Symphony InConcert January

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January 2014

GUERRERO MAHLER CONDUCTS

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BACKSTAGE

MEET OUR MUSICIANS bac k sta g e

LYNN PEITHMAN, Cello Member of the Nashville Symphony since: 1985 Hometown: Livonia, Michigan What do you enjoy about being a member of the Nashville Symphony? I have enjoyed being a member of the Nashville Symphony for 29 years. I respect my colleagues, and I love to be a part of beautiful performances. We have some incredible talent in our orchestra, and I get to hear them perform all the time! In general, this is a very smart bunch of folks, highly educated and extremely dedicated. No one seems to take themselves too seriously, though, and our senses of humor help get us through a lot of stressful situations. What inspired you to play the cello, and when did you know that you wanted to be a professional musician? My mother was a piano teacher, and she taught me piano when I was a very young child. My elementary school gave fifth graders the opportunity to begin orchestral instruments. Since I was about to get braces, my parents suggested a string instrument. I liked the sound of the cello best. Becoming a professional cellist was a natural progression over the years. Even though I played various sports in school and had top grades, I believe I was given the most support and encouragement in my musical studies. Being offered a full-tuition scholarship at the University of Michigan for my undergraduate and graduate years, it was just a “given” that this was my field. Do you have a favorite composer or piece of music? I couldn’t possibly have one favorite composer. Of course, it’s always nice when a composer gives the cello a nice melody. As far as the classics, I would lean toward many Russian composers…but variety is the spice of life. 10

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What do you most like about living in Nashville, and what makes our community special? Nashville has grown on me over the years, and I truly love living here. Besides the weather being more moderate than in Michigan, I have to say that it’s the kind and friendly nature of so many people here that makes Nashville special to me. It is a wonderful place to raise my young son. Our city is full of musicians and music lovers. The genre of music doesn’t really matter. A great musical talent is recognized by others. This is a culturally and financially rich community that has the capacity to support its world-class symphony orchestra. We have generous and loyal fans. What do you most want people in our community to know about the Nashville Symphony? I want Nashville to know that its symphony wants to play music that Nashville wants to hear. The musicians have dedicated their lives to their craft. If it’s written for an orchestra, we can play it. If you haven’t tried us in a while, come back and listen. If you want to hear more of something, be vocal. If you like it, we probably do, too.


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CLASSICAL SERIES

CL A SS I C A L

GUERRERO Friday & Saturday, January 10 & 11, at 8 p.m.

CONDUCTS

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MAHLER guerrero conducts mahler Nashville Symphony Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor Julie Albers, cello VICTOR HERBERT Concerto No. 2 for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 30

Allegro impetuoso - Andante tranquillo - Allegro

Julie Albers, cello INTERMISSION

GUSTAV MAHLER Symphony No. 7 in E minor

Langsam (Adagio) – Allegro risoluto, ma non troppo

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Scherzo: Schattenhaft (Fließend, aber nicht schell)

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InConcert

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V icto r her bert CL A SS I C A L se r ies

Born on February 1, 1859, in Dublin, Ireland; died on May 26, 1924, in New York City Cello Concerto No. 2 in E minor, Op. 30 Composed: 1893-94 First performance: March 9, 1894, with the composer as the soloist and Anton Seidl conducting the Philharmonic Society (precursor of the New York Philharmonic) in New York City First Nashville Symphony performance: These are the orchestra’s first performances. Estimated length: 22 minutes

T

he drive to forge an autonomous identity for the various arts in the United States — one independent from European-imported traditions — expressed itself in stages and at different rates for literature, visual art and music. A thriving and vibrant American voice was already well established in fiction, for example, by the middle of the 19th century. In music, however, the seeds for this development were still being sown near the end of that century, and the process involved considerable input from European composers and conductors who made their way to the New World. Among these was Victor Herbert. Born in Dublin, Herbert came of age in an arts-loving family in London and in Stuttgart, where he received a rigorous education in cello and composition. He earned a reputation as a 16

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cellist playing for various European orchestras, and in 1886 he was signed (together with his new bride, the celebrated soprano Therese Förster) to join the Metropolitan Opera in New York, where he served as principal cellist of that fledgling company’s orchestra. Gustav Mahler, Herbert’s contemporary, would later be engaged for a brief directorship at the Met near the end of his career, in 1908. Herbert and his wife ended up staying in their newly adopted city and becoming U.S. citizens. Along with his cello career, he led a busy life as a conductor, teacher and composer. He became especially famous for his work for the musical stage, writing European-style operettas such as Babes in Toyland, Sweethearts and Naughty Marietta, which were Broadway hits of the preWorld War I years. The second of Herbert’s two numbered concertos for his own instrument barely predates his theater career, which was launched later in the same year. It is the one example from Herbert’s catalogue of instrumental works to have found a place in the repertory — not surprisingly, given the immediate appeal of this music and the many interesting ways he uses to present the cello as both a virtuoso and a lyrical protagonist. Herbert composed this concerto during the years when another European celebrity, Antonín Dvořák, had similarly made his way to the New World for a sojourn as director of the National Conservatory of Music, recently founded in New York by Jeannette Meyers Thurber. Herbert, who also served on the Conservatory’s cello faculty, became friends with Dvořák — he even played cello in the premiere of Dvořák’s New World Symphony — and won enthusiastic praise from his Czech peer when he introduced the new concerto in 1894. Indeed, with his Cello Concerto No. 2, Herbert validated the idea of an ambitious, symphonically designed concerto for this instrument before Dvořák undertook his own Cello Concerto in B minor, which holds pride of place as the definitive cello concerto.

W hat to listen fo r Designed in the conventional threemovement format, Herbert’s Second Cello Concerto nevertheless aims to be more than a


In addition to solo cello, the Cello Concerto No. 2 is scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, timpani and strings.

GU STAV M A HL E R Born on July 7, 1860, in Kalischt, Bohemia, then part of the Habsburg Empire; died on May 18, 1911, in Vienna Symphony No. 7 Composed: 1904-05 First performance: September 19, 1908, in Prague, with the composer conducting First Nashville Symphony performance: December 6-7, 1996, with Music Director Kenneth Schermerhorn Estimated length: 84 minutes

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fter decades of being overlooked and generally considered a relic of turn-of-thecentury late Romanticism, the music of Gustav Mahler has found its way into the very center of the repertory for today’s orchestras. To perform the entire cycle of Mahler symphonies no longer suggests an outlandish ambition. Indeed, it has even come to represent a new gold standard for conductors and ensembles. Yet it has taken a while for contemporary orchestras to appreciate particular Mahler

symphonies, notably the Sixth and Seventh. The latter poses extraordinary interpretive challenges. Its enigmatic and even baffling character is in keeping with its kaleidoscopic emotional range, as well as its quintessentially Mahlerian use of unique orchestral colors. Mahler himself had unusual difficulty finding his way into this music. Once he managed to do so, however, composition of the Seventh proceeded swiftly. Working from the inside out, he began with the second and fourth movements InConcert

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question-and-answer pattern. Echoes of Wagnerian yearning, à la Tristan, are perhaps unavoidable, but the melodic aura of the song-form Andante tranquillo (in B major), with its stepwise theme, asserts a personality of its own comprised of longing, passion and a sprinkle of nostalgia. The finale reverts to the mood of the opening movement, even reclaiming its thematic ideas in slightly altered form, and the Andante’s melody likewise is reworked into the proceedings. Here, though, Herbert demands both expressive depth and rapid-fire virtuosity from his soloist. The rhythmic vitality of his writing propels the music forward into a fiery major-key conclusion.

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showcase for the cello. Herbert writes in a clearly European style informed by late Romanticism and by the Central European tradition of symphonically developed motifs. His treatment of the material reveals a typical Romantic preoccupation with the organic connection between ideas. The family resemblances between each of the three movements — which are all interconnected without movement breaks — are easy to hear even on a first encounter. Herbert’s dramatic flair emerges in the orchestra’s opening statement of the central thematic idea, an impetuous figure that is soon taken up by the solo cello and given a more reflective treatment. A major challenge throughout, given Herbert’s sizable ensemble, is achieving an effective balance so that the cello’s voice remains transparent amid the orchestral outbursts — hence the many variants on a


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While Mahler has become a central figure in the contemporary experience of the symphony, his music is still marked by a stubborn cliché: the notion of Mahler as a kind of poet laureate of existential despair, of 20th-century angst.

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of his overall five-movement design. Both of these movements, which he characterized as “night music” pieces, were composed in the summer of 1904, a period coinciding with completion of the profoundly dark Sixth Symphony. Then came a stumbling block in the summer following, when Mahler took his usual retreat from the stress of Vienna and headed to his composer’s getaway in the Austrian Alps. Mahler’s struggle involved how to work out the grand architectural design of this symphony. In a fit of creative desperation, he even considered abandoning the movements in progress but was then seized by an unexpected moment of inspiration. Mahler later recalled how this took place while he was being transported in a small boat across one of the lakes in this idyllic landscape: “With the first stroke of the oars, the theme (or rather, the rhythm and style) of the introduction to the first movement came to me.” The floodgates opened up, and Mahler sketched out the three other movements of the Seventh within less than two months. While Mahler has become a central figure in the contemporary experience of the symphony, his music is still marked by a stubborn cliché: the notion of Mahler as a kind of poet laureate of existential despair, of 20th-century angst. That simple formula allows no room for the abundance of sheer fantasy in the Seventh Symphony. To be sure, there are moments of darkness, even terror, in this music. The Seventh even incorporates forbidding echoes of its predecessor — sometimes known as the “Tragic” Symphony — but then goes on to mollify them. At the same time, the Seventh ranks among Mahler’s most forwardlooking, innovative achievements. The qualities

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and textures of its sound world anticipate later works, from the “night music” of Béla Bartók to the ironic quotation marks of postmodernism. One easy-to-recognize signature of Mahler’s style is his dramatic juxtaposition of contrasting elements. The Seventh takes this strategy to a new extreme. There are references to both Romantic and Classical images from the musical past, but Mahler filters these in such a way that they seem distanced. The nocturnal imagery of the Seventh, moreover, evokes something beyond the melancholy or introspective attitude of the Romantics. His sense of night ranges from richly poetic dreamscapes to offbeat parody and even boisterous humor, all leading up to a perplexing finale that bursts on the scene and, like an exuberant non sequitur, overwrites the music we’ve heard up to this point. The Seventh Symphony bears the unofficial nickname “Song of the Night.” What especially troubled its earliest critics was the continually shifting demeanor of the music as it changes from one mood to another without apparent “motivation” — as if mimicking the irrational processes of the unconscious mind. Mahler’s disdain for programmatic descriptions gives the listener no easy narrative subtext to explain the very brief outline he provided one of his friends: “Three night pieces; the finale, bright day. As foundation for the whole, the first movement.” This description, with its contrast of night and day, hardly follows the familiar pattern of the “victory symphony” — the progression from troubled darkness to conquering light. Rather than a monolithic threat, the darkness inherent in the Seventh is enormously varied, shaped by Mahler’s prismatic imagination.


that reinterpret the Romantic nocturne and serenade, respectively.

W hat to listen fo r

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A shadowy mystique permeates the Seventh’s opening music. Over a stuttering, funereal accompaniment of unstable harmony, Mahler superimposes the cry of a “tenor horn.” Normally associated with brass bands, this horn’s unusual sonority is our initial clue to the work’s highly original orchestration. The first theme features a dotted, descending three-note pattern, as well as a long-short-short rhythm; both of these recur as unifying devices throughout the work. The introduction accelerates into a fiery Allegro, its music transformed into a driving march that bears a close resemblance to the opening theme of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony. The lush, yearningly lyrical second theme, entrusted to the strings, serves as the critical center of the movement during the development, when it emerges like a full moon from a cloudbank and reaches a swooning, visionary climax. Mahler then plummets headlong into the introductory music again, beginning a highly inventive and varied process of recapitulation. The second movement represents yet another kind of march, one that slowly emerges amid echoes, fluttering sounds and night calls before settling into a major-minor swagger that is Mahler’s musical equivalent of chiaroscuro. The effect is enticingly ambiguous. As in Bartók’s night music, birdcalls and sensuous new colors (including cowbells) emerge under cover of darkness. The Schubertian charm of the contrasting melody is just one of the nostalgic evocations of the past that figure into the Seventh Symphony’s middle movements. “Shadowy” (schattenhaft) is Mahler’s marking for the central Scherzo, with its misplaced, tipsy accents. It’s a spectral waltz that both mocks and seems to outdo Romantic grotesquerie. The oboe’s cheerful tune in the trio comes back in a funhouse distortion when played by trombones and tuba, while echoes of the symphony’s opening theme heighten the symmetry by recurring here at the center. The delicious, painterly details of Mahler’s

