ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA MARCH 2023 ASO Salutes Music Educators
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony MARCH 2023 INTRODUCTIONS In Tune 2 Music Director 5 ASO Leadership ................... 6 ASO Musicians .................... 8 NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Written by Noel Morris MARCH 2, 4 20 MARCH 5 ........................ 28 MARCH 16, 18 .................... 32 MARCH 23, 25 40 DEPARTMENTS ASO Support 46 Henry Sopkin Circle 50 ASO Staff 51 Woodruff Circle .................. 53 Benefactor Circle 54 Page 14 ASO Salutes Music Educators encoreatlanta.com | 1
DEAR FRIENDS, M
usic in Our Schools Month is so important to us at the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, both because our education programs serve dedicated music educators who are “in the trenches” on a day-to-day basis; and also because none of us would be where we are, working in music, if it weren’t for our own special music teachers. In our feature story this month, we have profiled a few of the great music teachers in the Atlanta area.
Speaking personally, my school music teachers were some of the most influential people in my life. The first teacher who lit a fire in me was our middle school band director, Mrs. Averill. Her down-to-business manner made us work hard to stretch our skills, and she gave us a great grounding in what it meant to be an ensemble. She also identified talented students and encouraged us to compete in solo and ensemble competitions and audition for youth orchestras.
In high school, our band director Mr. Seanor generously heaped extra help and praise on students he identified as having the talent to pursue further musical studies. He went above and beyond with one friend in particular, becoming like a second father to him. My friend is now an inspiring high school band director too.
School music teachers do so much more than just teach technical skills— they build community, provide leadership, and inspire students to do great things. Being a band, orchestra or choir director is a calling, not a job, requiring long hours and extra effort. I am thankful for my school music teachers, and am proud that in my job at the ASO we have the opportunity to support their essential work.
If you love music, I encourage you to take time to thank a music teacher this month, or take a moment to write to a school or district administrator in support of strong music programs.
Thank you for all you do to support great music in our community!
With gratitude,
Jennifer Barlament, Executive Director
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ASO | IN TUNE
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TODD HALL
ASO | NATHALIE STUTZMANN
The 2022/23 season marks an exciting new era for the ASO as Maestro Nathalie Stutzmann takes her role as our fifth Music Director, making her the only woman leading a major American orchestra. She has also served as the Principal Guest Conductor of The Philadelphia Orchestra since 2021 and Chief Conductor of the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra in Norway since 2018.
Nathalie Stutzmann is considered one of the most outstanding musical personalities of our time. Charismatic musicianship combined with unique rigour, energy and fantasy characterize her style. A rich variety of strands form the core of her repertoire: Central European and Russian romanticism is a strong focus—ranging from Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms and Dvořák through to the larger symphonic forces of Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Mahler, Bruckner and Strauss—as well as French 19thcentury repertoire and impressionism.
Highlights as guest conductor in the next seasons include debut performances with the Munich, New York and Helsinki Philharmonics. She will also return to the London Symphony Orchestra and Orchestre de Paris.
Having also established a strong reputation as an opera conductor, Nathalie has led celebrated productions of Wagner’s Tannhäuser in Monte Carlo and Boito’s Mefistofele at the Orange festival. She began the 2022/23 season with a new production of Tchaikovsky’s Pikovaya Dama in The Royal Theater of La Monnaie in Brussels and will make her debut at the Metropolitan Opera this season with two productions of Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte reunite with Wagner’s Tannhäuser for a production at the Bayreuth in 2023.
As one of today’s most esteemed contraltos, she has done more than 80 recordings and received the most prestigious awards. Her newest album released in January 2021, Contralto, was awarded the Scherzo’s “Exceptional” seal, Opera Magazine’s Diamant d’Or and radio RTL’s Classique d’Or. She is an exclusive recording artist of Warner Classics/Erato.
Nathalie was named “Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur,” France’s highest honor, and “Commandeur dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres” by the French government.
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SIMON FOWLER
ASO | LEADERSHIP | 2022/23 Board of Directors
OFFICERS
Patrick Viguerie chair
Janine Brown immediate past chair
Bert Mills treasurer
Angela Evans secretary
DIRECTORS
Phyllis Abramson
Keith Adams
Juliet M. Allan
Susan Antinori
Andrew Bailey
Jennifer Barlament*
Paul Blackney
Rita Bloom
Zachary Boeding*
Janine Brown
Benjamin Q. Brunt
Betsy Camp
S. Wright Caughman, M.D.
Lisa Chang
Susan Clare
Russell Currey
Sheila Lee Davies
Erroll Brown Davis, Jr.
Carlos del Rio, M.D. FIDSA
Lisa DiFrancesco, M.D.
Sloane Drake
Lynn Eden
Angela Evans
Craig Frankel
Sally Bogle Gable
Anne Game
Rod Garcia-Escudero
Sally Frost George
Robert Glustrom
Bonnie B. Harris
Charles Harrison
Tad Hutcheson, Jr.
Roya Irvani
Joia Johnson
Susan Antinori vice chair
Lynn Eden vice chair
Chris Kopecky
Randolph J. Koporc
Carrie Kurlander
James H. Landon
Donna Lee
Sukai Liu
Kevin Lyman
Deborah Marlowe
Shelley McGehee
Arthur Mills IV
Bert Mills
Molly Minnear
Hala Moddelmog*
Terence L. Neal
Galen Lee Oelkers
Dr. John Paddock
Howard D. Palefsky
Cathleen Quigley
BOARD OF COUNSELORS
James Rubright vice chair
Doug Reid
James Rubright
William Schultz
Charles Sharbaugh
Fahim Siddiqui
W. Ross Singletary, II
John Sparrow
Elliott Tapp
Brett Tarver
S. Patrick Viguerie
Kathy Waller
Mark D. Wasserman
Chris Webber
John B. White, Jr.
Richard S. White, Jr.
Kevin E. Woods, M.D., M.P.H.
Neil Berman
John W. Cooledge, M.D.
John R. Donnell, Jr.
Jere A. Drummond
Carla Fackler
Charles B. Ginden
John T. Glover
Dona Humphreys
Aaron J. Johnson, Jr.
Ben F. Johnson, III
James F. Kelley
Patricia Leake
Karole F. Lloyd
LIFE DIRECTORS
Howell E. Adams, Jr.
*Ex-Officio Board Member
Connie Calhoun
Meghan H. Magruder
Penelope McPhee
Patricia H. Reid
Joyce Schwob
John A Sibley, III
H. Hamilton Smith
G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr.
Michael W. Trapp
Ray Uttenhove
Chilton Varner
Adair M. White
Sue Sigmon Williams
C. Merrell Calhoun
Azira G. Hill
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ASO | 2022/23 Musician Roster
Nathalie Stutzmann music director
The Robert Reid Topping Chair
FIRST
VIOLIN
David Coucheron concertmaster
The Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Peevy Chair
Justin Bruns
associate concertmaster
The Charles McKenzie Taylor Chair
Vacant assistant concertmaster
Jun-Ching Lin assistant concertmaster
Anastasia Agapova acting assistant
concertmaster
Kevin Chen
Carolyn Toll Hancock
The Wells Fargo Chair
John Meisner
Christopher Pulgram
Juan R. Ramírez Hernández
Olga Shpitko
Kenn Wagner
Lisa Wiedman Yancich
Sissi Yuqing Zhang
SECTION VIOLIN ‡
Judith Cox
Raymond Leung
The Carolyn McClatchey Chair
Sanford Salzinger
SECOND VIOLIN
Vacant principal
The Atlanta Symphony Associates Chair
Sou-Chun Su acting / associate principal
The Frances Cheney Boggs Chair
Jay Christy acting associate / assistantprincipal
Dae Hee Ahn
Robert Anemone
Noriko Konno Clift
David Dillard
Sheela Iyengar**
Eun Young Jung•
Eleanor Kosek
Yaxin Tan•
Rachel Ostler
VIOLA
Zhenwei Shi principal
The Edus H. and Harriet H. Warren Chair
Paul Murphy associate principal
The Mary and Lawrence Gellerstedt Chair
Catherine Lynn assistant principal
Marian Kent
Yang-Yoon Kim
Yiyin Li
Lachlan McBane
Jessica Oudin
Madeline Sharp
CELLO
Rainer Eudeikis* principal
The Miriam and John Conant Chair
Daniel Laufer acting / associate principal
The Livingston Foundation Chair
Karen Freer acting associate / assistant principal
Thomas Carpenter
Joel Dallow
The UPS Foundation Chair
Peter Garrett•**
Brad Ritchie
Denielle Wilson•**
BASS
Joseph McFadden principal
The Marcia and John Donnell Chair
Gloria Jones Allgood associate principal
The Lucy R. & Gary Lee Jr. Chair
Karl Fenner
Michael Kenady
The Jane Little Chair
Michael Kurth
Nicholas Scholefield•
Daniel Tosky
FLUTE
Christina Smith principal
The Jill Hertz Chair
Robert Cronin associate principal
C. Todd Skitch
Gina Hughes
PICCOLO
Gina Hughes
Players in string sections are listed alphabetically | ‡ Rotates between sections | * Leave of absence |
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Sir Donald Runnicles
principal guest conductor; The Neil & Sue Williams Chair
OBOE
Elizabeth Koch Tiscione principal
The George M. and Corrie Hoyt Brown Chair
Zachary Boeding associate principal
The Kendeda Fund Chair
Samuel Nemec
Emily Brebach
ENGLISH HORN
Emily Brebach
CLARINET
Vacant principal
The Robert Shaw Chair
The Mabel Dorn Reeder Honorary Chair
Ted Gurch acting / associate principal
Marci Gurnow
Alcides Rodriguez
E-FLAT CLARINET
Ted Gurch
BASS CLARINET
Alcides Rodriguez
BASSOON
Andrew Brady* principal
The Abraham J. & Phyllis Katz Foundation Chair
Anthony Georgeson acting / associate principal
Laura Najarian
Juan de Gomar
Jerry Hou resident conductor; music director of the atlanta symphony youth orchestra
The Zeist Foundation Chair
CONTRA-BASSOON
Juan de Gomar
HORN
Vacant principal
The Betty Sands Fuller Chair
Susan Welty acting / associate principal
Kimberly Gilman
Bruce Kenney
TRUMPET
Stuart Stephenson* principal
The Madeline and Howell Adams Chair
Michael Tiscione acting / associate principal
Anthony Limoncelli
Mark Maliniak
William Cooper•**
TROMBONE
Vacant principal
The Terence L. Neal Chair, Honoring his dedication and service to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
Nathan Zgonc acting / associate principal
Jason Patrick Robins
BASS TROMBONE
Vacant
The Home Depot Veterans Chair
TUBA
Michael Moore principal
The Delta Air Lines Chair
Norman Mackenzie director of choruses
The Frannie & Bill Graves Chair
TIMPANI
Mark Yancich principal
The Walter H. Bunzl Chair
Michael Stubbart assistant principal
PERCUSSION
Joseph Petrasek principal
The Julie and Arthur Montgomery Chair
Vacant assistant principal
The William A. Schwartz Chair
Michael Stubbart
The Connie and Merrell Calhoun Chair
HARP
Elisabeth Remy Johnson principal
The Sally and Carl Gable Chair
KEYBOARD
The Hugh and Jessie Hodgson Memorial Chair
Peter Marshall †
Sharon Berenson †
LIBRARY
Vacant principal
The Marianna & Solon Patterson Chair
Hannah Davis asyo / assistant librarian
† Regularly
musician | • New this
| ** One-year
engaged
season
appointment
Members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Advisory Council is a group of passionate and engaged individuals who act as both ambassadors and resources for the ASO Board and staff. The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra extends heartfelt gratitude to the members listed on this page.
