ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA A NEW ERA BEGINS RAFTERMAN OCTOBER 2022
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony OCTOBER 2022 INTRODUCTIONS In Tune 4 Music Director 5 ASO Leadership ................... 7 ASO Musicians .................... 8 NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Written by Noel Morris OCTOBER 6, 8, 9 21 OCTOBER 14, 15 .................. 36 OCTOBER 16 ..................... 42 DEPARTMENTS ASO Support ..................... 46 Henry Sopkin Circle 50 ASO Staff 52 Woodruff Circle 54 Benefactor Circle ................. 56 Page 12 Introducing Nathalie Stutzmann: by Noel Morris encoreatlanta.com | 1
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DEAR FRIENDS,
Welcome to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s 78th season—a time of new beginnings. This fall marks the beginning of Nathalie Stutzmann's tenure as Music Director. Nathalie is only the fifth Music Director in the ASO’s history and only the second woman to lead a major American orchestra. I know you will be inspired by Nathalie’s incredible talent and musicality, and I hope you’ll join me in giving her a warm Atlanta welcome. Follow along with #ATLwelcomesNathalie.
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra is also happy to welcome six new musicians to the stage, including three with very special ASO connections. Please join me in welcoming ASO Talent Development Program alumna, cellist Denielle Wilson, and two former members of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra, William Cooper, trumpet, and Michael Scholefield, bass, to the ASO.
One of the great privileges of my role at the ASO is the opportunity to work with our extraordinarily committed and hard-working Board of Directors. This July we welcomed Patrick Viguerie as Board Chair, succeeding Janine Brown. Having served on the Board for over a decade, Patrick knows the organization well. Most recently he chaired the search committee that led to the selection of Nathalie Stutzmann. A senior partner at strategy consulting firm Innosight, Patrick brings his keen insight to the ASO; and as a talented musician himself and parent of a star ASYO alum, he brings a true passion for the ASO’s programs and impact. Thank you, Patrick, for your leadership.
Speaking of new beginnings, we are happy to bring back our field trip concert series for Atlanta-area students this season. Students at the Symphony, formerly known as Concerts for Young People, is a wonderful way to introduce young people to the beauty of classical music, and we’re thrilled to bring back this long-standing and impactful education program.
To learn more about the ASO’s education programs, visit aso.org/education.
Finally, we hope you’re enjoying our newly renovated Galleria space, complete with new bars and expanded seating areas, all in a warm and inviting setting. Special thanks to our friends at Studiobdesigns. com for creating this beautiful new space to enjoy.
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ASO | IN TUNE TODD HALL | encore4
| 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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ASO
SIMON FOWLER encoreatlanta.com | 5
ASO | LEADERSHIP | 2022/23 Board of Directors
OFFICERS
Patrick Viguerie chair
Janine Brown immediate past chair
Bert Mills treasurer Angela Evans secretary Lynn Eden vice chair James Rubright vice chair
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 Susan Clare Russell Currey
Sheila Lee Davies
Erroll Brown Davis, Jr. Carlos del Rio,
M.D. FIDSA
Sloane Drake
S. Wright Caughman, M.D.
Lisa Chang
Lynn Eden Rod Garcia-Escudero
Angela Evans
Craig Frankel
Sally Bogle Gable Anne Game
Sally Frost George Robert Glustrom Bonnie B. Harris Charles Harrison Tad Hutcheson, Jr. Roya Irvani
Randolph J. Koporc Carrie Kurlander
James H. Landon Donna Lee Sukai Liu Kevin Lyman Deborah Marlowe Shelley McGehee Bert Mills Molly Minnear Hala Moddelmog* Terence L. Neal Galen Lee Oelkers
Dr. John Paddock Howard D. Palefsky Cathleen Quigley Doug Reid
BOARD OF COUNSELORS
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
Meghan H. Magruder Penelope McPhee
Patricia H. Reid
Joyce Schwob
John A Sibley, III H. Hamilton Smith
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.
G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr. Michael W. Trapp
Ray Uttenhove
Chilton Varner
Adair M. White
Sue Sigmon Williams
Howell E. Adams, Jr. Connie Calhoun C. Merrell Calhoun Betty Sands Fuller Azira G. Hill
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*Ex-Officio Board Member encoreatlanta.com | 7
ASO
2022/23 Musician Roster
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
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 / assistant principal
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
Nathalie Stutzmann music director
The Robert Reid Topping 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
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony 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
Jerry Hou
associate conductor; music director of the atlanta symphony youth orchestra
The Zeist Foundation 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
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
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
Holly Matthews assistant principal librarian
Hannah Davis asyo / assistant librarian
† Regularly engaged musician | • New this season | ** One-year 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.
2021/22 CHAIRS
Arthur Mills, IV advisory council chair
Justin Im internal connections task force
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 connections task force co chair
Otis Threatt diversity & community connection task force co chair
MEMBERS
Dr. Marshall & Stephanie Abes
Krystal Ahn Keith Barnett Asad & Sakina Bashey Meredith W. Bell
Jane Blount
Ronald Breakstone 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 Brian & Ann Kimsey Jason & Michelle Kroh
Scott Lampert
Dr. Fulton Lewis III & Mr. Neal Rhoney Robert Lewis, Jr. Eunice Luke Belinda Massafra Arthur Mills IV Berthe & Shapour Mobasser Bert Mobley Caroline & Phil Moïse Sue Morgan Anne 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 Baker Smith Cindy Smith Peter & Kristi Stathopoulos Kimberly Strong Stephen & Sonia Swartz
George & Amy Taylor 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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CONTACT Donna Choate 678-778-1573 donna@encoreatlanta.com
Introducing Nathalie Stutzmann: Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's Fifth Music Director
by Noel Morris
STEPHENIE SLAMA
For Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Music Director Designate Nathalie Stutzmann, music is more than an occupation; it’s a way of being. Both her parents were opera singers. At seven months pregnant, her mother sang the lead in Verdi’s Otello. Baby Nathalie came along two months later.
“If you love music as I do, it’s fantastic luck to start before you’re born,” laughs the 56-year-old conductor.
Living among people who practiced, rehearsed and performed every day, Nathalie experienced music as a natural part of family life. She recalls other kids not understanding her intense work ethic. That changed when she enrolled in an immersive music school at age 11.
“At that time, it was paradise because I was surrounded by people who had the same passion.” With a longer school day, she split her time between academics and piano, bassoon, viola and cello. As a teen, she started conducting.
“I wanted to take some [conducting] lessons. And the teacher was a great musician, but I quickly understood that [the 1970s] was no time for a woman on the podium,” she said. That would have to wait a few more decades.
Soon, nature stepped in. Nathalie developed an extraordinary contralto voice—a rarity among singers. At 16, she started studying with her mother. By 18, she was rejecting performance offers in
“She is a consummate rock star on the podium”
— ArtsATL
in order to focus on her studies at the Paris Opera. The youngest student in the Opera’s history, Nathalie spent four years there before stepping into the international spotlight. Quickly, she transitioned to life on the road, moving between airports, concert halls and opera houses.
“The contralto is not heading the way of the California condor just yet,” wrote The New York Times in 1995.
Nathalie Stutzmann with Seiji Ozawa
“Hope is arriving in the form of Nathalie Stutzmann, a lanky young Parisian with eyes as deep and dusky as her voice.” Nathalie proceeded to hit all the milestones of a glorious career, working with legendary conductors, singing in the most storied halls, and recording all the great works for the contralto voice (more than 80 recordings). At the same time, she quietly held onto her dream of becoming a conductor.
“As a singer, you have one melody to sing,” she said. “As a conductor, you have a hundred voices.” It was personal: “the only way to express all the music that’s in me is as a conductor.” Finally, after a 20-year career, she made her move—and flew into some mighty headwinds.