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The composer’s wife Alma suggested that Mahler had wanted to evoke the magic of his beloved writers from the early 19th century, including Joseph Eichendorff. The middle movements, she wrote, were shot through with “visions of Eichendorff ’s poetry, rippling fountains, German Romanticism.” Biographer Henry Louis de La Grange points to similarities in atmosphere shared by the poet Novalis’ Hymns to the Night, with their “shadows of the past… vague yearnings, and deceived hopes,” and by Nietzsche’s philosopher-prophet Zarathustra, whose epiphany-like “Midnight Song” Mahler had previously set in his Third Symphony. The Zarathustra reference, writes La Grange, elicits “a night of clairvoyance and heightened lucidity whose revelation is more essential than that of light.” Conductor Willem Mengelberg, an early Mahler champion, found in the Seventh’s second movement a background of visual inspiration from Rembrandt’s famous painting The Night Watch. Another colleague refined this reference by claiming that the real model was not so much Rembrandt’s subject matter as his technique of shading and chiaroscuro. This turns out to be a particularly insightful observation, for it can be applied to the work’s overall ambivalence. In general, La Grange observes, the Seventh “seems to welcome intrusions with a strange passivity, to mirror the strange diversity of the 20th-century man’s experience, a diversity which has become impossible to synthesize…in a disillusioned present which knows…that ambiguities can never be solved.” For all this ambiguity, the work’s five movements cohere, thanks to Mahler’s architectural symmetry. The first and fifth movements counterbalance each other in proportion. The two “night music” movements, together with the central Scherzo they flank, form an internal continuity and are roughly equal in length to each of the outer movements. The result is a neatly balanced arch shape (ABCBA), in which the odd-numbered movements unfold in modified versions of conventional forms (sonata, scherzo with trio, rondo finale), while the second and fourth movements are more akin to fantasias


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scoring abound here and in the ensuing “night music,” an “Andante amoroso” that serves as a gentle remake/parody of the lover’s serenade. This is also the first movement written from the start in a major key (F). Though Mahler has reduced his large orchestra to chamber dimensions, he colors it by adding amorous plucking on mandolin and guitar to intensify the ironic nostalgia. The finale has always posed the Seventh’s interpretive riddle. Pounding timpani set in motion the brassy fanfare of its multipart rondo theme. One segment resembles a drunken imitation of the pompously marching cheer of Wagner’s Meistersinger Prelude. Indeed, the C-major brightness of this music — which Mahler tellingly designates “Allegro ordinario” — intrudes so unexpectedly that it seems to thumb its nose at the notion of “triumph” over darkness, rather as Shostakovich would arguably do in his Fifth Symphony. Amid the elaborate variations on the hyperactive rondo music, which recurs seven times, the opening theme is transformed from a remembered dream to a statement of clamorous joy, closing the work so forcefully that the ironic reading by itself seems overly reductive. Bells ring out in a resounding affirmation of life: all of it, night and day, including the next-to-last chord, whose harmony introduces one final ambiguous touch before the clear finish. Mahler’s Symphony No. 7 is scored for piccolo, 4 flutes (4th doubling 2nd piccolo), 3 oboes, English horn, 3 clarinets, clarinet in E-flat, bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, contrabassoon, tenor horn, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, bass drum, snare drum, cymbals, tam-tam, triangle, glockenspiel, tambourine, rute, cowbells, tubular bells, 2 harps, guitar, mandolin and strings. —Thomas May, the Nashville Symphony’s program annotator, is a writer and translator who covers classical and contemporary music. He blogs at memeteria.com.

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About the soloist JULIE ALBERS, cello American cellist Julie Albers was born into a musical family in Longmont, Colorado, and began violin studies at age 2 with her mother, switching to cello at 4. She moved to Cleveland during her junior year of high school to pursue studies through the Young Artist Program at the Cleveland Institute of Music. She soon was awarded the Grand Prize at the XIII International Competition for Young Musicians in Douai, France, and toured France as soloist with Orchestre Symphonique de Douai. Albers made her major orchestral debut with The Cleveland Orchestra in 1998. She has performed in recital and with orchestras throughout North America, Europe, Korea, Taiwan, Australia and New Zealand. In 2001, she won second prize in Munich’s Internationalen Musikwettbewerbes der ARD and was also awarded the Wilhelm-Weichsler-Musikpreis der Stadt Osnabruch.. In 2003, she was named the first Gold Medal Laureate of South Korea’s Gyeongnam International Music Competition. In North America, recent performances have included a debut with the Grant Park Music Festival, where she performed Penderecki’s Concerto Grosso for three cellos, with the composer conducting. Albers regularly participates in chamber music festivals around the world. 2009 marked the end of a three-year residency with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Two. She is currently active with the Albers String Trio and the Cortona Trio. Albers is currently Assistant Professor and holds the Mary Jean and Charles Yates Cello Chair at the McDuffie Center for Strings at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. She performs on a N.F. Vuillaume cello made in 1872 and makes her home in Atlanta with her husband, Bourbon, and their dog, Dozer.


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POPS SERIES P OPS

Thursday, January 16, at 7 p.m. Friday & Saturday, January 17 & 18, at 8 p.m.

se r ies

Roberta Flack Nashville Symphony Albert-George Schram, conductor Roberta Flack, vocalist

COLE PORTER arr. Ralph Hermann

Begin the Beguine

Teufelstanz (Danse Diabolique)

JOSEF HELLMESBERGER II

CAMILLE SAINT-SAテ起S Danse macabre, Op. 40

DUKE ELLINGTON Duke Ellington Fantasy arr. Hermann TITO PUENTE Ran Kan Kan arr. Scott Wedell INTERMISSION

Roberta Flack Selections to be announced from the stage

Concert Sponsors

Media Partners

Official Partners

Nashville Downtown

InConcert

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About the artist P OPS se r ies

ROBERTA FLACK “I like to think of myself as a musician who has found some original meaning in songs that maybe everybody else has done,” Roberta Flack says when describing Let It Be, her new CD of Beatles tunes. “I’d like to think that my producers and I found some new directions and new meanings. I think that’s the sign of a good interpreter of music.” The universality that Flack speaks of can be located in her own long and deep personal history with the songs on this collection. Right from the start of her career, when she was a young woman juggling her career as a schoolteacher with her calling as a performer, Beatles songs played an important part, proving their boundless appeal. “When I made the transition from the classroom and was moonlighting at nightclubs in Washington, D.C.,” she recalls, “I chose songs for both settings from the songs we all heard on the radio. As a teacher, it was my responsibility to teach my kids something about music theory, and I used these songs as a means to do that because they already knew and loved them.” A child prodigy who won a music scholarship to Howard University at age 15, Flack came of artistic age and political consciousness just as America was convulsing on its own terms of existence. Starting with her classic debut album, 1969’s First Take, she carved out a career filled with massive radio and chart hits (“First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” “Killing Me Softly With His Song,” “Feel Like Making Love,” and — with the late, great Donny Hathaway — “Where is the Love?,” “The Closer I Get to You” and so many more), countless awards (including four GRAMMYs) and worldwide critical acclaim. Let It Be is in many ways a full-circle artistic statement from Roberta Flack, and it’s an exquisite re-imagining of Beatles songs. She’s justifiably proud of it but also laughs, “It’s hard to

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mess up a Beatles song unless you just don’t know what the ham sandwich you’re doing.” And in explaining both what she thinks makes the music of the Beatles so enduring, and what moves her to continue making music, she says simply, “I think music is such a powerful means of expressing what the world needs now, and that’s understanding between individuals, between races, between countries. I think music has the potential for being the answer to all those deep questions we ask ourselves as human beings.” ALBERT GEORGE SCHRAM, conductor A native of the Netherlands, AlbertGeorge Schram has conducted orchestras in a number of U.S. cities, including Nashville, where he has conducted on the Pops Series since 2006. His longest tenure has been with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, where he has worked in a variety of capacities since 1979. As a regular guest conductor of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra, he opened the orchestra’s new permanent summer home, Symphony Park, in 2002. From 1990 to 1996, he served as resident conductor of the Louisville Orchestra. In 2008 Schram was invited to conduct the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional of Bolivia and the Orquesta Sinfónica UNCuyo in Mendoza, Argentina. His other foreign conducting engagements have included the KBS Symphony Orchestra and the Taegu Symphony Orchestra in Korea, and the Orchester der Allgemeinen Musikgesellschaft Luzern in Switzerland. He has returned to his native Holland to conduct the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic and the Netherlands Broadcast Orchestra.


Special Event Sunday, January 19, at 7 p.m. s p ecial

Let Freedom Sing

J. ROSAMOND JOHNSON Lift Every Voice and Sing arr. Roland Carter

JOHN WILLIAMS Dry Your Tears, Afrika, from Amistad

ADOLPHUS HAILSTORK

event

Nashville Symphony Kelly Corcoran, conductor Nashville Symphony Celebration Chorus Diana Poe, choral director Celebration Youth Chorus Margaret Campbelle-Holman, choral director Adé Williams, violin Rod McGaha, trumpet

Fanfare on “Amazing Grace”

WILLIAM GRANT STILL Here’s One arr. Karen Elaine Adé Williams, violin WILLIAM GRANT STILL Summerland Adé Williams, violin TRADITIONAL Hold On arr. Uzee Brown Jr.

GALE JONES MURPHY orch. Jim Gray

Why Do We Sing? INTERMISSION

MICHAEL ABELS Dance for Martin’s Dream

GEORGE ALLEN Precious Lord, Take My Hand arr. Roy Ringwald

DIZZY GILLESPIE arr. Mike Crotty

Brother K Rod McGaha, trumpet

CALVIN BRIDGES arr. Chris MacDonald

I Can Go to God in Prayer

MOSES HOGAN His Light Still Shines

KARL JENKINS Let There Be Justice for All, text by Nelson Mandela from The Peacemakers TRADITIONAL We Shall Overcome arr. Roy Ringwald

Official Partners

InConcert

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About the artists s p ecial event

NASHVILLE SYMPHONY CELEBRATION CHORUS Diana K. Poe, choral director & lead vocalist Odessa L. Settles, choral coordinator Gale Jones-Murphy, piano accompanist Calvin V. Settles, Hammond organ Abigail Burke, lead vocalist Andrea Baker, sign language interpreter Lisa Cooper, music librarian Gary Burke, spiritual leader

James D. Allen Terri Allen Caroline Barry* Tony Barta* Irving Basañez Yolanda Bennett Laurens A. Blankers Jessica Boeglin* Caitlin Brand* Carson Burch* Gary M. Burke Cathi Carmack* Conra Collier James R. Collier Lisa Cooper* James Cortner* Kaitlin Crofford* Richard H. Davis Kenton Dickerson* Willia Doss Teneia Ewing Joyce Fletcher Abbey Francis* L.B. Gaiters Deborah Gardner Delphine Genrty* Yolanda Giddens Gilliam, Elizabeth Gilliam* Gipson, Becky Gipson Glass, Laurens Glass* Glover, Barbara E. Glover Golden, Lorie M. Golden Griffin, Judy Griffin* Griffith, Stefanie Griffith* Michael Harrison* Nerissa Harvey

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Representing the important role of vocal music in African-American history, the Celebration Chorus has played an important role in “Let Freedom Sing” since its inception in 1993. Formed and managed by local recording and solo artist Odessa Settles, the chorus consists of singers from the Nashville Symphony Chorus and dozens of area colleges, high schools, universities and places of worship, with diverse ethnic, religious and cultural backgrounds. The diversity within the ensemble displays the ecumenism advocated by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for “all of God’s children — black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Catholics and Protestants…to stand and sing” together.

Cork Heyning* Kay Higgs Pam Hoffner Mike Hopfe* Gay Hollins-Wiggins* Cory Howell* Mariah Jenkins Stanley Jenkins* Antonio Johnson Clinton A. Johnson* Shawn Johnson Young-Soon Kang* Gladys Ketsri Cloretta Lampkin Megan Latham* Bill Lloyd* Ben McKeown* Lynn McGill* Lee A. Mayberry Andrea Mays Shelly McCormack* Claudia McKissack Dori Mikus* Jessica Moore* Marva Mortley Nancy Nettles Lisa Oliver-Gray Brenda Northern Richard Paddon Renita Perkins Diyanna Perkins Gary Rabideau* Keith Ramsey* Gloria Ransom Carolyn Ransom-Jones Jamila A. Ray

Pamela D. Ray Andrew Riehle* Fran Rogers Lynn Ross Valerie Ross David Russell* Demytris Savage Jill Sayler Odessa L. Settles Gene A. Shade Synovia Simmons Barbara Slusher Matthew Smedberg* Robert L. Smith Jr. Susan Smith Rachel Spruill Jenny Lynn Sterrett Mark Stewart Sarah Sulton Marva Swann* Gina Thomas Vicki Todd-Stubbs Tonia Treece-Carter Christina Van Regenmorter* Monica P. Walker Sarah Warner* Debra Waters* James White* Bruce Williams* Eric Wiuff* Sylvia Wynn* Norma J. Yoos *Nashville Symphony Chorus Members


The Celebration Chorus and MLK Committee extend a warm welcome to the distinguished guest artists, Nashville Symphony Chorus, Celebration Youth Chorus and many thanks to Kelly Corcoran. Special gratitude to Alan Valentine and the Nashville Symphony; Fifteenth Avenue Baptist Church, Reverend Dr. William F. Buchanan, Pastor; Diana K. Poe; Odessa Settles; Gale Jones-Murphy; Calvin Settles; Gary Burke; John Manson; Lisa Cooper; and all volunteers. Apologies for any omitted names.