2022/23 CHAIRS
Arthur Mills, IV advisory council chair
Justin Im internal connections task force co-chair
Robert Lewis, Jr. internal connections task force co-chair
Frances Root patron experience task force chair
Jane Morrison
diversity & community connection task force co-chair
Eleina Raines
diversity & community connection task force co-chair
Cindy Smith
diversity & community connection task force co-chair
Otis Threatt
diversity & community connection task force co-chair
MEMBERS
Dr. Marshall & Stephanie Abes
Krystal Ahn
Paul Aldo
Evelyn Babey
Keith Barnett
Asad & Sakina Bashey
Meredith W. Bell
Jane Blount
Carol Brantley & David Webster
Cristina Briboneria
Tracey Chu
Donald & Barbara Defoe
Paul & Susan Dimmick
Bernadette Drankoski
Diana Einterz
Bruce Flower
John Fuller
Tucker Green
Caroline Hofland
Justin Im
Baxter Jones & Jiong Yan
Brian & Ann Kimsey
Jason & Michelle Kroh
Scott Lampert
Dr. Fulton Lewis III & Mr. Neal Rhoney
Robert Lewis, Jr.
Eunice Luke
Belinda Massafra
Erica McVicker
Arthur Mills IV
Berthe & Shapour
Mobasser
Bert Mobley
Caroline & Phil Moïse
Anne Morgan
Sue Morgan
Jane Morrison
Tatiana Nemo
Gary Noble
Bethani Oppenheimer
Chris Owes
Margie Painter
Ralph Paulk
Regina Olchowski
Eliza Quigley
Eleina Raines
Felicia Rives
Frances A. Root
Thomas & Lynne Saylor
Jim Schroder
Suzanne Shull
Baker Smith
Cindy Smith
Peter & Kristi Stathopoulos
Tom & Ani Steele
Kimberly Strong
Stephen & Sonia Swartz
George & Amy Taylor
Bob & Dede Thompson
Otis Threatt Jr.
Cathy Toren
Sheila Tschinkel
Roxanne Varzi
Robert & Amy Vassey
Juliana Vincenzino
Robert Walt
Nanette Wenger
Kiki Wilson
Taylor Winn
Camille Yow
For more information about becoming an Advisory Council member, please contact Cheri Snyder at cheri.snyder@atlantasymphony.org or 404.733.4904.
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CARLOS SIMON: Fate Now Conquers
BRITTEN: Violin Concerto
BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique
Stéphane Denève, conductor
Augustin Hadelich, violin
APR 13/15
MOZART: The Magic Flute Overture
MENDELSSOHN: Violin Concerto
SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 9
Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
Daniel Lozakovich, violin
Presented with support from
APR 20/21
LERA AUERBACH: Icarus
WAGNER: “Dawn” and “Siegfried’s Rhine Journey” from Götterdämmerung
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: A Sea Symphony
Nicholas Carter, conductor
Nicole Cabell, soprano
Lucas Meachem, baritone
ASO Chorus
APR 27/29
Season presented by Programs, dates and artists are subject to change.
ASO Salutes Music Educators
By Holly Hanchey
This month, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra (ASO) joins communities across the country in celebrating school music programs and their teachers. For over 30 years, the National Association for Music Educators (NAfME) has designated March as “Music in Our Schools Month,” with the purpose of raising awareness of the importance of music education for all children. Daily, school music programs are positively impacting the social, academic, and personal growth of the younger generation. The ASO is proud to partner in that mission for metro Atlanta schools and beyond.
Each year, thousands of young musicians engage with ASO education programs including the field trip series Students at the Symphony, the ASO’s Talent Development Program (TDP), a diversity youth training initiative now in its twenty-ninth year, and the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra (ASYO), now in its forty-ninth season. The ASO recognizes that none of this can be accomplished without the educators behind these young musicians. The list of music educators associated with the ASO is vast. Music educators facilitate ASO programs for families and schools. Hundreds of school music teachers are alumni of TDP and ASYO. And of course, every musician on the stage has a school music educator who assisted in their journey to Symphony Hall. In recognition of “Music in Our Schools Month,” the ASO shares the stories of a few exceptional educators special to the organization.
Jeffrey Rowser
Morgan County High School’s band director, Jeffrey Rowser, was inducted into the National High School Band Directors Hall of Fame, awarded the “Legion of Honor” from the John Phillip Sousa Foundation, and named the Georgia Music Educators Association Distinguished Career recipient, all in 2022.
Mr. Rowser has been a Georgia music educator for more than 40 years. His career accolades stem from the success of his ensembles: superior ratings in GMEA State Festival Concert Band performances and sight-reading for 40 consecutive years in addition to Superior, Best In Class and Grand Championship marching band awards.
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JEFFREY ROWSER
Mr. Rowser’s collegiate marching band was barrier-breaking While attending Auburn University in the 1970s, he became the first black drum major at the university, and in turn the first in the Southeastern Conference (SEC).
Not surprisingly, he is an advocate for music education, but not just to create the next generation of musicians. Music education, says Mr. Rowser, is about more than learning notes and the mechanics of playing an instrument.
“I just think music education through symphonies and schools has such an impact on creating a whole person for today’s society,” he said. “I am really sold on the fact that music education can give kids the opportunity to work interpersonally with others, not only from a technological standpoint, but also in expression, communication and having a verbal lifestyle together.”
He is currently hosting many of the ASO’s UpTempo Teen Nights, where middle and high school students can participate in a pre-concert discussion, followed by a classical concert, all for just $5.
“I get so fired up about doing that, and I treat it just like I’m getting ready for the Grammys, or the Emmys or whatever, to be prepared to interact with the audience, or whomever I’m interviewing,” he said.
Mr. Rowser has also put together multiple ensembles to play in the Galleria during the ASO’s popular holiday concert series, and many of Mr. Rowser’s students have participated in the ASYO, including Harrison Buck, a percussionist and current member.
Stephen Lawrence-Carroll
Another music educator in Georgia with close ties to the ASO is Stephen Lawrence-Carroll, who is currently Director of Orchestral Activities and Department Chair at North Atlanta High School’s Fine and Performing Arts Department. An Atlanta native, Mr. Lawrence-Carroll started playing violin and cello at age 12, and later picked up the piano. He was concertmaster in multiple orchestras throughout his education, including Loyola University Symphony and Chamber Orchestra and the Atlanta Public Schools Youth Symphony. He is also a graduate of the ASO’s TDP.
Dr. Sara Womack, Fine and Performing Arts Coordinator for Atlanta Public Schools, says “Atlanta Public Schools is continually grateful for Stephen’s award-winning instruction that enables students to use the knowledge gained through performance to solve real-world problems.”
Womack says, “It is encouraging to watch the enthusiasm of his students as
STEPHEN LAWRENCE
ALFRED WATKINS
they explain what they have learned, showcase their knowledge, and take on leadership roles that make an impact in their school and community. He treats each one of his students with great dignity and respect and has created a positive learning environment focused on building selfesteem through high standards and well-designed instruction. His ability to collaborate and lead is inspiring and has prompted other colleagues to strive for greatness.”
Currently in his eighth year at North Atlanta High School, Mr. LawrenceCarroll is active in GMEA and serves as District Orchestra Lead for Atlanta Public Schools Arts Resource Team, as well as the 2021-2023 State Orchestra Chair for the GMEA. He was also recently named American String Teacher’s Association Educator of the Year. Mr. Lawrence-Carroll regularly engages his students in the programs offered by the ASO, including the new Chamber Performance + Tour field trip option.
Alfred Watkins
Alfred Watkins retired after thirty seven years of teaching, with more than 30 years as Director of Band at Lassiter High School. He continues to serve school bands as a clinician and adjudicator throughout the country. Mr. Watkins is also the co-founder and musical director of the adult community band, Cobb Winds, an ensemble comprised primarily of metro-Atlanta area music educators.
Under his direction at Lassiter, his concerts bands performed nationally at the Midwest Band and Orchestra Clinic, the Music for All National Concert Band Festival, and College Band Directors National Convention. His marching bands were named Bands of America (BOA) Grand Champions in 1998 and 2002 and won nine BOA regional championships during his tenure. In addition, Mr. Watkins’s bands have performed in four Rose Parades, three Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parades, two Orange Bowl Parades and one Citrus Bowl Parade.
His work at Lassiter and his life are the subjects of not one, but two doctoral dissertations. As a proud Florida A & M University alum, and alumni award recipient, he co-founded and currently serves as president of the Minority Band Directors National Association. Mr. Watkins was awarded the 2013 GMEA Distinguished Career Award, the same year he won the “Leader of the Band Award,” given by a poll of more than ten thousand band directors, making him one of the most admired band directors in the nation.
One of his many admirers includes former student and current ASO clarinetist Marci Gurnow, who said, “Alfred Watkins has been such
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an enormous part of the journey that has led me to where I am today. In his role as my high school band director, Alfred not only inspired me musically, but strove to make sure that every one of his students gained the tools necessary to move forward as successful humans. The discipline and life lessons instilled in me under Alfred’s leadership are foundations I still value every day. It certainly feels like kismet to have ended up in his program, and I’m forever grateful to him.”
A common thread among these greats is the love and care they pour into their students and their profession. Thank you to these and all music educators who make more than music in their classrooms each day. For without music educators, the stage you see in front of you would be empty, and the hall would be silent. Join the ASO in celebrating “Music in Our Schools Month” and share the influence music programs, and their directors, had on you.
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The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra reaches 100,000+ students a year with its Students at the Symphony concerts, classroom visits, tailored in-person programs, and virtual resources.
ASO | SEASON SPONSORS
We are deeply grateful to the following leadership donors whose generous support has made the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's season possible.
NOLA FRINK: Robert Shaw's Loyal, Iconic Lieutenant
Her planned gift helps ensure that the Orchestra, and her beloved ASO Chorus, will continue to be heard
Everyone called her “Nola,” but her real name was Flanola Frink. That first name? An acronym combining Florida, where her parents were from, with New Orleans, LA, where she was born. And for 26 years, she was Robert Shaw’s fiercely loyal lieutenant and an unforgettable, iconic presence at the ASO.
Over that time, Nola worked as Administrative Assistant to Shaw and as Choral Administrator for the ASO Chorus, in which she also sang. At her 2001 retirement, an AJC article quoted her friends' descriptions of her as “a firecracker,” “a spark plug,” and “a loaded pistol.” Definitely not a shrinking violet, she described herself this way: “Everybody important has to have a pit bull. Mr. Shaw needed one. I was his.” By all accounts, Shaw was a demanding boss, and often a difficult one. Nola was vital to his success and that of the ASO.
The ASO Chorus was Shaw’s glorious creation and legacy, and Nola did pretty much everything to keep it running smoothly, from helping recruit singers to arranging scores. “I get the water ready for Mr. Shaw to walk on,” she famously said. Working in a basement office she referred to as “the Low Museum” (vs. the High Museum next door), she was Shaw’s faithful right hand, devoted to him and to the Chorus, which she made into a family.
Nola died last September. Years earlier she had become a member of the Henry Sopkin Circle by making the ASO the beneficiary of her retirement plan as well as a bequest. By honoring the Orchestra in this way, Nola helped ensure that the Orchestra, and her beloved all-volunteer ASO Chorus, will continue to be heard by future generations.
