Encore Atlanta March 2010 ASO

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LANG LANG

March 2010


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contents march 2010

photo courtesy of Telarc

12

features

aso departments

12 ‘The Pianist’s Pianist of Generation X’

8 ASO Leadership 10 Robert Spano 16 Musicians 29 Contributors 46 Administration 48 General Info 50 Ticket Info 52 Gallery ASO

High praise from The New Yorker and a soaring solo career haven’t affected Simone Dinnerstein.

the music 19 The concert’s program and notes

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A MEMORABLE EVENING, ACT TWO

“Atlanta’s Best Southern & Wait Staff” —The Sunday Paper A “Top Ten Atlanta Restaurant” —Jezebel

Just blocks from Woodruff Arts Center at 1144 Crescent Avenue Dinner served Monday-Thursday 5-10pm; Friday-Saturday 5-10:30pm; Sundays 5-10pm 404.873.7358 • fifthgroup.com Present your ticket stub and receive 10% off dinner (one per table).

publisher/sales Sherry Madigan White 404.459.4128

sherry.white@encoreatlanta.com account executive

editorial director/chief storyteller

Kristi Casey Sanders kristi@encoreatlanta.com art director

Jenny Schisler jenny@encoreatlanta.com production manager

Whitney Stubblefield whitney@encoreatlanta.com associate editor/storyteller Ashley Brazzel contributing writer

Margaret Shakespeare

Thomas Pickney 404.459.4127

thomas.pickney@encoreatlanta.com senior national accounts manager

Sandra Ourusoff 212.769.7079 ENCORE ATLANTA is published monthly by Atlanta Metropolitan Publishing Inc.

Tom Casey Diane Casey controller Suzzie Adams vice president, sales and marketing Evan Casey chief administrative officer Claudia Madigan president

chairperson

atlanta symphony orchestra

Rob Phipps Karl Schnittke program notes editor Ken Meltzer

director of publications publications editor

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ASOleadership atlanta Symphony Orchestra League 2009-2010 Board of Directors Officers Ben F. Johnson, III Chairman Clayton F. Jackson Treasurer

Jeff Mango Penny McPhee Chilton Davis Varner

Kathleen (Suzy) Wasserman ASA President* Joni Winston Secretary

Tycho Howle Tad Hutcheson Mrs. Roya Irvani Clayton F. Jackson Ben F. Johnson, III Marsha Sampson Johnson Mark Kistulinec Steve Koonin Michael Lang Donna A. Lee Lucy Lee Patrice Wright-Lewis Meghan H. Magruder Jeff Mango Darrell J. Mays

JoAnn McClinton Penelope McPhee Giorgio Medici Charles Moseley Galen Oelkers Victoria Palefsky Leslie Z. Petter Patricia Reid Margaret Conant Reiser Martin Richenhagen John D. Rogers Dennis Sadlowski William Schultz Tom Sherwood John Sibley Hamilton Smith

Thurmond Smithgall Gail R. Starr Mary Rose Taylor Liz Troy Ray Uttenhove Chilton Davis Varner Rick Walker Mark Wasserman Kathleen (Suzy) Wasserman* John B. White, Jr. Richard S. (Dick) White, Jr. Joni Winston Camille Yow

George Lanier Patricia Leake Mrs. William C. Lester Mrs. J. Erskine Love Carolyn C. McClatchey Bertil D. Nordin Dell P. Rearden Joyce Schwob

Mrs. Charles A. Smithgall, Jr. W. Rhett Tanner G. Kimbrough Taylor Michael W. Trapp Edus Warren Adair R. White Neil Williams

Directors Pinney L. Allen Joseph R. Bankoff * Jason A. Bernstein Paul Blackney C. Merrell Calhoun Donald P. Carson Philip Cave Ann W. Cramer Cari K. Dawson Richard A. Dorfman Carla Fackler Gary P. Fayard Dr. Robert Franklin Paul R. Garcia Willem-Jan O. Hattink Jim Henry

Board of counselors Howell E. Adams, Jr. Mrs. John Aderhold Robert M. Balentine Elinor Breman Dr. John W. Cooledge Bradley Currey, Jr. John Donnell Jere Drummond Arnoldo Fiedotin

Ruth Gershon Charles Ginden John T. Glover Frances B. Graves Dona Humphreys John S. Hunsinger Aaron J. Johnson Herb Karp Jim Kelley

Life Directors Mrs. Drew Fuller Mary D. Gellerstedt

Azira Hill Dr. James M. Hund

Arthur L. Montgomery

* ex officio

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Robert Spano music Director

A

tlanta Symphony Orchestra Music Director Robert Spano is recognized internationally as one of the most imaginative conductors of his generation. Since 2001, he has invigorated and expanded the ASO’s repertoire through a creative programming mix, recordings and visual enhancements, such as the Theater of a Concert — the continuing exploration of different formats, settings and enhancements for the musical performance experience. Mr. Spano also champions the Atlanta School of Composers, his commitment to nurturing and championing music through multi-year partnerships, defining a new generation of American composers. Mr. Spano has conducted the great orchestras of North America, including those in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia and San Francisco. Overseas, he has led the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala, Czech Philharmonic, Frankfurt Radio Sinfonie Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Scottish, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, New Japan Philharmonic and Tonhalle Orchester. He has conducted the Chicago, Houston, Santa Fe, Royal Opera at Covent Garden and Welsh National Operas. In August 2005, he conducted Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen at Seattle Opera, and returned for the cycle in August 2009. With a discography of 12 critically acclaimed recordings for Telarc and Deutsche Grammophon made over six years, Robert Spano has garnered six Grammy Awards. Musical America’s 2008 Conductor of the Year, Mr. Spano was artistic director of the Ojai Festival in 2006, director of the Festival of Contemporary Music at the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Tanglewood Music Center in 2003 and 2004, and from 1996 to 2004 was music director of the Brooklyn Philharmonic. Head of the Conducting Fellowship Program at Tanglewood Music Center from 1998-2002, he has served on the faculties of Bowling Green State University, Curtis Institute and Oberlin Conservatory. Mr. Spano lives in Atlanta.

10 EncoreAtlanta.COM


dinner & a concert with the asO Looking for a great night out? Enjoy dinner prior to performances by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and save on concert tickets and dining! Make your plans now.

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Contact Russell Wheeler 404.733.4807 • russell.wheeler@woodruffcenter.org For complete Dinner and a Concert details please visit www.atlantasymphony.org/dinnerandconcert


‘The pianist’s pianist of Generation X’ I High praise from The New Yorker and a soaring solo career haven’t affected Simone Dinnerstein, who remains true to her roots and her Brooklyn neighborhood. She performs the Bach Concerto in D minor in her Symphony Hall debut the first of April.

t’s a winter Sunday afternoon in a

Brooklyn neighborhood. The standing

room only crowd of children and parents

gathered in the auditorium at Public School 321 hushes as Simone Dinnerstein, her shiny long hair swinging, takes center stage next to the grand piano.

photo courtesy of Telarc

by Margaret Shakespeare

12 EncoreAtlanta.COM


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Atlanta Symphony Associates’ 40th Annual

Decorators’ Show House &Gardens April 17 – May 9, 2010

Monday – Saturday, 10 am- 3:30 pm • Sunday, 12 pm-4:30 pm Thursday extended hours until 7:30 pm

Tickets: $20 through April 16; $25 thereafter. Woodruff Arts Center Box Office or call 404-733-5000. Opening Night Party Friday, April 16, 2010

www.decoratorsshowhouse.org Proceeds benefit the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s Learning Community

30


Dinnerstein is the founder of the P.S. 321 Neighborhood Concerts, which feature musicians she has admired and collaborated with during her career. The series is open to the public and raises funds for the school’s Parent Teacher Association. The musicians performing donate their time and talent to the program.

Short story: Not that many years ago she attended this school, where her mother taught, and where, now, her son is a third-grader and her husband teaches. It’s her growing-up neighborhood and her grown-up neighborhood. A home she never really left.

“The sound of the piano, as soon as I experienced it,

Dinnerstein thanks the community for their participation in this concert, and puts everyone at ease by talking about the music, all short pieces — some old and some new — and by asking those who must leave early to do so after a piece is over. She introduces her fellow musicians — the American Contemporary Music Ensemble (ACME). She asks the composers — Jefferson Friedman and Phil Kline — “was that really a chorale and avant garde rock we heard in your piece, and what inspires you, anyway?” She fields questions from the audience. Oh, and she plays Dvorak and Bach with a flawless technique and fresh infusion of warmth and lucidity that rise from her own personality.

felt more natural than words in

But, there is a longer story, and she meets me to tell it a few days later at Sweet Melissa Patisserie, a neighborhood café full of moms waiting to fetch their kids after school.

expressing myself.

How did Dinnerstein, who appears with major orchestras such as the New York Philharmonic and on stages at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Vienna’s Konzerthaus, and who will be playing Bach in her Atlanta Symphony Orchestra debut (Thursday and Saturday, April 1 and 3) with conductor Kristjan Järvi, find her way to PS 321?

14 EncoreAtlanta.COM

“I have known I wanted this career since I was seven, when I started playing. The sound of the piano, as soon as I experienced it, felt more natural than words in expressing myself. Back then, I had a very romantic idea of how my life could be as a solo performer — traveling, playing with great orchestras, in great concert halls. Also, I watched my father, who is an artist, and how his life was. I was concerned about how it would affect me in my personal life as a woman.” At 15, she met the man who would become her husband. “I’ve always known what I wanted,” she says with a mixture of girlish laughter and underlying confidence. “And we married when I was 20.” At 16, she entered the Juilliard School, taking a break before graduating to study in London with Maria Curcio, a teaching disciple of Artur Schnabel whose musical lineage goes directly back to Beethoven. Continued on page 38


REGISTER TO WIN! Log onto EncoreAtlanta.com now for details and register to win tickets to these amazing performances!