“People were suspicious; a singer, plus a woman… [there were] a lot of elements against me,” she told Interlude. “But I believed in it, and when I believe in something it’s hard to stop me.” Far from an industry outsider, she quickly found encouragement from Seiji Ozawa and Sir Simon Rattle, two eminent conductors who served
“Nathalie is the real thing. So much love, intensity and sheer technique. We need more conductors like her,” said Rattle.
He advised her to go to the legendary conducting teacher Jorma Panula in Finland [Panula has produced six major maestros to date]. Add to that, Nathalie brought with her some unique perspective.
“I kept the dream of conducting all my life. [Nurturing that] passion, I observed the great conductors I was singing with,” she said. “As a conducting student, it’s probably the best school you could ever have.”
“Nathalie is the real thing…We need more conductors like her”
— Sir Simon Rattle
After honing her skills with Panula, Nathalie founded her own ensemble, the critically acclaimed Baroque orchestra Orfeo 55. With them, she hit her stride on the podium. Fastforward to 2022, Nathalie Stutzmann is now the only woman to head a top-25 American orchestra and is in demand around the world.
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She holds positions as Chief Conductor of the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra in Norway and Principal Guest Conductor of The Philadelphia Orchestra, in addition to taking the reins of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. As busy as she is, taking the job in Atlanta was a no-brainer.
“It’s so funny,” she grinned. “To be a musician is a paradox because you can be happy with a concert, but you’re already looking forward to the next concert—because you think you can be better.” In Atlanta, she has found a group of musicians who share that work ethic. “They want to serve the music first. And to serve the music, you have to be a perfectionist. They are starving to make music, and that is what attracts me so much.” And the feeling is mutual.
“Even before she came to Atlanta,” said ASO Executive Director Jennifer Barlament, “some of our musicians saw her working with other orchestras and were blown away, not only by her artistry but her deep connection with the players.”
“It’s very obvious that she comes from a vocal background by the way she thinks of phrasing. It’s so musical,” said ASO Concertmaster David Coucheron.
“And in rehearsal (sometimes it’s hard for conductors to put an idea into words). She’ll just sing it. And then we know exactly what she wants.” The results speak for themselves.
“The most elegant and articulate words fail to do justice to Stutzmann’s performance,” wrote ArtsATL. “She is a consummate rock star on the podium. With her precise, yet large and wild articulations, she doesn’t ‘conduct’ so much as she seizes the full potential of every note and wrenches it loose from the silence that preceded it.”
This bodes well for Atlanta. With years of great performances on the horizon, the Stutzmann era promises rocket fuel for the city’s culture scene. And it all comes down to something people often associate with the dynamic maestro: magic.
“…in rehearsal (sometimes it’s hard for conductors to put an idea into words). She’ll just sing it. And then we know exactly what she wants.”
— David Coucheron
“Magic happens when absolutely everyone in the orchestra is connected,” she said. “Of course, you can play together (it’s easy for any professional orchestra). But to feel together, to breathe together, to take risks together . . . It’s this exchange of energy between me, the orchestra, and the audience. That’s what makes those moments special.”
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SPECIAL THANKS:
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra gives special thanks to the following donors for their extraordinary support of the Orchestra’s Stability Fund.
Created at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Stability Fund helps mitigate the enormous challenges of the pandemic and allows the Orchestra to continue performing and sharing music with our community.
A Friend of the Symphony (4)
The Antinori Foundation
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Players’ Association
Jennifer Barlament & Kenneth Potsic
Janine Brown & Alex J. Simmons, Jr.
The John and Rosemary Brown Family Foundation
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Advised Fund
Marcia & John Donnell
In loving memory of Catherine W. Dukehart
The Estate of Geoffrey G. Eichholz
Angela Evans
James H. Landon Bert & Carmen Mills Lynn & Galen Oelkers
Sally & Pete Parsonson Patty & Doug Reid
Mr. John A. Sibley, III Ross & Sally Singletary Slumgullion Charitable Fund Kathy Waller & Kenneth Goggins
Adair & Dick White
The Estate of Hubert H. Whitlow, Jr. Kiki Wilson
This list recognizes donors who have made contributions to the ASO Stability Fund since March 2020.
ASO | SEASON SPONSORS
We are deeply grateful to the following leadership donors whose generous support has made the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's season possible.
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Concerts of Thursday, October 6, 2022, 8:00pm Saturday, October 8, 2022, 8:00pm Sunday, October 9, 2022, 3:00pm
NATHALIE STUTZMANN, conductor
TALISE TREVIGNE, soprano
JENNIFER JOHNSON CANO, mezzo-soprano
ROBIN TRITSCHLER, tenor
LEON KOŠAVIĆ, baritone
ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CHORUS
NORMAN MACKENZIE, Director of Choruses
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN (1770–1827)
Ah! perfido, Op. 65 (1796) 13 MINS Talise Trevigne, soprano
HILARY PURRINGTON (b. 1990)
Words for Departure (2020) 15 MINS
I. Nothing was remembered, nothing forgotten II. I have remembered you III. You have learned the beginning Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus
INTERMISSION
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
20 MINS
Symphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op. 125 (“Choral”) (1824) 68 MINS
I. Allegro ma non troppo, un poco maestoso
II. Molto vivace
III. Adagio molto e cantabile
IV. Finale: Presto. Allegro assai Talise Trevigne, soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano, mezzo-soprano Robin Tritschler, tenor Leon Košavic, baritone Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus
Words for Departure was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.
This weekend’s concerts are dedicated to SHEILA L. & JONATHAN J. DAVIES in honor of their extraordinary support of the 2021/22 Annual Fund.
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.
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notesontheprogram
by Noel Morris Program Annotator
Ah! perfido, Op. 65
In addition to the soprano solo, Ah! perfido is scored for flute, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns and strings.
First and most recent ASO performances: October 20, 1955
Henry Sopkin, conductor Zinka Milanov, soprano
About half a mile from the Prague Castle stands a terracotta-colored Baroque building with a terracotta roof. A plaque by the door sports a stern-looking bronze of Beethoven scowling down at anyone who pauses to read its inscription: “Here at the Inn of the Golden Unicorn lived the famous music composer Ludwig van Beethoven in February 1796.” In fact, Beethoven is not the only famous composer to have stayed there.
When he moved to Vienna as a 21-year-old pianist, Beethoven fell into the orbit of a classical music superfan, Prince Karl Lichnowsky, a friend of Mozart and Haydn. (Famously, Lichnowsky worked through C.P.E. Bach, son of Johann Sebastian, to amass a collection of the elder Bach’s manuscripts and write the first biography of the composer.) When Beethoven landed in Vienna in November of 1792, Lichnowsky offered him an attic apartment and took him under his wing. Showing off his young protégé, Lichnowsky took Beethoven on a trip to Prague, a city where Mozart had made a tremendous splash.
In fact, it had only been seven years since Lichnowsky had traveled there with Mozart, Beethoven’s musical hero. Returning with Beethoven in 1796, the prince guided the younger composer to the Golden Unicorn, staying in the very same room where Mozart had slept.
With Mozart on the brain, Beethoven secured a piano and wrote the concert scene Ah! perfido for soprano and orchestra, mirroring a work that Mozart had written for a local musician.
Back in 1787, Mozart had been in Prague for the premiere of Don Giovanni and stayed at the country house of his friends Franz and Josefa Duschek. Josefa was a formidable soprano, inspiring Mozart to write Bella mia fiamma. When Beethoven traveled to the Czech capital in 1796, he wrote Ah! perfido for the same singer. Infused with fiery melodrama, rapid mood shifts and virtuosic flourishes, Ah! perfido takes us into the emotional torrent of a woman spurned, vacillating between rage, vengeance, devotion, grief and indignation. Josefa Duschek sang the premiere in Leipzig later that year.
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Words for Departure
These are world premiere performances.
Words for Departure is scored for mixed chorus, two flutes (one doubling piccolo), two oboes (one doubling English horn), two clarinets (one doubling bass clarinet), two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, piano and strings.