For more information about Planned Giving, or to join the Henry Sopkin Circle (see page 50), contact Jimmy Paulk at James.Paulk@atlantasymphony.org or call 404.733.4485.
For 26 years, she was Robert Shaw’s fiercely loyal lieutenant and an unforgettable, iconic presence at the ASO
Concerts of Thursday, March 2, 2023
8:00 PM Saturday, March 4, 2023
8:00 PM
JERRY HOU, conductor
AWADAGIN PRATT, piano
JOAN TOWER (b. 1938)
1920/2019 (2020)
JESSIE MONTGOMERY (b. 1981)
14 MINS
Rounds for Piano and String Orchestra (2022) 20 MINS
Awadagin Pratt, piano
INTERMISSION
BÉLA BARTÓK (1881–1945)
Concerto for Orchestra (1943)
I. Introduzione: Andante non troppo — Allegro vivace
20 MINS
38 MINS
II. Giuoco delle coppie: Allegretto scherzando
III. Elegia: Andante non troppo
IV. Intermezzo interrotto: Allegretto
V. Finale: Pesante — Presto
The use of cameras or recording devices during the concert is strictly prohibited. Please be kind to those around you and silence your mobile phone and other hand-held devices.
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony | mar2/4
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by Noel Morris Program Annotator
1920/2019
1920/2019 is scored for two flutes (one doubling piccolo), two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, piano and strings.
During a career spanning more than 60 years, composer Joan Tower’s works have been commissioned by major ensembles, soloists, and orchestras, including the Emerson, Tokyo, and Muir quartets; soloists Evelyn Glennie, Carol Wincenc, David Shifrin, Paul Neubauer, and John Browning; and the orchestras of Chicago, New York, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Nashville, Albany NY, and Washington DC, among others.
Recent awards: in 2020 Chamber Music America honored her with its Richard J. Bogomolny National Service Award; Musical America chose her to be its 2020 Composer of the Year; in 2019 the League of American Orchestras awarded her its highest honor, the Gold Baton. In 1990, Tower became the first woman to win the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for Silver Ladders. She is the first composer chosen for a Ford Made in America consortium commission of 65 orchestras. The Nashville Symphony and conductor Leonard Slatkin recorded that work, Made in America, with Tambor and Concerto for Orchestra for the Naxos label. The top-selling recording won three Grammy awards in 2008.
Tower’s tremendously popular six Fanfares for the Uncommon Woman have been played by over 600 different ensembles. She is Asher B. Edelman Professor in the Arts at Bard College, where she has taught since 1972.
Her composer residencies with orchestras and festivals include a decade with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra’s Composer of the Year for their 2010–11 season, as well as the St. Louis Symphony, the Deer Valley Music Festival, and the Yale/Norfolk Chamber Music Festival. She was in residence as the Albany Symphony’s Mentor Composer partner in the 2013–14 season. She has received honorary doctorates from Smith College, the New England Conservatory, and Illinois State University.
From the composer: 1920/2019 was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic, Jaap van Zweden, Music Director. It is dedicated to Deborah Borda, the orchestra’s President and CEO, in recognition of her vision for the creation of Project 19.
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These are the first ASO performances
Project 19 is the Philharmonic’s initiative to commission and premiere nineteen new works by women composers in honor of the 2020 centennial of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing women the right to vote. Project 19 is the single largest commissioning project for women in history.
1920 was the year when the amendment was ratified and adopted— an important and long sought-after achievement. I began writing this music in 2019 as the #MeToo movement continued to grow. Victims of sexual abuse, assault, and harassment are ending their silence, finding strength by sharing their experiences and beliefs.
These two years—1920 and 2019—were probably the two most historically significant years for the advancement of women in society.
Rounds
Rounds is scored for solo piano and strings.
Jessie Montgomery is an acclaimed composer, violinist, and educator. She is the recipient of the Leonard Bernstein Award from the ASCAP Foundation, the Sphinx Medal of Excellence, and her works are performed frequently around the world by leading musicians and ensembles.
Her growing body of work includes solo, chamber, vocal, and orchestral works. Some recent highlights include Shift, Change, Turn (2019) commissioned by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Coincident Dances (2018) for the Chicago Sinfonietta, and Banner (2014)—written to mark the 200th anniversary of “The Star-Spangled Banner”—for The Sphinx Organization and the Joyce Foundation, which was presented in its UK premiere at the BBC Proms on 7 August 2021.
Since 1999, Jessie has been affiliated with The Sphinx Organization, which supports young African American and Latinx string players and has served as composer-in-residence for the Sphinx Virtuosi, the Organization’s flagship professional touring ensemble.
A founding member of PUBLIQuartet and a former member of the Catalyst Quartet, Jessie holds degrees from the Juilliard School and New York University and is currently a PhD Candidate in Music Composition at Princeton University. She is Professor of violin and composition at The New School. In May 2021, she began her three-year appointment as the Mead Composer-inResidence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
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These are the first ASO performances. ADOBE STOCK JIYANG CHEN
From the composer:
Rounds for solo piano and string orchestra is inspired by the imagery and themes from T.S. Eliot’s epic poem Four Quartets. Early in the first poem, Burnt Norton, we find these evocative lines:
At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless; Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is, But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity, Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,
Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point, There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.
(Text © T.S. Eliot. Reproduced by courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd)
In addition to this inspiration, while working on the piece, I became fascinated by fractals (infinite patterns found in nature that are self-similar across different scales) and also delved into the work of contemporary biologist and philosopher Andreas Weber who writes about the interdependency of all beings. Weber explores how every living organism has a rhythm that interacts and impacts with all of the living things around it and results in a multitude of outcomes.
Like Eliot in Four Quartets, beginning to understand this interconnectedness requires that we slow down, listen, and observe both the effect and the opposite effect caused by every single action and moment. I’ve found this is an exercise that lends itself very naturally towards musical gestural possibilities that I explore in the work—action and reaction, dark and light, stagnant and swift. Structurally, with these concepts in mind, I set the form of the work as a rondo, within a rondo, within a rondo. The five major sections are a rondo; section “A” is also a rondo in itself; and the cadenza— which is partially improvised by the soloist—breaks the pattern, yet, contains within it, the overall form of the work.
To help share some of this with the performers, I’ve included the following poetic performance note at the start of the score:
Inspired by the constancy, the rhythms, and duality of life, in order of relevance to form:
Rondine – AKA Swifts (like a sparrow) flying in circles patterns
Playing with opposites – dark/light; stagnant/swift
Fractals – infinite design
I am grateful to my friend Awadagin Pratt for his collaborative spirit and ingenuity in helping to usher my first work for solo piano into the world.
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Commissioned by Art of the Piano Foundation for pianist Awadagin Pratt; Co-Commissioned by Hilton Head Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Colorado Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, IRIS Orchestra, Kansas City Symphony, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.
First ASO performance:
January 17, 1967
Robert Mann, conductor
Most recent
ASO performances:
April 4–6, 2019
Robert Spano, conductor
Concerto for Orchestra
Concerto for Orchestra is scored for three flutes (one doubling piccolo), three oboes (one doubling English horn) three clarinets (one doubling bass clarinet), three bassoons (one doubling contrabassoon), four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps and strings.
“Ishall pursue one objective all my life, in every sphere and in every way: the good of Hungary and the Hungarian Nation,” wrote young Béla Bartók in a letter to his mother. And over his lifetime, he did just that—at least until Hungary became a place he couldn’t recognize.
Starting in his early twenties, Bartók took rural treks with his friend Zoltán Kodály, traveling from village to village where they persuaded old-time musicians to sing into an Edison phonograph. With academic precision, they cataloged the songs, forever preserving them. Bartók developed an enduring affection for those rural communities, but upheaval was coming.
Under the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary, country folk stood powerless as their homeland tumbled into World War I. Within six years, they lost a generation of fathers, brothers, and sons and were saddled with a peace deal that ceded 70 percent of Hungarian territory to other countries (Bartók’s birthplace is no longer in Hungary). Ethnic Hungarians were outraged. It was a recipe for extremism.
Through the 1920s and 30s, Hungary moved to the right and fell increasingly under German influence. Fascism and anti-Semitism crept into the mainstream. Bartók, a prominent composer and concert pianist, became a vocal opponent of the fascists. When Adolph Hitler came to power in 1933, Bartók boycotted Germany. When Hitler annexed Austria and extended his influence into Hungary, the composer no longer felt safe. Nevertheless, he stayed to care for his mother.
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ADOBE STOCK
Paula Voit, mother of Béla Bartók, died December 19, 1939. By that time, Hitler had begun his drive to take over Europe. Bartók and his wife, Ditta Pásztory, steamed into New York Harbor on October 30, 1940, where he was classified as a visitor. When Hungary joined the Axis Powers, he became an “enemy alien.” Bartók’s status was diminished in the United States. From 1941–42, he worked as a “Visiting Assistant in Music” at Columbia University, where he edited a collection of Serbo-Croatian folk music. In the spring of 1942, he developed symptoms of leukemia, and his finances suffered. His son, Peter, enlisted in the U.S. Navy and arranged to have most of his earnings sent to his parents (or so he thought).
“Father was too proud to use the money,” he said. “When I returned, every bit of my pay was in a bank account.” This pride, as Peter called it, became an ongoing problem for stateside fans of the composer. Through the war years, his friends and admirers conspired to support him, always under the guise of some shortterm job. (Bartók refused anything that smacked of charity.)
Through 1942 and into 1943, his condition worsened. He was in hospital when Fritz Reiner and Joseph Szigeti persuaded Serge Koussevitzky to commission a new piece. It would be dedicated to the memory of Natalie Koussevitzky, the maestro’s wife. The commission gave the composer a lift, and his condition improved. Under doctor’s orders, Bartók spent the summer in a quiet cabin on Saranac Lake, where he wrote the Concerto for Orchestra.
Koussevitzky conducted the premiere in Boston on December 1, 1944. The piece was an instant success; Bartók went on to write his Third Piano Concerto and his String Quartet No. 6. Although he became a United States citizen in 1945, he continued to long for his native Hungary.
Béla Bartók died on September 26, 1945. In his will, he requested that the Hungarian people refrain from memorializing him until all commemorations of Hitler and Mussolini had been expunged from Hungarian soil.
A Shostakovich Cameo?
On July 20, 1942, Soviet Composer Dmitri Shostakovich graced the cover of Time magazine. In one of the cultural coups of the year, his Seventh Symphony had been smuggled out of Leningrad in the middle of the 900-day Nazi siege. Western orchestras clamored to play it. Appropriate to the times, the Symphony culminates in
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an insipid, Bolero-like march that repeats and repeats, each time becoming more twisted and pugilistic until it explodes into a grotesque indictment of militarism.
It’s possible that the irony and social commentary of the Shostakovich Seventh were lost on Béla Bartók. According to conductor Antal Dorati, Bartók confessed to him that he found the insipid melody just that—insipid. The tune turns up as a playful romp in the fourth movement of Concerto for Orchestra, after which Bartók blows a raspberry with trills in the trumpets. Many believe Bartók was lampooning the Russian composer. Others argue that the tune is not by Shostakovich but by Franz Lehár, a tune from The Merry Widow. As of now, this matter remains unsettled.