Antonio Pastor-Rodriguez Benjamin Sowell Brian Smith Ryan Stevens Carrie Talley Ellis Thuresson Rachel Truong Mercy Bustamante Vizarretea David Vuong Sanaa Williams Simeon Williams Brandon Wilson Meilin Yates Mixed Choir, Grades 7-12 Reeta Bandyopadhyay* Joya Burrell Kyesha Christian** Robin Contos* Ambre Dromgoole** Krystian Frierson** Jesica Hereford Tanner Johnson Kira McCall** Conne Molette Lauren Pettis Angela Pinnock Bhree Smith Destini Thompson Allen Christian Marqus Dromgoole** Myles Fisher Kyle Fisher* Nyles Harris Trevor Johnson** Garrel Lawrence Logan Lovell

Braxton Sowell Donovan Stephen Cedric Townsend** *Senior **Alumni CYC Artistic Associates, Staff & Partner Mentors Kimberly K. McLemore, Antioch High School Karen V. Mueller, Retired Rutherford County Nita M. Smith, I.T. Creswell Arts Magnet Middle Prep Debra Tillery, Glenview Elementary Stephanie Blocker, Vocal Coach Barb Santoro, Accompanist Conne Molette, Student Accompanist Maxine B. Jones, Higher Education Liaison, Tennessee State University Music Specialist Mentors, MNPS Music Makes Us Debra Tillery and Darryl Miller, Glenview Elementary Sue Hall, Thomas Edison Elementary Nita Smith, I.T. Creswell Arts Magnet Middle Prep

InConcert

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event

Treble Choir, Grades 2- 6 Zachary Adam Nicholas Anderson Lawson Ashurst Summer Austin Faith Ayemweare Carlos Bautista Miguel Becerra Taylor Bell Jakiyah Clark Isaac Crouse Daniella Delcid Joselyn Deskins Luke Elliott Margareth Figueroa Laniey Frontz Erica Gaston Trevor Harris Rakell Hooper Parris Jemison Christian Kabeya Kyla Mahaffey Orlandis Maise Angela Meza Shelby Moore Matthew Mueller Alyssa Myers Stile Nzeza Eliazar Ochoa Kelsey Ojeda Emmannuel Ojuade Claudia Padron Kylie Penn Patrick Phillips Olivia Potter Paul Ramirez Tatum Riddle

As a community partner with Music Makes Us of Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools, CAL strives to link school music education programs to top-quality performance options. This special 2014 arts access project is made possible from a growing network of sponsors, including Rena Ellzy, Bobby Jean Frost, the Parthenon Links, the Woman’s Club of Nashville, dGE PR & Communications, Inshuttle and the National Museum of African American Music. We extend our appreciation to Kelly Corcoran and Blair Bodine for their vision, artistic leadership and commitment to Nashville Symphony’s investment in Middle Tennessee.

s p ecial

CELEBRATION YOUTH CHORUS MARGARET CAMPBELLE-HOLMAN, choral director Celebration Youth Chorus (CYC) reaches into the rich communities of Nashville through Choral Arts Link (CAL), the parent nonprofit of the MET Singers. Nashville’s MET Singers perform as CYC for the Let Freedom Sing concert in 2014, and consist of public, private and homeschool participants, grades 2-12. This performance consists of a special Choral Arts Link community outreach initiative from its program, MET Academy, and includes singers from Glenview and Thomas Edison Elementary, as well as, I.T. Creswell Arts Magnet Middle Prep.


SP E CI A L E VE NT

ADÉ WILLIAMS, violin Adé Williams is Junior Division First Place Laureate of the 2012 Annual Sphinx Competition, presented by the DTE Energy Foundation. She performs as part of the Sphinx Soloist Program, sponsored by the GM Foundation. Williams, 14, is the first William Warfield scholarship recipient and a member of the Music Institute of Chicago’s (MIC) Academy program. Named Artist-in-Residence with the Waukegan Symphony Orchestra in 2012, she also had a year of exciting opportunities in 2011, including a 14-city tour with the Sphinx Virtuosi and international soloing in Switzerland and Bermuda. Her 2004 orchestral debut at age 6 was with the Chicago Sinfonietta as that orchestra’s youngest-ever soloist. She has soloed with the Waukegan Symphony Orchestra, the Illinois Symphony Orchestra at Millennium Park, the MIC’s Academy Strings, the Lake Forest Symphony, the Highland Park Strings at Ravinia and the South Side Family Chamber Orchestra. Williams performs on a violin by Jan van Rooyen, 2008, after the “Comte de Villares” Stradivarius, 1720, on generous loan from the Rachel Elizabeth Barton Foundation. She is honored to be a Bauder Fellow, a Links Fellow, and recipient of generous support from Alexandra Nichols. She is a charter member of the Junior Division of the Chicago Music Association.

ROD MCGAHA, trumpet Rod McGaha has the quiet assurance of a man whose musical roots are deep and strong. Born in Chicago, he began playing trumpet in fourth grade. With practice, he began developing a style that encompassed the myriad different genres and styles he grew up enjoying. He first found work playing gospel and R&B, but delved into traditional jazz wholeheartedly while attending college at Northeastern University, just outside Chicago. Trumpet legend Clark Terry discovered him playing at a local festival in 1989 and took McGaha under his considerable wing. It was when he was opening shows for a cappella group Take 6 during the early 1990s that McGaha made the move from Chicago to Music City. Shortly after the move, legendary drummer Max Roach invited the young trumpeter to join his band. Eventually, McGaha stepped forward as a bandleader and producer exploring all his jazz, pop, R&B, blues, gospel, and hip-hop influences. For McGaha, a panoramic vision of the way our shared humanity is reflected in music will always be more important than his top-shelf technique. That’s the spirit that animates every note that he plays. “It’s all about unity,” he says. “It’s about finding the common thread.”

Dr. King, ready to address an overflow crowd, with Reverend Kelly Miller Smith at the Fisk University gym on April 20, 1960. Photo courtesy of the Nashville Public Library

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t h e n a S h V i l l e Sy M P h o n y S e t S t h e Stag e w i t h St e i n way

A Steinway & Sons Model D concert grand piano sets the stage at the Nashville Symphony’s Schermerhorn Symphony Center. (Photo by: Steve Hall of Hedrich Blessing)

97% of Piano SoloiStS ChoSe the Steinway Piano During the 2011/2012 ConCert SeaSon St e i n way: 5 6 8 ot h e r P i a n o S : 1 8 2011/2012 Concert Season:

Steinway

akron Symphony orchestra 1 anchorage Symphony orchestra 1 arkansas Symphony orchestra 3 asheville Symphony orchestra 3 atlanta Symphony orchestra 9 austin Symphony orchestra 3 Bakersfield Symphony Orchestra 1 Baton rouge Symphony orchestra 2 Bismarck-Mandan Symphony orchestra 2 Boise Philharmonic 2 Boston Symphony orchestra 10 Buffalo Philharmonic orchestra 6 Calgary Philharmonic orchestra 8 Canton Symphony orchestra 2 Charlotte Symphony 4 Chattanooga Symphony 2 Chicago Symphony orchestra 13 Cincinnati Symphony orchestra 7 the Cleveland orchestra 6 Dallas Symphony orchestra 9 Dayton Philharmonic orchestra 3 Detroit Symphony orchestra 7 edmonton Symphony orchestra 16 erie Philharmonic 1 eugene Symphony 5 evansville Philharmonic orchestra 1 the florida orchestra 5 fort worth Symphony orchestra 6 fox Valley Symphony 1 fresno Philharmonic orchestra 2 glens falls Symphony 1 greensboro Symphony orchestra 2 greenville Symphony orchestra 2 greenwich Symphony orchestra 2 harrisburg Symphony orchestra 6

others 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Steinway hartford Symphony orchestra 2 hilton head Symphony orchestra 6 houston Symphony 6 indianapolis Symphony orchestra 10 the israel Philharmonic orchestra 15 Jacksonville Symphony orchestra 6 Kansas City Symphony 5 lexington Philharmonic 1 los angeles Philharmonic 8 louisiana Philharmonic orchestra 7 the louisville orchestra 0 Memphis Symphony orchestra 4 Miami Symphony 3 Milwaukee Symphony orchestra 2 the Minnesota orchestra 7 Mississippi Symphony orchestra 1 Mobile Symphony orchestra 2 Münchner Philharmoniker 32 naples Philharmonic orchestra 4 nashville Symphony 6 national arts Centre 11 national Symphony orchestra 5 new Jersey Symphony orchestra 7 new west Symphony 2 new york Philharmonic 8 north Carolina Symphony 8 oklahoma City Philharmonic orchestra 4 omaha Symphony orchestra 6 orchestra de Paris 26 orchestra filharmonica Della Scala di Milano 9 orchestre Symphonique de Montréal 13 oregon Symphony 6 orlando Philharmonic orchestra 1

others 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0

Steinway others orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona 7 Pacific Symphony 5 Pensacola Symphony orchestra 1 Peter nero and the Philly Pops 1 the Philadelphia orchestra 10 the Phoenix Symphony 3 Pittsburgh Symphony orchestra 8 Portland Symphony (Me) 2 orquesta Sinfónica de Puerto rico 3 Quad City Symphony orchestra 1 reno Philharmonic orchestra 2 richmond Symphony 2 royal Concertgebuow 13 Saint louis Symphony orchestra 10 Saint Paul Chamber orchestra 6 San antonio Symphony 4 San Diego Symphony 5 San francisco Symphony 14 Santa Barbara Chamber orchestra 3 Seattle Symphony orchestra 12 South Carolina Philharmonic 3 Spartanburg Philharmonic orchestra 1 Spokane Symphony 3 toledo Symphony 3 toronto Symphony orchestra 15 tucson Symphony orchestra 2 utah Symphony 9 Vancouver Symphony 15 Virginia Symphony 4 west Virginia Symphony orchestra 3 wichita Symphony orchestra 3 winnipeg Symphony orchestra 4 winston-Salem Symphony 4

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0

numbers are listed exactly as they were provided by symphonies.

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SPECIAL EVENT Thursday, January 30, at 7:30 p.m. s p ecial

the Music of led Zeppelin

event

Performed by the Nashville Symphony

Nashville Symphony Brent Havens, conductor Randy Jackson, vocals Daniel Clemens, bass Powell Randolph, drums George Cintron, guitar Robert W. Cross, producer Selections to be announced from the stage

About the Show Bridging the gulf between rock ’n’ roll and classical music, conductor/arranger Brent Havens takes the podium to present The Music of Led Zeppelin, a program he scored to extend the listening experience of Led Zeppelin’s timeless tunes. Performed by an orchestra and amplified with a full rock band, the show captures Led Zeppelin’s sheer blast and power riff for riff while cranking out new musical colors. “Our concept was to take the music as close to the originals as we could and then add some colors to enhance what Zep had done,” Havens says. “The wonderful thing with an orchestra is that you have an entire palette of sounds to call upon. The band is reproducing what Led Zeppelin did on the albums, verbatim, and then having an orchestra behind the band gives the music richness, a whole different sense of power.” Delivering a note-for-note interpretation, vocalist Randy Jackson (lead singer of the rock band Zebra) acts as a window between the audience and the reworked material. “The music itself is one thing, but Jackson more than captures the spirit of Robert Plant,” Havens says. 32

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With the support of producer Rob Cross, artistic director of the Virginia Arts Festival, Havens first conceived the show for the Virginia Symphony, where Cross was orchestra manager at the time. The Music of Led Zeppelin has proven a great way to introduce rock fans to the symphony experience. “I’m sure there are people who come to these shows who have never seen their city’s symphony orchestra, and this allows them to experience something new, along with the music that they already love,” says Havens. BRENT HAVENS, conductor Berklee-trained arranger/conductor Brent Havens has written music for orchestras, feature films and virtually every kind of television. His work includes commercials, cartoons, sports music for ESPN and movies for ABC, CBS and ABC Family Channel Network. Havens has also worked with the Doobie Brothers and the Milwaukee Symphony, arranging and conducting for Harley Davidson’s 100th Anniversary Birthday Party Finale, which was attended by more than 150,000 fans. He has worked with some of


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event

RANDY JACKSON, vocals Randy Jackson was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana. He started playing piano and guitar at age 5. His earliest influences were Les Paul and Mary Ford, The Beatles, The Allman Brothers, Cream, Jimi Hendrix, The Moody Blues and Led Zeppelin. In 1973, he joined Shepherds Bush as lead guitarist. It was here that he met Felix Hanemann. The two left the band a year later and soon met drummer Guy Gelso.

Together, they formed Zebra in 1975. Zebra moved to New York and in 1982 signed a recording contract with Atlantic Records. Their first album went Gold and became the fastestselling debut album in the history of the label. During the next couple of years, Zebra opened for Aerosmith, Journey, ZZ Top, Loverboy, Cheap Trick, Sammy Hagar and REO Speedwagon. The group has produced five albums with combined sales of more than 2 million. In September 1995 Jackson performed his first orchestral show with the Virginia Symphony, singing lead vocals and adding acoustic guitar to The Music of Led Zeppelin. Today he continues performing the shows nationwide to sold-out audiences and also performs the music of Pink Floyd, The Doors and The Eagles.

s p ecial

the world’s greatest orchestras, including the Royal Philharmonic in London, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, the Indianapolis Symphony, the Houston Symphony, the Atlanta Symphony, the Baltimore Symphony and countless others. Havens recently completed the score for the film Quo Vadis. He is arranger/conductor for seven symphonic rock programs: the Music of Led Zeppelin, the Music of the Doors, the Music of Pink Floyd, the Music of the Eagles, the Music of Queen, the Music of Michael Jackson and, most recently, the Music of The Who.