Hilary Purrington is a living composer of chamber, vocal and orchestral music. Her work has received recognition from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP); the International Alliance for Women in Music; and the National Federation of Music Clubs (NFMC), among others. Purrington’s orchestral and chamber works have been performed by many distinguished ensembles, including the Peabody Modern Orchestra, the American Modern Ensemble, Voices of Change and the Chicago Harp Quartet. Recent commissions include new works for the New York Youth Symphony, American Composers Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra.
For the 2018/19 season, Purrington was named the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra's Composer of the Year and served as composer-in-residence for the Musical Chairs Chamber Ensemble. She is a 2020 recipient of an orchestral commission from the League of American Orchestras' Women Composers Readings and Commissions program, supported by the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.
Also an accomplished vocalist, Purrington has developed a reputation as a skilled composer of solo and choral music. Her song For your judicious and pious consideration was premiered by mezzo-soprano Adele Grabowsky on the 2016 NY Phil Biennial’s New Music New Haven concert. In 2015, the Eric Stokes Fund commissioned Purrington to compose a new song cycle about the devastating effects of climate change. The resulting work, A Clarion Call, was premiered at the 2017 Conference for Ecology and Religion hosted by the Yale Divinity School. Recent vocal commissions include new works for the Melodia Women’s Choir of NYC, Yale Glee Club, inFLUX, and the Bowers/Fader Duo. In April 2019, C4: The Choral Composer/Conductor Collective premiered John Eason Stops Preaching, a new work with words by contemporary poet Julia Bouwsma. She recently completed a new opera for New Camerata Opera, created in collaboration with librettist Hannah
NARA GAISINA
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McDermott and animation studio Catarata.
Originally from western Massachusetts, Purrington lives and works in Durham, North Carolina. She holds degrees from the Yale School of Music, The Juilliard School and the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.
From the composer:
Words for Departure (2020) is a three-movement choral symphony featuring poetry by 20th century writer Louise Bogan. Over the course of three poems, Bogan describes and reflects on the end of a romantic relationship.
I began writing Words for Departure in January 2020 and completed it during the initial months of the COVID-19 pandemic. As a society, we were reaching out to friends near and far and finding new ways to support and connect with one another. Words for Departure, which began as an analysis of an imagined relationship, became a meditation on the importance of investing in others and examining how we treat one another.
During an initial reading of Bogan’s “Words for departure,” I was captivated by the three poems’ visceral imagery and Bogan’s ability to create a complete narrative through just a few impactful lines. At first, I overlooked the set because the topic seemed too “small” to explore in the context of a choral symphony; however, the first few months of the pandemic dramatically changed my perspective. We had collectively come to the realization that relationships are actually the most significant and essential areas of our lives—certainly worth the scale and drama of a symphony.
Symphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op. 125 (“Choral”)
Symphony No. 9 is scored for soprano, alto, tenor, and bass soloists, mixed chorus, piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, percussion and strings.
What can one say about Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony? Epic, magnificent, monumental, revolutionary—the 19th-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche suggested this:
First ASO performance: October 19, 1967
Robert Shaw, conductor
Most recent
ASO performances: April 11–14, 2019
Thomas Søndergård, conductor
“At a certain place in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony,” he wrote, “[one] might feel that he is floating above the earth in a starry dome, with
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the dream of immortality in his heart; all the stars seem to glimmer around him, and the earth seems to sink ever deeper downwards.” The Ninth Symphony does feel otherworldly. It occupies a space beyond our everyday experience. Indeed, it was written by a deaf man. Through more than an hour’s worth of music, Beethoven had no auditory point of reference. It all billowed from a singular imagination. And so the Ninth Symphony stood alone, becoming a piece that people perform at moments of great significance. Leonard Bernstein, for example, conducted Beethoven’s Ninth to mark the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. And, closer to home, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus present it here at the start of a new era for the ensemble (and for women aspiring to top conducting jobs)—the tenure of Nathalie Stutzmann.
Often, we skip to the end of the Beethoven story: a composer loses his hearing but writes one masterpiece after another. We spend less time thinking about a man—a musician—coping with an especially cruel disability.
Beethoven had moved to Vienna in 1792, ostensibly to study composition with Franz Josef Haydn. The two did not exactly click. The Viennese nobility latched onto the younger composer. With Europe’s “who’s who” looking on, Beethoven dazzled the Viennese from the piano and came to see Haydn as a distraction. Beethoven’s improvisations were legendary and served as a wellspring for his ideas. By the end of the decade, he was aware of a problem in the left ear.
For all the astonishing architecture associated with his music— massive works that grow from tiny bits of material—composition was a scattered enterprise. Beethoven’s sketchbooks contain ideas for many different works, side-by-side, that would sometimes take years to germinate. During his first two decades in Vienna, he cranked out reams of music, often centering around his piano playing. He presented his first four piano concertos featuring himself as soloist. By the time he presented the Fifth in 1811, his hearing was too far gone to play in public. The Seventh and Eighth Symphonies followed in 1812, and then Beethoven hit a dry spell.
Over the next few years, he acquired various ear trumpets while pressuring instrument builders to design a louder piano. He even devised a contraption to amplify the instrument, but his connection to the piano—to the instrument that had been an extension of his soul—was falling away.
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Probably Beethoven had always been a difficult person, but hearing loss exacerbated his personality quirks. He had a hot temper. He was a horrible boss and tended to hurl insults at people. But he did have friends and was frequently seen dining with them in restaurants and sharing laughs about things jotted down on pieces of paper. From his conversation books, we know a lot about his daily life. He chronically suffered from gastrointestinal problems and various infections. For years, he fought to gain custody of his nephew, Carl. Medical bills, various therapies, and Carl’s tuition all led to financial distress. In response, Beethoven wrote what he called trifles, little compositions, in an attempt to make some money, but years passed before he hit his stride again as a composer. Twelve years separate the Eighth and Ninth Symphonies.
Born in 1770, Beethoven was a child of the Enlightenment. Through all his misery, he held fast to Enlightenment principles celebrating what he believed to be a God-given capacity for reason, science, progress, liberty, and equality. These values, he thought, were the key to happiness, not just for himself but for all humanity. Enter Friedrich Schiller.
Schiller published a poem in 1786 called “An die Freude,” Ode to Joy, that spread like wildfire among those who had a taste for revolution. According to Beethoven-biographer Jan Swafford, “The poem’s essence was the Enlightenment cult of happiness as the goal of life, the conviction that the triumph of freedom and joy will bring humanity to an epoch of peace and universal brotherhood, the utopia he called Elysium.” The poem is written in the style of the geselliges Lied—a song that might be sung with beer steins hoisted in the air.
Three years after the poem’s publication, French subjects stormed the Bastille. In 1792, officials named Schiller an honorary citizen of the newly constituted French Republic. However, it must be said that Schiller was horrified by the ensuing bloodbath and soon revised and distanced himself from his poem. Beethoven, on the other hand, never forgot it; throughout his adult life, he talked about setting it to music.
Beethoven found his footing around 1819 when he began work on his Diabelli Variations and his Solemn Mass. He completed the first movement of his Ninth Symphony in early 1823 and finished the piece in 1824. The Ninth Symphony is a journey. It begins in a fury and makes its way toward the celestial light of the finale, proclaiming Schiller’s poem with four vocal soloists and a full chorus.
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Beethoven conducted the premiere of the Ninth Symphony on May 7, 1894 (sort of). In truth, he followed the score and indicated tempos in front of conductor Michael Umlauf who had instructed the performers not to look at the composer.
Beethoven “flailed about with his hands and feet as though he wanted to play all the instruments and sing all the chorus parts,” recalled one witness. When it was over, contralto Caroline Unger reportedly approached the composer and turned him to face the cheering crowd.
TEXT AND TRANSLATION
Ah! perfido
Ah! perfido, spergiuro, Barbaro traditor, tu parti?
E son questi gl’ultimi tuoi congedi?
Ove s’intese tirannia più crudel?