CONTESTS South Pacific at the Fox Theatre Enter by March 26, 2010 Atlanta Opera's The Magic Flute at Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Enter by April 1, 2010 Tyler Perry's Madea's Big Happy Family at the Fox Theatre Enter by April 1, 2010 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's production of Verdi's Requiem Enter by April 5, 2010 Mary Poppins at the Fox Theatre Enter by April 15, 2010 Little House on the Prairie at the Fox Theatre Enter by June 1, 2010 Phantom of the Opera at the Fox Theatre Enter by June 10, 2010

AtlAntA Symphony orcheStrA

robert SpAno, muSic Director

DonAlD runnicleS, principAl gueSt conDuctor

roberto AbbADo

Guest ConduCtor February 11/13 & 18/19/20

FebrUary 27, march 2,5,7(m), 2O1O FebruAry 2010

February 2010 FoxTheatre.org EncoreAtlanta.com

Feb. 24 - March 21, 2010 **#: *= 38* - Zurich General Director

Read about Atlanta's performing arts every month in Encore Atlanta.


atlanta Symphony Orchestra Robert Spano, Music Director, The Robert Reid Topping Chair * Donald Runnicles, Principal Guest Conductor, The Neil and Sue Williams Chair *

FIRST VIOLIN VIOLA William Pu Reid Harris Associate/Acting Concertmaster Principal

BASS Ralph Jones

The Charles McKenzie Taylor Chair*

The Edus H. and Harriet H. Warren Chair*

Principal The Marcia and John Donnell Chair  *

Justin Bruns

Paul Murphy

Gloria Jones

Assistant Concertmaster The Mary and Cherry Emerson Chair

Associate Principal The Mary and Lawrence Gellerstedt Chair *

Jun-Ching Lin

Catherine Lynn

Carolyn Toll Hancock

Wesley Collins Robert Jones Marian Kent Yang-Yoon Kim Lachlan McBane Heidi Nitchie Ardath Weck

Assistant Concertmaster The AGL Resources Chair

Martha Reaves Head John Meisner Alice Anderson Oglesby Lorentz Ottzen Christopher Pulgram Carol Ramirez Juan Ramirez Olga Shpitko Denise Berginson Smith Kenn Wagner Lisa Wiedman Yancich SECOND VIOLIN David Arenz

Assistant Principal

Paul Brittan

The Georgia Power Foundation Chair

Carl David Hall PICCOLO Carl David Hall OBOE Elizabeth Koch

Principal The George M. and Corrie Hoyt Brown Chair *

ENGLISH HORN Patrick McFarland

Associate Principal The Livingston Foundation Chair

Assistant Principal Emeritus

Eleanor Arenz Sharon Berenson David Braitberg Noriko Konno Clift Judith Cox David Dillard Raymond Leung Ruth Ann Little Thomas O’Donnell Ronda Respess Sanford Salzinger Frank Walton

Joseph Conyers Michael Kenady Michael Kurth Douglas Sommer Thomas Thoreson

Associate Principal

Daniel Laufer

Principal The Miriam and John Conant Chair*

Sou-Chun Su

Assistant Principal

Assistant Principal Emeritus

Robert Cronin

Yvonne Powers Peterson Associate Principal Deborah Workman Patrick McFarland

Karen Freer

Jay Christy

Jane Little

Principal The Jill Hertz Chair *

CELLO Christopher Rex

Principal The Atlanta Symphony Associates Chair* Associate Principal The Frances Cheney Boggs Chair*

Associate Principal

FLUTE Christina Smith

Assistant Principal

Dona Vellek Klein Joel Dallow Jere Flint Larry LeMaster Brad Ritchie Paul Warner

16 EncoreAtlanta.com


Jere Flint, S taff Conductor; Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra The Zeist Foundation Chair *

Norman Mackenzie, Director of Choruses, The Frannie and Bill Graves Chair

CLARINET Laura Ardan

Principal The Robert Shaw Chair*

HORN Brice Andrus

Ted Gurch

Principal The Sandra and John Glover Chair

William Rappaport

Associate Principal

Associate Principal

Susan Welty

Alcides Rodriguez

Thomas Witte Richard Deane

E-FLAT CLARINET Ted Gurch

Bruce Kenney

The Alcatel-Lucent Chair

BASS CLARINET Alcides Rodriguez BASSOON Carl Nitchie

Principal The Walter L. “Buz” Carr, III Chair

Elizabeth Burkhardt

The UPS Community Service Chair

TRUMPET Thomas Hooten

Principal The Madeline and Howell Adams Chair*

Joseph Walthall

Juan de Gomar

Stephen Wilson

CONTRABASSOON Juan de Gomar

William Wilder

Assistant Principal

PERCUSSION Thomas Sherwood Principal The Julie and Arthur Montgomery Chair*

William Wilder Assistant Principal

William A. Schwartz Chair*

Charles Settle

Principal The Delta Air Lines Chair

KEYBOARD

The Hugh and Jessie Hodgson Memorial Chair*

Peter Marshall † Beverly Gilbert † Sharon Berenson LIBRARY Rebecca Beavers Principal

Steven Sherrill Assistant

John Wildermuth

Michael Tiscione TROMBONE Colin Williams

The Pricewaterhouse ­Coopers Chair

Principal The Walter H. Bunzl Chair*

HARP Elisabeth Remy Johnson

The SunTrust Bank Chair

Laura Najarian

Associate Principal

TIMPANI Mark Yancich

Principal The Wachovia Chair Associate Principal The Patsy and Jere Drummond Chair

Bill Thomas George Curran BASS TROMBONE George Curran TUBA Michael Moore

Principal The Georgia-Pacific Chair

* Chair named in perpetuity † Regularly engaged musician Players in string sections are listed alphabetically.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 17


Directed By Andy Meeks

February 19 - March 21, 2010 Fridays and Saturdays @ 8pm, Sundays @ 7pm presents

1996 Tony Award Winner

t www.kudzuplayhouse.org


ASOprogram Atlanta Symphony Orchestra A founding member of the Robert W. Woodruff Arts Center Robert Spano, Music Director Donald Runnicles, Principal Guest Conductor

SPECIAL PRESENTATION Wednesday, March 17, 2010, at 8 p.m.

robert spano, Conductor lang lang, Piano

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)

Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Opus 64 (1888) I. Andante; Allegro con anima

II. Andante cantabile, con alcuna licenza III. Valse. Allegro moderato IV. Finale. Andante maestoso; Allegro vivace

INTERMISSION

Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849) Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Opus 21 (1829-30) I. Maestoso II. Larghetto III. Allegro vivace Lang Lang, Piano

The use of cameras or recording devices during the concert is strictly prohibited.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 19


Atlanta Symphony Orchestra sponsors

is proud to sponsor the Delta Classical Series of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. Delta’s commitment to the communities we serve began the day our first flight took off. After almost 80 years, Delta’s community spirit worldwide continues to be a cornerstone of our organization. As a force for global good, our mission is to continuously create value through an inclusive culture by leveraging partnerships and serving communities where we live and work. It includes not only valuing individual differences of race, religion, gender, nationality and lifestyle, but also managing and valuing the diversity of work teams, intracompany teams and business partnerships. Delta is an active, giving corporate citizen in the communities it serves. Delta’s community engagement efforts are driven by our desire to build long-term partnerships in a way that enables nonprofits to utilize many aspects of Delta's currency – our employees time and talent, our free and discounted air travel, as well as our surplus donations. Together, we believe we can take our worldwide communities to new heights!

Major funding for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners under the guidance of the Fulton County Arts Council. Solo pianos used by the ASO are gifts of the Atlanta Steinway Society and in memory of David Goldwasser. The Hamburg Steinway piano is a gift received by the ASO in honor of Rosi Fiedotin. The Yamaha custom six-quarter tuba is a gift received by the ASO in honor of Principal Tuba player Michael Moore from The Antinori Foundation. This performance is being recorded for broadcast at a later time. ASO concert broadcasts are heard each week on Atlanta’s WABE FM-90.1 and Georgia Public Broadcasting’s statewide network. The ASO records for Telarc. Other ASO recordings are available on the Argo, Deutsche Grammophon, New World, Nonesuch, Philips and Sony Classical labels. Four Seasons Hotel Atlanta is the preferred hotel of the ASO. Trucks provided by Ryder Truck Rental Inc. Media sponsors: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and WSB 750 AM.

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ASOprogram Notes on the Program By Ken Meltzer Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Opus 64 (1888) Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Kamsko-Votkinsk, Russia, on May 7, 1840, and died in St. Petersburg, Russia, on November 6, 1893. The first performance of the Symphony No. 5 took place in St. Petersburg on November 17, 1888, with the composer conducting. The Symphony No. 5 is scored for piccolo, three flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani and strings. Approximate performance time is forty-seven minutes.

“I shall without fail compose a symphony”

I

n the spring of 1888, after a highly successful three-month conducting tour of Western Europe, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky returned to Russia. Tchaikovsky was determined to focus his attentions on composing. As he wrote to his brother, Modest: “first this summer I shall without fail compose a symphony.” A decade had elapsed since the completion of Tchaikovsky’s last numbered Symphony, the Fourth (In 1885, he composed a programmatic Symphony, based on Lord Byron’s Manfred). Tchaikovsky reviewed the Symphony No. 4 and, pleased with that work, embarked upon the creation of his Fifth. Tchaikovsky composed his Symphony No. 5 during the summer of 1885. In June, he wrote to his benefactress, Nadezhda von Meck: Now I shall work my hardest. I am exceedingly anxious to prove to myself, as to others, that I am not played out as a composer … Have I told you that I intend to write a symphony? The beginning was difficult; but now inspiration seems to have come. However, we shall see. During this period, Tchaikovsky also worked on a “Fantasy-0verture,” based upon William Shakespeare’s Hamlet.Tchaikovsky completed his Fifth Symphony on August 26. He put the finishing touches on the Hamlet “Fantasy-Overture” on October 19.