JAZZ SERIES Friday, January 31, at 8 p.m. J A Z Z S E R I ES

marcus roberts trio celebrates monk & coltrane MARCUS ROBERTS TRIO Marcus Roberts, piano Rodney Jordan, bass Jason Marsalis, drums

Official Partners

Selections to be announced from the stage

About the artists

MARCUS ROBERTS TRIO The Marcus Roberts Trio is known for its virtuosic style — strongly rhythmic, melodic and filled with dynamic contrast. This group has an entirely new approach to jazz trio performance. Founded in 1995, it is now known around the world for its signature style. Roberts’ vision of the jazz trio grew rapidly following the selection of drummer Jason Marsalis for the drum chair in

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1994 (when Jason was just 17). Bassist Rodney Jordan is the most recent addition, and his profound musical intelligence has already left its mark on the group’s sound. Although the piano is typically the focus of most jazz trios, in the Marcus Roberts Trio all musicians share equally in shaping the direction of the music through changing tempo, mood, texture or form, communicated through a system of musical cues. Each member’s enormous individual talent is showcased, along with the powerfully rhythmic group sound. This has led more than a few concert-goers to comment that it sounds like a lot more than three people onstage. One of the most enjoyable aspects of a Marcus Roberts Trio concert is that it is so apparent to the audience these three musicians are really having fun playing together. Roberts’ current focus is on expanding the unique trio format to larger ensembles (ranging from quartet to septet, octet and larger). In this way, all musicians onstage will use their quick musical reflexes and creative imaginations to improvise freely as individuals and as a group while maintaining the same powerfully rhythmic group sound.


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con d ucto r s music director

Giancarlo Guerrero

G

iancarlo Guerrero is the Music Director of the Nashville Symphony and concurrently holds the position of Principal Guest Conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra Miami Residency. His recordings with Nashville Symphony won GRAMMY® Awards in 2011 and 2012, including Best Orchestral Performance. A fervent advocate of contemporary music and composers, Guerrero has championed works by several of America’s most respected composers, including John Adams, John Corigliano, Osvaldo Golijov, Jennifer Higdon, Michael Daugherty, Roberto Sierra and Richard Danielpour. In the 2013/14 season, Guerrero will make several European debuts, including the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Orchestre national du Capitole de Toulouse, Frankfurt Radio Symphony and Copenhagen Philharmonic. In North America, he takes The Cleveland Orchestra on tour and returns to the symphony orchestras of Cincinnati and Detroit. For many years he has maintained a close association with the São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra in Brazil, as well as with the Simón

36

JANUARY 2014

Bolívar Symphony Orchestra and El Sistema in Venezuela. In recent seasons Guerrero has established himself with many of the major North American orchestras, including the symphony orchestras of Boston, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Toronto and Vancouver, among others. He is also known to audiences of large summer festivals including the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles and Blossom Music Festival in Cleveland. He is also cultivating an increasingly visible profile in Europe, where his recent debuts included BBC Symphony Orchestra and Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin. A native of Costa Rica, Guerrero gained early experience with the Costa Rican Lyric Opera and later spent time in Venezuela as Music Director of the Táchira Symphony Orchestra. Upon moving to the U.S., he studied conducting and percussion at Baylor and Northwestern universities. He served as Associate Conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra from 1999-2004 and was Music Director of the Eugene Symphony in Oregon from 2002-09.


ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR

Chorus director

VINAY PARAMESWARAN

Kelly Corcoran The 2013/14 season marks Kelly Corcoran’s seventh season with the Nashville Symphony. During this time, she has conducted a variety of programs, including the Symphony’s SunTrust Classical Series and Bank of America Pops Series, and made her Carnegie Hall conducting debut in May 2012 with the Nashville Symphony during the Spring For Music Festival. In May 2013, she was named director of the Nashville Symphony Chorus. This season, Corcoran has return guestconducting engagements with The Cleveland Orchestra and the Naples Philharmonic, as well as a debut with the Charleston Symphony. She has conducted major orchestras throughout the country, including performances with the Atlanta, Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee and National Symphonies. In 2009, she made her South American debut as a guest conductor with the Orquesta Sinfónica UNCuyo in Mendoza, Argentina, and returned for multiple subscription programs in 2011. Critic Tim Page of the Washington Post has hailed her conducting as “sure and sensitive.” Prior to her position in Nashville, Corcoran completed three seasons as assistant conductor for the Canton Symphony Orchestra in Ohio and music director of the Canton Youth Symphony and the Cleveland-area Heights Chamber Orchestra. In 2004, she participated in the National Conducting Institute, where she studied with her mentor, Leonard Slatkin. Originally from Massachusetts and a member of the Tanglewood Festival Chorus for more than 10 years, she received her Bachelor of Music in vocal performance from The Boston Conservatory and her Master of Music in instrumental conducting from Indiana University. She serves on the conducting faculty at the New York Summer Music Festival. InConcert

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CO ND U C TOR S

San Francisco Bay Area native Vinay Parameswaran is a 2013 graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied with Otto-Werner Mueller as the Albert M. Greenfield Fellow. This season, he will conduct the Curtis Opera Theater in a production of Donizetti’s L’elisir d’amore and will make numerous appearances with the Forth Worth Symphony Orchestra. Last season Parameswaran conducted Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte with the Curtis Opera Theatre followed by appearances with the Vermont Symphony conducting three doubleconcertos with violinists Jamie Laredo and Jennifer Koh. He concluded the season with East Coast tour appearances at the Kimmel Center, the Kennedy Center and Miller Theater as part of the “Curtis On Tour” program. He was also one of six conductors selected to conduct the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra in a workshop headed by Miguel Harth-Bedoya. In summer 2012, Parameswaran was one of seven out of more than 130 applicants to be selected as a participant in the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Workshop’s Conductors Institute, headed by Marin Alsop and Gustav Meier and sponsored by the Conductors Guild. In May, he served as cover conductor to Robert Spano in the Curtis Symphony Orchestra’s tour to Dresden, Germany, as well as the cover conductor to Miguel Harth-Bedoya with the Fort Worth Symphony. Prior to entering Curtis, Parameswaran majored in music and political science at Brown University, where he graduated with honors in 2009. He is the only student to win Brown University’s Concerto Competition in two different instruments: piano in 2009 and timpani in 2007.


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2013/14 Nashville Symphony orchestra Basses*

Concertmaster Walter Buchanan Sharp Chair

Principal

Jun Iwasaki,

Principal

Associate Concertmaster

Elizabeth Stewart Gary Lawrence,

Preston Bailey,

Assistant Concertmaster

Kevin Jablonski

Trombones

Concertmaster Emerita

Flutes

Mary Kathryn Van Osdale, Denise Baker Kristi Seehafer John Maple Deidre Fominaya Bacco Alison Gooding Paul Tobias Beverly Drukker Anna Lisa Hoepfinger Kirsten Mitchell Erin Long Isabel Bartles Second Violins*

Carolyn Wann Bailey, Principal

Zeneba Bowers,

Assistant Principal

Kenneth Barnd Jessica Blackwell Rebecca Cole Radu Georgescu Benjamin Lloyd Louise Morrison Laura Ross Jeremy Williams Rebecca J Willie Violas*

Assistant Principal Principal Emeritus

Erik Gratton,

Principal Anne Potter Wilson Chair

Ann Richards,

Assistant Principal

Kathryn Ladner

Norma Grobman Rogers Chair

Piccolo

Kathryn Ladner,

Norma Grobman Rogers Chair

Oboes

James Button, Principal

Ellen Menking,

Assistant Principal

Roger Wiesmeyer

English Horn

Roger Wiesmeyer Clarinets

James Zimmermann, Principal

Cassandra Lee,

Assistant Principal

Daniel Reinker,

Daniel Lochrie

Shu-Zheng Yang,

E-flat Clarinet

Principal

Assistant Principal

Judith Ablon + Hari Bernstein Bruce Christensen Michelle Lackey Collins Christopher Farrell Mary Helen Law Melinda Whitley Clare Yang Cellos*

Anthony LaMarchina,

Cassandra Lee

Bass Clarinet

Daniel Lochrie Bassoons

Cynthia Estill, Principal

Dawn Hartley,

Assistant Principal

Gil Perel

Principal

Contra Bassoon

Acting Assistant Principal James Victor Miller Chair

Horns

Xiao-Fan Zhang,

Bradley Mansell Lynn Marie Peithman Stephen Drake Michael Samis + Matthew Walker Christopher Stenstrom Keith Nicholas Julia Tanner

Co-Principal

Acting Assistant Principal

Vacant,

Principal

Susan K. Smith,

Acting Principal

r oste r

photos by Jackson DeParis

Jeffrey Bailey, Patrick Kunkee,

Erin Hall,

Kelly Corcoran Associate Conductor & Chorus Director

Trumpets

Glen Wanner,

Gerald C. Greer,

Giancarlo Guerrero Music Director

Joel Reist,

Bass Trombone

Steven Brown Tuba

Gilbert Long, Principal

Timpani

William G. Wiggins, Principal

Percussion

Sam Bacco, Principal

Richard Graber,

Assistant Principal

Harp

Licia Jaskunas, Principal

Keyboard

Robert Marler, Principal

Librarians

D. Wilson Ochoa, Principal

Jennifer Goldberg, Librarian

Orchestra Personnel Manager

Carrie Marcantonio *Section seating revolves +Leave of Absence ++Replacement/Extra

Gil Perel

Leslie Norton, Principal

Beth Beeson Patrick Walle,

Associate Principal/ 3rd Horn

Hunter Sholar Radu V. Rusu,

Assistant 1st Horn InConcert

o r chest r a

First Violins*

39


2013/14 BOARD OF DIRECTORS B O A RD OF D I R E C TOR S

Officers

Directors

Edward A. Goodrich Board Chair

Janet Ayers John Bailey III Russell Bates Scott Becker David Black Jack Bovender Jr. Anastasia Brown Keith Churchwell Rebecca Cole * Michelle R. Collins * Ben Cundiff Carol Daniels Robert Dennis Robert Ezrin Benjamin Folds Judy Foster Alison Gooding * Amy Grant Carl Haley Jr. Michael W. Hayes

James Seabury III Board Chair Elect Kevin Crumbo Board Treasurer Betsy Wills * Board Secretary Alan D. Valentine * President & CEO

Lee Ann Ingram Martha R. Ingram * Elliott Warner Jones Sr. Larry Larkin * John T. Lewis John Manson * Richard Miller Eduardo Minardi William Minkoff David Morgan Mike Musick Peter Neff Harrell Odom Cano Ozgener Victoria Chu Pao Mark Peacock Pam Pfeffer Deborah Pitts Jennifer H. Puryear Nelson Shields

Renata Soto Brett Sweet Van Tucker Mark Wait Jeffery Walraven Ted Houston Welch Melinda Whitley * Roger Wiesmeyer * William Greer Wiggins * David Williams II Harry Williams Jr. * Jeremy Williams * Clare Yang * Donna Yurdin * Shirley Zeitlin James Zimmermann * *Indicates Ex Officio

To view a full listing of administrative staff, please visit NashvilleSymphpony.org/staff.

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I n divi duals

The Nashville Symphony is deeply grateful to the following individuals who support its concert season and its services to the community through their generous contributions to the Annual Fund. Donors as of December 4, 2013.

annual

Martha Rivers Ingram Society Gifts of $25,000 + David & Diane Black Mr. & Mrs. John Chadwick Mr. & Mrs. Kevin W. Crumbo

Janine & Ben Cundiff Carol & Frank Daniels III Mrs. Martha Rivers Ingram

Martin Brown Family Richard & Sharalena Miller Mr. & Mrs. James C. Seabury III

fun d

Walter Sharp Society Gifts of $15,000 - $24,999 Anonymous (1) Judy & Joe Barker Russell W. Bates

Dr. & Mrs. Howard S. Kirshner Dr. Harrell Odom II & Mr. Barry W. Cook

Mr. & Mrs. Cano Ozgener Mr. & Mrs. Ben R. Rechter Mr. & Mrs. Steve Turner

Virtuoso Society Gifts of $10,000-$14,999 Anonymous (2) Mr. & Mrs. Jack O. Bovender Jr. Richard & Judith Bracken Mr.* & Mrs. J. C. Bradford Jr. Mr.* & Mrs. W. Ovid Collins Mr. & Mrs. Brownlee O. Currey Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jere M. Ervin

Allis Dale & John Gillmor James C. Gooch & Jennie P. Smith Ed & Nancy Goodrich Giancarlo & Shirley Guerrero Carl & Connie Haley Patricia & H. Rodes Hart Jan & Daniel Lewis

Myles & Joan MacDonald The Melkus Family Foundation The Honorable Gilbert S. Merritt Mr. & Mrs. William Minkoff Jr. Drs. Mark & Nancy Peacock Mr. & Mrs. Philip M. Pfeffer

Stradivarius Society Gifts of $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. & Mrs. James Ayers Dr. Brian O. Bachmann J. B. & Carolyn Baker Dr. & Mrs. Robert O. Begtrup Annie Laurie & Irvin* Berry Mark & Sarah Blakeman Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Bottorff Ann & Frank Bumstead Fred Cassetty Drs. Keith & Leslie Churchwell Kelly & Bill Christie Hilton & Sallie Dean Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Dennis Marty & Betty Dickens Dee & Jerald Doochin Mr. & Mrs. John W. Eakin Jr. Mrs. Annette S. Eskind The Jane & Richard Eskind & Family Foundation Marilyn Ezell John & Lorelee Gawaluck Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Giacobone Mr. & Mrs. C. David Griffin Ellen C. Hamilton Jack & Jill Harmuth Mr. & Mrs. Billy Ray Hearn