Va, scellerato! va, pur fuggi da me, L’ira de’ numi non fuggirai.
Se v’è giustizia in ciel, se v’è pietà, Congiureranno a gara tutti a punirti!
Ombra seguace, presente, ovunque vai, Vedrò le mie vendette,
Io già le godo immaginando.
I fulmini ti veggo già balenar d’intorno.
Ah no! Fermate, vindici Dei!
Risparmiate quel cor, ferite il mio!
S’ei non è più qual era, son io qual fui,
Per lui vivea, voglio morir per lui!
Per pietà, non dirmi addio!
Di te priva che farò?
Tu lo sai, bell’idol mio!
Io d’affanno morirò.
Ah crudel! Tu vuoi ch’io mora!
Tu non hai pietà di me?
Perchè rendi a chi t’adora Così barbara mercè?
Dite voi se in tanto affanno
Non son degna di pietà?
Ah! You treacherous
Ah! You treacherous, faithless, barbaric traitor, you leave?
And is this your last farewell?
Where did one hear of a crueller tyranny? Go, despicable man! Go, flee from me! You won’t flee from the wrath of the gods. If there is justice in heaven, if there is pity, all will join forces in a contest to punish you.
I follow your trail! I am wherever you go, I will live to see my revenge, I already take my delight in it in my imagination.
I already see you surrounded by flashes of lightning. Alas! Pause, avenging gods! Spare that heart, wound mine! If he is not what he was, I am still what I was. For him I lived, for him I want to die!
Have mercy, don’t bid me farewell, what shall I do without you? You know it, my beloved idol! I will die of grief.
Ah, cruel man! You want me to die! Don’t you have pity on me? Why do you reward the one who adores you in such a barbaric way? Tell me, if in such a grief I do not deserve pity?
Translation by Bertram Kottmann
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Words for Departure by Louise Bogan
1
Nothing was remembered, nothing forgotten.
When we awoke, wagons were passing on the warm summer pavements, The window-sills were wet from rain in the night, Birds scattered and settled over chimneypots
As among grotesque trees.
Nothing was accepted, nothing looked beyond. Slight-voiced bells separated hour from hour, The afternoon sifted coolness And people drew together in streets becoming deserted. There was a moon, and light in a shop-front, And dusk falling like precipitous water.
Hand clasped hand Forehead still bowed to forehead— Nothing was lost, nothing possessed There was no gift nor denial.
TEXT AND TRANSLATION
2
I have remembered you. You were not the town visited once, Nor the road falling behind running feet.
You were as awkward as flesh And lighter than frost or ashes.
You were the rind, And the white-juiced apple, The song, and the words waiting for music.
3
You have learned the beginning; Go from mine to the other.
Be together; eat, dance, despair, Sleep, be threatened, endure. You will know the way of that.
But at the end, be insolent; Be absurd—strike the thing short off; Be mad—only do not let talk Wear the bloom from silence.
And go away without fire or lantern Let there be some uncertainty about your departure.
Symphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op. 125 (“Choral”)
Baritone Solo, Soloists and Chorus
O Freunde, nicht diese Töne!
Sondern lasst uns angenehmere anstimmen und freudenvollere!
Freude, schöner Götterfunken, Tochter aus Elysium, Wir betreten feuertrunken, Himmlische, dein Heiligtum!
Deine Zauber binden wieder, Was die Mode streng geteilt; Alle Menschen werden Brüder, Wo dein sanfter Flügel weilt.
Baritone Solo, Soloists and Chorus
Oh friends, no more these sounds!
Let us sing songs that are more cheerful and full of joy!
Joy, lovely divine spark, Daughter of Elysium, With fiery rapture, We approach your sanctuary!
Your magic reunites, What stern custom separated; All men shall be brothers, Under your gentle wings.
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Wem der grosse Wurf gelungen, Eines Freundes Freund zu sein, Wer ein holdes Weib errungen, Mische seinen Jubel ein!
Ja, wer auch nur eine Seele Sein nennt auf dem Erdenrund! Und wer’s nie gekonnt, der stehle Weinend sich aus diesem Bund. Freude trinken alle Wesen
An den Brüsten der Natur; Alle Guten, alle Bösen Folgen ihrer Rosenspur.
Küsse gab sie uns und Reben, Einen Freund, geprüft im Tod; Wollust ward dem Wurm gegeben, Und der Cherub steht vor Gott!
Whoever has enjoyed the great fortune Of being a friend to a friend, Whoever has won a dear wife, Join in our chorus of jubilation! Yes, even if he has but one soul On this earth to call his own! And whoever has not, let him steal away Tearfully and alone.
Every creature drinks joy At nature’s breast. Everyone, good and bad Follows in her rosy path. She gave us kisses and the fruit of the vine, And a friend, faithful until death; Even the worm can feel contentment, And the cherub stands before God!
Tenor Solo and Chorus
Froh, wie seine Sonnen fliegen Durch des Himmels prächt’gen Plan, Laufet, Brüder, eure Bahn, Freudig, wie ein Held zum Siegen. (The first stanza is repeated)
Chorus and Soloists
Seid umschlungen, Millionen!
Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt! Brüder! Über’m Sternenzelt Muss ein lieber Vater wohnen. Ihr stürzt nieder, Millionen?
Ahnest du den Schöpfer, Welt? Such’ ihn überm Sternenzelt! Über Sternen muss er wohnen.
Tenor Solo and Chorus
Gladly, as His suns fly Through the mighty path of heaven, So, brothers, run your course, Joyfully, like a hero on his conquest. (The first stanza is repeated)
Chorus and Soloists
Be embraced, you millions! This kiss is for all the world! Brother! Above this tent of stars There must dwell a loving Father. Do you kneel, you millions? Do you sense your Creator, world? Seek Him above in the tent of stars! Above the stars He must dwell.
Translation by Ken Meltzer
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artists
TALISE TREVIGNE, SOPRANO
Career highlights for American soprano Talise Trevigne include her celebrated portrayal in the title role Porgy and Bess at The Atlanta Opera; she returned as a TAO Company Principal Artist in Season 2020-21 as Nedda I Pagliacci. Miss Trevigne played the role of Sunny desert in for Boston Lyric Opera in their exciting new episodic opera drama devised for the small screen, curated and directed by James Darrah. Previous highlights include her return appearance with CBSO for Tippett’s A Child of our Time in performances in the UK and Germany, conducted by Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla. Future engagements include Violetta La Traviata at Calgary Opera, and La bohème at Cincinnati Opera, alongside the title role in Gregory Spears’ new work, Castor and Patience
JENNIFER JOHNSON CANO, MEZZO-SOPRANO
Anaturally gifted singer known for her commanding stage presence and profound artistry, Jennifer Johnson Cano has garnered critical acclaim for committed performances of both new and standard repertoire. With more than 100 performances on the stage at The Metropolitan Opera, her most recent roles have included Nicklausse, Emilia, Hansel and Meg Page. Cano undertakes a balance of orchestral, opera and chamber music performances each season. She appears with major orchestras and conductors, and has collaborated on numerous projects with the Cleveland Orchestra and Franz Welser-Möst as well as the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Gustavo Dudamel in both the US and Europe. She has performed with the New York Philharmonic in both New York and Vail, as well as the Pittsburgh Symphony and Manfred Honeck. A native of St. Louis, she earned degrees from Rice University and from Webster University, where she was honored as a distinguished alumna and commencement speaker in May 2017.
ROBIN TRITSCHLER, TENOR
Irish tenor Robin Tritschler has garnered praise from critics and audiences for his performances. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Music and was a BBC New Generation Artist. In concert, Tritschler has appeared with many leading orchestras including the London Philharmonic Orchestra (Yannick NézetSéguin, Nathalie Stutzmann and Vladimir Jurowski), L’Orchestre
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GRANT LEGAN 32
National de Lyon (Yutaka Sado), Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon, the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra (Edo de Waart), the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra (Philippe Herreweghe), the Moscow Virtuosi (Vladimir Spivakov), and the BBC Philharmonic (Juanjo Mena). With the RTE Concert Orchestra, Tritschler performed Messiah before Pope Benedict XVI to celebrate the 80th Anniversary of the Vatican State and gave the UK premiere of CPE Bach’s St. John Passion with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra under Kirill Karabits.