“I like it far better now” Tchaikovsky conducted the premiere of his Symphony No. 5 in St. Petersburg on November 17, 1888. In many ways, it was a grand triumph for the composer. At the concert, the orchestra saluted Tchaikovsky with a triple fanfare. He also received an honorary membership in the St. Petersburg Society. The audience greeted the new work with a rousing ovation. However, the critics were far less enthusiastic about the Fifth Symphony. Tchaikovsky, who frequently battled the demons of self-doubt, soon wrote to von Meck: Having played my Symphony twice in Petersburg and once in Prague, I have come to the conclusion that it is a failure. There is something repellent in it, some overAtlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 21


exaggerated color, some insincerity of fabrication which the public instinctively recognizes. It was clear to me that the applause and ovations referred not to this but to other works of mine, and that the Symphony itself will never please the public. All this causes deep dissatisfaction with myself … Yesterday evening I looked through the Fourth Symphony … How much better and superior it is! However, in the early part of 1889, Tchaikovsky conducted the Fifth Symphony in Hamburg, Germany. The work earned the praises of the orchestra musicians, as well as the great German composer, Johannes Brahms. This reception seemed to buoy Tchaikovsky’s spirits. He wrote to his nephew, Vladimir Davïdov: “The Fifth Symphony was magnificently played and I like it far better now, after having held a bad opinion of it for some time.”

The Tchaikovsky Fifth: A “Fate” Symphony? By Tchaikovsky’s own admission, both the Fourth and his final Symphony, the Sixth, feature programmatic elements. Tchaikovsky completed his Fourth Symphony in the wake of his brief and disastrous marriage to Antonína Milyukova. As Tchaikovsky confessed to Nadezhda von Meck, the Fourth Symphony portrays the confrontation with: Fate, that inexorable force that prevents our aspirations to happiness from reaching their goal, that jealously ensures our well-being and peace are not unclouded, that hangs over our heads like the sword of Damocles, that with steadfast persistence poisons our souls. It is invincible, you will never master it. One can only resign oneself to fruitless sorrow. Tchaikovsky composed his Symphony No. 6 (“Pathétique”) in 1893. As he confided to Davïdov: Whilst I was on my travels I had an idea for another symphony, a programme symphony this time; but the programme will be left as an enigma — let people guess it for themselves. This programme is so intensely personal that as I was mentally composing it on my travels I frequently wept copiously. Tchaikovsky’s “Pathétique” Symphony concludes in heartbreaking fashion with a slow-tempo finale that, after a bitter struggle, finally resolves to silence. Tchaikovsky conducted the world premiere of his “Pathétique” Symphony on October 28, 1893. Nine days later, the composer was dead at the age of 53. Tchaikovsky insisted that his Fifth Symphony did not contain a program. However, the progression of the Symphony No. 5 — with its presentation, frequent reappearance, and dramatic metamorphosis of a central leitmotif — certainly seems to hint at some extra-musical significance. That notion is supported by the following words, located among Tchaikovsky’s sketches for the Fifth Symphony: Intr(oduction). Total submission before Fate — or, what is the same thing, the inscrutable design of Providence. Allegro. I. Murmurs, doubts, laments, reproaches against … XXX.

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ASOprogram 2. Shall I cast myself into the embrace of faith? A wonderful programme, if only it can be fulfilled. If it is true that Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 portrays a struggle with Fate, the outcome seems far more positive than that depicted in the Fourth. But such considerations, ultimately, are secondary to the glorious music of this gripping and unforgettable symphonic journey.

Musical Analysis I. Andante; Allegro con anima — The Symphony opens with a slow introduction (Andante). The clarinets present an ominous theme. This theme will appear as the central leitmotif in each of the Symphony’s four movements. The theme soon becomes the basis for the opening melody (played by a solo clarinet and bassoon) of the ensuing Allegro con anima. The melody builds in intensity, until it receives a fff proclamation by the orchestra. The violins then introduce a more reflective theme, played molto espressivo. A cheerful dialogue between strings and chirping winds (Un pochettino più anima) leads to a yearning melody (Molto più tranquillo), played by the violins. This melody and the preceding theme build to a climax, as the exposition reaches its dynamic conclusion. After a tempestuous development of the central themes, a solo bassoon inaugurates the recapitulation. The first theme of the Allegro dominates a fiery coda that finally resolves to a ppp close. II. Andante cantabile, con alcuna licenza — After a hushed introduction by the strings, the solo horn plays the radiant principal melody, to which a clarinet soon provides obbligato accompaniment. A solo oboe then introduces the lovely second theme of this slow movement. The strings repeat the two themes in sequence, as the mood becomes ever more passionate. A solo clarinet launches a central episode that proceeds inexorably to a powerful reappearance of the Symphony’s leitmotif. This leads to a varied restatement of the Andante’s two principal melodies, interrupted again by the leitmotif, now in an even more savage guise. Calm is restored in the final measures with the strings’ reprise of the second melody. III. Valse. Allegro moderato — The third-movement Waltz is in A—B—A form. The strings introduce the lilting, principal melody. A sprightly central section features spiccato strings and puckish winds. A reprise of the opening section ensues, followed by a coda in which the clarinets and bassoons utter a rather insinuating version of the central leitmotif. Six fortissimo chords bring the Waltz to an ebullient close. IV. Finale. Andante maestoso; Allegro vivace — The Finale opens with a slow introduction (Andante maestoso). Here, for the first time, the central leitmotif is transformed to the major key. A roll of the timpani heralds an agitated section (Allegro vivace) where the leitmotif again assumes a notable presence. Finally, after a dramatic pause, the leitmotif returns for the final time — now cast as a triumphal march (Moderato assai e molto maestoso). Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony concludes with a Presto coda, featuring the brass’s heroic version of the opening movement’s initial Allegro theme.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 23


Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Opus 21 (1829-30) Frédéric Chopin was born in Z˙elazowa Wola, Poland, on March 1, 1810, and died in Paris, France, on October 17, 1849. The first performance of the F-Minor Piano Concerto took place at the National Theater in Warsaw, Poland, on March 17, 1830, with the composer as soloist. In addition to the solo piano, the Concerto is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, trombone, timpani and strings. Approximate performance time is thirty-two minutes.

“I have met my ideal”

D

uring the period that Frédéric Chopin composed his F-minor Concerto, he was in the midst of an infatuation. The young pianist and composer had fallen hopelessly in love with a fellow student at the Warsaw Conservatory, a soprano by the name of Constantia Gladkowska. For whatever reason, Chopin chose not to reveal his feelings to the young woman. Instead, Chopin poured his heart out to his dearest friend, Tytus Woyciechowski. In a letter of September 18, 1830, Chopin confessed: When I ponder myself, I am troubled to see how often I lose the notion of reality! While my eyes are struck by things that interest me a great deal, horses could walk over my body and I wouldn’t feel a thing. That’s almost what happened to me on Sunday. Struck by an unexpected look at church (from Constantia), just when I had fallen prey to an adorable torpor. I was so disturbed that I couldn’t say what happened during the ensuing quarter of an hour. In the street, I ran into Doctor Parys and, not knowing how to explain my distraction, I had to invent a dog which, having gotten under my feet, had made me lose my balance! In another letter to Woyciechowski, dated October 3, 1829, Chopin stated: Perhaps to my misfortune, I have met my ideal and have served her faithfully for six months, without speaking to her about my feelings. I dream about it: under her inspiration, the adagio (i.e., the slow movement, actually marked Larghetto) of my Concerto in F Minor and, this morning, the little waltz (Opus 70, No. 3 in D-flat) that I’m sending you, have been born. No one will know about it, except you.

“The Paganini of the piano” The premiere of Chopin’s Piano Concerto in F minor was featured at his Warsaw concert debut, which took place at the National Theater on March 17, 1830. As was typical of the time, Chopin did not perform the Concerto’s three movements in an uninterrupted sequence. Following an overture, Chopin played the Concerto’s opening movement. Then, a musician by the name of Görner played a piece for hunting horn. The first half of the concert ended with the Concerto’s final two movements. During the second half, Chopin offered a brilliant “Potpourri on Polish Airs.”

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ASOprogram The concert was a critical success. One writer, referring to the great Italian violinist, dubbed Chopin “the Paganini of the piano.” Another critic for a Warsaw paper enthused: The night before last represented a true thrill for all those who love the great art. Our compatriot, Mr. Chopin, demonstrated in his Concerto that he had the courage to disregard that weakness — so frequently found here — of imitating blindly those masters who, thanks to people who are supposed to determine our tastes … sit on the musical thrones of Europe … Though Chopin is still an adolescent, he follows the road to genius laid out by his predecessors, marching with virile fortitude to the temple of Euterpe … but treading a new path of his own. Chopin was able to offer a far more dispassionate analysis. Ten days after the concert, he wrote to Titus Woyciechowski: Well then, my first concert, although it was sold out and there was not a box or seat to be had three days beforehand, did not make on the general public the impression I thought it would. The first Allegro of my concerto, which relatively few could grasp, called forth applause, but it seems to me that people felt they had to show interest (“Ah, something new!”) and pretend to be connoisseurs. The Adagio and Rondo produced the greatest effects and exclamations of sincere admiration could be heard. But the Potpourri on Polish Airs did not in my opinion fully achieve its aim. They applauded because they felt they must show at the end that they had not been bored. In any event, it was not be long before Chopin bade farewell to his homeland. On October 11, 1830, Chopin appeared at the Warsaw National Theater in the premiere of his Piano Concerto in E minor. Although Chopin composed this Concerto after the F-minor, it was published earlier, and therefore is designated as his First. That concert proved to be Chopin’s last in Poland. The following year, Chopin moved to Paris, where he lived for the remainder of his life. And, although Chopin continued to write prolifically for the piano, he never wrote another concerto for that instrument.

Musical Analysis I. Maestoso — The Concerto opens with an orchestral presentation of the principal thematic material. The first theme, initially played softly by the violins, is soon punctuated by fortissimo outbursts. The winds introduce the lovely, second principal theme. The soloist enters with a grand flourish and proceeds to offer highly elaborate versions of the themes. The soloist’s music becomes ever more animated, leading to a vigorous orchestral tutti. The development opens quietly, but the passion soon increases, culminating in another orchestral tutti. The soloist reprises the principal themes, and predominates throughout the remainder of the movement, capped by a final orchestral exclamation.