JERRY HOU, CONDUCTOR
Born in Taiwan and raised in a small town in Arkansas, TaiwaneseAmerican conductor Jerry Hou had a late start in music. Beginning on trombone in middle school band, Hou went on to work professionally in American and European orchestras before his playing career was ended by injury. He returned to school to study conducting, and is now recognized for his dynamic presence, insightful interpretations, versatility and commanding technique on the podium.
Hou is the Resident Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra. He leads the Atlanta Symphony in classical, family, and education concerts. In March of 2023, Hou will make his official subscription debut in a program of music by Joan Tower, Jessie Montgomery, and Bela Bartók.
This past season, Hou began an association with the New York Philharmonic and their music director Jaap van Zweden, and recently conducted the orchestra in the tuning of the newly renovated David Geffen Hall. He continues to work as a cover conductor and this spring will make his debut with the orchestra.
During the summer, Hou serves as Resident Conductor of the Grand Teton Music Festival where he stepped in at the last minute this past August to lead a program of Gershwin, Prokofiev’s Symphony 5, and the Trumpet Concerto of John Williams. In addition, he serves on the faculty of Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, where he is Artist Teacher of Orchestras and Ensembles.
Known for his flexibility in many styles and genres, Hou has conducted a wide range of repertoire from classical to contemporary.
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26 | meettheartists
In the spring of 2019, Hou led performances of a new collaboration between composer Steve Reich and artist Gerhart Richter to commemorate the opening of New York City’s new performing arts space and center for artistic invention, The Shed. A leading interpreter and conductor of contemporary music, he has collaborated with acclaimed composers such as Steve Reich, Anthony Davis, John Adams, Melinda Wagner, John Harbison, George Lewis, Bernard Rands, Joel Thompson, Gyorgy Kurtag, Helmut Lachenmann, Unsuk Chin, and Carlos Simon. He lives in Houston with his wife Jenny and son Remy, and has competed on the game show Jeopardy!
AWADAGIN PRATT, PIANO
Born in Pittsburgh, Awadagin Pratt began studying piano at the age of six. Three years later, having moved to Normal, Illinois with his family, he also began studying violin. At the age of 16 he entered the University of Illinois where he studied piano, violin, and conducting. He subsequently enrolled at the Peabody Conservatory of Music where he became the first student in the school’s history to receive diplomas in three performance areas: piano, violin and conducting.
Mr. Pratt won the Naumburg International Piano Competition and was awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant. His orchestral performances include the New York Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra and the Pittsburgh, Atlanta, National, and New Jersey symphonies among many others.
In November 2009, Mr. Pratt was one of four artists selected to perform at a classical music event at the White House that included student workshops hosted by the First Lady, Michelle Obama, and performing in concert for guests including President Obama. He has performed two other times at the White House.
Mr. Pratt is currently a Professor of Piano at the CollegeConservatory of Music at the University of Cincinnati. He also served as the Artistic Director of the World Piano Competition in Cincinnati and is currently the Artistic Director of the Art of the Piano Festival at CCM.
JACKY AZOULAI
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Concert of Sunday, March 5, 2023, 3:00pm
WILLIAM R. LANGLEY, conductor
JOHN WILLIAMS (b. 1932)
Lost
ANTONÍN DVOŘÁK (1841—1904)
Carnival Overture, Op. 92 10 MINS
Edward Elgar (1857–1934)
“March of the Mogul Emperors” from The Crown of India 4 MINS
Variations on an Original Theme, Op. 36 (“Enigma”)
XI. (G.R.S.) Allegro di molto
CLAUDE DEBUSSY (1862–1918)
This performance is made possible through a generous grant from the Lettie Pate Evans Foundation, which is part of the family of foundations that also includes the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation.
The use of cameras or recording devices during the concert is strictly prohibited. Please be kind to those around you and silence your mobile phone and other hand-held devices.
Performance time is approximately 45 minutes, and there is no intermission.
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“Raiders March” from Raiders of the
Ark 6 MINS Theme from Jurassic Park 4 MINS
1 MIN
La Mer III. Dialogue of Wind and Sea 4 MINS
28 | mar5
WILLIAM R. LANGLEY, CONDUCTOR
Founding Music Director of the Memphis Repertory Orchestra, William R. Langley began his career as an orchestral conductor at age sixteen. In 2009 he founded the Wolf River Chamber Orchestra and in 2011 the MRO. Langley also serves as conductor of the Blueshift Ensemble and frequent guest conductor with All of the Above Ensemble, contemporary ensembles dedicated to programming and promoting new and existing chamber works while incorporating multi-genre collaborations.
Langley has appeared as guest conductor with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Memphis Symphony Orchestra, Starling Chamber Orchestra, Blueshift Ensemble, Concert:Nova, and All of the Above ensemble.
In demand as a cover conductor, Langley has been a frequent cover with both the Atlanta and Cincinnati Symphony Orchestras covering such conductors as Sir Donald Runnicles, Louis Langrée, Carlos Kalmar, Juanjo Mena, Ramón Tebar, Peter Oundjian, Nathalie Stutzmann, Nicola Luisotti, Xian Zhang, and Miguel Harth-Bedoya, to name a few.
Langley holds a Master’s degree in Orchestral Conducting from the College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) in Cincinnati where he studied under the tutelage of Maestro Mark Gibson. He was selected by members of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and the American Austrian Foundation to be awarded one of two esteemed Ansbacher Fellowships for Young Conductors with the opportunity to study in Austria at the 2019 Salzburger Festspiele.
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SIMON PAULY
Concerts of Thursday, March 16, 2023
8:00 PM Saturday, March 18, 2023
8:00 PM
STEPHEN MULLIGAN, conductor
TIMOTHY MCALLLISTER, saxophone
CARL MARIA VON WEBER (1786–1826)
Overture to Der Freischütz (1821) 10 MINS
TYSHAWN SOREY (b. 1980)
Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith) (2022) 20 MINS
Timothy McAllister, saxophone
Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith) was commissioned by Lucerne Festival and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra as part of New Music USA’s “Amplifying Voices” program.
INTERMISSION 20 MINS
JEAN SIBELIUS (1865–1957)
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43 (1902) 44 MINS
I. Allegretto
II. Tempo Andante, ma rubato
III. Vivacissimo —
IV. Finale: Allegro moderato
Amplifying Voices is a New Music USA initiative which is powered by the Sphinx Ventures Fund, with additional support from ASCAP and the Sorel Organization.
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32 | mar16/18
Notes on the Program by Noel Morris
Overture to Der Freischütz
This overture is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani and strings.
by Noel Morris Program Annotator
First ASO performance: March 27, 1949
Henry Sopkin, conductor
Most recent
ASO performances: April 9–12, 2015
Der Freischütz (The Marksman) comes from the age of the gothic novel. Think Dracula, Frankenstein, Turn of the Screw, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Because the composer taps into German folklore, some elements would even sound familiar to today’s gaming culture.
Lionel Bringuier, conductor
In the opera, Max is in love with Agathe and must win a shooting competition to earn her hand. Although he’s the best shot around, his skills abandon him, thanks to a spell by Kaspar, who has sold his soul to Zamiel, the Black Huntsman. Zamiel sees a chance to add Max’s soul to his collection and tempts him with magic bullets. Around this scenario, the composer crafted a brilliant and diabolical score. It is a rustic tale—notice the outdoorsy sound of the horns—as common folk battle temptation and the supernatural in pursuit of love.
Carl Maria von Weber came from a family of entertainers. His father founded a traveling theater company populated by the composer’s aunts, uncles, and siblings. His first cousin was the singer Constanze Weber, who was married to Mozart. As a gifted youngster, Carl received the best musical training (at least for a kid who spent his life on the road). He was a brilliant pianist and took to composition. As he grew, he bounced from job to job as a musician, lithographer, poet, music critic, music director, and court secretary. History took a left turn when Weber became director of the German opera in Dresden. Before that time, Italian opera had dominated the art form. (Mozart’s German hit The Magic Flute was the exception.) Weber took his company and Germanlanguage opera to new heights. Supervising the lighting, the sets, the costumes, the chorus and all aspects of the production, he built a first-class company.
Der Freischütz is a giant in the annals of German opera. When the show premiered in Berlin in 1821, influencers flocked to the theater, including E.T.A. Hoffmann, Heinrich Heine, and the prodigy composer Felix Mendelssohn. It became a favorite of Hector Berlioz, Pyotr Tchaikovsky and Richard Wagner. As productions spread across Germany, Europe, Russia and America, Wagner rode that wave, seizing upon a new interest in German opera to become a dominant cultural
33 notesontheprogram |
CAROLINE BARDUA
figure in the 19th century. One could argue that without Weber, there may not have been a Wagner.
Today, music critics speak of the gorgeous music that runs throughout Der Freischütz, yet it is a difficult ticket to find; American opera companies seldom perform it.
In 1826, the 39-year-old Weber succumbed to tuberculosis while supervising a production of Oberon in London. There, he was laid to rest until 1844, when Richard Wagner brought his remains back to Dresden. For the procession, Wagner composed his Trauermusik and personally delivered a eulogy.
Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith)
In addition to the solo saxophone, Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith) is scored for two flutes (one doubling bass flute), two oboes, clarinet, e-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, percussion, harp and strings.
Newark-born composer and multi-instrumentalist Tyshawn Sorey (b. 1980) is celebrated for his incomparable virtuosity, effortless mastery and memorization of highly complex scores, and an extraordinary ability to blend composition and improvisation in his work. He has performed nationally and internationally with his own ensembles, as well as artists such as John Zorn, Vijay Iyer, Roscoe Mitchell, Muhal Richard Abrams, Wadada Leo Smith, Marilyn Crispell, George Lewis, Claire Chase, Steve Lehman, Jason Moran, Evan Parker, Anthony Braxton, and Myra Melford, among many others.
The New York Times has praised Sorey for his instrumental facility and aplomb, “He plays not only with gale-force physicality, but also a sense of scale and equipoise”; The Wall Street Journal notes Sorey is, “a composer of radical and seemingly boundless ideas.” The New Yorker recently noted that Sorey is “among the most formidable denizens of the in-between zone…An extraordinary talent who can see across the entire musical landscape.”
Sorey has composed works for the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the International Contemporary Ensemble, soprano Julia Bullock, PRISM Quartet, JACK Quartet, TAK Ensemble, the McGill-McHale Trio, bassbaritone Davóne Tines, Alarm Will Sound, the Louisville Orchestra, and tenor Lawrence Brownlee with Opera Philadelphia in partnership with Carnegie Hall, as well as for countless collaborative performers. His music has been performed in notable venues such as the Walt Disney
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JOHN ROGERS
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These are the first ASO performances.
Concert Hall, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the Village Vanguard, the Ojai Music Festival, the Newport Jazz Festival, the Kimmel Center, and the Mostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center. Sorey has received support for his creative projects from The Jerome Foundation, The Shifting Foundation, Van Lier Fellowship, and was named a 2017 MacArthur fellow and a 2018 United States Artists Fellow. Sorey has released 12 critically acclaimed recordings that feature his work as a composer, co-composer, improviser, multi-instrumentalist, and conceptualist. His latest release, Pillars (Firehouse 12 Records, 2018), has been praised by Rolling Stone as “an immersive soundworld… sprawling, mysterious… thrilling” and has been named as one of BBC Radio 3’s Late Junction 2018 albums of the year.