LEON KOŠAVIĆ, BARITONE
The young Croatian baritone Leon Košavić began his vocal training at the age of 12. He completed his master’s degree at the Music Academy in Zagreb in the singing class of Giorgio Surian. In 2011 he began his musical career as Papageno at the Croatian National Opera, where he sang Masetto and Moralès and Malatesta in the following years. In 2015 he made his debut at the Finnish National Opera as Malatesta (Don Pasquale). In the same year, Kosavic won the Croatian Theatre Prize for “outstanding performances by young artists under 30” for his sensational performance of Don Giovanni. Since then, he has appeared at numerous European opera houses such as the Royal Opera House London (Ping in Turandot), Stuttgart State Opera (Don Giovanni), Liège (Figaro in Nozze di Figaro), Antwerp ( Juive), Lausanne (Masetto in Don Giovanni) and Strasbourg (Figaro in Barbiere di Siviglia).
ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CHORUS
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus, founded in 1970 by former Music Director, Robert Shaw, is an all-volunteer, auditioned ensemble that performs on a regular basis with the Orchestra and is featured on many of its recordings. Led by Director of Choruses, Norman Mackenzie, the chorus is known for its precision and expressive singing quality. Its recordings have garnered 14 Grammy® Awards (nine for Best Choral Performance; four for Best Classical Recording and one for Best Opera Recording). The Chorus performs large symphonic choral works under the direction of Music Director Nathalie Stutzmann and Principal Guest Conductor Sir Donald Runnicles. In addition, the Chorus has been involved in the creation and shaping of numerous world-premiere commissioned works.
GARRETH WONG WEB
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NORMAN MACKENZIE, DIRECTOR OF CHORUSES
As Director of Choruses for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra since 2000 and holder of its endowed Frannie and Bill Graves Chair, Norman Mackenzie was chosen to help carry forward the creative vision of legendary founding conductor Robert Shaw to a new generation of music lovers. In his 14-year association with Shaw, he was keyboardist for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, principal accompanist for the ASO Choruses, and ultimately Assistant Choral Conductor.
Mackenzie prepares the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus and Chamber Chorus for all concerts and recordings, works closely with the Music Director on the commissioning and realization of new choral-orchestral works. During his tenure, the Chorus has made numerous tours and garnered its most recent four Grammy® Awards. Mackenzie also serves as Director of Music and Fine Arts for Atlanta’s Trinity Presbyterian Church, and pursues an active recital and guest conducting schedule.
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ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CHORUS
SOPRANO 1
Ellen Abney Khadijah Davis Liz Dean*
Laura Foster Michelle Griffin* Erin Jones* Arietha Lockhart** Alexis Lundy Mindy Margolis* Joneen Padgett* Mary Martha Penner Susan Ray
Samaria Rodriguez Emily Salmond
Lydia Sharp Susie Shepardson Chelsea Toledo Brianne Turgeon** Deanna Walton Erika Wuerzner Wanda Yang Temko**
SOPRANO 2 Debbie Ashton Sloan Atwood* Jessica Barber Tierney Breedlove Barbara Brown Maggie Carpenter Martha Craft
Gina Deaton Erika Elliott Mary Goodwin Amanda Hoffman Melissa Mack Mary Mulvey Heidi Padovano
Lindsay Patten Murray Chantae Pittman
Tramaine Quarterman Marianna Schuck Anne-Marie Spalinger
Emily Tallant
Cheryl Thrash**
Donna Weeks**
ALTO 1
Pamela Amy-Cupp Deborah Boland** Emily Campbell Donna Carter-Wood** Patricia DinkinsMatthews* Angel Dotson-Hall Katherine Fisher Beth Freeman* Cynthia Harris Unita Harris Beverly Hueter* Janet Johnson** Susan Jones Kathleen KellyGeorge* Virginia Little* Staria Lovelady* Alina Luke Frances McDowellBeadle** Sara McKlin Linda Morgan** Natalie Pierce Kathleen Poe Ross Noelle Ross Camilla Springfield** Nancy York*
ALTO 2
Nancy Adams* Angelica BlackmanKeim Elizabeth Borland Emily Boyer Marcia Chandler* Carol Comstock Meaghan Curry Cynthia Goeltz DeBold** Michèle Diament* Alyssa Harris Joia Johnson Nicole Khoury* Lynda Martin
Lalla McGee Sharon Simons* Virginia Thompson* Cheryl Vanture Kiki Wilson** Diane Woodard** TENOR 1 Jeffrey Baxter** Christian Bigliani David Blalock** LaRue Bowman John Brandt** Daniel Cameron* Daniel Compton Justin Cornelius Joseph Cortes Clifford Edge** Steven Farrow** Leif Gilbert-Hansen* James Jarrell* Keith Langston* Christopher Patton* Stephen Reed # Jeremiah Robinson TENOR 2 Matthew Borkowski Steve Brailsford Charles Cottingham # Phillip Crumbly* Steven Dykes Joseph Few** Sean Fletcher John Harr Keith Jeffords** David Kinrade Michael Parker Timothy Parrott Marshall Peterson* Thomas Slusher Scott Stephens** BASS 1 Dock Anderson William Borland Russell Cason** Jeremy Christensen
Joshua Clark
Trey Clegg* Rick Cobb Michael Cranford Thomas Elston Jon Gunnemann* Jason Hamlet Noah Horton Nick Jones # Frank Kingsley Jameson Linville Peter MacKenzie Jason Maynard Jackson McCarthy John Newsome Hal Richards Peter Shirts John Terry Marshall Todd Edgie Wallace* BASS 2 Philip Barreca Marcel Benoit Jacob Blevins John Carter Joel Craft** Paul Fletcher Timothy Gunter* Thomas Hanrahan Philip Jones Tamir Mickens Michael Nedvidek Joel Rose John Ruff* Jonathan Smith* George Sustman Benjamin Temko* David Webster** Gregory Whitmire** Keith Wyatt*
* 20+ years of service ** 30+ years of service # Charter member (1970)
Norman Mackenzie director of choruses
The Frannie & Bill Graves Chair
Jeffrey Baxter choral administrator The Florence Kopleff Chair
Peter Marshall accompanist
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Concerts of Friday, October 14, 2022, 8:00pm Saturday, October 15, 2022, 8:00pm
NATHALIE STUTZMANN, conductor
NETIA JONES, video artist
JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833–1897)
Symphony No. 3 in F Major, Op. 90 (1883) 35 MINS
I. Allegro con brio II. Andante
III. Poco allegretto
IV. Finale: Allegro
CÉSAR FRANCK (1822–1890)
Le chasseur maudit (The Accursed Huntsman) (1882) 15 MINS
INTERMISSION 20 MINS
ARNOLD SCHOENBERG (1874–1951)
Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night), Op. 4 (1943 revision) 30 MINS
Film by Netia Jones / Lightmap
Friday’s concert is dedicated to RON & SUSAN ANTINORI in honor of their extraordinary support of the 2021/22 Annual Fund
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.
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Symphony No. 3
Symphony No. 3 is scored for two flutes (one doubling piccolo), two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, percussion and strings.
by Noel Morris Program Annotator
First ASO performance: March 31, 1951
Henry Sopkin, conductor
Most recent ASO performances: January 7–9, 2016
Afriend of Brahms described the composer as “equally lovable, cheerful, and deep.” But Brahms biographer Jan Swafford added, “with women, Brahms had a habit of straight-faced teasing that was often misinterpreted— especially by Clara, who generally missed the joke and waxed indignant.”
Ludovic Morlot, conductor
By “Clara,” Swafford meant Clara Schumann.