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II. Larghetto — This is the movement inspired by Chopin’s youthful infatuation for Constantia Gladkowska. A brief orchestral introduction features a dialogue between the strings and winds. The soloist enters with a wide-ranging and elaborate melody. A terse exchange between the soloist and orchestra leads to the agitated, central episode, featuring tremolo strings and passionate declarations by the soloist. A descending cascade by the soloist serves as the bridge to a reprise of the mood of the opening section. The Larghetto concludes with the piano’s breathtaking, upward arpeggio. III. Allegro vivace — The finale evokes the spirit of the Polish mazurka, a lively dance in triple time. It serves as the basis for the numerous, engaging flights by the soloist. A solo horn announces the brilliant final section, in which the soloist’s passagework moves at lightning speed. After a brief pause, the finale rushes to a joyous close.

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ASOprogram H

eralded as the “hottest artist on the classical music planet” by the New York Times, 27-yearold Lang Lang has played sold out recitals and concerts in every major city in the world and is the first Chinese pianist to be engaged by the Vienna Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic and all the top American orchestras. A testiment to his success, Lang Lang recently appeared in Lang Lang the 2009 Time 100 – Time magazine’s annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World. In 2008, over five billion people viewed Lang Lang’s performance in Beijing’s opening ceremony for the XXIX Olympic Games, where he appeared as a symbol of the youth and future of China. This status has inspired over 40 million Chinese children to learn to play classical piano — a phenomenon “The Today Show” called “the Lang Lang effect.” Recognizing Lang Lang’s powerful cultural influence, in 2008, the Recording Academy named him their Cultural Ambassador to China. Most recently, Lang Lang has been chosen to be the official worldwide ambassador to the 2010 Shanghai Expo. In 2008, Lang Lang created the Lang Lang International Music Foundation in New York to enrich the lives of children through a deeper understanding and enjoyment of classical music and to inspire and financially support the next generation of musicians. In May 2009, Lang Lang and his three chosen scholars from the foundation – aged between eight and 10 years old – performed together on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” as part of Oprah’s Search for the World’s Most Smartest and Most Talented Kids. In 2009, Lang Lang was featured in the Carnegie Hall festival, Ancient Paths, Modern Voices: Celebrating Chinese Culture. In addition, the Musikverein in Vienna presented the Lang Lang Fest, which included a joint concert between Lang Lang and Cecilia Bartoli. During the 2010-11 season, he will hold residencies in London, Paris, Milan, Madrid and Sydney. His biography, Journey of a Thousand Miles, published by Random House in 11 languages, was released to critical acclaim. As part of his commitment to the education of children, he released a version of his autobiography specifically for younger readers, entitled Playing with Flying Keys. Lang Lang began playing piano at the age of three. By five years old, he had won the Shenyang competition and given his first public recital. Entering Beijing’s Central Music Conservatory at age nine, he won first prize at the Tchaikovsky International Young Musicians Competition and played all 24 Chopin Études at the Beijing Concert Hall at age 13. Lang Lang’s break into stardom came at age 17, when he was called upon for a dramatic last-minute substitution at the Gala of the Century, playing the Tchaikovsky concerto with the Chicago Symphony. Following this gigantic debut, he performed successful concerts around the world — The Times in London remarked: “Lang Lang took a sold-out Albert Hall by storm. … This could well be history in the making.” Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 27

photo by Philip Glaser

lang lang, Piano


ASOprogram All of Lang Lang’s albums have risen to the top of classical charts as well as many pop charts around the globe. His latest recording is of Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky piano trios with Vadim Repin and Misha Maisky. In February 2010, Lang Lang joined Sony Music Entertainment as an exclusive recording artist; his first album with Sony features a live recording of his 2010 recital at Vienna’s legendary Musikverein.

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ASOsupport Ray Uttenhove, Appassionato Chair

Ap-pas’-si-o-na’-to – adv., Passionately, with strong emotion The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra is privileged to receive annual contributions from individuals throughout the southeast. Appassionato was inaugurated in 2000 & welcomes annual givers of $10,000 & above. Appassionato members provide the Symphony with a continuous & strong financial base in support of our ambitionous aritistic & education initiatives.

$50,000+

Mrs. Anne Cox Chambers

Ms. Joni Winston

$35,000+

Robert Spano

Susan & Thomas Wardell

$25,000+ Madeline & Howell E. Adams, Jr. Stephanie & Arthur Blank Mr. & Mrs. Bradley Currey, Jr. Marcia & John Donnell Catherine Warren Dukehart

Lucy R. & Gary Lee, Jr. Terence L. & Jeanne P. Neal* Victoria & Howard Palefsky Mrs. Charles A. Smithgall, Jr. Ray & John Uttenhove Morgan & Chilton Varner

Mark & Rebekah Wasserman Adair & Dick White Mr. & Mrs. John B. White, Jr.* Sue & Neil Williams*

Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Garcia Charles & Mary Ginden* Jim & Pam Henry Clay & Jane Jackson Ann A. & Ben F. Johnson III Mr. & Mrs. James C. Kennedy Michael & Cindi Lang Donna Lee & Howard C. Ehni Karole & John Lloyd Meghan & Clarke Magruder Mr. Jeff Mango

Lynn & Galen Oelkers Patty & Doug Reid Margaret & Bob Reiser John & Kyle Rogers Mr. Thurmond Smithgall Marsha Johnson – Southern Company Mr. & Mrs. Edus H. Warren, Jr. Camille W. Yow

Dr. & Mrs. Carl D. Fackler Mr. James F. Fraser Mary D. Gellerstedt Nancy D. Gould The Graves Foundation Robert Hall Gunn, Jr. Fund Mr. Jennings M. Hertz, Jr. * * Tom & Jan Hough Mr. Tad Hutcheson Roya & Bahman Irvani Anne Morgan & Jim Kelley* Philip I. Kent Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Keough Amy & Mark Kistulinec Family of Thomas B. Koch Larry L. Lanier Mr. & Mrs. John M. Law John & Patrice Lewis Printpack Inc. & The Gay & Erskine Love Foundation

Massey Charitable Trust John F. & Marilyn M. McMullan Mr. Kenneth & Dr. Carolyn Meltzer Mr. & Mrs. Harmon B. Miller III Morgens West Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Solon P. Patterson* Dennis & JoAnne Sadlowski Bill & Rachel Schultz Joyce & Henry Schwob Mr. John A. Sibley III John Sparrow Loren & Gail Starr Mary Rose Taylor Carol & Ramon Tome The Michael W. Trapp Family Mike & Liz Troy Turner Foundation, Inc. Neal & Virginia Williams

$15,000+ AGCO Corporation, Martin Richengagen Pinney L. Allen & Charles C. Miller III Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Blackney Mr. & Mrs. C. Merrell Calhoun Christopher S. & Ana P. Crommett Mary Helen & Jim Dalton Lynne & Richard Dorfman Gary & Nancy Fayard* Mr. Donald F. Fox $10,000+ Anonymous (2) Ron & Susan Antinori Betty & Robert Balentine The Balloun Family* Lisa & Joe Bankoff Barnes & Thornburg LLP Ms. Diana J. Blank Dr. Robert L. & Lucinda W. Bunnen The Walter & Frances Bunzl Foundation Cynthia & Donald Carson Shannon & Philip Cave Dr. John W. Cooledge In Honor of Norman Mackenzie by Janet Davenport Cari Katrice Dawson Eleanor & Charles Edmondson In memory of Polly Ellis by Admiral James O. Ellis, Jr.

*We are grateful to these donors for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers. **Deceased.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 29


ASOsupport Judy Hellriegel, Chair

The Insider’s Experience for Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Members The Patron Partnership of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra is the society of donors who have given $1,750 or more and comprise a vital extension of the ASO family through their institutional leadership and financial support.

$5,000+ John & Helen Aderhold* Aadu & Kristi Allpere Mr. & Mrs. Richard Anderson Anonymous (3) Mr. & Mrs. William Atkins Jan & Gus Bennett Kelley O. & Neil H. Berman Mr. David Boatwright Ms. Suzanne Dansby Bollman Breman Foundation Ann and Jeff Cramer* Triska Drake & G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr. Jere & Patsy Drummond Rosi & Arnoldo Fiedotin Mr. David L. Forbes

Betty Sands Fuller Sally & Carl Gable Ruth Gershon & Sandy Cohn Dick & Ann Goodsell John E. Graham Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Grathwohl Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Gross Joe Guthridge & David Ritter Sharon & Michael Hodgson C. Tycho & Marie Howle Foundation John Hunsinger James H. Landon George H. Lanier* Pat & Nolan Leake John & Linda Matthews

Mr. & Mrs. Darrell J. Mays Penelope & Raymond McPhee* Brenda & Charles Moseley Margaret H. Petersen Mr. George E. Peterson Hamilton & Mason Smith* Irene & Howard Stein Lynne & Steven Steindel* Charlie Wade & M.J. Conboy Gertrude & William C. Wardlaw Fund, Inc. Russell Williamson & Shawn Pagliarini Suzanne Bunzl Wilner T & H Yamashita*

Mr. & Mrs. T.J. Lavallee, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. William C. Lester* Deborah & William Liss* Dr. & Mrs. James T. Lowman Gino & Belinda Massafra Dr. & Mrs. William McClatchey Walter W. Mitchell Dr. & Mrs. Mark P. Pentecost, Jr.