In 2012, he was selected as one of nine composers for the Other Minds Festival, where he exchanged ideas with such like-minded peers as Ikue Mori, Ken Ueno, and Harold Budd. In 2013, Jazz Danmark invited him to serve as the Danish International Visiting Artist. He was also a 2015 recipient of the Doris Duke Impact Award. Sorey has taught and lectured on composition and improvisation at Columbia University, The New England Conservatory, The Banff Centre, University of Michigan, International Realtime Music Symposium, Harvard University, Hochschule für Musik Köln, Berklee College of Music, University of Chicago, and The Danish Rhythmic Conservatory. Sorey joined the composition faculty of the University of Pennsylvania in the Fall of 2020.
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43
Symphony No. 2 is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani and strings.
In 1910, the Boston critic Arthur Elson wrote: “It is undoubtedly true that Italy has been the most important nation in musical history… her supremacy was of long duration, and dates from before the fall of the Roman Empire.”
First ASO performance: February 3, 1951
Henry Sopkin, conductor Most recent ASO performances: April 7–8, 2016
Robert Spano, conductor
To Elson’s point, Italy gave us opera and musical terminology and perfected the design of the violin. History sports a long list of composers who were forever changed by contact with Italy, including Bach, Handel, Mozart and Richard Strauss. Other composers wrote musical postcards from there, including Mendelssohn, Wagner, Tchaikovsky, Berlioz, Liszt and Stravinsky. The Second Symphony by Jean Sibelius, is one of those pieces.
In March of 1900, Sibelius received a letter from an admirer that read:
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“You have been sitting at home for quite a while, Mr. Sibelius, it is high time for you to travel. You will spend the late autumn and the winter in Italy, a country where one learns cantabile, balance and harmony, plasticity and symmetry of lines, a country where everything is beautiful—even the ugly.” The offer came from Baron Axel Carpelan, who raised a generous sum to send the composer on his way.
Sibelius had other reasons for a change of venue. In February, his 15-month-old daughter died of typhoid. He had also been drinking and racking up debts. It seemed an Italian getaway would help him to clear his head.
In early 1901, Jean Sibelius took his family to a villa near the seaside community of Rapallo, where pastel-colored houses hugged the Mediterranean. Until then, his only contact with such vistas had come from the theater. In Rapallo, thoughts of Mozart’s Don Giovanni flooded his brain. A scenario for a possible tone poem came to mind.
“Don Juan,” he wrote. “Sitting in the twilight in my castle, a guest enters. I ask many times who he is.—No answer. I make an effort to entertain him. He remains mute. Eventually, he starts singing. At this time, Don Juan notices who he is—Death.” Next to this scenario, Sibelius wrote down a melody.
Sibelius returned to a tense situation in Finland—the Russian tsar had begun to tighten the screws on Finnish culture, and there were rumblings of rebellion. Sibelius found his bearings in this tumultuous atmosphere and sat down to write. The Don Juan melody found its way into the second movement of the Second Symphony, which he worked on until early 1902.
Although Sibelius never ascribed a program to his Symphony No. 2, his close friend, conductor Robert Kajanus, wrote that the second movement “strikes one as the most broken-hearted protest against all the injustice that threatens at the present time to deprive the sun of its light and our flowers of their scent.” Whether or not this was the composer’s intention, the timing of the symphony, coupled with rising political tensions, forever linked the piece with the spirit of independence.
Sibelius as a National Hero
From the time of Napoleon, the Finnish people have had an 830-mile problem—their border with Russia. In 1809, they fell under the thumb of the tsar. Initially, the Russian monarch permitted the Finns some measure of autonomy. That changed in 1899 when Nicholas II instituted
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WIKIMEDIA
a policy of Russification. With that, the Russian military began to draft Finns into service and force people to adopt the Russian language. The Finns pushed back just as Sibelius was emerging as an important composer.
Often, Sibelius’s music conjures associations with the boreal forests of Scandinavia— bone-chilling and impenetrable combined with a smoldering passion. Although he grew up in a Swedish-speaking household, his romance with Aino Järnefelt, daughter of a famous general, helped bring focus to his identity. Under the influence of his future father-in-law, he switched to the Finnish language and began writing music inspired by Finnish folklore. Before long, Jean Sibelius became a potent symbol of the resistance, prompting the Russians to ban performances of his anthem Finlandia
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STEPHEN MULLIGAN, CONDUCTOR
Berlin-based American conductor Stephen Mulligan recently concluded his tenure as Associate Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra. Mulligan served as a Dudamel Conducting Fellow with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the 2018-19 season, leading the orchestra on the Toyota Symphonies for Youth series and assisting Music Director Gustavo Dudamel, Conductor Laureate EsaPekka Salonen, and guest conductors Lionel Bringuier, Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, Zubin Mehta, and Michael Tilson Thomas.
Mulligan’s 2022-23 season includes return engagements with the symphony orchestras of Atlanta, Arkansas, and Amarillo; and debut projects with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, and San Francisco Symphony Orchestra.
During the 2017-18 season, his first with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Mulligan stepped in on short notice for three classical subscription programs over the course of six weeks, working with mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano and pianists Jorge Federico Osorio and Behzod Abduraimov to critical acclaim. Mulligan is a three-time recipient of the prestigious Solti Foundation U.S. Career Assistance Award.
A native of Baltimore, Maryland, Mulligan began his music studies with his father Gregory, former concertmaster of the San Antonio Symphony and current violinist with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. He studied conducting at Yale University with Toshiyuki Shimada, at the Peabody Institute with Gustav Meier; Markand Thakar; and Marin Alsop; and at the Aspen Music Festival and School with Robert Spano.
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38 | meettheartists
JEFF ROFFMAN
TIMOTHY MCALLISTER, SAXOPHONE
Since his solo debut at age 16 with the Houston Civic Symphony, Timothy McAllister’s career has taken him throughout the United States, Australia, Russia, Canada, Japan, China, Mexico, France, Slovenia, Croatia, Switzerland, Great Britain, The Netherlands, Belgium, and Austria, with solo performances in Prince Royal Albert Hall in London, the Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall’s Isaac Stern Auditorium, Los Angeles’ Walt Disney Concert Hall, among others. Other recent performances as soloist and recording artist include the London Symphony Orchestra, Brussels Philharmonic, Strasbourg Philharmonic Orchestra, Cabrillo Festival Orchestra, Reno Philharmonic, the Hot Springs Festival Orchestra, Dallas Wind Symphony, United States Navy Band, Hong Kong Wind Philharmonia, among others.
A dedicated teacher, McAllister is Professor of Saxophone at The University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance. He holds the Doctor of Musical Arts and other degrees in music education, conducting and performance from The University of Michigan where he studied saxophone with Donald Sinta and conducting with H. Robert Reynolds. He received the School of Music’s most distinguished performance award—the Albert A. Stanley Medal.
Timothy McAllister is on the artist roster of Jonathan Wentworth Associates, Ltd. Additionally, he is a ConnSelmer artist/clinician, while also serving as a Backun Woodwind Artist, assisting with research and mouthpiece design. He endorses Key Leaves and Peak Performance Woodwind products.
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Concerts of Thursday, March 23, 2023
8:00 PM
Saturday, March 25, 2023
8:00 PM
NATHALIE STUTZMANN, conductor
Part I: BACH (performed without pause)
JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH (1685–1750)
Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D Major, BWV 1068
Gavottes I & II
Sinfonia from Cantata 42
Sinfonia from Cantata 12
Concerto for Two Violins in D Minor, BWV 1043
Vivace
Largo, ma non tanto
Allegro
David Coucheron, violin
Justin Bruns, violin
Thursday’s concert is dedicated to
SALLY & PETE PARSONSON in honor of their extraordinary support of the 2021/22 Annual Fund.
BRIEF PAUSE
Part II: FRIENDS (performed without pause)
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL (1685–1759)
“Entrance of the Queen of Sheba” from Solomon
ANTONIO VIVALDI (1678–1741)
Concerto for Strings in G Minor, RV 156
Allegro
Adagio
Allegro
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL
Saturday’s concert is dedicated to JEANNETTE GUARNER, MD & CARLOS DEL RIO, MD in honor of their extraordinary support of the Talent Development Program and for helping the ASO during COVID-19.
The use of cameras or recording devices during the concert is strictly prohibited. Please be kind to those around you and silence your mobile phone and other hand-held devices.
Sinfonia in B-flat Major, HWV 339
Adagio
Concerto grosso in D Minor, Op. 3, No. 5
Allegro, ma non troppo
Allegro
Concerto grosso in B-Flat Major, Op. 3, No. 2
Largo
Concerto grosso in G Minor, Op. 6, No. 6
Allegro
ANTONIO VIVALDI
Concerto for Four Violins in B Minor, RV 580
Allegro
Largo — Larghetto — Adagio — Largo
Allegro
David Coucheron, violin
Justin Bruns, violin
Jun-Ching Lin, violin
Anastasia Agapova, violin
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40 | mar23/25
by Noel Morris Program Annotator
BRIEF PAUSE
Part III: BACH (performed without pause)
JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Sinfonia from Cantata 174
Orchestral Suite No. 2 in B Minor, BWV 1067
Polonaise
Badinerie
Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D Major, BWV 1068
Bourrée
Gigue
Please note: this concert will be performed without intermission. Approximate concert length is 80 minutes.
1685was a banner year. Two little boys were born in Germany, about 100 miles apart. One is among the world’s most influential composers. The other wrote Messiah. Six hundred miles to the south, a third boy was learning the violin. Today, they dominate western music written before the arrival of Mozart.
Each year, around the world, professional and community choirs—as well as many intrepid audience members—gather to sing George Frideric Handel’s massive oratorio written on the life of Christ. On YouTube, a single video of Antonio Vivaldi’s Four Seasons has over 248 million views. And, thanks to NASA’s Voyager mission, two pieces by Johann Sebastian Bach are hurtling through interstellar space at over 38,000 miles per hour.
Of the three, Bach was the least traveled. He lived his life in central Germany. Twice he hoped to meet Handel, but their schedules never aligned. He encountered Vivaldi through a book of Italian concertos and was so impressed he made keyboard transcriptions of them. (For many years, Bach’s transcriptions served as a tether between Vivaldi, who was largely forgotten, and oblivion.) Vivaldi became a jumping-off point for Bach as he wrote concertos of his own.
Probably, Handel and Vivaldi did meet. In his early twenties, Handel traveled to Italy, learning the language, learning to imitate Italian music, and readying himself for a brilliant career in Great Britain.
Johann Sebastian Bach
By the time Johann Sebastian came along, central Germany was littered with church musicians named Bach. A marvel of genetics, the Bach family trained male children for the trade from an early age, typically with older brothers, uncles, fathers and cousins serving as instructors. Johann Sebastian trained six future
WIKIMEDIA 41 notesontheprogram |
musicians named Bach, in addition to his own children. In the Bach family, “Sebastian” was a fifth-generation church musician. In preparation, he studied the Bible in German and Latin. At 10, he was orphaned and went to live with his older brother Johann Christoph—already a successful organist. Sebastian thrived in his brother’s care and won his first church job in Arnstadt at the age of 18.
After a few years at Arnstadt, Sebastian’s music-making grew experimental, which rankled the conservatives in town, and so he moved to Mühlhausen. There, he landed in the middle of a battle over church doctrine. After a year, he took a job as a chamber musician and organist in Weimar, where he got his hands on a Dutch publication of Italian concertos, mostly by Antonio Vivaldi. From this book, he made organ and harpsichord transcriptions, opening his mind to new possibilities in instrumental writing.