Helen & Neil Hemphill Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Hilton Judith Hodges Mrs. V. Davis Hunt Mr. & Mrs. David B. Ingram Keith & Nancy Johnson Elliott Warner Jones & Marilyn Lee Jones Anne Knauff Christine Konradi & Stephan Heckers Ralph & Donna Korpman Mr. & Mrs. Fred W. Lazenby Dr. & Mrs. George R. Lee Jim Lewis John T. Lewis Zachary Liff Robert Straus Lipman Ellen Harrison Martin Sheila & Richard McCarty Edward D. & Linda F. Miles Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Musick Anne & Peter Neff Mr. & Mrs. Larry D. Odom Dr. Barron Patterson & Mr. Burton Jablin

Peggy & Hal Pennington Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Pruett Eric Raefsky, M.D. & Ms. Victoria Heil Anne & Joe Russell Mr. & Mrs. Scott C. Satterwhite Joe & Dorothy Scarlett Dr. & Mrs. Michael H. Schatzlein Dr. & Mrs. John Selby Mr.* & Mrs. Nelson Severinghaus Ronald & Diane Shafer The Shields Family Foundation Nelson & Sheila Shields Mr. & Mrs. Irvin Small Mr. & Mrs. Earl S. Swensson Dr. John B. Thomison* Mr. & Mrs. Louis B. Todd Jr. Alan D. & Jan L. Valentine Peggy & John Warner Ms. Johnna Benedict Watson Mr. & Mrs. Ted H. Welch Barbara & Bud Zander Shirley Zeitlin Mr. Nicholas S. Zeppos & Ms. Lydia A. Howarth

Golden Baton Society Gifts of $2,500 - $4,999 Anonymous (3) Mrs. R. Benton Adkins Jr. Drs. W. Scott & Paige Akers Shelley Alexander Jon K. & Colleen Atwood Sallie & John Bailey Dr. & Mrs. Elbert Baker Jr. 42

J A NUA RY 2 0 1 4

Dr. & Mrs. Billy R. Ballard Ms. Marilyn Bell Betty C. Bellamy Mr. & Mrs. Louie A. Belt Dr. Eric & Elaine Berg Dr. & Mrs. Frank H. Boehm Jamey Bowen & Norman Wells

Randal & Priscilla Braker Dr. & Mrs.* H. Victor Braren Dan & Mindy Brodbeck Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Buijsman Michael & Jane Ann Cain Ann & Sykes Cargile Mr. Philip M. Cavender


Jack & Louise Spann Mr. & Mrs. Clark Spoden & Norah Buikstra Christopher & Maribeth Stahl Brett & Meredythe Sweet Mr. & Mrs. Matthew K. Taylor Pamela & Steven Taylor Rich & Carol Thigpin Scott & Julie Thomas Candy Toler Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Townes Risë & Laurence Tucker Mr. Robert J. Turner Drs. Pilar Vargas & Sten H. Vermund Mr. Vince Vinson Kris & G. G. Waggoner Dr. & Mrs. Martin H. Wagner Deborah & Mark Wait Mr. & Mrs. Jeffery C. & Dayna L. Walraven Mrs. W. Miles Warfield Dr. & Mrs. Mark Wathen Jonathan & Janet Weaver Carroll Van West & Mary Hoffschwelle Art & Lisa Wheeler Mr. Thomas G. B. Wheelock Charles Hampton White Mr. & Mrs. Jimmie D. White Jerry & Ernie Williams Ms. Marilyn Shields-Wiltsie & Dr. Theodore E. Wiltsie Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Wimberly Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. Wolfe

F U ND

Robert & Carol Lampe Larry & Martha Larkin Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Ledbetter Jr. Sally M. Levine Red & Shari Martin Tommy & Cat McEwen Mr. & Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Dr. Arthur M. Mellor F. Max & Mary A. Merrell Dr. Mark & Mrs. Theresa Messenger Mr. & Mrs. Eduardo H. Minardi Christopher & Patricia Mixon Mr. & Mrs. William P. Morelli Mr. David K. Morgan Ms. Lucy H. Morgan Matt & Rhonda Mulroy Mr. Mark E. Nicol Dr. Agatha L. Nolen Jonathan Norris & Jennifer Carlat David & Adrienne Piston Keith & Deborah Pitts Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Priesmeyer Dr. Terryl A. Propper Mr. & Mrs. Gustavus A. Puryear IV Ms. Allison R. Reed & Mr. Sam Garza Jeff & Kim Rice Anne & Charles Roos Geoffrey & Sandra Sanderson Dr. Norm Scarborough & Ms. Kimberly Hewell Mr. & Mrs. J. Ronald Scott Stephen K. & Patricia L. Seale Mr.* & Mrs. Martin E. Simmons George & Mary Sloan K. C. & Mary Smythe

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Mr. & Mrs. Terry W. Chandler Catherine Chitwood Dorit & Donald Cochron Marjorie & Allen* Collins Richard & Sherry Cooper Mr. & Mrs. James H. Costner Mr. & Mrs. Donald S. A. Cowan Dr. & Mrs. Ben Davis John & Natasha Deane The Rev. & Mrs. Fred Dettwiller Dr. & Mrs. E. Mac Edington David Ellis & Barry Wilker Donna & Jeffrey Eskind Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Ezrin Ms. Paula Fairchild T. Aldrich Finegan Tom & Judy Foster Danna & Bill Francis Cathey & Wilford Fuqua Harris A. Gilbert William & Helen Gleason Mr. & Mrs. Fred C. Goad Jr. Tony & Teri Gosse Kate R. W. Grayken Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Hagood Suzy Heer Mr. & Mrs. Scott Hoffman Ms. Cornelia B. Holland Dr. & Mrs. Stephen L. Houff Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Israel Donald L. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. John F. Jacques Robin & Bill King Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Koban Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Kovach

CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE Gifts of $1,000 - $2,499 Anonymous (9) Eric & Shannon Adams Jerry Adams Jeff & Tina Adams James & Glyna Aderhold Mark & Niki Antonini Ms. Teresa Broyles-Aplin Jeremy & Rebecca Atack Grace & Carl Awh Mr. & Mrs. H. Lee Barfield II Barbara & Mike Barton Mrs. Brenda Bass Mr. & Mrs. James Beckner Mrs. Norma M. Bell Frank M. Berklacich, MD Mr.* & Mrs. Harold S. Bernard Mr. & Mrs. Raymond P. Bills Mr. David Blackbourn & Ms. Celia Applegate Mr. & Mrs. Bill Blevins Dennis & Tammy Boehms Bob & Marion Bogen Mr. & Mrs. Robert Boyd Bogle III Mr. & Mrs. Gene Bonfoey Jere & Crystal Brassell Berry & Connie Brooks Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Brown

Jean & David Buchanan Dr. & Mrs. Glenn Buckspan Mr.* & Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl III Sharon Lee Butcher John E. Cain III Mr. & Mrs. Gerald G. Calhoun Mr. & Mrs. William H. Cammack Jan & Jim* Carell Mr. David Carlton Mr. & Mrs. William F. Carpenter III Clint & Patty Carter Dr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Carter Michael & Pamela Carter Valleau & Robert M. Caruthers Ms. Pamela Casey Anita & Larry Cash Dr. Elizabeth Cato Mary & Joseph Cavarra Dr.* & Mrs. Robert Chalfant Erica & Doug Chappell Barbara & Eric Chazen Donna R. Cheek James H. Cheek III Mrs. John Hancock Cheek Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Sam E. Christopher David & Starling Clark George D. Clark Jr.

Sallylou & David Cloyd Ed & Pat Cole Chase Cole Mr. Brian Cook Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Cook Jr. Teresa Corlew & Wes Allen Nancy Krider Corley Roger & Barbara Cottrell Mr. & Mrs. Roy J. Covert Mr. & Mrs. Donald S. A. Cowan Dr. & Mrs. James Crafton Drs. Paul A. & Dorothy Valcarcel Craig Mr. & Mrs. J. Bradford Currie Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Daley III M. Maitland DeLand, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Daryl Demonbreun Mrs. Edwin DeMoss LeeAnne & Carl Denney Peter & Kathleen Donofrio Laura L. Dunbar Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Eaden E.B.S. Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Edmondson Sr. Dr. & Mrs. William H. Edwards Sr. Robert D. Eisenstein Drs. James & Rena Ellzy Dr. Noelle Daugherty & Dr. Jack Erter

The Nashville Symphony would like to express sincere thanks and appreciation to the musicians and staff for their contributions. Through their extraordinary sacrifices, hard work and unwavering dedication, every member of our organization is helping to build a sustainable institution committed to serving our entire community through great music and education programs. InConcert

43


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Laurie & Steven Eskind Mr. Matthew Evers Bill & Dian S. Ezell Mr. & Mrs. DeWitt Ezell Dr. Meredith A. Ezell Mrs. Nancye Feistritzer Mr. & Mrs. John Ferguson W. Tyree Finch Ms. Deborah F. Turner & Ms. Beth A. Fortune Ms. Bettie D. Fuller Dr. & Mrs. John R. Furman Peter & Debra Gage Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas R. Ganick Carlene Hunt & Marshall Gaskins Ted M. George Mr. & Mrs. Roy J. Gilleland III Frank Ginanni Nancy & Gerry Goffinet Mr. C. Stanley Golden & Ms. Andrea J. Barrett Dr. Fred & Martha Goldner Dr. & Mrs. James D. Green Dr. & Mrs. Allen F. Gwinn The Evelyn S. & Jim Horne Hankins Foundation Mr. & Mrs. John Burton Hayes Ms. Doris Ann Hendrix Carrie & Damon Hininger Ken & Pam Hoffman Mr. & Mrs. Richard Holton Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Hooker Mr. & Mrs. Ephriam H. Hoover III Vicki & Rick Horne Ray Houston Hudson Family Foundation Donna & Ronn Huff Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Huljak Judith S. & James R. Humphreys Marsha & Keel Hunt Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Irby Sr. Rodney Irvin Family Mr. & Mrs. Toshinari Ishii Ellen & Kenneth Jacobs Janet & Philip Jamieson Lee & Pat Jennings George & Shirley Johnston Mary Loventhal Jones Mrs. Robert N. Joyner Mrs. Edward C. Kennedy Tom & Darlene Klaritch William C. & Deborah Patterson Koch Ms. Pamela L. Koerner Ms. Linda R. Koon Heloise Werthan Kuhn Mr. & Mrs. Randolph M. LaGasse Bob & Mary LaGrone Mr. Okey M. Landers Richard & Diane Larsen Kevin & May Lavender Sandi & Tom Lawless

Dr. & Mrs. John W. Lea IV Don & Patti Liedtke Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Lipman Mrs. John N. Lukens Joe & Anne Maddux Rhonda A. Martocci & William S. Blaylock Steve & Susie Mathews Lynn & Jack May Bob Maynard Joey & Beth McDuffee Mrs. Arlene McLaren Mr. & Mrs. Robert McNeilly Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. McRae III Ronald S. Meers Drs. Manfred & Susan Menking Diana & Jeff Mobley Dr. & Mrs. Charles L. Moffatt Patricia & Michael Moseley Margaret & David Moss Mrs. Betty W. Mullens James & Patricia Munro Leonard Murray & Jacqueline Marschak Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Nave Jr. Lannie W. Neal Mr. & Mrs. F.I. Nebhut Jr. Robert Ness Leslie & Scott Newman Mr. & Mrs.* Douglas Odom Jr. Representative & Mrs. Gary L. Odom Ms. Divina Ontiveros Dan & Helen Owens The Paisley Family David & Pamela Palmer Victoria & William Pao Grant & Janet Patterson Drs. Teresa & Phillip Patterson Dr. Edgar H. Pierce Jr. Mr. Charles H. Potter Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Potter Mr. & Mrs. Joseph K. Presley Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Prill Brad S. Procter Dr. Gipsie B. Ranney Franco & Cynthia Recchia Mr. & Mrs. Doyle R. Rippee Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Riven Mr. & Mrs. John A. Roberts Margaret Ann & Walter Robinson Foundation Mary Rolando Mr. & Mrs. David L. Rollins Ms. Sara L. Rosson & Ms. Nancy Menke Georgianna W. Russell David Sampsell Paula & Kent Sandidge Mr. & Mrs. John J. Sangervasi Samuel A. Santoro & Mary M. Zutter Mr. & Mrs. Eric M. Saul Mr. Paul H. Scarbrough

Mrs. Cooper M. Schley Mr. & Mrs. John L. Seigenthaler Dr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Shack Mr.* & Mrs. Robert K. Sharp Joan B. Shayne Anita & Mike Shea Allen Spears* & Colleen Sheppard Bill & Sharon Sheriff Dr. & Mrs. Andrew Shinar Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas A. Sieveking Sr. Luke & Susan Simons Tom & Sylvia Singleton Drs. Walter E. Smalley Jr. & Louise Hanson Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Scott Smith Suzanne & Grant Smothers Mickey M. & Kathleen Sparkman Dr. & Mrs. Norman Spencer Dr. Michael & Tracy Stadnick Mr. & Mrs. Joe N. Steakley Dr. & Mrs. Robert Stein Mr. & Mrs. David B. Stewart Bill & Linda Suchman Bruce & Elaine Sullivan Johanna & Fridolin Sulser James B. & Patricia B. Swan Dr. Steve A. Hyman & Mr. Mark Lee Taylor Ann M. Teaff & Donald McPherson III Dr. Paul E. Teschan Dr. & Mrs. Clarence S. Thomas Mr. Dwight D. Thrash Dr. Gary Tizard Norman & Marilyn Tolk Joe & Ellen Torrence Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Trammell Thomas L. & Judith A. Turk Christi & Jay Turner Mr. & Mrs. William E. Turner Jr. Larry & Brenda Vickers Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. Wahl Mike & Elaine Walker Mr. & Mrs. Martin H. Warren Talmage M. Watts Erin Wenzel Mr. & Mrs. James W. White Stacy Widelitz Dr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Wieck Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Wiesmeyer Mr. & Mrs. David M. Wilds Craig P. Williams & Kimberly Schenk Judy S. Williams Shane & Laura Willmon Mr. & Mrs. Ridley Wills II Mr. & Mrs. D. Randall Wright Mr. Matthew W. Wyatt Gail & Richard Yanko Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Zigli