Brahms and Clara had shared a special bond since September of 1853 when he turned up on her doorstep. At the time, she was married to the famous composer and music critic Robert Schumann. Brahms was but a wide-eyed 20-yearold, but it was a three-way love fest. Robert became Brahms’s champion. Brahms became Robert’s disciple. And Clara, one of the greatest pianists alive, completed the circle. It was a synergy that burned with great energy until Robert suffered a breakdown the following February. After an attempted suicide, he was committed to an asylum, where he died two years later.
In the wake of these tragic events, Brahms became devoted to Clara and her seven children. There’s no evidence that they were lovers, but they did remain best friends for the rest of their lives. Clara became Brahms’s confidante and, in many cases, was the first person to see his compositions. Often, they played them together at the piano, which might explain the fact that he published two-piano versions of so many of his works, including the symphonies.
Brahms had had a fraught relationship with the symphony. Not long after he met the Schumanns, Robert published an editorial shouting to the world that Brahms would be the next great composer. He urged the younger composer to get to work on a symphony—comparable to writing a first novel—and Brahms froze. He made many aborted attempts over the years but did not issue his First Symphony until age forty-three—years after having established himself as a composer.
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Fast forward to May of 1883. Brahms celebrated his fiftieth birthday with a couple of friends, some cigars and plenty of wine. Soon after, he took his typical summer holiday away from Vienna. This time, he followed contralto Hermine Spies (a woman who inspired him to write numerous works) to the resort town of Wiesbaden, famous for its hot springs. Renting a cottage with a view of the Rhine River, the composer took brisk day hikes and enjoyed the local food. (Today, tourists can take a 3.5hour “Brahms Hike” through the forests and meadows around Wiesbaden.) Seated in an airy studio overlooking the river, Brahms wrote his Third Symphony.
From this point on, there is much conjecture about what happened that summer. We don’t know what transpired between the composer and his muse, Hermine, but we do know he remained a bachelor. As for the symphony, he was tight-lipped about it, leaving it to others to discover the personal and cultural references within.
The Third Symphony opens with three bold chords outlining the tones F, A-flat, F. This is a recurring figure in the piece. Scholars believe these notes to be an acronym for Brahms’s motto as a happy bachelor: Frei aber froh—free but happy. The motto is a nod to his old friend Joseph Joachim, who used to say Frei aber einsam—free but lonely. (Years before, Brahms and Schumann co-wrote a piece for Joachim called the F-A-E Sonata, along with Albert Dietrich.)
Making a connection to the Rhineland, Brahms pays homage to Robert Schumann, following those opening chords with a tune from Schumann’s Rhine Symphony (Rhenish). Brahms also honors Richard Wagner, who had died earlier that year. There are certain harmonies that bear a striking resemblance to the “Siren’s Chorus” from Wagner’s Tannhäuser. This doubles as a Rhine reference—one of the river’s most popular attractions is a 433-foot cliff known as the Lorelei. According to legend, a siren perches atop the Lorelei and lures sailors to their deaths.
Brahms’s Third Symphony was premiered in Vienna in December of 1883. The critics raved, and orchestras around Europe clamored to play it. The American premiere followed in October of 1884.
Le chasseur maudit (The Accursed Huntsman)
Le chasseur maudit is scored for piccolo, two flutes, two clarinets, four bassoons, four horns, four trumpets, three
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trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion and strings.
The German army humiliated the French in 1871. Yet, in the face of crippling war reparations and loss of territory, French culture blossomed. Just one month after the fall of Paris, composer Camille SaintSaëns and a singer named Romain Bussine laid plans for an historic concert series celebrating French music. In 1874, a legendary group of artists (Monet, Degas, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, and Berthe Morisot) launched the first Impressionist art exhibition. And in the 1880s, French culture produced some unforgettable works, including the Statue of Liberty, the Eiffel Tower, the Moulin Rouge, and the present piece by César Franck.
First ASO performance: December 15, 1966
José Iturbi, conductor
Most recent ASO performances: October 4–6, 2007
Robert Spano, conductor
The Belgian-born organist César Franck was one of the charter members of Saint-Saëns’ composer collective, the nationale de musique. Franck is remembered as a titanic figure in a glorious tradition of church music in Paris, yet most of his work is lost to the ether. In general, the music which roared from those gargantuan pipe organs was improvised. Thus, when writers comment on the fact that Franck was most active as a composer later in life, what they really mean is that this was the period when he wrote things down.
Franck based his symphonic poem The Accursed Huntsman on the then popular ballad “The Wild Huntsman” by Gottfried August Bürger. The piece was first performed in an 1883 concert of the Société nationale de musique. In Bürger’s poem, a member of the German nobility skips church to go hunting (“Sacrilège!”). In summary: The Wildgrave blows his horn. “To horse, to horse,” he cries. As he gallops ahead of his hunting party, exploding through bush and brier, a yonder steeple glows in the early morning light. It is Sunday, “God’s own hallowed day.” In the distance, a bell tolls, summoning “the sinful man to pray” as two horsemen join the chase—one urging the Wildgrave onward, the other pleading with him to abort the hunt and remove himself to church. “While joying o’er the wasted corn,” the huntsman rides roughshod, savaging herds, crops, and peasants, alike. Crashing through a hermit’s chapel,
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the huntsman proclaims, “Not God himself shall make me turn!” Suddenly, the huntsman’s hounds vanish; the wood goes dark. His horn refuses to sound, and demons rise up.
First ASO performances:
September 30–
October 2, 1993
Yoel Levi, conductor
Most recent ASO performances:
March 23–27, 2004
Roberto Abbado, conductor
High above, an awful voice hisses at him: “Be chased forever through the wood.” In an instant, the hunter becomes the hunted.
Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night), Op. 4
Verklärte Nacht is scored for strings.
In 1913, a Hamburg newspaper published a cartoon of a riot inside a concert hall—people ducking for cover, arms and legs flailing, fingers smashed into other people’s faces, and musicians wielding instruments as if they were Billy clubs. At the center of the mayhem stood Arnold Schoenberg conducting his own music.
Five years before, Schoenberg had broken from away from tonal conventions in music (a move that revolutionized the way composers thought about melody and harmony). Verklärte Nacht comes from a period just prior to that break. One might call it a farewell to Romanticism or perhaps the apotheosis of it.
Schoenberg grew up in a lower-middle-class Jewish neighborhood in Vienna. His parents were not musical, but he picked up the violin at age 8 and began a journey into music marked by scarcity and sheer invention.
He couldn’t afford to attend concerts but often heard military bands playing in the park. He couldn’t afford sheet music but managed to acquire a book of violin duets based on opera arias. With this music in his head, young Schoenberg started to compose. Later, he taught himself cello and joined an orchestra. There, he made friends with Alexander Zemlinsky. Just two years his senior, Zemlinsky gave Schoenberg counterpoint lessons and later arranged a performance of Schoenberg’s String Quartet in D.
In September of 1899, the composer took a vacation with the Zemlinskys (Alexander and his sister, Mathilde, who was an accomplished artist and future wife of the composer). They settled into the picturesque Alpine village of Payerbach at Semmering. There, over a three-week period, Schoenberg wrote a sextet inspired by a poem by Richard Dehmel. Following the
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FLORENCE HOMOLKA
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basic plot points of Dehmel’s verses, the composer created a tone poem in which a young couple walks together in the woods on a cold winter’s night. They are deeply in love. Standing under the trees, the woman works up the courage to make a confession: she carries another man’s baby. Terrified of losing the love of her life, she braces for his response. Tenderly, he takes her in his arms and tells her he will love the child as his own, transforming (transfiguring) this moonlit encounter into an ecstatic union of souls.
Schoenberg expanded his tone poem into a work for string orchestra in 1917 and made another revision in 1943 (heard in this concert). In 1912, the poet Richard Dehmel heard the piece in its original form and wrote to the composer: “Yesterday evening I heard your ‘Transfigured Night’, and I should consider it a sin of omission if I failed to say a word of thanks to you for your wonderful sextet. I had intended to follow the motives of my text in your composition, but I soon forgot to do so, I was so enthralled by the music.”