The situation in Weimar was a happy time for Bach, lasting nine years until a feud broke out between different branches of the ruling family. Soon, Bach moved on. The next chapter was a revelation—at least for today’s classical instrumentalist. Bach went to work at the court of Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Köthen, a Calvinist. Leopold was a fine musician and devoted patron but couldn’t permit music in the church. As a result, Bach went from composing sacred works to producing secular pieces for harpsichord and various string and wind instruments. Much of his instrumental music (other than for organ) comes from this period, including the Well-Tempered Clavier, the Cello Suites, the Orchestral Suites, the Violin Partitas and Sonatas, and likely some part of the Brandenburg Concertos.
George Frideric Handel
In 1705, a 19-year-old boy carried the manuscript of his first opera, Almira, into a theater in Hamburg. He presented it to his colleagues in the orchestra, where he had been working as a violinist and harpsichordist. Soon, that orchestra played the first performance Almira—it was a hit. Young Handel followed Almira immediately with a second hit opera and soon had the financial wherewithal to choose his next move—a trip to Italy, which was, in his mind, the center of the opera universe.
Handel stayed in Italy for more than three years, learning the language, soaking up the instrumental work of Italian composers—especially Arcangelo Corelli—and absorbing the Italian opera style. He rubbed elbows with members of the high nobility,
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42 | encore
WIKIMEDIA
including Prince Ernst August, brother of the Elector of Hanover, who invited him to come for a visit. In 1710, Handel, now 25, crossed the Alps and made his way to Hanover, where he took the top job as Kapellmeister.
He was in Hanover for less than a year when the Elector granted him leave to go to England. There, the composer presented his “Italian opera” Rinaldo, and the Londoners received him like a rock star. Never mind the irony of a German composer writing Italian opera in London, people clamored to see his shows, and Handel postponed his return to Hanover. Soon Queen Anne granted him an annual allowance of £200, putting him in an awkward position with his employer across the Channel—it didn’t matter. Queen Anne died the following year, and the Elector of Hanover became King of England. Handel’s life in England was different from what it might have been in Hanover. Instead of serving at the pleasure of a prince, working as a church musician and entertainer at court, he was a freelancer. He depended on commissions and ticket sales, which he managed out of his house on Brook Street.
Handel wrote music at an astonishing pace. He composed his twelve Concerti Grossi, Op. 6, during the month of October in 1739. By this time, Londoners had lost interest in his Italian operas, so he shifted to writing English-language oratorios. During intermissions, he featured music from his Op. 6 Concerti Grossi, which are patterned after works by Arcangelo Corelli. With the sale of sheet music for his concertos, Handel turned a tidy profit.
Antonio Vivaldi
Antonio Vivaldi came of age during a sweet spot in history. About a hundred miles away, the violin maker Antonio Stradivari was turning out his now priceless instruments (today, the “Messiah Strad” is valued at $20 million). In the history of the world, the overall quality of fiddles available to a poor instrumentalist had never been higher. The stage was set for someone to take violin playing to the next level. And in walked Antonio Vivaldi.
One witness said he was “terrified” by Vivaldi’s playing. Vivaldi brought fiery virtuosity to the instrument. At the same time, his growing success as an opera composer fed into a soulful lyricism that inhabited his playing in slower music.
Vivaldi was the son of a violinist at Saint Mark’s Basilica, the famous domed church in the heart of Venice. He learned music from his father before going to school to become a priest. Ordained in 1703,
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WIKIMEDIA
Vivaldi soon was given dispensation from having to say mass due to “tightness in the chest.” This enabled him to focus on music. He took a job teaching music to “orphan” girls at the state-funded convent Ospedale della Pietà (a number of them weren’t orphans at all but illegitimate daughters of the nobility). Already, Venice was a center of tourism, a must-see for young European noblemen. With an international reputation, Vivaldi’s school supported an orchestra that was the pride of the city. For an ensemble of some forty girls, Vivaldi composed hundreds of concertos. On the side, he hustled for work as an opera composer and impresario.
Later in life, as his popularity waned, Vivaldi turned his attention increasingly to Charles VI, the Holy Roman Emperor. Moving to Vienna in 1740, he expected to revive his career and possibly win a royal appointment. Sadly, Charles VI died shortly after Vivaldi’s arrival. Stuck in a foreign city without work and without royal protection, the composer sank into poverty and died in 1741. His music was nearly forgotten until 1926, when a crate of manuscripts was discovered at a boarding school in Piedmont. There began an effort to recover, reconstruct, perform and publish Vivaldi’s music. Most recently, an entire opera was discovered at an Italian library in 2012.
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44 | encore
ASO | SUPPORT
TheAtlanta Symphony Orchestra continues to prosper thanks to the support of our generous patrons. The list below recognizes the donors who have made contributions since June 1, 2021. Their extraordinary generosity provides the foundation for this world-class institution.
$1,000,000+ A Friend of the Symphony∞
$100,000+
1180 Peachtree
The Antinori Foundation
The Molly Blank Fund of The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation∞
The Coca-Cola Company
Sheila L. & Jonathan J. Davies
Delta Air Lines
Lettie Pate Evans Foundation
Barney M. Franklin & Hugh W.
Burke Charitable Fund
Georgia Power Company
The Home Depot Foundation
Invesco QQQ
Abraham J. & Phyllis Katz Foundation∞
Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc.
Amy W. Norman Charitable Foundation
Ann Marie & John B. White, Jr.°∞
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
Alston & Bird LLP
$50,000+
$75,000+ Accenture LLP
The John & Rosemary Brown Family Foundation
Cadence Bank
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Advised Fund
$35,000+
Sally & Larry Davis
The Roy & Janet Dorsey Foundation
EY, Partners & Employees
John D. Fuller∞
$25,000+
Aadu & Kristi Allpere°
Jennifer Barlament & Kenneth Potsic
Paul & Linnea Bert
Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Blackney
Janine Brown & Alex J. Simmons, Jr.
Connie & Merrell Calhoun
Chick-fil-A
John W. Cooledge
The Jim Cox, Jr. Foundation
Mr. Richard H. Delay & Dr. Francine D. Dykes∞
Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation PNC Slumgullion Charitable Fund
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Foundation
City of Atlanta
Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
Ms. Lynn Eden
Emerald Gate Charitable Trust
Ms. Angela L. Evans∞
The Gable Foundation
Fulton County Arts & Culture
Google
Donna Lee & Howard Ehni
National Endowment for the Arts
John R. Paddock, Ph.D. & Karen M. Schwartz, Ph.D.
Betty Sands Fuller*
Dick & Anne Game°
Sally & Walter George
Jeannette Guarner, MD & Carlos del Rio, MD
The Halle Foundation
Bonnie & Jay Harris
League of American Orchestras
The Marcus Foundation, Inc.∞
Massey Charitable Trust
John & Linda Matthews∞
Moore Colson, CPAs & Bert & Carmen Mills
Anne Morgan & Jim Kelley
Georgia Council for the Arts
Graphic Packaging International, Inc.
The Graves Foundation
Gary Lee, Jr.
Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP
Truist
David, Helen & Marian Woodward Fund, Atlanta
Sally & Pete Parsonson∞
Patty & Doug Reid
Mary & Jim Rubright
Patrick & Susie Viguerie
Mr.* & Mrs. Edus H. Warren, Jr.
Northside Hospital
Novelis
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Mr. Tyler Perry
Publix Super Markets Charities, Inc.
Bill & Rachel Schultz°
June & John Scott∞
Ross & Sally Singletary
Mr. G. Kimbrough Taylor & Ms. Triska Drake
Troutman Pepper
WarnerMedia
Kathy Waller & Kenneth Goggins
Mrs. Sue S. Williams
46 | encore aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony
$17,500+
A Friend of the Symphony
Mr. Keith Adams & Ms. Kerry Heyward°
John & Juliet Allan
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Bailey
Benjamin Q. Brunt
Wright & Alison Caughman
Choate Bridges Foundation
Russell Currey & Amy Durrell
Mr. & Mrs. Erroll B. Davis, Jr.∞
Cari K. Dawson & John M. Sparrow
Maria & Rodrigo Garcia-Escudero
Mr. Max M. Gilstrap∞
Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Harrison
The Estate of John H. Head
The Hertz Family Foundation, Inc.
Azira G. Hill
James H. Landon
The Ray M. & Mary Elizabeth Lee
Foundation, Inc.
Mr. Kevin Lyman & Dr. Jennifer Lyman
Ms. Deborah A. Marlowe & Dr. Clint Lawrence
Terence L. & Jeanne Perrine Neal°
Lynn & Galen Oelkers
Ms. Margaret Painter∞
Martha M. Pentecost
The Hellen Ingram Plummer
Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Ms. Cathleen Quigley
Regions
Joyce & Henry Schwob
Mr. Fahim Siddiqui & Ms. Shazia Fahim
Dr. Steven & Lynne Steindel°
Ms. Brett A. Tarver
Carolyn C. Thorsen∞
The Mark & Evelyn Trammell Foundation
John & Ray Uttenhove
$15,000+
Phyllis Abramson, Ph. D.
Madeline* & Howell E. Adams, Jr.
Mr. David Boatwright
Ms. Elizabeth W. Camp
Ms. Lisa V. Chang
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Clare°
Lisa DiFrancesco, MD & Darlene Nicosia
Eleanor & Charles Edmondson
Marina Fahim°
Fifth Third Bank
Craig Frankel & Jana Eplan
Georgia-Pacific
Pam & Robert Glustrom
Roya & Bahman Irvani
Mr. Sukai Liu & Dr. Ginger J. Chen
John F. & Marilyn M. McMullan
Ms. Molly Minnear
New Music, USA
North Highland Company
Mr. Edward Potter & Ms. Regina Olchowski°
Charlie & Donna Sharbaugh
Beverly & Milton Shlapak
Mr. John A. Sibley, III
Elliott & Elaine Tapp
Adair & Dick White
Drs. Kevin & Kalinda Woods
$10,000+
A Friend of the Symphony (2)
Paul & Melody Aldo∞
Mr. & Mrs. Calvin R. Allen
Paul & Marian Anderson*
Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation∞
Julie & Jim Balloun
Keith Barnett
Bell Family Foundation for Hope Inc
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald R. Benjamin
Kelley O. & Neil H. Berman
Bloomberg Philanthropies
The Boston Consulting Group
The Breman Foundation, Inc.
Lisa & Russ Butner∞
CBRE
Colliers International
Donald & Barbara Defoe°
Peter & Vivian de Kok
Marcia & John Donnell
Ms. Diane Durgin
Eversheds Sutherland
Dr. & Mrs. Leroy Fass
The Robert Hall Gunn, Jr., Fund
JBS Foundation
Ann A. & Ben F. Johnson III
James Kieffer
Stephen & Carolyn Knight
The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation
Pat & Nolan Leake
Meghan & Clarke Magruder
Mr. Nicholas Marrone
Belinda & Gino Massafra
Merrill Lynch
The Monasse Family Foundation∞
Moore, Colson & Company, P.C.
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Nellis , Jr.
Ms. Gail O'Neill & Mr. Paul Viera
Kathryn Petralia & Diane Bartlett
Leonard Reed°
David F. & Maxine A.* Rock
Thomas & Lynne Saylor
Peter James Stelling*
John & Yee-Wan Stevens
George & Amy Taylor
Judith & Mark K. Taylor
Dr. & Mrs. James O. Wells, Jr.