CONCERTMASTER Gifts of $500 - $999 Anonymous (22) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Abelman Carol M. Allen Andy & Karen Anderson Geralda M. Aubry Richard W. Baker Mr. Randall B. Ball Susan F. & Paul J. Ballard George E. Barrett Mr. & Mrs. Edwin R. Barton Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Bateman Katrin T. Bean Mr. & Mrs. Craig Becker 44

J A NUA RY 2 0 1 4

Marti Bellingrath Bernice Amanda Belue Mike & Kathy Benson Dr. Joel Birdwell Ralph & Jane Black Randolph & Elaine Blake Mr. John Blanton Dr. & Mrs. Marion G. Bolin Irma Bolster Mary K. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. William E. Boyte Beverly J. Brandenburg Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Braun

Mary Lawrence Breinig Anastasia Brown Dr. Pamela E. Brown Thomas K. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Burgess Mr. Peter L. Bush Dr. & Mrs. Grady Butler William & Mary Callahan Mr. Thomas R. Campion Michael & Linda Carlson Bill & Chris Carver Mr. & Mrs. Christopher John Casa Santa


InConcert

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Mr. Benjamin L. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. J. Michael Gould Mr. & Mrs. Richard Grant Roger & Sherri Gray Mr. Michael Grillot Cathey & Doug Hall Dr. & Mrs. Carl Hampf Dr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Hardy Cindy Harper Kent & Becky Harrell Jean & Dick Hart Mr. & Mrs. Evans Harvill Dr. & Mrs. Jason Haslam Janet & Jim Hasson Dr. Gerald & Mary Hausman David & Judith Slayden Hayes Mr. & Mrs. Philip F. Head Lisa & Bill Headley Doug & Beth Heimburger Mr. Kevin E. Hickman Mr. David Hilley Dr. Becky E. Swanson-Hindman Mr. & Mrs. Jim Hitt Dr. Elisabeth Dykens & Dr. Robert Hodapp Frances Holt Ms. Susan S. Holt Albert C. Hughes Jr. & Charlotte E. Hughes Margie Hunter Nelson Hunter & Becky Gardner Mr. & Mrs. David Huseman Sandra & Joe Hutts Michael & Evelyn Hyatt Robert C. Jamieson MD Bob & Virginia Johnson Dr. Barbara F. Kaczmarska Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kane Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Karr John & Eleanor Kennedy Jane Kersten Ms. Janet Kleinfelter Mr. & Mrs. Gene C. Koonce Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Land Paul & Dana Latour Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lavender Mrs. Martha W. Lawrence Judy & Lewis Lefkowitz Mr. David C. Lehman Jr. Michael & Ellen Levitt Mr. & Mrs. Irving Levy Mr. & Mrs. John Lillie Burk & Caroline Lindsey Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas Lippolis The Howard Littlejohn Family Dr. & Mrs. John L. Lloyd Mr. & Mrs. Denis Lovell Drs. Amy & George Lynch George & Cathy Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Phil Lyons Herman & Dee Maass

annual

John & Susan Chambers M. Wayne Chomik Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Christenberry Mr. & Mrs. John W. Clay Jr. Jay & Ellen Clayton The Honorable & Mrs. Lewis H. Conner Elizabeth Cormier Marion Pickering Couch Richard & Marcia Cowan Chuck & Jackie Cowden Mr. and Ms. Joseph B. Crace Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Craig Dr. Robert Crants III Mr. & Mrs. Rob Crichton Ms. Susannah C. Culbertson James & Maureen Danly Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Davenport Maria Gabriella Giro & Jeff Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Davis Steve Sirls & Allen DeCuyper Mr. Daniel A. DeFigio Anne R. Dennison Drs. Clint & Jessica Devin Wally & Lee Lee Dietz Tom & Leslie DiNella Karen & Steven Good Josephine Doubleday Tere & David Dowland Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Drake Joe & Shirley Draper Mrs. Sheila D. Duke Michael & Beverly Dunn Dr. Jane Easdown & Dr. James Booth Dr. & Mrs. James E. Edwards Mrs. Clara Elam Dr. Christopher & Wendy Ellis Mr. Owen T. Embry Mr. & Mrs. William H. Eskind Robert & Cassandra Estes Dr. & Mrs. James Ettien Edgar & Kim Evins Jr. Dr. John & Janet Exton Ms. Marilyn Falcone Laurie & Ron Farris Ms. Fern Fitzhenry Dr. Arthur C. Fleischer & Family Denise Foote Dr. & Mrs. Armando C. Foronda Mr. & Mrs. David B. Foutch Ann D. Frisch Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Frist Jr. Robert & Peggy Frye Suzanne J. Fuller Bill & Ginny Gable William Joyce & Anderson Gaither John & Eva Gebhart Dr. & Mrs. Harold L. Gentry Mr. & Mrs. Stewart J. Gilchrist Mark Glazer & Cynthia Stone

Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Macdonald William R. & Maria T. MacKay Mr. & Mrs. Don MacLachlan James & Gene Manning Lee Marsden James & Patricia Martineau Abraham, Lesley & Jonathan Marx Drs. Ricardo Fonseca & Ingrid Mayer Mr. & Mrs. Henry C. McCall Joanne Wallace McCall Peg & Al McCree Mary & Don McDowell Mr. Brian L. McKinney Mrs. Heidi L. McKinney Dr. & Mrs. Alexander C. McLeod Randy & Edina McMasters Catherine & Brian McMurray Ed & Tracy McNally Sam & Sandra McSeveney Ms. Virginia J. Meece Dr. & Mrs. Robert A. Mericle Bruce & Bonnie Meriwether Dr. & Mrs. Philip G. Miller Drs. Randolph & Linda Miller Dr. & Mrs. Kent B. Millspaugh Dr. Jere Mitchum Ms. Gay Moon Cynthia & Richard Morin Steve & Laura Morris Dick & Mary Jo Murphy Larry & Marsha Nager William & Kathryn Nicholson Mr. Brian M. Norris Jane K. Norris Virginia O'Brien Mr. & Mrs. Russell Oldfield Jr. Judy Oxford & Grant Benedict Dr. & Mrs. Harry L. Page James & Jeanne Pankow Mr. & Mrs. M. Forrest Parmley Dr. & Mrs. C. Leon Partain Ms. Lisa Pasho-Coughlin John W. & Mary Patterson Dr. & Mrs. Joel Q. Peavyhouse Dr. & Mrs. A. F. Peterson Jr. Claude Petrie Jr. Linda & Carter Philips Faris & Robert Phillips CW Pinson, M.D., MBA Gaynelle Pitner* Ms. Julie B. Plexico Rick & Diane Poen Mr. John Pope Dr. & Mrs. James L. Potts John & Fiona Prine Ms. Belinda A. Pulley George & Joyce Pust Dr. James Quiggins Mr. Edwin B. Raskin Charles H. & Eleanor L. Raths Mrs. Ida D. Read Ms. Bonnie D. Reagan Paul & Gerda Resch Candace Mason Revelette Mr. Cliff N. Rhodes Barbara Richards Mrs. Jean Richardson Mary Riddle Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth L. Roberts Dr. Julie A. Roe Mr. & Mrs. Doug Rogers Fran C. Rogers W. Don Rogers Mr. & Mrs. David C. Roland Dr. James Roth Dr.* & Mrs. Kenneth Rutherford Samuel L. & Barbara Sanders Philip & Jane Sanderson 45


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Dr. Glynis Sandler & Dr. Martin Sandler Molly & Richard Schneider Dr. & Mrs. Timothy P. Schoettle Dr. Kenneth E. Schriver & Dr. Anna W. Roe Mr. & Mrs. Robert Scott Mr. Roderick Scruggs Drs. Fernando F. & Elena O. Segovia Odessa L. Settles Max & Michelle Shaff Paul & Celeste Shearer Mr. & Mrs. Alan Sielbeck Ashley N. Skinner Mr. Wesley A. Skinner Smith Family Foundation Robert B. Smith Dr. Robert Smith & Barbara Ramsey Mr. & Mrs. S. Douglas Smith Ruth & William Smith Mr. James E. Snider Jr. Mr.& Mrs. James M. Sohr Mr. & Mrs. Ronald M. Sohr

Dr. & Mrs. Anderson Spickard Jr. Ms. Karen G. Sroufe Gloria & Paul Sternberg Jr. CAPT & Mrs. Charles E. Stewart Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James P. Stonehocker Mr. & Mrs. William T. Stroud Craig & Dianne Sussman Dr. & Mrs. J. D. Taylor Eugene & Penny Te Selle Gilbert Thibedore Mr. Marcus W. Thompson Mr. Michael P. Tortora Martha J. Trammell Mr. & Mrs. Ray Troop Mila & Bill Truan Monty Holmes & Van Tucker Bradley & Karen Vandermolen Ms. Rita R. Vann Kathryn G. Varnell Curt & Kay Wallen Mr. Donald D. Warden II Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Warner Jr. Lawrence & Karen Washington

Mrs. James A. Webb Jr. Dr. Medford S. Webster Beth & Arville Wheeler Mr. & Mrs. Fred Wheeler David W. White Alyson Wideman Mrs. Marie Holman Wiggins Adam & Laura Wilczek Mr. Robert S. Wilkinson Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Williams Vicki Gardine Williams Gary & Cathy Wilson The Rev. & Mrs. H. David Wilson Greg & Debbie Wolf Edward* & Mary E. Womack Mr. Peter Wooten & Ms. Renata Soto Gary & Marlys Wulfsberg Mr. Payton H. Young Dr. Michael Zanolli & Julie K. Sandine Ms. Jane Zeigler Roy & Ambra Zent

Dr. Beth S. Barnett Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Barr Mr. & Mrs. Jack Bass, Jr. Mr. Curtis L. Baysinger Ms. Michelle L. Beauvais Dr. Sammy F. Becdach Susan O. Belcher Mr. Wesley P. Belden Mark H. Bell Ron & Sheryl Bell Mr. Carl W. Berg Ms. Tyler Berry Cherry & Richard Bird Dr. & Mrs. Ben J. Birdwell Bill & Donna Bissell Mr. & Mrs. Scott & Rebekah Blackburn Ms. Helen R. Blackburn-White Rick & Abby Blahauvietz Marilyn Blake Joan Bledsoe Mr. John Bliss Phil & Carol Boeing Jim & Sydney Boerner Mr. & Mrs. Philip C. Bolger Dr. & Mrs. Charles R. Bolton David L. Bone Mr. Paine Bone Mr. & Mrs. Seton J. Bonney Mr. & Mrs. Roger Borchers David Bordenkircher Jerry & Donna Boswell Robert E. Bosworth Carolyn J. Bowlds Don & Deborah Boyd Jeff & Jeanne Bradford Mr. Charles Brasher Mr. Michael F. Brewer Ms. Alexis Bright Betty & Bob Brodie Mr & Mrs. Larry J. & Julia Brooks Kathy & Bill Brosius Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Brown Robert Brown Tom Bruce Burnece Walker Brunson Mr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Bryant Mrs. Susan S. Buck Mr. Nicholas M. Buda T. Mark & D. K. Buford

Mr. & Mrs. John R. Burch Sr. Evan & Jennifer Burton Mr. & Mrs. David R. Buttrey Jr. Geraldine & Wilson Butts David L. & Chigger J. Bynum Dr. & Mrs. Robert O. Byrd Ms. Betsy Calabrace Mr. Richard Callahan Mrs. Julia C. Callaway Claire Ann Calongne Mr. Richard A. Calvin Bratschi Campbell Mr. Kenneth L. Campbell Gary E. Canaday Robert & Melanie Cansler Mr. Mark J. Cappellino Mr. T. James Carmichael Earl & Elizabeth Carnahan Mr. Colin J. Carnahan Karen Carr Amy Carter Ms. Shalonda Cawthon Mr.* & Mrs. James W. Chamberlain Evelyn LeNoir Chandler Mr. Caldwell Charlet Dr. Walter J. Chazin Mrs. Robert L. Chickey Mr. Joseph B. Christy Teresa C. Cissell Councilman & Mrs. Phil Claiborne Drs. Walter & Deborah Clair Charles & Agenia Clark Steven* & Donna Clark Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Clarkson Mr. & Mrs. Roy Claverie Sr. Keith N. Clayton Terry & Holly Clyne Mr. & Mrs. Neely B. Coble III Dr. Clifford Cockerham & Ms. Sherry Cummings Mark & Robin Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan J. Cole Ms. Danah Coleman Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Coleman Shirley Coleman Mr. & Mrs. Wiley B. Coley Colonel (ret.) Dr. & Mrs. James R. (Conra) Collier Dr. Clyde E. Collins