Elise T. Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Rezin Pidgeon, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joel F. Reeves Edward G. Scruggs** Morton & Angela Sherzer Sydney Simons Amy & Paul Snyder Mrs. C. Preston Stephens

Mrs. Hugh Chapman Lavon & Dennis Chorba Honor C. Cobbs Lucy & John Cook Robert Cronin & Christina Smith Mona & Leonard** Diamond Mr. Michael E. Dickens Mr. & Mrs. Christopher S. Edmonds George T. & Alecia H. Ethridge Mr. & Mrs. Todd Evans Ken Felts & Richard Bunn Mr. & Mrs. Howard Feinsand Mr. Joseph M. & Pronda Few Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. M. Garland Ms. Alma Garrette Dr. Mary G. George & Mr. Kenneth Molinelli Mr. & Mrs. John T. Glover Ben & Lynda Greer Mr. & Mrs. Bradley Hale

Mr. Steven & Mrs. Caroline Harless Sally W. Hawkins Mr. & Mrs. John E. Hellriegel Mr. Haywood (Robin) Hendrix Deedi Henson In Memory of Carolyn B. Hochman Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Hollums Mr. & Mrs. Harry C. Howard Ms. Joy G. Howard Linda & Richard Hubert Dr. William M. Hudson Mr. & Mrs. William C. Humphreys, Jr. JoAnn Hall Hunsinger Aaron & Joyce Johnson Mr. & Mrs. W. F. Johnston Dr. Maurice J. Jurkiewicz Mr. & Mrs. John H. Kauffman Mr. & Mrs. L. Michael Kelly Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. King

$3,500+ Julie M. Altenbach Ms. Carol F. Comstock & Mr. James L. Davis Sally & Larry Davis Dr. & Mrs. C.R. Harper Ms. Cynthia Jeness Hazel & Herb Karp Dr. & Mrs. James T. Laney* $2,250+ Mr. & Mrs. Phillip E. Alvelda* Mr. Albert S. Anderson Marian & Paul Anderson Anonymous Dr. David & Julie Bakken Jack & Helga Beam Neale M. Bearden Penelope B. Berk Shirley & Sol** Blaine Rita & Herschel Bloom Mr. & Mrs. Merritt S. Bond* Margo Brinton & Eldon Park Jacqueline A. & Joseph E. Brown, Jr. Maj. Gen. & Mrs. Robert Bunker Dr. Aubrey M. Bush & Dr. Carol T. Bush Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Canipe Mrs. Thalia Carlos Mr. & Mrs. Beauchamp Carr John & Adrienne Carr Mr. & Mrs. Dan Cathy

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ASOsupport $2,250+ (continued) Mr. & Mrs. J. David Lifsey Mr. & Mrs. Sean Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Mabry Ruth & Paul Marston Birgit & David McQueen Ms. Molly Minnear & Mr. Craig H. Seibert Richard S. & Winifred B. Myrick Dr. & Mrs. R. Daniel Nable Mr. & Mrs. J. Vernon O’Neal, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Albert N. Parker Mr. & Mrs. Andreas Penninger Dr. John B. Pugh

Realan Foundation, Inc. Dr. & Mrs. W. Harrison Reeves, Sr. In memory of Nora A. Richardson S. A. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Rodgers Mrs. William A. Schwartz Dr. Paul Seguin Elizabeth S. Sharp Dr. Kay R. Shirley Beverly & Milton Shlapak Helga Hazelrig Siegel Lewis Silverboard Mr. & Mrs. Baker A. Smith

Peter James Stelling John & Yee-Wan Stevens Mr. & Mrs. George B. Taylor, Jr. Burton Trimble Mr. William C. Voss Mr. Thomas P. Walbert Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Walker Dr. & Mrs. James O. Wells, Jr. Ms. Mary Lou Wolff Mr. & Mrs. John C. Yates Mr. Michael H. Zimmerman

Dorothy Jackson Mary & Wayne James Veronique & Baxter Jones Lana M. Jordan Mr. Thomas J. Jung Paul & Rosthema Kastin Dick & Georgia Kimball* Dr. Rose Mary Kolpatzki Mr. & Mrs. David E. Krischer Mr. Thomas C. Lawson Dr. Leslie Leigh Dr. J. Bancroft Lesesne Dr. Fulton D. Lewis III & Mr. Stephen Neal Rhoney Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Lutz* Barbara & Jim MacGinnitie Mr. & Mrs. James H. Matthews, Jr. Martha & Reynolds McClatchey Captain & Mrs. Charles M. McCleskey Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. McGhee Angela & Jimmy Mitchell* Judy & Gregory Moore Carter & Hampton Morris Mrs. Gene Morse Mr. & Mrs. Vernon J. Nagel Mr. & Mrs. Victor A. Nilson Sanford & Barbara Orkin Keith & Dana Osborn Dr. & Mrs. Bernard H. Palay Mr. & Mrs. Emory H. Palmer Mr. & Mrs. William A. Parker, Jr. Ms. Susan B. Perdew Mr. & Mrs. William John Petter Dr. & Mrs. Frank S. Pittman III

Provaré Technology Mr. Christopher D. Rex & Dr. Martha Wilkins Ms. Mary Roemer & Ms. Susan Robinson The Gary W. & Ruth M. Rollins Foundation John T. Ruff Dr. & Mrs. Rein Saral Nancy & Henry Shuford Alida & Stuart Silverman Sandy & Paul Smith* Mr. & Mrs. Raymond F. Stainback, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Michael D. Stargel Mr. & Mrs. Gabriel Steagall Mrs. James R. Stow Kay & Alex Summers Elvira Tate Mr. & Mrs. Mark Taylor Mr. & Mrs. William M. Tipping Frank Vinicor, M.D. Mr. J.H. Walker III Jonne & Paul Walter Mr. & Mrs. Terry R. Weiss Drs. Julius & Nanette Wenger David & Martha West Mrs. Thomas R. Williams Mark & Ruthelen Williamson Jan & Beattie Wood Dorothy & Charlie Yates Family Fund Mike & Marguerite York Chuck & Pat Young The Zaban Foundation, Inc. Grace & Herbert Zwerner

$1,750+ Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. William B. Astrop Mr. & Mrs. Ron H. Bell Ms. Laura J. Bjorkholm & Mr. John C. Reece II Leon & Linda Borchers Mr.** & Mrs. Eric L. Brooker Tony & Norma Jean Bueschen Mr. & Mrs. Russell E. Butner* Dr. & Mrs. Grady S. Clinkscales, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. R. Barksdale Collins* Mr. & Mrs. Burton K. Davis Mrs. H. Frances Davis Mr. & Mrs. P. Brantley Davis Elizabeth & John Donnelly Mr. Bruce E. Dunlap Ms. Diane Durgin Dr. Francine D. Dykes & Mr. Richard Delay Mary Frances Early Drs. Bryan & Norma Edwards Heike & Dieter Elsner Judge & Mrs. Jack Etheridge Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Fullilove* Representative Pat Gardner & Mr. Jerry Gardner Bill & Susan Gibson Joseph W. & Beth M. Gibson* Carol & Henry Grady Duncan & Judy Gray Kenneth R. Hey Thomas J. High Mr. Thomas Hooten Dr. & Mrs. James M. Hund

*We are grateful to these donors for taking the extra time to acquire matching gifts from their employers. **Deceased.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 31


ASOsupport

Corporate sponsors $100,000+

Classical Title Sponsor Classic Chastain Title Sponsor Family and SuperPOPS Presenting Sponsor

Holiday Title Sponsor Muhtar Kent President and Chief Operating Officer

Richard Anderson Chief Executive Officer 1180 Peachtree * Perimeter Summit * Riverwood

Delta Classic Chastain Presenting Sponsor

Delta Classic Chastain Presenting Sponsor

Delta Classic Chastain Presenting Sponsor

Philip I. Kent Chief Executive Officer

David W. Scobey President & Chief Executive Officer - AT&T - Southeast

jerome j. byers, II Atlanta Regional President

$50,000+ AGCO Corporation and Vendors AT&T The Real Yellow Pages GE Energy Oliver Wyman

$35,000+

$20,000+

Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, PC Porsche Cars North America Publix Super Markets Charities

Official Coffee of Delta Classic Chastain Free Parks Title Sponsor Lisa Compton Regional Vice President

Owned by an affiliate of the General Electric Pension Trust – advised by GE Asset Management

Supporter of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Chorus Jerry Karr Managing Director GE Asset Management

$10,000+

CNN en EspaĂąol Sutherland, LLP Target Corporation

Turner Construction AlixPartners, LLP The Boston Consulting Company Verizon Wireless Group

foundation and government support $100,000+ The Goizueta Foundation The Halle Foundation William Randolph Hearst Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Mabel Dorn Reeder Foundation The Vasser Woolley Foundation, Inc. The Zeist Foundation, Inc.

$25,000+ Anne and Gordon Getty Foundation The Abraham J. & Phyllis Katz Foundation League of American Orchestras The Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc. MetLife Foundation

$10,000+ The Aaron Copland Fund For Music, Inc. The Arnold Foundation The Green Foundation Hellen Ingram Plummer Charitable Foundation The Kendeda Fund

$5,000+ Atlanta Federation of Musicians Fraser-Parker Foundation Robert S. Elster Foundation The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation

Major funding for this organization is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners under the guidance of the Fulton County Arts Council.

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National Endowment for the Arts

Office of Cultural Affairs: Major support is provided by the City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs.

Special Gifts The ASCAP Foundation Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre Foundation Kathy Griffin Memorial Endowment Livingston Foundation Reiman Charitable Foundation The Wachovia Wells Fargo Foundation William Randolph Hearst Endowed Fund

This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. The Council is a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts.