Deedee & Marc Hamburger°
Clay & Jane Jackson
°We are grateful to these donors for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers. *Deceased
For information about giving to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Annual Fund, please contact William Keene at 404.733.4839 or william.keene@ atlantasymphony. org. ∞ Leadership Council We salute these extraordinary donors who have signed pledge commitments to continue their support for three years or more. encoreatlanta.com | 47
ASO | SUPPORT (cont.)
Dr. & Mrs. Jerome B. Blumenthal
$7,500+
Jack & Helga Beam∞
Karen & Rod Bunn
Patricia & William Buss∞
Mark Coan & Family
Sally W. Hawkins
Grace Ihrig*
Ann & Brian Kimsey
Jason & Michelle Kroh
Dr. Fulton D. Lewis III & S. Neal Rhoney
Mr. Robert M. Lewis, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Mills IV
Mr. Bert Mobley
Hala & Steve Moddelmog
Caroline & Phil Moïse
Judge Jane Morrison∞
Gretchen Nagy & Allan Sandlin
Margaret H. Petersen
Ms. Felicia Rives
Hamilton & Mason Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W.
Stroetz, Jr.
Stephen & Sonia Swartz
Drs. Jonne & Paul Walter
Kiki Wilson
Mr. David J. Worley & Ms. Bernadette Drankoski
$5,000+
A Friend of the Symphony
Dr. Marshall & Stephanie Abes
Mrs. Kay Adams* & Mr. Ralph Paulk
Judy & Dick Allison
Dr. Evelyn R. Babey
Lisa & Joe Bankoff
Juanita & Gregory Baranco
Asad Bashey
Mr. Herschel V. Beazley
Meredith Bell
Bennett Thrasher LLP
Natalie & Matthew
Bernstein
Rita & Herschel Bloom
Jane & Gregory Blount
Mrs. Sidney W. Boozer
Carol Brantley & David Webster
Mrs. Cristina Briboneria
Margo Brinton & Eldon Park
Jacqueline A. & Joseph E. Brown, Jr.
Judith D. Bullock
CBH International, Inc
John Champion & Penelope Malone
Ms. Tena Clark & Ms. Michelle LeClair
Dr. & Mrs. Richard W. Compans
Carol Comstock & Jim Davis
Ralph & Rita Connell
William & Patricia Cook
Janet & John Costello
Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Dimmick
Dorsey Alston Realtors
Xavier Duralde & Mary Barrett
Mr. & Mrs. John Dyer
Paulette Eastman & Becky Pryor Anderson∞
Diana Einterz
Dieter Elsner & Othene Munson
Robert S. Elster
Foundation
Ellen & Howard Feinsand
Bruce W. & Avery C.
Flower
David L. Forbes
Mary* & Charles Ginden
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Goodsell∞
Melanie & Tucker Green
William Randolph Hearst
Foundations
Tad & Janin Hutcheson
Mr. Justin Im & Dr. Nakyoung Nam
Mr. & Mrs. Baxter Jones
Paul* & Rosthema Kastin
Ms. Carrie L. Kirk
Mr. Charles R. Kowal
Mrs. Heidi LaMarca
Dr. & Mrs. Scott I. Lampert
Peg & Jim Lowman
Ms. Eunice Luke
Dr. & Mrs. Ellis L. Malone
Elvira & Jay Mannelly
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher D. Martin
Mr. Robert S. Mathews
Mary Ruth McDonald
The Fred & Sue McGehee
Family Charitable Fund
Ed & Linda McGinn°
Ms. Erica McVicker
Berthe & Shapour
Mobasser
Ms. Sue L. Morgan∞
Gary R. Noble, MD
Ms. Bethani Oppenheimer
Ms. Eliza Quigley
Mr. & Mrs. Joel F. Reeves
Margaret & Bob Reiser
Cammie & John Rice
Vicki & Joe Riedel
Betsy & Lee Robinson
Mrs. Nita Robinson
Ms. Frances A. Root
Mr. Joseph A. Roseborough
John T. Ruff
Katherine Scott
Suzanne Shull
Gerald & Nancy
Silverboard
Baker & Debby Smith
Ms. Cynthia Smith
Dr. K. Douglas Smith
Tom & Ani Steele
In memory of Elizabeth
B. Stephens by Powell, Preston & Sally∞
Richard M. Stormont & Sally C. Jobe
Ms. Kimberly Strong
Dr. Nossi Taheri & Ms. Hope Vaziri
Dede & Bob Thompson
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Toren
Trapp Family
Burton Trimble
Chilton & Morgan* Varner
Mr. & Mrs. Benny Varzi
Amy & Robert Vassey
Ms. Juliana T. Vincenzino
Mr. Robert Walt & Mr. Daniel J. Hess
Alan & Marcia Watt
Ruthie Watts
Dr. Nanette K. Wenger
Suzanne B. Wilner
Camille W. Yow
$3,500+
Mr. John Blatz
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Chorba
Jean & Jerry Cooper
The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc.
Phil & Lisa Hartley
Martha Reaves Head
Barbara M. Hund
Fara & Ari Levine°
Deborah & William Liss°
Martha & Reynolds
McClatchey
Judy Zaban-Miller & Lester Miller
Donald S. Orr & Marcia K. Knight
Mr. & Mrs. Edmund F. Pearce, Jr.°
In Memory of Dr. Frank S. Pittman III
Dr. & Mrs. John P. Pooler
Ms. Kathy Powell
Mrs. Susan H. Reinach
S.A. Robinson
Dr. & Mrs. Rein Saral
Donna Schwartz
Ms. Martha Solano
Angela Spivey
Beth & Edward Sugarman
Mrs. Dale L. Thompson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Welch
David & Martha West
Mr. & Mrs. M. Beattie Wood
| encore 48
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony
$2,000+ A Friend of the Symphony (4)
2492 Fund
Dr. & Mrs. Joel M. Adler, D.D.S.
Kent & Diane Alexander
Mr. & Mrs. Ivan Allen IV
Mr. & Mrs. Walker Anderson
The Hisham & Nawal Araim Family Foundation
Anthony Barbagallo & Kristen Fowks
Drs. Jay & Martin
Beard-Coles
Susan & Jack Bertram
Catherine Binns & Jim Honkisz*
Shirley Blaine
Leon & Joy Borchers
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Bower°
Martha S. Brewer
Harriet Evans Brock
Dr. Aubrey Bush & Dr. Carol Bush
Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Canipe
Mrs. Betty Case
Julie & Jerry Chautin
Mr. James Cobb
Coenen-Johnson Foundation
Susan S. Cofer
Liz & Charlie Cohn°
Malcolm & Ann Cole
Mr. & Mrs. R. Barksdale
Collins°
Ned Cone & Nadeen Green
Mrs. Nancy Cooke
Mary Carole Cooney & Henry R. Bauer, Jr.
R. Carter & Marjorie A.
Crittenden Foundation
Dr. & Mrs. F. Thomas
Daly, Jr.
Mr. John C. Dancu
Mrs. Anna F. Dancu
Mary & Mahlon Delong
Mr. & Mrs. Graham Dorian
Gregory & Debra Durden
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Edge
Erica Endicott & Chris Heisel
Dr. & Mrs. Carl D. Fackler
Mr. Ramsey Fahs°
Mr. & Mrs. Paul G. Farnham
Ken Felts & A. Richard Bunn
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Flinn
Dr. Karen A. Foster
Ms. Elizabeth C. French
Gaby Family Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Sebastien
Galtier
Raj & Jyoti Gandhi Family Foundation
Marty & John Gillin°
Sandra & John Glover
Mrs. Janet D. Goldstein
Mary C. Gramling
Richard & Debbie Griffiths
Mr. & Mrs. George Gunderson
Linda & Hank Harris
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Hauser
Mr. & Mrs. John Hellriegel
Ms. Elizabeth Hendrick
Mr. Kenneth & Ms. Colleen Hey
Sarah & Harvey Hill, Jr.°
Laurie House Hopkins & John D. Hopkins
James & Bridget Horgan
Mrs. Sally Horntvedt
Ms. & Mr. Carli Huband
Richard & Linda Hubert
Dona & Bill Humphreys
Mary & Wayne James
Nancy & John Janet
Ms. Rebecca Jarvis
Mrs. Gail Johnson
Mr. W. F. & Dr. Janice Johnston
Cecile M. Jones
Mr. & Mrs. David T. Jones
Lana M. Jordan
William L. & Sally S. Jorden
Teresa M. Joyce, Ph.D
Mr. & Ms. Josh Kamin
Mr. & Mrs. Todd E. Kessler
Mr. Lewis King
Wolfgang* & Mariana
Laufer
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J.
Lavallee, Sr.
Lillian Balentine Law
Mr. & Mrs. Chris Le
Grace & Josh Lembeck
Elizabeth J. Levine
Mr. & Mrs. J. David Lifsey
Dr. Marcus Marr
Dr. & Mrs. David H. Mason
In Memory of
Pam McAllister
Mr. & Mrs. James
McClatchey
Birgit & David McQueen
Dr. & Mrs. John D. Merlino
Anna & Hays Mershon
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Mimms, Jr.
Laura & Craig Mullins
Janice & Tom Munsterman∞
Michael & Carol Murphy
Melanie & Allan Nelkin
Dr. & Mrs. John Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Solon P. Patterson
The Piedmont National Family Foundation
John H. Rains
Sharon & David Schachter°
Mrs. Dianna A. Scherer
Drs. Bess Schoen & Andrew Muir
Drs. Lawrence & Rachel Schonberger
Nick & Annie Shreiber
Helga Hazelrig Siegel
Diana Silverman
Jeanne & Jim Simpson
Mr. Matthew Sitler
The Alex & Betty
Smith Donor-Advised Endowment Fund
Anne-Marie Sparrow
Peggy & Jerry Stapleton
Candace Steele
James & Shari Steinberg
Dr. & Mrs. John P. Straetmans
Kay R Summers
Ms. Linda F. Terry
Ms. Lara C. Tumeh°
Dr. Brenda G. Turner
Wayne & Lee Harper
Vason
Vogel Family Foundation
Ron & Susan Whitaker
Russell F. Winch & Mark B. Elberfeld
Mrs. Lynne M. Winship
Ms. Sonia Witkowski
Zaban Foundation, Inc.
Herbert* & Grace Zwerner
Patron
Leadership
(PAL) Committee
We give special thanks to this dedicated group of Atlanta Symphony Orchestra donor-volunteers for their commitment to each year’s annual support initiatives:
Linda Matthews chair
Kristi Allpere
Helga Beam
Bill Buss
Pat Buss
Kristen Fowks
Deedee Hamburger
Judy Hellriegel
Nancy Janet
Belinda Massafra
Sally Parsonson
June Scott
Milt Shlapak
Sheila Tschinkel
Jonne Walter
Marcia Watt
encoreatlanta.com | 49
°We are grateful to these donors for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers. *Deceased
HENRY SOPKIN CIRCLE
Named for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s founding Music Director, the HENRY SOPKIN CIRCLE celebrates cherished individuals and families who have made a planned gift to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. These special donors preserve the Orchestra’s foundation and ensure success for future generations.
A Friend of the Symphony (22)
Madeline* & Howell E. Adams, Jr.
Mr.* & Mrs.* John E. Aderhold
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Aldo
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald R. Antinori
Dr. & Mrs. William Bauer
Helga Beam
Mr. Charles D. Belcher *
Neil H. Berman
Susan & Jack Bertram
Mr.* & Mrs.* Karl A. Bevins
The Estate of Donald S. & Joyce Bickers
Ms. Page Bishop*
Mr.* & Mrs. Sol Blaine
John Blatz
Rita & Herschel Bloom
The Estate of Mrs.