FIRST CHAIR Gifts of $250 - $499 Anonymous (28) Drs. Oran Aaronson & Shannon Snyder The Rev. Dr. & Mrs. W. Robert Abstein Maryle & Tom Albin Chip Alford Mr. & Mrs. Roger Allbee Dr. Joseph H. Allen Newton & Burkley Allen Mr. & Mrs. John Allpress Michael & Charlene Alvey Adrienne Ames Betty Anderson Dr. & Mrs. John E. Anderson Professor Kathryn Anderson Ken & Jan Anderson Newell Anderson & Lynne McFarland Todd & Barbara Arrants Mr. & Mrs. John S. Atkins The Brian C. Austin Family Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Averbuch Janet B. Baggett Lawrence E. Baggett Charles & Marjorie Bain Ms. Carolyn C. Baker Drs. Ferdinand & Eresvita Balatico Mr. & Mrs. J. Oriol Barenys

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Ms. Karen A. Fentress Dr. Robert G. Ferland Mr. Matt H. Ferry Jerry & Mary Ann Fife Janie & Richard Finch Ms. Jennifer Finger Dr. & Mrs. Jack Fisher Doris T. Fleischer Nellie Folsom Mr. Kent T. Forward Cathy & Kent Fourman Mr. Eric P. Fowlds Andrew & Mary Foxworth Sr. Ms. Nelle L. Freemon Scott & Anita Freistat Mr. & Mrs. Robert & Debra Frey Tom & Jennifer Furtsch Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Galantowicz Dr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Galbraith Ms. Elham Galyon Mr. William Gann Mr. & Mrs. Philip Ganske Mr. & Mrs. Craig E. Gardella Mr. & Mrs. George C. Garden Alan & Jeannie Gaus Nancy & Ken Gentry Miss Lindsay A. George Dodie & Carl George The Geraghty Family Em J. Ghianni Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Giles Mr. & Mrs. Ralph T. Glassford Linda & Joel Gluck Theresa G. Payne Caroline Goedicke Eric H. Goodman Susan T. Goodwin

InConcert

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Mrs. John S. Derryberry Ms. Molly E. Devine Mr. & Mrs. Arthur DeVooght Mr. John I. Dickson Jr. Dr. Joseph & Ambassador Rachel Diggs Dr. Tom D. Dillehay Dominick & Lynette Dimeola Mr. Guy R. Dinwiddie Ms. Shirley J. Dodge Ms. Angelica M. Dones Kevin J. & Ellen Donovan Michael Doochin & Linda Kartoz-Doochin Mr. & Mrs. William A. Dortch Jr. Clark & Peggy Druesedow Judith A. Dudley Mr. & Mrs. Bradley Dugger Kathleen & Stephen Dummer Mr & Mrs. Mike Dungan Bob & Nancy Dunkerley Dr. & Mrs. D.W. Durrett Burton Dye Mr. & Mrs. Jim Eades Jr. Kathryn & Webb Earthman Mr. & Mrs. Kevin B. Ebert Braces by Dr. Ruth Thomas D. Edmonds DVM Bonnie Edwards Mr. Timothy W. Estes Ms. Claire Evans Bobby & Dawn Evans Tony & Shelley Exler The Farris & Martin Family Mr. Steven Fast Michael & Rosemary Fedele Mr. Edward Fedorovich

annual

Mr. & Mrs. Jerry C. Collins Ms. Peggy B. Colson F. Michael Combs Mr. & Mrs. Randy Cook Mr. Troy E. Cook Donna Cookson Ms. Anne G. Cooper Arlene & Charley Cooper Mike & Sandy Cooper Kathy & Scott Corlew Ms. Adrienne L. Corn Allie & Landford Correll Paula & Bob Covington Dr. Charles Cox & Dr. Joy Cox Mr. & Mrs. George Crawford Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Jeff L. Creasy Mr. & Mrs. David Crecraft Mr. Howard R. Crockett Will R. & Jean Crowthers Ms. Kathleen M. Cullen R. Barry & Kathy Cullen The Daly-Ark Family Ms. Margaret M. DAngelo William N. Daniel Jr. Ms. Aurora A. Daniels Andrew Daughety & Jennifer Reinganum Mr. Frederick L. Davidson Janet Keese Davies Frank C. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Daws Ms. Gloria Deaner Doug & Marie DeGraaf Dr. & Mrs. Roy L. DeHart Mr. & Mrs. J. William Denny Eustace Denton Dr. & Mrs. Henry A. DePhillips

47


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Dr. & Mrs. Gerald S. Gotterer Tom & Carol Ann Graham Antonio M. Granda M.D. Jay & Suzanne Grannis Dr. Cornelia R. Graves Alexander & Simone Gray Mr. Thomas A. Greene Mr. James H. Grimes R. Dale & Nancy G. Grimes Mr. & Mrs. Russell D. Groff Anne & Frank Gulley Mr. & Mrs. David C. Guth Jr. Dr. & Mrs. John D. Hainsworth Ms. Leigh Ann Hale Scott, Kathy & Kate Hall Katherine S. Hall Mr. & Mrs. Harry M. Hanna Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hanselman Mr. Eric Hardesty Mrs. Edith Harris Mr. & Mrs. James M. Harris Dickie & Joyce Harris Mr. James S. Hartman Mark & Sylvia Hartzog Mary & Paul Harvey Robert & Nora Harvey Mr. Jonathan Harwell Mr. Michael W. Hayes Peggy R. Hays Stephen & Deborah Hays H. Carl Haywood Fred & Judy Helfer Doug & Becky Hellerson Mr. Wayne Z. Henderson Jr. Dennis & Leslie Henson Steve Hesson Ronald & Nancy Hill Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Hilmer Ms. Christina M. Hirsch

Mr. & Mrs. Donald Hofe Aurelia L. Holden Dr. Nan Holland Mr. & Mrs. James G. Holleman William Hollings Mr. James N. Hollingsworth Dr. and Mrs. Doy Hollman Catherine J. Holsen Bethany Productions- Bethany & Tyson Hoppe Ken & Beverly Horner Diane & Bruce Houglum Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. House Allen, Lucy & Paul Hovious Samuel H. Howard William Howard Lilly Hsu Mrs. Carol Hudler Mr. Neal Hudson Dr. & Mrs. Louis C. Huesmann II Ms. Jean C. Hughes The Hunt Family Foundation Cathy A. Hutchinson Mr. Narum Hyatt Mrs. Beverly Hyde Gordon & Shaun Inman Dr. & Mrs. Roger Ireson Dr. Anna M. Jackson Frances C. Jackson Haynie & Patsy Jacobs Gregory & Patricia James Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Javorcky Mr. Richard W. Jett Mr. & Mrs. Neil Jobe Mr. & Mrs. David A. Johnson John T. & Kerrie Johnson Susan & Evan Johnston Dr. Amos Jones Jr. Bridgette Jones

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Jane & Cecil Jones Pat & David Jones Frank & Audrey Jones Pat & Howard Jones Mr. Patrick D. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kanak Dr. & Mrs. Herman J. Kaplan Mrs. Michel G. Kaplan Carly Kear Mrs. Cynthia A. Keathley Jeffrey & Layle Kenyon Petter & Courtney Kihlberg Mr. Patrick Kilby Bill & Becca Killebrew Mr. & Mrs. Monty Kimble Kathleen & Don King Drs. Thomas & Vicki King Mr. Alexander W. Kirk Jack T. & Barbara E. Knott George McCulloch & Linda Knowles David & Judy Kolzow Dr. Valentina Kon & Dr. Jeffrey L. Hymes Mr. & Mrs. Carl Kornmeyer Mark J. Koury & Daphne C. Walker Sanford & Sandra Krantz David G. Kuberski Mr. James G. Lackey III Mr.& Mrs. Timothy LaGrow Mr. & Mrs. John H. Laird Sharon H. Lassiter Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Latham Danny & Jan Law Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Lawrence Dr. & Mrs. James W. Lea Jr. Mrs. Douglas E. Leach* Dr. & Mrs. Donald Lee J. Mark Lee Mr. David L. Lege Mr. Kyle Lehning Richard & Deborah Lehrer Michael Leidel Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Lester Ralph G. Leverett Mr. Matthew Leverton John & Marge Lewis Mr. Adam J. Liff Judy & David Lifsey Mr. & Mrs. Ronald S. Ligon Mr. & Mrs. Billy Livsey Keltner W. & Debra S. Locke Jean & Steve Locke Mr. Rufus & Evelyn Long David & Nancy Loucky Thomas H. Loventhal Kenyatta & Tracey Lovett J. Edgar Lowe Mr. & Mrs. Jay Lowenthal Terry & Larry Lowman Ms. Frances B. Lumbard Mr. & Mrs. James C. Lundy Jr. Jeffrey C. Lynch Patrick & Betty Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Lynn Sr. Sharron Lyon Dr. & Mrs. Joe MacCurdy Drs. Thomas W. & Beverly B. Madron Dr. Mark A. Magnuson & Ms. Lucile Houseworth Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Maier Mr. Cosmin E. Majors Gerry & Alicia Mandel Audrea & Helga Maneschi Dr. & Mrs. N. H. Mann Jr. Sheila Mann Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Manyik Sam & Betty Marney Terry Maroney & Christine Sun


Mr. Kevin M. Marron Carolyn J. Marsh Dr. & Mrs. Harry D. Marsh Ms. Anne B. Marshall Mr. Arrold Martin Mr. & Mrs. Ben T. Martin Mr. Henry Martin Dr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Brian S. Masterson Sue & Herb Mather Eva Mathis Margery Mayer & Carolyn Oehler Mr. & Mrs. John D. McAlister Mr. Paul Lorczak & Janet McCabe Ms. Beverly McCann Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. McClure Kathleen McCracken Mary & John McCullough Mr. Evan A. McCutchen Bob McDill & Jennifer Kimball Ed & Carla McDougle Edward W. McFadden Mr. Alison S. McFarland Dr. & Mrs. Timothy E. McNutt Sr. Dr. Larry L. McReynolds Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. McWherter Linda & Ray Meneely Mr. & Mrs. Roy L. Mewbourne Mr. James A. Meyer & Ms. Lynne Link Ms. Brinkley Meyers Sherree Meyers Mr. & Mrs. Mike Hannold Sheila & Alan Miller Dr. Ron V. Miller Dr. Fernando Miranda & Dr. Patricia Bihl-Miranda Mr. Michael Mishu Ms. Nancy Mitchell Mr. Steve C. Mitchell Mr. & Mrs. Steven Moll Anthony & Ariane Montemuro Felix & Shirley Montgomery Dr. Michael F. Montijo & Mrs. Patricia A. Jamieson-Montijo Ms. Autumn E. Moore Mr. D. Mark Moore James & April Moore Dr. Kelly L. Moore Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Morphett Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Morreale Scott & Suzy Morrell Lynn Morrow Mr. Gary Morse Dr. Matthew K. Mosteller Phil Mowrey Drs. Russell & Lizabeth Mullens Mr. & Mrs. B. Dwayne Murray Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J. William Myers James Mark Naftel Allen & Janice Naftilan Ms. Carolyn Heer Nash Mr. & Mrs. Jerome B. Neal Mrs. Mary T. Neblett Mr. Hunter S. Neubert Dr. & Mrs. Harold Nevels Dr. John Newman & Ms. Rebecca Lyford Mark & Kaye Nickell Al Nisley Drs. John* & Margaret Norris Judy M. Norton Ann & Denis* O'Day Jason & Kelly Odum Hunt & Debbye Oliver Mr. & Mrs. Jack Oman Frank & Nancy Orr Philip & Carolyn Orr Frank & Dr. Amy Ortega Drs. Lucius & Freida Outlaw

The Arts make our community a richer, healthier, more vibrant place to live. And that’s a subject we know a lot about.

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Wayne Overby Dr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Overfield Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Overstreet Dr. & Mrs. James Pace Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth H. Palm Terry & Wanda Palus Mr. & Mrs. Chris Panagopoulos Doria Panvini Clint Parrish Diane Payne Mr. & Mrs. John O. Pearce Lewis & Martha Penfield Anne & Neiland Pennington Kathy & Tom Pennington Frank Perez Mr. Adam Perkinson Ms.Caroline Peyton Dennis Pitts Gail Plucker Ms. Judith E. Plummer Ms. Carol Polston Phil & Dot Ponder Mr. Jason E. Poole Katherine M. Poole Mr. & Mrs. Robert & Kathleen Poole Stanley D. Poole Ms. Elizabeth M. Potocsnak Mr. Sean Power Mitch and Leslie Powers Cammy Price Ann Pushin Mr. Daniel L. Rader & Mrs. Leah R. Jensen-Rader Edria & David Ragosin Mr. & Mrs. Ross Rainwater Mr. Wyatt Rampy Mr. & Mrs. William C. Randle Nancy Ward Ray Don Reed & Lynne Wallman Mr. & Mrs John & Dawn Reed Dr. William M. Regenold Charlotte A. Reichley Jean D. Reily Lee Allen Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth & Lori Rhodes Mr. & Mrs. Larry V. Rhodes Don & Connie Richardson Mr. & Mrs. Michael Richardson Mrs. Jane H. Richmond Mrs. Paul E. Ridge Margaret Riegel Rob & Tammy Ringenberg Mr. & Mrs. Eugene & Susan Robinson Dr. & Mrs. Bruce D. Rogers Judith R. Roney Rodney & Lynne Rosenblum Dr. Carolyn A. Ross Dr. & Mrs. Charles Ross Edgar & Susan Rothschild Dr. & Mrs. Robert M. Roy Dr. Irving Rubenstein Pamela & Justin C. Rutledge Judith Ann Sachs Mr. Stephen Sachs Mr. Douglas L. Sadtler Ms. Kaori Saito Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Sams Ron & Lynn Samuels Mr. & Mrs. Bryce Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Bobby & Brenda Sandlin Mr. & Mrs. Derrick G. Sandoval Jack & Diane Sasson Mr. & Mrs.William B. Saunders & Family Mr. Donald D. Savoy Mrs. Loretta Holland Scates Ms. Sandra A. Schatten Dr. Alex D. Schenkman & Melissa Musser Mrs. Thomas W. Schlater III Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth P. Schnaars