NETIA JONES, VIDEO ARTIST
Netia Jones is a British director/designer and video artist working internationally in opera, staged concerts, performance and installation, using video, film and projected media in all of her work. She is director of LIGHTMAP, a mixed media partnership with whom she has created video, film, installation and interactive media projects in the UK, US and Europe, from large-scale external projection mapping to multi-projector integrated film in opera performances.
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Concert of Sunday, October 16, 2022, 3:00pm
JERRY HOU, conductor DREAMBOX THEATRE
JESSICA ROSE ESPINOSA, Founder & Director
CITY SPRINGS THEATRE PRE-PRO COMPANY
JENNA GAMERL, Director of Education
COBB COUNTY SCHOOLS
TANYA TURNER, Visual Arts Teacher
MODEST MUSSORGSKY (1839–1881) (arr. Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov)
Excerpt from Night on Bald Mountain EDVARD GRIEG (1843–1907)
“In the Hall of the Mountain King” from Peer Gynt JOHN WILLIAMS (b. 1932)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone: Children’s Suite for Orchestra
I. Hedwig’s Flight
IV. Nimbus 2000
VI. Quidditch
IX. Harry’s Wondrous World
IGOR STRAVINSKY (1882–1971)
Firebird Suite (1919)
III. Infernal Dance
IV. Berceuse
V. Finale
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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JERRY HOU, CONDUCTOR
ecognized for his dynamic presence, insightful interpretations, versatility and commanding technique, Taiwanese-American conductor Jerry Hou serves as the Associate Conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra. He has conducted the Dallas Symphony, Houston Symphony, St. Louis Symphony, Grand Teton Music Festival Orchestra, Orchestra of St. Luke’s, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, National Arts Centre Orchestra, Teatro Colon, Rochester Philharmonic and San Antonio Symphony, among others.
DREAMBOX THEATRE
DreamBox is an educational theatre company that works with school communities to provide quality theatre integrated programming both in-school and after-school. DreamBox aims to invite creative expression for students and educators alike to dream, learn, and grow.
DreamBox Theatre’s comprehensive programs range from exploring musical theatre, to puppetry, to playwriting. We work within the common core curricular framework to use drama to promote literacy, interpersonal skills, team-building and selfefficacy in students.
DreamBox’s Education programs model educational theatre techniques and make them accessible in a practical manner that helps educators to grow in their practice. The residencies are uniquely crafted after meeting with administrators and teachers and targeting specific areas that students need extra support in.
JESSICA ROSE ESPINOSA, Founder & Director
Jessica Rosa Espinoza is an arts integration specialist and author/playwright. With experience teaching K-12 in both the general classroom and the fine arts, Espinoza partners with both national and international organizations facilitating arts integration and STEAM learning. She has led and designed professional learning for school districts and arts organizations, including various programs at the Woodruff Art Center. She is the Fine Arts Professional Learning Specialist for Cobb County schools and is an Ed.D candidate researching curriculum and instruction in arts integration. Espinoza intersects her creative energy as an artist with her classroom experiences and loves illuminating this for fellow educators and school communities
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CITY SPRINGS THEATRE PRE-PRO COMPANY
City Springs Theatre Pre-Pro Company provides students with rigorous, weekly training to prepare them for a career in the arts and beyond. She loves helping students discover their artistic passions and dreams as they find their voice in life.
JENNA GAMERL, Director of Education
Originally from Pennsylvania, Jenna Gamerl, received her BFA in dance education and musical theatre from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Gamerl joined the national tour of Sesame Street Live, performing the role of Ernie and Live Dancer for two seasons. She then became the performance director for two domestic and international tours of Sesame Street/USO Experience for military families. Jenna served as the assistant stage manager for City Springs Theatre Company as well as a performer for various companies throughout Atlanta. She is also the Director of Education for The City Springs Theatre Pre-Pro Company.
COBB COUNTY SCHOOLS
TANYA TURNER, Visual Arts Teacher
Tanya Turner has taught Visual Art at Harrison High School since 2018 and has taught in Cobb County for nearly 10 years. Turner is an oil painter and enjoys making artwork with a nostalgic twist. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Art Education from the University of North Georgia in Dahlonega in 2012 and has enjoyed supporting artistic students ever since. This program features artwork from the following Cobb County students:
Denver Johnson
Avery Strum
Lily Gersch
Ava Langelotti
Jordan Childers
Cindy Chen
Nicole Vickery
Leonardo Bogazzi Luisa Longo Alaina Huber
Dani Durio
Kathleen Lankford Taylor Hart
Alicia Regier Thomas Harper Isabel Norris Zaynah Little Krystian Jensen Jackson Fotopoulos Mia López
Kayla Boazman
Finn Callahan Ella Andrade Venus Kirkland Anneliese Hildoer Aidan Irick
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ASO | SUPPORT
The Atlanta 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+
$100,000+
1180 Peachtree
The Antinori Foundation
The Molly Blank Fund of The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation∞
Barney M. Franklin & Hugh W. Burke Charitable Fund
$75,000+
Alston & Bird LLP
$50,000+
Accenture LLP
The John & Rosemary Brown Family Foundation
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Advised Fund
$35,000+
BlackRock, Inc.
City of Atlanta
Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
Sally & Larry Davis
The Roy & Janet Dorsey Foundation
$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
Sally & Larry Davis
Mr. Richard H. Delay &
A Friend of the Symphony∞
The Coca-Cola Company
Sheila L. & Jonathan J. Davies Delta Air Lines
Lettie Pate Evans Foundation Georgia Power Company
The Home Depot Foundation Invesco QQQ
Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation PNC
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Foundation
Ms. Lynn Eden
Ms. Angela L. Evans∞
The Gable Foundation
Georgia Council for the Arts
EY, Partners & Employees
Fulton County Arts & Culture
Donna Lee & Howard Ehni National Endowment for the Arts
John R. Paddock, Ph.D. & Karen M. Schwartz, Ph.D.
Dr. Francine D. Dykes∞
Betty Sands Fuller
John D. Fuller∞
Dick & Anne Game° Jeannette Guarner, MD & Carlos del Rio, MD
Bonnie & Jay Harris
League of American Orchestras The Marcus Foundation, Inc.∞ Massey Charitable Trust John & Linda Matthews Moore Colson, CPAs & Bert & Carmen Mills
Abraham J. & Phyllis Katz Foundation∞
Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc. Amy W. Norman Charitable Foundation
Ann Marie & John B. White, Jr.°∞
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
Slumgullion Charitable Fund Kathy Waller & Kenneth Goggins
Graphic Packaging International, Inc.
The Graves Foundation Gary Lee, Jr.
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 WarnerMedia Mrs. Sue S. Williams
46 | encore aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony
$17,500+
Mr. Keith Adams & Ms. Kerry Heyward° John & Juliet Allan
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Bailey
Benjamin Q. Brunt Wright & Alison Caughman
Russell Currey & Amy Durrell
Mr. & Mrs. Erroll B. Davis, Jr. Cari K. Dawson & John M. Sparrow
Mr. Max M. Gilstrap∞
Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Harrison
The Hertz Family Foundation, Inc. Azira G. Hill
James H. Landon
The Ray M. & Mary Elizabeth Lee Foundation, Inc.
Mr. & Dr. Kevin Lyman
Ms. Deborah A. Marlowe & Dr. Clint Lawrence
Anne Morgan & Jim Kelley
Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP 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
The Mark & Evelyn Trammell Foundation
Ms. Sheila Tschinkel
$15,000+
Phyllis Abramson, Ph. D. Madeline* & Howell E. Adams, Jr.
