THE SEASON AT THEGILMORE.ORG
SPHINX SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
WITH EXIGENCE (EUGENE ROGERS, MUSIC DIRECTOR)
Tito Muñoz, conductor
Aundi Marie Moore, soprano
Detroit’s Sphinx Organization celebrates its 25th anniversary with a program featuring works by African American and Latinx composers.
DANIEL HOPE, VIOLIN ZURICH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Violinist Daniel Hope brings the Zurich Chamber Orchestra in a new program that takes a deep dive into the rich repertoire of American music, including Aaron Copland, Duke Ellington, Florence Price, Philip Glass, and George Gershwin.
Sun Jan 29 // 2 pm
Hill Auditorium (Ann Arbor)
Principal Sponsors: Ken Fischer Legacy Endowment Fund
Fri Mar 17 // 8 pm
Hill Auditorium (Ann Arbor)
TICKETS AT UMS.ORG 734-764-2538
LIVE THE MOMENT 144TH SEASON