ASOsupport Recognizing planned gifts that benefit the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Madeline & Howell E. Adams, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John E. Aderhold William & Marion Atkins Dr. & Mrs. William Bauer Neil H. Berman Fred & Bettye Betts Mr. & Mrs.* Karl A. Bevins Mr.* & Mrs. Sol Blaine Frances Cheney Boggs* W. Moses Bond Robert* & Sidney Boozer Elinor A. Breman William Breman* James C. Buggs, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Burgin Hugh W. Burke Wilber W. Caldwell Mr. & Mrs. C. Merrell Calhoun Cynthia & Donald Carson Margie & Pierce Cline Dr. & Mrs. Grady Clinkscales, Jr. Miriam & John A. Conant* Dr. John W. Cooledge Mr. & Mrs. William R. Cummickel* John R. Donnell Dixon W. Driggs* Catherine Warren Dukehart Ms. Diane Durgin Arnold & Sylvia Eaves

Elizabeth Etoll John F. Evans Doyle Faler* Rosi & Arnoldo Fiedotin Dr. Emile T. Fisher A. D. Frazier, Jr. Betty & Drew* Fuller Carl & Sally Gable William H. Gaik Kay Gardner* Mr.* & Mrs. L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr. Ruth Gershon & Sandy Cohn Micheline & Bob Gerson Mr. & Mrs. John T. Glover Mrs. Irma G. Goldwasser* Robert Hall Gunn, Jr. Billie & Sig* Guthman Betty G. & Joseph* F. Haas James & Virginia Hale Miss Alice Ann Hamilton Ms. Jeannie Hearn Jill* & Jennings Hertz Albert L. Hibbard, Jr.* Richard E. Hodges Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. Holmes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Fred A. Hoyt, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. James M. Hund Mary B. James deForest F. Jurkiewicz* Herb & Hazel Karp

Anne Morgan & Jim Kelley Bob Kinsey James W. & Mary Ellen* Kitchell Paul Kniepkamp, Jr. Miss Florence Kopleff Ouida Hayes Lanier Liz & Jay* Levine Jane Little Mrs. J. Erskine Love, Jr. Nell Galt & Will D. Magruder K Maier John W. Markham, III Ann Bernard Martin* Mr. Michael McDowell* Dr. Michael S. McGarry Mr. & Mrs. Richard McGinnis Vera A. Milner* Mr. & Mrs. Bertil D. Nordin Roger B. Orloff Dr. Bernard & Sandra Palay Bill Perkins Mr. & Mrs. Rezin E. Pidgeon, Jr. Janet M. Pierce Reverend Neal P. Ponder, Jr. William L. & Lucia Fairlie Pulgram Carl J. Reith* Edith Goodman Rhodes* Vicki J. & Joe A. Riedel Dr. Shirley E. Rivers

Mr. & Mrs. Martin H. Sauser Mr. Paul S. Scharff & Ms. Polly G. Fraser Edward G. Scruggs Dr. & Mrs. George P. Sessions W. Griggs Shaefer, Jr.* Mr. & Mrs. Robert Shaw* Charles H. Siegel* Mr. & Mrs. H. Hamilton Smith Mrs. Lessie B. Smithgall Margo Sommers* Elliott Sopkin Elizabeth Morgan Spiegel Daniel D. Stanley* Peter James Stelling C. Mack* & Mary Rose Taylor Jed Thompson Steven R. Tunnell Mary E. Van Valkenburgh Mrs. Anise C. Wallace* Mr. & Mrs. John B. White, Jr. Richard S. White, Jr. Hubert H. Whitlow, Jr. Sue & Neil Williams Mrs. Frank L. Wilson, Jr. Elin M. Winn* Joni Winston George & Camille Wright Mr.* & Mrs. Charles R. Yates Anonymous (12)

*Deceased

THE LEARNING COMMUNITY Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra, Talent Development Program, Azira G. Hill Scholarship Endowment Fund, Concerts for Young People, Family Concerts, Conversations of Note

$250,000+

Margaret & Bob Reiser Jay & Arthur Richardson

Ms. Joy G. Howard Aaron & Joyce Johnson Mr. & Mrs. William Lamar, Jr. $10,000+ Ms. Malinda C. Logan AGL Resources Mr. & Mrs. Howatt E. Mallinson Edith H. & James E. Bostic, Jr. Dr. Emily A. Massey Family Foundation Dr. Joanne R. Nurss $50,000+ Marcia & John Donnell Dr. & Mrs. Travis Paige GE Energy Mr. & Mrs. Howard Palefsky John H. & Wilhelmina D. Harland Cree & Frazer Durrett $2,500+ The Green Foundation Ms. Margaret H. Petersen Charitable Foundation, Inc. Elinor Rosenberg Breman* Livingston Foundation, Inc. Ms. Elise T. Phillips The Abraham J. Lincoln Financial Foundation The Sartain Lanier Family & Phyllis Katz Foundation Links Inc., Azalea City Chapter Alison & Mike Rand Foundation, Inc. Erich & Suzette Randolph $25,000+ The Pittulloch Foundation Mr. Herman J. Russell, Sr. Bank of America John C. Portman, Jr. Michael & Lovette Russell $1,000+ The Coca-Cola Company Primerica Stephanie & H. Jerome Russell Anonymous William Randolph Hearst Simmons Family Foundation Madeline & Howell E. Adams, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Johnathan H. Short Foundation Suzanne & Willard Shull Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Yellowlees Claire & Hubie Brown Mr. & Mrs. Jesse Hill, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Sullivan Dr. Eric & Nancy Brown MetLife Foundation $5,000+ Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Troy Dr. Sheri D. Campbell Monica (Kaufman) Pearson Mr. & Mrs. Henry Aaron Sharon, Lindsay & Gordon Fisher Mr. & Mrs. Raul F. Trujillo & John E. Pearson, Sr. EZ Agape Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Mark D. Wasserman Dr. John O. Gaston Hellen Ingram Plummer Dr. Margo A. Brinton Mr. Mack Wilbourn & Dr. Gloria S. Gaston Charitable Foundation & Mr. Eldon Park Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Greer Publix Super Markets & Publix Cynthia & Donald Carson The Honorable Judge Glenda Super Markets Charities, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Ginden A. Hatchett The Goizueta Foundation The Wachovia Wells Fargo Foundation The Zeist Foundation, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. David Gould Mrs. Mary C. Gramling Kraft Foods, Inc. Isaiah & Hellena Huntley Tidwell The Frances Wood Wilson Foundation Ms. Joni Winston

* Scholarships for Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra tuition are made possible through the Elinor Rosenberg Breman Fellowship.

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 33


ASOsupport The volunteer organization of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 2009-2010 Board Kathleen (Suzy) Wasserman President Leslie Petter Advisor Judy Schmidt Parliamentarian Alison Mimms Secretary

Belinda Massafra Treasurer Joanne Lincoln Historian Janis Eckert Nominating Chair Elba McCue VP Adminstration Honey Corbin VP Public Relations

Glee Lamb VP Membership Martha Perrow Decorators’ Show House & Gardens Sylvia Davidson VP Youth Education Yetty Arp & Martha Perrow ASA Spring Luncheon

Events

April Conaway & Annie York Trujillo ASA Night at the Symphony Camille Kesler Newsletter Editor Sylvia Davidson & Dr. Mary Francis Early Target Family Day Brooke Merrill Fall Membership Party

Pat King Directory Editor Nancy Levitt Ambassador’s Desk Camille Yow & Leslie Petter VP Annual Fund Dr. Mary Francis Early VP Outreach

2009 Decorators’ Show House & Gardens Diamond Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles Platinum Bovis Lend Lease St. Regis Atlanta Ticket Sponsor Springer Mountain Farms

Gold Boxwoods Comcast Encore Atlanta Magazine Jackson Spalding Mercedes-Benz of Buckhead Silver Phipps Plaza

Bronze Closets & More Conceirge Services of Atlanta Designer Previews Flora by John Grady Burns Laubmann Rector, Inc. Landscape Architecture & Land Planning

Olde Savannah Flooring, Inc Preprint Rabun Rasche Rector & Reece Architects Swoozie’s

2009 Atlanta Symphony Ball corporate Sponsors

Silver table hosts Amanda & Greg Gregory

special contributors

Phoenix AirTran Airways

Bronze Global Payments, Inc. Genuine Parts

Table Hosts Mr. & Mrs. William M. Graves Patty & Doug Reid

Platinum The Coca-Cola Company wine sponsors Invesco Savi Urban Market Capasaldo Silver Rosenblum Vineyards AGL Resources Sterling Vineyards Alston & Bird CISCO National Distributing Company King and Spalding Parties to Die For Media sponsor Printpack, Inc. & The Atlantan the Gay & Erskine Love Foundation Siemens Energy & Automation Southern Company St. Regis Atlanta Verizon Wireless

patrons Mr. & Mrs. Carleton Allen Mr. & Mrs. Charles Allen Ron & Susan Antinori Yetty & Charlie Arp Lyn & Rick Asbill Kimberly & Joel Babbit Mr. & Mrs. Smith Baker Joe & Lisa Bankoff Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Blackney Stephanie & Arthur Blank Dr. Yamma Brown & Mr. Brandon Culpepper Mr. & Mrs. C. Merrell Calhoun Mr. & Mrs. Philip P. Cave

Dr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Dawkins Richard & Lynne Dorfman Eilleen & Bo Dubose Carla & Carl Fackler Bill & Frannie Graves Harald R. Hansen Merrel & Willem Hattink Jim & Pam Henry Gerry & Patricia Hull Baxter & Veronique Jones Mark S. Lange Mr. & Mrs. Larry Lanier Pat & Nolan Leake Elizabeth Levine Belinda & Gino Massafra Mr. & Mrs. Harmon B. Miller, III Lawrence E. Mock, Jr. Ann Morgan & Jim Kelly Victoria & Howard Palefsky Leslie & Skip Petter Patty & Doug Reid

Jay & Arthur Richardson D. Jack Sawyer & William Torres Selig Foundation Thurmond Smithgall Susan & Stuart Snyder Gail & Loren Starr Mr. & Mrs. Howard Stein Steven & Lynne Steindel Mary Rose Taylor Annie-York Trujillo & Raul F. Trujillo Kryst & James Voyles Suzy & Steve Wasserman Adair & Dick White Sue & Neil Williams Joni & David Winston Camille Yow

Hole Sponsor: Asurion ATC Associates, Inc. Cosentini Associates Credit Suisse Cushman & Wakefield Dennis Taylor & Co., Inc. Gwinnett Chamber Hirtle, Callaghan & Co. Morgan Stanley Nordmark Consulting Group

North Fulton Chamber of Commerce Pathbuilders, Inc. Sasaki Associates, Inc. The Shumacher Group Troutman Sanders LLP Wilmington Trust

2009 AIRTRAN ASO Golf Classic Tournament title Sponsor AirTran Airways Reception Sponsors Blackberry Verizon Wireless Four-person Team & Hole Sponsor Atlanta Braves Radio Network Atlanta Falcons The Coca-Cola Company

Four-person Team Sponsor Auburn ISP Sports Network Beck EMC Corporation HKS Architects Signal Point System Turner Construction Two-person Team & Hole Sponsor: ZWJ Investment Counsel

34 EncoreAtlanta.com

Two-person Team Sponsor Alston & Bird Argus Benefits Brasfield & Gorrie Jones Day Nokia SunTrust Bank Sutherland Parsons Brinckerhoff


Donate to UNICEF today, and tomorrow millions of children around the world will have all the clean, safe water they need. Just like ours do every day. 1.877.PROJ.TAP tapproject.org Your donation to the UNICEF Tap Project is a contribution to the U.S. Fund for UNICEF to support UNICEF Water, Sanitation and Hygiene programs, and the effort to bring clean and accessible water to millions of children around the world. For more information visit tapproject.org


Patron Circle of Stars

By investing $15,000 or more in the Woodruff Arts Center and its four divisions – Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Alliance Theatre, High Museum of Art and Young Audiences – these outstanding annual corporate campaign donors helped us raise more than $8.6 million in 2008–09. Thank you! Chairman’s Council ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ $500,000+ The Coca-Cola Company ★★★★★★★★★★★ $450,000+ Georgia Power Foundation, Inc.