Mr. David Boatwright
Ms. Liza V. Chang
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Clare° The Jim Cox, Jr. Foundation Eleanor & Charles Edmondson
Fifth Third Bank
Mr. Craig M. Frankel & Mrs. Jana A. Eplan Florencia y Rodrigo Garcia-Escudero
Sally & Walter George 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 John & Ray Uttenhove 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. CBF Foundation
CBRE
Colliers International Peter & Vivian de Kok Donald & Barbara Defoe° Marcia & John Donnell Ms. Diane Durgin Eversheds Sutherland
Dr. & Mrs. Leroy Fass
The Robert Hall Gunn, Jr., Fund
Deedee & Marc Hamburger° Clay & Jane Jackson
JBS Foundation
Ann A. & Ben F. Johnson III James Kieffer
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Knight
The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation
Pat & Nolan Leake
Meghan & Clarke Magruder Mr. Nicholas Marrone Belinda & Gino Massafra
The Monasse Family Foundation∞
Moore, Colson & Company, P.C. Mr. & Mrs. James F. Nellis , Jr.
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.
°We are grateful to these donors for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers.
*Deceased
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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.
ASO | SUPPORT (cont.)
$7,500+
Jack & Helga Beam∞
Karen & Rod Bunn
Patricia & William Buss∞
Lisa & Russ Butner 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 Mrs. Frank L. Wilson, Jr.
Mr. David J. Worley & Ms. Bernadette Drankoski
$5,000+
A Friend of the Symphony 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
Jane & Gregory Blount
Dr. & Mrs. Jerome B. Blumenthal
Mrs. Sidney W. Boozer Mrs. Cristina Briboneria Margo Brinton & Eldon Park
Jacqueline A. & Joseph E. Brown, Jr.
Mrs. 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 Mary* & Charles Ginden Mr. & Mrs. Richard Goodsell∞
Melanie & Tucker Green William Randolph Hearst Foundations
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. 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 Carolyn C. Thorsen∞
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
Carol Brantley & David Webster
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Chorba
Jean & Jerry Cooper
The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc. Phil & Lisa Hartley
John* & Martha Head 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 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
$2,000+
A Friend of the Symphony (3) 2492 Fund
Dr. Marshall & Stephanie Abes
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aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony
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
Mr. Jay & Dr. Martin Beard-Coles
Susan & Jack Bertram Shirley Blaine
Leon & Joy Borchers
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Bower° Martha S. Brewer
Harriet Evans Brock Dr. Aubrey Bush & Dr. Carol Bush
Ms. Elizabeth W. Camp
Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Canipe Mrs. Betty Case
Julie & Jerry Chautin
Mr. James Cobb Susan S. Cofer
Malcolm & Ann Cole
Mr. & Mrs. R. Barksdale Collins°
Ned Cone & Nadeen Green Mrs. Nancy Cooke R. Carter & Marjorie A. Crittenden Foundation
Dr. & Mrs. F. Thomas Daly, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Dancu Mary & Mahlon Delong
Mr. & Mrs. Graham Dorian Gregory & Debra Durden
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Edge
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
Mr. Nathan Gaby
Mr. & Mrs. Sebastien Galtier
°We are grateful to
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 Dona & Bill Humphreys Barbara M. Hund 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
Wolfgang* & Mariana Laufer
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Lavallee, Sr. Lillian Balentine Law
Mr. & Mrs. Chris Le Grace & Josh Lembeck
Mr. & Mrs. Ari Levine° Elizabeth J. Levine
Mr. & Mrs. J. David Lifsey 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
The Piedmont National Family Foundation John H. Rains Mrs. Susan H. Reinach Sharon & David Schachter° Mrs. Dianna A. Scherer Drs. Bess Schoen & Andrew Muir Nick & Annie Shreiber Helga Hazelrig Siegel
Diana Silverman
Mr. Matthew Sitler
The Alex & Betty Smith Donor-Advised Endowment Fund
Dr. & Mrs. Gerald M. 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 Partnership and Appassionato Leadership 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
Deedee Hamburger
Judy Hellriegel
Kristen Fowks
Nancy Janet
Belinda Massafra
Sally Parsonson
June Scott
Milt Shlapak
Sheila Tschinkel
Jonne Walter
Marcia Watt
for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers. *Deceased
encoreatlanta.com | 49
these donors
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 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
John R. Donnell Dixon W. Driggs* Pamela Johnson Drummond
Mrs. Kathryn E. Duggleby Catherine Warren Dukehart* Ms. Diane Durgin
Mr. Richard H. Delay & Dr. Francine D. Dykes 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. 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. Stephen L. Naman
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
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
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
aso.org | @AtlantaSymphony | facebook.com/AtlantaSymphony | encore50
*Deceased
CONCERTS
OUTI TARKIAINEN: Midnight Sun Variations RACHMANINOV: Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini CHOPIN/Stravinsky: Nocturne and Grand Waltz
SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 5 John Storgårds, conductor Inon Barnatan, piano
Programs and artists are subject to change. Season presented by
SIBELIUS: The Oceanides KORNGOLD: Violin Concerto JENNIFER HIGDON: Concerto for Orchestra Hannu Lintu, conductor Gil Shaham, violin
UPCOMING
EXECUTIVE
Jennifer Barlament executive director
Alvinetta Cooksey executive & finance assistant
Elise Kolle executive assistant to senior management
ARTISTIC
Gaetan Le Divelec vice president, artistic planning
Jeffrey Baxter choral administrator
Bob Scarr archivist & special projects coordinator
RaSheed Lemon aso artist liaison
EDUCATION & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Sarah Grant director of education
Ryan Walks talent development program manager
Elena Gagon coordinator of education & community engagement
OPERATIONS
Sameed Afghani vice president & general manager
Tyler Benware director of orchestra operations & asyo
Elizabeth Graiser manager of operations & asyo Victoria Moore director of orchestra personnel
Hsing-I Ho, manager of orchestra personnel
Paul Barrett
senior production stage manager
Richard Carvlin stage manager
Holly Matthews, assistant principal librarian
Hannah Davis, assistant librarian
MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Tammy Hawk vice president, marketing & communications
Delle Beganie content & production manager
Leah Branstetter director of digital content 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 publications
Bob Scarr archivist & research coordinator Madisyn Willis marketing manager
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
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
Joshua Reynolds event manager, 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 senior director of financial planning & analysis
Brandi Hoyos director of diversity, equity & inclusion
April Satterfield controller Brandi Reed staff accountant
DEVELOPMENT
Grace Sipusic vice president of development
Cheri Snyder senior director of development
William Keene director of annual giving
James Paulk annual giving officer
Renee Contreras associate director, development communications
Dana Parness manager of individual giving and prospect research
Catherine MacGregor assistant manager of donor engagement
Robert Cushing development associate, major gifts
Sarah Wilson development operations associate
ASO | STAFF | encore52
ASO
& GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
Major support is provided by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.
Major funding is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners.
This program is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.
| CORPORATE
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 Peachtree
ACT Foundation, Inc.
Alston & Bird
The Antinori Foundation
Atlantic Station
John Auerbach Sandra & Dan Baldwin BlackRock
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
The Estate of Mr. Hugh W. Burke
Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc.
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs Melinda & Brian Corbett
Georgia-Pacific
Google
Graphic Packaging
The Henry Luce Foundation, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Hilton H. Howell, Jr.
The Estate of Sara & Fred A. Hoyt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Grien
Louise S. Sams and Jerome Grilhot
The Imlay Foundation, Inc.
Institute of Museum & Library Services
Jones Day Foundation & Employees
Kaiser Permanente King & Spalding , Partners & Employees
The Marcus Foundation, Inc. John W. Markham III* 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 Sartain Lanier Family Foundation Sheila L. and Jonathan J. Davies
The Shubert Foundation Carol & Ramon Tomé Family Fund
The Estate of Mrs. Mary F Trembath
Mr.* & Mrs. Edith H. Warren, Jr. Dr. Joan H. Weens
Rod Westmoreland
Anne Marie & John B. White, Jr. wish Foundation
The David, Helen & Marian Woodward Fund
*notates deceased
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