Gilbert H. Boggs, Jr.
W. Moses Bond
Mr.* & Mrs. Robert C. Boozer
Elinor A. Breman*
James C. Buggs*
Mr. & Mrs.* Richard H. Burgin
Hugh W. Burke*
Mr. & Mrs. William Buss
Wilber W. Caldwell
Mr. & Mrs. C. Merrell Calhoun
Cynthia & Donald Carson
Mrs. Jane Celler*
Lenore Cicchese*
Margie & Pierce Cline
Dr. & Mrs. Grady S. Clinkscales, Jr.
Robert Boston Colgin
Mrs. Mary Frances
Evans Comstock*
Miriam* & John A.* Conant
Dr. John W. Cooledge
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Cummickel
Bob* & Verdery* Cunningham
Mr. Richard H. Delay & Dr. Francine D. Dykes
John R. Donnell
Dixon W. Driggs*
Pamela Johnson Drummond
Mrs. Kathryn E. Duggleby
Catherine Warren Dukehart*
Ms. Diane Durgin
Arnold & Sylvia Eaves
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Edge
Geoffrey G. Eichholz*
Elizabeth Etoll
Mr. Doyle Faler
Brien P. Faucett
Dr. Emile T. Fisher*
Moniqua N Fladger
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce W. Flower
A. D. Frazier, Jr.
Nola Frink*
Betty & Drew* Fuller
Sally & Carl Gable
William & Carolyn Gaik
Dr. John W. Gamwell*
Mr.* & Mrs.* L.L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
Ruth Gershon & Sandy Cohn
Micheline & Bob Gerson
Max Gilstrap
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Glover
Mrs. David Goldwasser
Robert Hall Gunn, Jr. Fund
Billie & Sig Guthman
Betty G.* & Joseph* F. Haas
James & Virginia Hale
Ms. Alice Ann Hamilton
Dr. Charles H. Hamilton*
Sally & Paul* Hawkins
John* & Martha Head
Ms. Jeannie Hearn*
Barbara & John Henigbaum
Jill* & Jennings* Hertz
Mr. Albert L. Hibbard
Richard E. Hodges
Mr.* & Mrs. Charles K.
Holmes, Jr.
Mr.* & Mrs.* Fred A. Hoyt, Jr.
Jim* & Barbara Hund
Clayton F. Jackson
Mary B. James
Mr. Calvert Johnson & Mr. Kenneth Dutter
deForest F. Jurkiewicz*
Herb* & Hazel Karp
Anne Morgan & Jim Kelley
Bob Kinsey
James W.* & Mary Ellen*
Kitchell
Paul Kniepkamp, Jr.
Vivian & Peter de Kok
Miss Florence Kopleff*
Mr. Robert Lamy
James H. Landon
Ouida Hayes Lanier
Lucy Russell Lee* & Gary Lee, Jr.
Ione & John Lee
Mr. Larry M. LeMaster
Mr.* & Mrs.* William C. Lester
Liz & Jay* Levine
Robert M. Lewis, Jr.
Carroll & Ruth Liller
Ms. Joanne Lincoln*
Jane Little*
Mrs. J. Erskine Love, Jr.*
Nell Galt & Will D. Magruder
K Maier
John W. Markham*
Mrs. Ann B. Martin
Linda & John Matthews
Mr. Michael A. McDowell, Jr.
Dr. Michael S. McGarry
Richard & Shirley McGinnis
John & Clodagh Miller
Ms. Vera Milner
Mrs. Gene Morse*
Ms. Janice Murphy*
Mr. & Mrs. Bertil D. Nordin
Mrs. Amy W. Norman*
Galen Oelkers
Roger B. Orloff
Barbara D. Orloff
Dr. Bernard* & Sandra Palay
Sally & Pete Parsonson
James L. Paulk
Ralph & Kay* Paulk
Dan R. Payne
Bill Perkins
Mrs. Lela May Perry*
Mr.* & Mrs. Rezin E. Pidgeon, Jr.
Janet M. Pierce*
Reverend Neal P. Ponder, Jr.
William L.* & Lucia Fairlie*
Pulgram
Ms. Judy L. Reed*
Carl J. Reith*
Mr. Philip A. Rhodes
Vicki J. & Joe A. Riedel
Helen & John Rieser
Dr. Shirley E. Rivers*
David F. & Maxine A.* Rock
Glen Rogerson*
Tiffany & Richard Rosetti
Mr.* & Mrs.* Martin H. Sauser
Bob & Mary Martha Scarr
Mr. Paul S. Scharff & Ms. Polly G. Fraser
Dr. Barbara S. Schlefman
Bill & Rachel Schultz
Mrs. Joan C. Schweitzer
June & John Scott
Edward G. Scruggs*
Dr. & Mrs. George P. Sessions
Mr. W. G. Shaefer, Jr.
Charles H. Siegel*
Mr. & Mrs. H. Hamilton Smith
Mrs. Lessie B. Smithgall*
Ms. Margo Sommers
Elliott Sopkin
Elizabeth Morgan Spiegel
Mr. Daniel D. Stanley
Gail & Loren Starr
Peter James Stelling*
Ms. Barbara Stewart
Beth & Edward Sugarman
C. Mack* & Mary Rose* Taylor
Isabel Thomson*
Jennings Thompson IV
Margaret* & Randolph* Thrower
Kenneth & Kathleen Tice
Mr. H. Burton Trimble, Jr.
Mr. Steven R. Tunnell
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Uttenhove
Mary E. Van Valkenburgh
Mrs. Anise C. Wallace
Mr. Robert Wardle, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John B. White, Jr.
Adair & Dick White
Mr. Hubert H. Whitlow, Jr.*
Sue & Neil* Williams
Mrs. Frank L. Wilson, Jr.
Mrs. Elin M. Winn
Ms. Joni Winston
George & Camille Wright
Mr.* & Mrs.* Charles R. Yates *Deceased
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony | encore 50
ASO | STAFF
EXECUTIVE
Jennifer Barlament executive director
Alvinetta Cooksey executive & finance assistant
Emily Fritz-Endres executive management
fellow
Dautri Erwin executive assistant
ARTISTIC
Gaetan Le Divelec vice president, artistic planning
Jeffrey Baxter choral administrator
RaSheed Lemon aso artist liaison
Ebner Sobalvarro artistic administrator
EDUCATION & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Sarah Grant director of education
Ryan Walks
talent development program manager
Elena Gagon coordinator of education & community engagement
OPERATIONS
Paul Barrett
senior production stage manager
Richard Carvlin
stage manager
Hannah Davis, assistant librarian
Elizabeth Graiser manager of operations & asyo
Renee Hagelberg manager of orchestra personnel
Victoria Moore
director of orchestra personnel
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Ashley Mirakian
vice president, marketing & communications
Delle Beganie content & production manager
Leah Branstetter director of digital content
Meredith Chapple marketing coordinator
Adam Fenton director of multimedia technology
Will Strawn associate director of marketing, live
Caitlin Buckers marketing manager, live
Lisa Eng multimedia creative manager, live
Mia Jones-Walker marketing manager
Rob Phipps director of creative services
Bob Scarr
archivist & research coordinator
Madisyn Willis marketing manager
Robin Smith
patron services & season ticket associate
Jake Van Valkenburg sales coordinator
Milo McGehee guest services coordinator
Anna Caldwell guest services associate
ATLANTA SYMPHONY HALL LIVE
Nicole Panunti vice president, atlanta symphony hall live
Christine Lawrence associate director of guest services
Michael Tamucci
associate director of performance management, atlanta symphony hall live
Dan Nesspor
ticketing manager, atlanta symphony hall live
FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION
Susan Ambo
chief financial officer & vice president, business operations
Kimberly Hielsberg vice president of finance
DEVELOPMENT
Grace Sipusic vice president of development
Cheri Snyder senior director of development
William Keene
director of annual giving
James Paulk
senior annual giving officer
Renee Contreras associate director, development communications
Julia Filson
director of corporate relations
Dana Parness
manager of individual giving and prospect research
Catherine MacGregor manager of donor engagement
Robert Cushing development associate, major gifts
Sarah Wilson development operations associate
Sharveace Cameron senior development associate
SALES
&
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
Russell Wheeler vice president, sales & revenue management
Nancy James front of house supervisor
Erin Jones director of sales
Jesse Pace senior manager of ticketing & patron experience
Dennis Quinlan
data analyst
Brandi Hoyos
director of diversity, equity & inclusion
April Satterfield controller
Brandi Reed staff accountant
encoreatlanta.com | 51
ASO
CORPORATE & GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony | encore 52
|
This program is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Major funding is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners. Major support is provided by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.
CONTACT Hila Johnson hila@encorecharlotte.com
THE WOODRUFF CIRCLE
Woodruff Circle members have contributed more than $250,000 annually to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art. We are deeply grateful to these partners who lead our efforts to help create opportunities for enhanced access to the work.
$1MILLION+
A Friend of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
$500,000+
The Antinori Foundation
Bank of America
A Friend of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
$250,000+
Accenture
AT&T Foundation
Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation
The Molly Blank Fund
Helen Gurley Brown Foundation
Chick-fil-A Foundation | Rhonda & Dan Cathy
The Goizueta Foundation
Invesco QQQ
Novelis
PNC
Mr. & Mrs. Shouky Shaheen
The Home Depot Foundation
Sarah and Jim Kennedy
The Rich Foundation, Inc.
Alfred A. Thornton Venable Trust
Truist Trusteed Foundations:
Florence C. and Harry L. English Memorial Fund
Thomas Guy Woolford Charitable Trust
UPS
WestRock
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
THE LEADERSHIP CIRCLE
Leadership Circle corporations have committed to a contribution of $1,000,000 over one or more years to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art.
Accenture
The Coca-Cola Company
Chick-fil-A
Delta Air Lines
Georgia Power
Graphic Packaging
Novelis
UPS
WestRock
THE BENEFACTOR CIRCLE
Benefactor Circle members have contributed more than $100,000 annually to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art. We are deeply grateful to these partners who lead our efforts to help create opportunities for enhanced access to the work.
$100,000+
1180
Alston & Bird
Atlantic Station
John Auerbach
Sandra & Dan Baldwin
BlackRock
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta
Melinda & Brian Corbett
Sheila L. & Jonathan J. Davies
Barney M. Franklin & Hugh W. Burke Charitable Fund
Georgia-Pacific
Google
Graphic Packaging
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Grien
Louise S. Sams and Jerome Grilhot
The John H. & Wilhelmina D. Harland Charitable Foundation
The Hertz Family Foundation, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Hilton H. Howell, Jr.
The Imlay Foundation Institute of Museum & Library Services
Jones Day Foundation & Employees
Kaiser Permanente
Abraham J. and Phyllis Katz Foundation
King & Spalding, Partners & Employees
The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation
Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc.
The Henry Luce Foundation, Inc.
The Marcus Foundation, Inc.
John W. Markham III*
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Morris Manning & Martin LLP
National Endowment for the Arts
Newell Brands
Norfolk Southern Foundation
Amy W. Norman Charitable Foundation
Northside Hospital
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Patty and Doug Reid
The Shubert Foundation
Carol & Ramon Tomé Family Fund
Dr. Joan H. Weens
Kelly and Rod Westmoreland
Ann Marie and John B. White, Jr.
wish Foundation
The David, Helen & Marian Woodward Fund
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony
Peachtree ACT Foundation, Inc.
*notates deceased