SunTrust Employees & Directed Funds Florence C. & Harry L. English Memorial Fund Harriet McDaniel Marshall Trust Woolford Charitable Trust Fund

★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★ $100,000+ $400,000+ Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. AirTran Airways Alston & Bird LLP ★★★★★★★★★★ Bank of America $300,000+ Holder Construction Company ING Cox Interests Cox Enterprises Kaiser Permanente (Atlanta JournalKing & Spalding LLP Constitution, WSB-TV, KPMG LLP, Partners & Cox Radio Group Atlanta, Employees James M. Cox Foundation) The Marcus Foundation, Inc. The Honorable Anne Tull Charitable Foundation Cox Chambers The Wachovia Foundation, Inc. The Sara Giles Moore The David, Helen & Marian Foundation Woodward Fund UPS ★★★★★★★★★ $200,000+ AT&T The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta, Inc. Deloitte LLP, its Partners & Employees ★★★★★★★★ $150,000+ Equifax Inc. & Employees Ernst & Young, Partners & Employees Jones Day Foundation & Employees Kilpatrick Stockton LLP PricewaterhouseCoopers Partners & Employees The Rich Foundation, Inc.

36 EncoreAtlanta.com

★★★★★★ $75,000+ The Home Depot Foundation The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation, Inc. Macy’s Foundation Mabel Dorn Reeder Foundation Regions Financial Corporation Toshiba American Nuclear Energy Corp. Westinghouse ★★★★★ $50,000+ AGL Resources Inc. The Partners & Employees of Atlanta Equity Investors Cisco Citi Foundation and Citi businesses of Primerica

Citi Smith Barney CitiFinancial Corporate Investment Bank Coca-Cola Enterprises The Delta Airlines Foundation Frank Jackson Sandy Springs Toyota and Scion GE Energy Kia Motors America, Inc. Kimberly-Clark Corporation The Ray M. & Mary Elizabeth Lee Foundation, Inc. Sutherland Waffle House, Inc. The Zeist Foundation, Inc. ★★★★ $35,000+ Accenture & Accenture Employees Balch & Bingham LLP Lisa & Joe Bankoff Brysan Utilities Contractors, Inc. Drummond Company, Inc. INVESCO PLC J. Marshall & Lucile G. Powell Charitable Trust Siemens Harris A. Smith Spartan Constructors LLC Troutman Sanders LLP Gertrude & William C. Wardlaw Fund Frances Wood Wilson Foundation, Inc. ★★★ $25,000+ Assurant Atlanta Companies Assurant Solutions Assurant Specialty Property Atlanta Foundation BB&T Corporation BDO Seidman, LLP Bryan Cave Powell Goldstein Capital Guardian Trust Company


Woodruff Arts Center Alliance Theatre Atlanta Symphony Orchestra High Museum of Art Young Audiences A. D. Correll Crawford & Company DuPont Mr. & Mrs. Mike Garrett Gas South, LLC Genuine Parts Company Georgia-Pacific Jack & Anne Glenn Foundation, Inc. Grant Thornton LLP IBM Corporation The Imlay Foundation, Inc. IntercontinentalExchange JPMorgan Private Bank Philip I. Kent Foundation The Blanche Lipscomb Foundation Kelly Loeffler & Jeffrey Sprecher McKinsey & Company, Inc. Mueller Water Products, Inc. Noonan Family Foundation Norfolk Southern Foundation Mary & Craig Ramsey Rock-Tenn Company SCANA Energy Shaw Nuclear Services Southwire Company Towers Perrin Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. ★★ $15,000+ 22squared, inc. ACE Charitable Foundation Air2Web, Inc. Alcatel-Lucent Arcapita Arnall Golden Gregory LLP Atlanta Marriott Marquis Bain & Company, Inc. Julie & Jim Balloun Beaulieu Group, LLC Katharine & Russell Bellman Foundation Vicki & Gerry Benjamin

The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation Bovis Lend Lease Catherine S. & J. Bradford Branch Bradley-Turner Foundation, Inc. Buck Consultants Center Family Foundation Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams & Martin The Chatham Valley Foundation, Inc. Chubb Group of Insurance Companies Cousins Properties Incorporated Mr. & Mrs. Bradley Currey, Jr. DLA Piper Duke Realty Corporation Exposition Foundation, Inc. Ford & Harrison LLP John & Mary Franklin Foundation, Inc. Georgia Natural Gas Georgia Trane Companies, Inc. Mr. James B. Hannan Harland Clarke The Howell Fund, Inc. Hunton & Williams ICS Contract Services, LLC Mr. & Mrs. M. Douglas Ivester J. Mack Robinson Interests Mr. & Mrs. Tom O. Jewell Weldon H. Johnson Family Foundation David & Jennifer Kahn Family Foundation Sarah & Jim Kennedy Thomas H. Lanier Foundation Lanier Parking Solutions Barbara W. & Bertram L. Levy Fund Ron Lipham — UC/Synergetic Livingston Foundation, Inc. Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company

Manulife Financial Morgan Stanley MWV Food & Beverage Northwestern Mutual Goodwin, Wright Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP Tara Perry Pickard Chilton Piedmont Charitable Foundation, Inc. The Pizzuti Companies Printpack Inc./The Gay & Erskine Love Foundation David M. Ratcliffe Raymond James Financial, Inc. Restaurant Associates Spencer Stuart Karen & John Spiegel Staples Superior Essex Inc. Mark & Susan Tomlinson Family Fund Turner Construction Company United Distributors, Inc. US Foodservice/Atlanta Vertical Systems Group, Inc./ Atlantic Financial Services, Inc. WATL/WXIA/Gannett Foundation Watson Wyatt Worldwide Weswood Foundation John Wieland Homes and Neighborhoods Mr. & Mrs. James B. Williams Sue & Neil Williams Carla & Leonard Wood The Xerox Foundation

*As of August 1, 2009

Atlanta’s Performing Arts Publication 37


Continued from page 14 After Juilliard, though, the career she had imagined “didn’t happen for me.” Highprofile international competitions, the path for some pianists, were not for her. “In my twenties, I thought what I had imagined and wanted didn’t exist, so I reframed my career.” (In 2007 The New York Times ran an article on her with the headline, “How Do You Move a Career Into High Gear? By Breaking the Rules.”

But what about the formidable grip of the late Glenn Gould on this piece? His fearlessly personal interpretation polarizes pianists and listeners, intimidating some. “I loved Glenn Gould’s playing,” says Dinnerstein, who listened to his recordings as a teenager. “My idolization of him prevented me from playing Bach publicly because I felt he had the final word. But studying with Peter Serkin [at Juilliard] I learned to investigate other ways of playing Bach. Bach is the most personal of composers because the music is so chameleon-like. It takes on the attributes of whoever is playing. I came to feel inspired and reassured by Gould. He did exactly what photo courtesy Telarc

Dinnerstein lives with a refreshing — inspiring even — outlook. She deeply mines what some might call teachable moments, for herself and others. “I had won an audition with Astral Artists for a debut recital, and I wanted to play something big for it.” Big? She chose what is for even the greatest established pianists, a musical Mount Everest: Bach’s daunting

Goldberg Variations. “Then I discovered I was pregnant. I thought I could spend my pregnancy learning this piece. I felt, more than ever, that I was becoming an adult, and this piece was perfect for that.”

38 EncoreAtlanta.com


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made sense to him, It doesn’t matter that some people hate [his interpretation]. It’s perfect, according to him.” And, according to critics, her own selfproduced 2005 break-through CD of the Goldbergs, stylistically far from the orbit of Gould, is pretty perfect, too: “Timeless.” “Unpretentious elegance.” “Utterly distinctive voice.” “Utterly audacious.” “That recording was the biggest thing I did to reframe my career and get back to my dream,” she says.

New York writer Margaret Shakespeare frequently covers music and musicians for major publications.

photo courtesy Telarc

But it wasn’t the only thing. “I come from a socially conscious family, not a fancy

background. I am willing to give my [time and talent] where I think it is needed. After graduation I did a lot of performances for the Piatigorsky Foundation — all over the country in public schools, nursing homes, community centers, even prisons. One thing that struck me is that those people who heard me play are the same as the ones who come to Carnegie Hall. Maybe the Carnegie audience has more sophistication, but we all have the same reasons for listening to music. Music feeds the soul — for everyone.”

40 EncoreAtlanta.com


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ASOCALENDAR UPCOMING CONCERTS

APRIL

1◊/3 8pm

APRIL

8◊/9 10 8pm

APRIL

15◊/16 17 8pm

APRIL

22◊/24 8pm

25 3pm

APRIL/MAY

30/1 8pm

BaCh:Concerto in D minor

DELTA CLASSICAL

STRAVINSKY:Suite from Pulcinella KRISTJAN JÄRVI, conductor STRAVINSKY:Suite from The Firebird SIMONE DINNERSTEIN, piano Mr. Järvi, from the esteemed Estonian conducting family (Paavo is his brother, Neeme his father), brings a contrasting pair of Stravinsky ballets: the spare, neoclassical Pulcinella and the luxuriant Firebird. Simone Dinnerstein makes her ASO debut with one of the master’s equally fascinating concertos.

TChaikovsky:Piano Concerto no. 1

DELTA CLASSICAL

TCHAIKOVSKY:Manfred Symphony

VASILY PETRENKO, conductor BARRY DOUGLAS, piano Maestro Petrenko, Chief Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, brings a fascinating all-Tchaikovsky program: the picturesque Manfred Symphony, based on Lord Byron’s novel, followed by the always youthful First Piano Concerto, featuring the spectacular Irish pianist Barry Douglas.

shosTakoviCh:violin Concerto no. 1

DELTA CLASSICAL

SCHREKER:Prelude to Die Gezeichneten LOTHAR ZAGROSEK, conductor BEETHOVEN:Symphony No. 3, “Eroica” MIDORI, violin Revived to acclaim at the 2005 Salzburg Festival, Die Gezeichneten (“The Branded”) is Franz Schreker’s 1918 opera of sex, death, and artistic creativity. The wondrously talented Midori plays a Shostakovich concerto from the 1940s, and Maestro Zagrosek concludes with Beethoven’s resounding symphonic salute to all things heroic.

verDi:Requiem Mass

DELTA CLASSICAL

ROBERT SPANO, conductor DIMITRI PITTAS, tenor ANGELA BROWN, soprano ANDREA SILVESTRELLI, bass MARIANA PENTCHEVA, mezzo-soprano ASO CHORUS The Verdi Requiem, often referred to as Verdi’s greatest opera, is a heartfelt religious expression imbued with dramatic vitality by a master composer of Italian opera.

on Broadway with Marvin hamlisch

SuperPOPS!

�MARVIN HAMLISCH, conductor & piano Pulitzer Prize-winning composer-arranger-singer Marvin Hamlisch toasts his 65th birthday as only he can, celebrating his famous collaborations with Barbra and Liza, show-stopping one-man shows, and landmark musicals.

on sale noW:

◊ concert preview with ASO Insider Ken Meltzer, 7-7:30pm.

Woodruff Arts Center Box Office 404.733.5000 atlantasymphony.org 2009/2010 SEASON SPONSOR

42 52 EncoreAtlanta.com ENCORE ATLANTA

PUBLIC SUPPORT

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ASOSPECIALS UPCOMING CONCERTS IN SYMPHONY HALL MARCH

SPECIAL PRESENTATION

27 8pm

The world’s most popular jazz trumpeter returns after last season’s sellout show! Spend an extraordinary evening with the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Wynton Marsalis and his celebrated big band.

Wynton Marsalis

& THE LINCOLN CENTER JAZZ ORCHESTRA SPECIAL PRESENTATION

MAY

7

8pm BOTTI’S BACK! One, two, three sold-out shows last May were not enough! Soulful and charismatic trumpeter Chris Botti returns by popular demand with a brand-new show.

Chris Botti

WITH THE ASO

on sale noW: Ticketmaster 800.745.3000 ticketmaster.com Woodruff Arts Center Box Office 404.733.5000 atlantasymphony.org 44 EncoreAtlanta.com



ASOstaff

administrative staff Executive Donald F. Fox Interim Chief Executive Officer Evans Mirageas Director of Artistic Planning ADMINISTRATION John Sparrow Vice President for Orchestra Initiatives & General Manager Rachel Trignano Assistant to the VP for Orchestra Initiatives & General Manager Julianne Fish Orchestra Manager Nancy Crowder Operations/Rental Events Coordinator Carol Wyatt Executive Assistant to the Music Director & Principal Guest Conductor Jeffrey Baxter Choral Administrator Ken Meltzer ASO Insider & Program Annotator Russell Williamson Orchestra Personnel Manager Susanne Watts Assistant Orchestra Personnel Manager Paul Barrett Senior Production Stage Manager Richard Carvlin Stage Manager Lela Huff Assistant Stage Manager

FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION Donald F. Fox Executive Vice President for Business Operations & Chief Financial Officer Aysha Siddique Assistant to the EVP for Business Operations & CFO Susan Ambo Controller Kim Hielsberg Director of Financial Planning & Analysis April Satterfield Senior Accountant Peter Dickson Staff Accountant Michael Richardson Venues Analyst Stephen Jones Symphony Store Manager Galina Rotbakh Symphony Store Sales Associate Popular Presentations Clay Schell General Manager Trevor Ralph General Manager and Senior Director of Operations Holly Clausen Director of Marketing Keri Musgraves Promotions Manager Lisa Eng Graphic Artist Chastain Park Amphitheater Tanner Smith Program Director Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park Katie Daniel VIP Sales Manager Jenny Pollock Operations Manager Rebecca Gordon Box Office Manager

46 EncoreAtlanta.com

advancement & learning Paul W. Hogle Vice President for Institutional Advancement & Learning Tammie Taylor Assistant to the VP for Advancement & Learning Stephanie Malhotra Director of Advancement & Learning Services Rebecca Abernathy Donor Services Associate Major & Planned Giving Jessica Langlois Director of Leadership Gifts & Planned Giving Andrea Welna Major Gifts Officer Meredith Jackson Prospect Research Officer Annual, Institutional & Volunteer Services Sandy Smith Senior Director of Institutional Support & Partnerships Corey Cowart Corporate Relations Manager Toni Paz Director of Individual Giving Maya Robinson Patron Partnership Gifts Officer Celeste Pendarvis Director of Volunteer Services & Special Events Sarah Levin Special Events Coordinator ASO Learning Community Melanie Darby Director of Education Programming Sandy Smith Director of Development Barbara Saunders Learning Community Gifts Officer Elizabeth Wilson Director of Student Musician Development Lindsay Fisher Learning Community Specialist; Ensembles Coordinator

MARKETING & CONCERT PROMOTIONS Charles Wade Vice President for Marketing & Audience Engagement Alesia Banks Director of Customer Service & Season Tickets Nellie Cummins Group & Corporate Sales Associate Rebecca Enright Subscription & Education Sales Assistant Janice Hay Senior Director of Marketing Meko Hector Office & Marketing Coordinator Jennifer Jefferson Interactive Media Manager Melanie Kite Subscription Office Manager Shelby Moody Group & Corporate Sales Coordinator Seth Newcom Database Administrator Robert Phipps Publications Director Melissa A. E. Sanders Director of Public & Media Relations Karl Schnittke Publications Editor Robin Smith Group & Corporate Sales Assistant Laura Soldati Publicist Russell Wheeler Group & Corporate Sales Manager Christina Wood Marketing Manager


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General info LATE SEATING Latecomers are seated at the discretion of house management. Reserved seats are not guaranteed after the performance starts. Latecomers may be initially seated in the back out of courtesy to the musicians and other patrons. SPECIAL ASSISTANCE All programs of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra are accessible to people with disabilities. Please call the box office (404.733.5000) to make advance arrangements. SYMPHONY STORE The ASO’s gift shop is located in the galleria and offers a wide variety of items, ranging from ASO recordings and music-related merchandise to t-shirts and mugs. Proceeds benefit the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

THE ROBERT SHAW ROOM The ASO invites donors who contribute at least $1,750 annually to become members of this private salon for cocktails and dining on concert evenings — private rentals available. Call 404.733.4860. IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERS Concert Hotline 404.733.4949 (Recorded information) Symphony Hall Box Office 404.733.5000 Ticket Donations/Exchanges 404.733.5000 Subscription Information/Sales 404.733.4800 Group Sales 404.733.4848 Atlanta Symphony Associates 404.733.4865 (Volunteers) Educational Programs 404.733.4870 Youth Orchestra 404.733.5038 Box Office TTD Number 404.733.4303 Services for People 404.733-5000 with Special Needs 404.733.4800 Lost and Found 404.733.4225 Symphony Store 404.733.4345


We treat voices like fine instruments. Emory Voice Center specializes in the medical treatment and rehabilitation of voice and voice disorders. • • • •

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Ticket Info CAN’T ATTEND A CONCERT? If you can’t use or exchange your tickets, please pass them on to friends or return them to the box office for resale. To donate tickets, please phone 404.733.5000 before the concert begins. A receipt will be mailed to you in January acknowledging the value of all tickets donated for resale during the year. SINGLE TICKETS Call 404.733.5000 Mon. – Fri., 10 am – 8 pm; Sat. – Sun., Noon – 8 pm. Service charge applies. Phone orders are filled on a best-available basis. www.atlantasymphony.org Order any time, any day! Service charge applies. Allow two to three weeks for delivery. For orders received less than two weeks

prior to the concert, tickets will be held at the box office. Woodruff Arts Center Box Office Mon. – Fri., 10 am – 8 pm; Sat. – Sun., Noon – 8 pm. The box office is open through intermission on concert dates. No service charge if tickets are purchased in person. Please note: All singleticket sales are final. No refunds or exchanges. All artists and programs subject to change. GROUP DISCOUNTS Groups of 10 or more save up to 15% on most ASO concerts, subject to ticket availability. Call 404.733.4848. GIFT CERTIFICATES Available in any amount for any series, through the box office. Call 404.733.5000.

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galleryASO

SCORE ONE FOR THE ATLANTA SCHOOL Continuing its tradition of performing works by Robert Spano’s Atlanta School of Composers, the Orchestra premiered Osvaldo Golijov’s suite from Francis Ford Coppola’s 2007 film, Youth Without Youth, in late January. Guest soloists were (from left to right) Richard Grimes (cimbalom), Michael Ward-Bergeman (accordion), Jeremy Flower (laptop) and Kayhan Kalhour (kamancheh).

52 EncoreAtlanta.com

27 AND COUNTING The Orchestra earned its 27th Grammy Award for the Telarc recording, Transmigration, featuring John Adams’s On the Transmigration of Souls, named Best Surround Sound Album at the 52nd annual Grammy Awards, held on January 31. Pictured above are Michael Bishop, surround mix engineer and surround mastering engineer, and Elaine Martone, surround producer, who also received Grammys.

Jeff Roffman

Golijov Premiere, Grammy Win


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The average TheaTer-goer reTurns from inTermission afTer The second bell.

every ninTh person forgeTs To Turn off Their cell phone. and The average applause lasTs 15 To 20 claps.

A better understanding of you helped us to engineer a better RX. It’s what influenced where we placed controls and vital information, and how we engineered technologies to be as second nature as a round of applause.

The RX


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