Sheila Schott Jack Schuett Dr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Schultenover Mr. Thomas R. Schupp Phyllis & Ray Sells Gene & Linda Shade Richard & Marilyn Shadinger Dr. & Mrs. Steven Shankle Brian Shapiro Ms. Vickie Shaw Mrs. Jack W. Shepherd Ms. Laura E. Sikes Dr. & Mrs. John O. Simmons Keith & Kay Simmons Mrs. Wilson Sims Dr. & Mrs. Manuel Sir Alice Sisk Pamela Sixfin Rebecca Slaughter Mr. James B. Smedley Charles R. Smith & Vernita Hood-Smith Dallas & Jo Ann Smith Mr. Edd Smith Mrs. Rebecca Smith Marc & Lorna Soble Mr. Chris Song Mr. John D. Souther Nan E. Speller Tom Spiggle Mr. & Mrs. Charles Sprintz Tom Squires Mrs. Randolph C. St. John Tabor Stamper - KHS America Hilary & Shane Stapleton Caroline Stark & Lane Denson* Lelan & Yolanda Statom Dennis & Billie Jean Stephen Mr. & Mrs. Lemuel Stevens Jr. Richard & Jennifer Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Cyril Stewart Bob & Tammy Stewart Dr. Christie E. St-John Kent & Judy Stockton Mr. Timothy M. Strobl Mr. & Mrs. Samuel E. Stumpf, Jr. Dewayne & Kristy Sullivan Frank Sutherland & Natilee Duning Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Svennevik Don D. & Louise McKee Swain Greg & Rhonda Swanson Rev. Justin Sweatman Dr. Esther & Mr. Jeff Swink Bishop Frederick Hilborn Talbot Bruce & Jaclyn Tarkington Ms. Jeanette Tatman Mr. Lawrence E. Taylor Dr. Patricia Lloyd Taylor Jeremy & Carrie Teaford Mr. Christian Teal Dr. & Mrs. David L. Terrell Mrs. Kimberly S. Teter Mr. & Mrs. Richard Theiss Mr. & Mrs. Bob F. Thompson Richard & Shirley Thrall Mr. Bradford Threlkeld Mr. Walter Tieck Scott & Nesrin Tift Brian & Callie Tinney Ms. Shari L. Tish Leon Tonelson Mr. & Mrs. Timothy True Mr. Phillip Trusty Richard, Kimiko, Jennifer & Lindsey Tucker Mr. & Mrs. John A. Turnbull Mr. & Mrs. Jimmy L. Turner Mr. William B. Turner Dr. & Mrs. Michael Tyler Mr. Frank C. Valdez

A school that’s about all the possibilities.

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Every day your children are discovering new things to learn and love. Franklin Road Academy shows them how to turn choices into a life of fulfillment and success. We teach students to explore all of life’s possibilities, and then we equip them to excel. philanthropist

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SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 2014 Grades PreK3 – 12 Developing scholars with integrity and balance in an inclusive Christian environment for grades PreK3 through 12. For a personal tour of the campus, please call (615) 369-4488.

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Families have relocated from 31 states and seven foreign countries, citing Currey Ingram Academy as a major factor in their decision to move to this area. We offer individualized learning plans for every student and a robust host of athletics, arts and extracurricular activities — all on a beautiful 83-acre campus just minutes from downtown Nashville and Cool Springs/Franklin, in the heart of Brentwood.

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FROM HERE TO ANYWHERE

BELMONT UNIVERSITY School of Music Audition Dates for Spring / Fall 2014 UNDERGRADUATE: November 9, 2013 / January 11, 2014 / January 25, 2014 February 8, 2014 / March 22, 2014 (Admission only) (A BM in Music Therapy will be offered beginning fall 2014.)

GRADUATE: November 9, 2013 / January 24, 2014 / February 14, 2014 / February 28, 2014

For more information, call 615.460.6408 or visit www.BELMONT.edu/music.

The Webb School Bell Buckle

Passionate LEarnErs

Creative ExprEssion

Anthony & Sonya Venturella Mr. James N. Vickers Mr. Rory I. Villafuerte Kimberly Dawn Vincent Ms. Lucy A. Visceglia Ms. Maria Voss Janice Kay Wagen Lois J. Wagner & Barbara M. Lonardi Mr. & Mrs. Fred C. Wald Mrs. Betty W. Walker Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Wall Jr. Kay & Larry Wallace Mr. Matthew D. Wardle Rachel Ward-Vick Mr. & Mrs. William Joe Warise Dr. Adam E. Watkins Bob Watson & Beth Mallen Gayle & David Watson Frank & Jane Wcislo Ms. Bernadette A. Webster H. Martin & Joyce Weingartner Dr. & Mrs. Matthew B. Weinger Mr. & Mrs. Jon A. Wells Mr. Kevin L. Welsh Ms. Jo H. West Franklin & Helen Westbrook J Peter R. Westerholm Mr. Angelo White Linda & Raymond White Keith & Amy Whitfield Jonna & Doug Whitman Eleanor D. Whitworth Ms. Judith B. Wiens Frank & Marcy Williams Mr. & Mrs. Harry E. Williams John & Anne Williams Dr. Joyce E. Williams Susan & Fred Williams Mr. Kirby S. Willingham Amos & Etta Wilson Tommy & Carol Ann Wilson The Wing Family Ms. Sandra Wiscarson Scott & Ellen Wolfe Mr. Robert H. Walle Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Wood Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert & Wanda Woods Dr. John Wright & Mrs. Jenni Wright Kay & Randall Wyatt Vivian R. & Richard A. Wynn Ms. Na Yang Dr. Mary Yarbrough Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. Yeager Faith Adams Young Donna B. Yurdin Jerry Zhao Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Zibart James & Candice Zimmermann Rev. & Mrs. A. Jackson Zipperer Jr. *denotes donors who are deceased

Honorary

The Webb School is a college preparatory day/boarding school for grades 6-12. Special in-state tuition rate and merit scholarships available. www.thewebbschool.com 888-733-9322

In honor of Emily & Ralph Buck In honor of Drake Calton In honor of Marion P. Couch In honor of Keelan Farrell & Ben Gager In honor of Kaelyn Giles In Honor of Martha Rivers Ingram In honor of Roger T. May, Esq. In honor of Callum, Julia & A. J. McCaffrey In honor of Bonnie Myers In honor of the Nashville Symphony Musicians In honor of the Nashville Symphony Musicians and Staff In honor of Reba Sanders In honor of Mark Lee Taylor In honor of the marriage of Michael Thigpen & Kimhoung Nhep


Memorial

Jason Tucker Photography

In memory of Paul W. Beam In memory of James Bradshaw In memory of James F. Brandenburg In memory of Miss Martha Carroll In memory of Steven A. Clark In memory of W. Ovid Colllins Jr. In memory of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Crain In memory of Gerry Daniel In memory of Julian de la Guardia In memory of Ann Deol In memory of Joe Ervin In memory of Miles Stuart Hunter In memory of Rodney Irvin In memory of Mildred J. Oonk In memory of Willis Page In memory of Mrs.Bert (Emily) Parrish In memory of Lt Cmdr Alan A. Patterson, USN In memory of Katherine Ramage Love In memory of Mr. John Robert Sanders Sr. In memory of Reba Morton Sanders In memory of Walter & Huldah Sharp In memory of Martin E. Simmons In memory of Dr. Sam Simon In memory of Mrs. Barbara Smith Cagle-Walker In memory of Frank Smith In memory of Alex Steele In memory of Caroline Suschnick In memory of Ginny Thigpen In memory of Rosemary Thompson In memory of Lera Van Eys In memory of Fred Viehmann In memory of Irving & Gladys WolfĂŤ

Lawrence S. Levine Memorial Fund

George E. Barrett John Auston Bridges Mr.* & Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl III Barbara & Eric Chazen Donna R. Cheek Dr. & Mrs. Alan G. Cohen Esther & Roger Cohn Wally & Lee Lee Dietz Dee & Jerald Doochin Robert D. Eisenstein Mrs. Annette S. Eskind Laurie & Steven Eskind Harris A. Gilbert Allis Dale & John Gillmor Dr. Fred & Martha Goldner Mr. & Mrs. Billy Ray Hearn Judith Hodges Judith S. & James R. Humphreys Walter & Sarah Knestrick Sheldon Kurland Ellen C. Lawson Sally M. Levine In honor of Judith & Jim Humphreys Frances & Eugene Lotochinski Ellen Harrison Martin Mr. & Mrs. Martin F. McNamara III Cynthia & Richard Morin Dr. Harrell Odom II & Mr. Barry W. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Craig E. Philip Anne & Charles Roos Mr. & Mrs. John L. Seigenthaler Joan B. Shayne Dr. & Mrs. Anderson Spickard Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert Stein Vicky & Bennett Tarleton Mr. & Mrs. Louis B. Todd Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Byron Trauger Betty & Bernard Werthan Mr. Mark Zimbicki and Ms. Wendy Kurland Alice A. Zimmerman

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annual

Corporations, Foundations & Government Agencies

The Nashville Symphony is deeply grateful to the following corporations, foundations and government agencies that support its concert season and its services to the community through generous contributions to the Annual Fund. Donors as of December 4, 2013.

fun d

Season Presenters Gifts of $100,000+ The Martin Foundation

Care Foundation of America, Inc.

Directors’ Associates Gifts of $50,000+

Principal Players Gifts of $25,000+ Mike Curb Family Foundation

Mary C. Ragland Foundation

Government Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County

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Mayor Karl F. Dean

Metropolitan Council


Business Partner Gifts of $2,500 - $4,999 American Brokerage Company, Inc. AmSurg BioVentures, Inc. Blevins, Inc. Carter Haston Real Estate Services Inc. City of Brentwood Consolidated Pipe & Supply Co., Inc. The Crichton Group First Baptist Nashville Gould Turner Group, P.C. Renasant Bank Tennsco Corporation Travelink American Express Travel

Business Associates Gifts of $500 - $1,249 Anonymous (1) A-1 Appliance Company V. Alexander & Co., Inc. R. H. Boyd Publishing Corporation Burger Up Chaffin's Barn Dinner Theatre D.F. Chase, Inc. Marylee Chaski Charitable Corporation Enfinity Engineering, LLC Haber Corporation Habitat for Humanity of Greater Nashville INDUSCO Kaatz, Binkley, Jones & Morris Architects, Inc. Loews Vanderbilt Hotel Quanta Computer Nashville RD Plastics Co., Inc. Richard Fletcher of 511 Group Inc. Stansell Electric Company, Inc. Stites & Harbison, PLLC Sysco Nashville Volunteer Barge & Transport, Inc. VSA Arts Tennessee Walker Lumber & Hardware Company Walmart DC 6062 Women's Philharmonic Advocacy IN-KIND AARP Tennessee Ajax Turner Co., Inc. American Airlines American Tuxedo Crowe Horwath LLP Dulce Desserts Stephen M. Emahiser The Glover Group Hampton Inn & Suites Downtown Nashville, Hilton Nashville Downtown Just Love Coffee Roasters Ms. Sally M. Levine Lipman Brothers McQuiddy Printing

CAPT & Mrs. Charles E. Stewart Jr. Nashville Symphony Volunteer Auxiliary NAXOS OSHi Floral DĂŠcor Studio Premier Parking of Tennessee MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES American General Life & Accident American International Group, Inc. Atmos Energy AT&T Higher Education/Cultural Matching Gift Program Bank of America BCD Travel Becton Dickinson & Co. CA Matching Gifts Program Caterpillar Foundation Cigna Foundation Community Health Systems Foundation Eaton Corporation ExxonMobil Foundation First Data Foundation First Tennessee The Frist Foundation GE Foundation Hachette Book Group IBM Corporation Illinois Tool Works Foundation McKesson Foundation Merrill Lynch & Co Foundation, Inc. Microsoft Matching Gifts Program Nissan Gift Matching Program Regions Scottrade Square D Foundation Matching Gift Program Shell Oil Company Foundation Starbucks Matching Gifts Program The Aspect Matching Gifts Program The HCA Foundation The Meredith Corporation Foundation The Prudential Foundation The Stanley Works U.S. Bancorp Foundation Williams Community Relation

InConcert

55

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Artistic Underwriters Gifts of $5,000- $9,999 A.C. Entertainment Inc. BDO Chet Atkins Music Education Fund Of the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee The Cockayne Fund Inc. The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc. Cracker Barrel Foundation Samuel M. Fleming Foundation Freeman Webb, Inc. Landis B. Gullett Charitable Lead Annuity Trust Hampton Inn & Suites Nashville Downtown KraftCPAs PLLC OSHi Floral Decor Studio PwC The Elizabeth Craig Weaver Proctor Charitable Foundation Tennessee Christian Medical Foundation Wells Fargo

Business Leader Gifts of $1,250 - $2,499 Calsonic Kansei Gannett Foundation/The Tennessean J. Alexander's Corporation Universal Lighting Technologies William Morris Endeavor Entertainment

annual

Orchestra Partners Gifts of $10,000 - $24,999 Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP Coca-Cola Bottling Company Consolidated Caterpillar Financial Services Corrections Corporation of America Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation Griffin Technology The HCA Foundation Ann Hardeman and Combs L. Fort Foundation Neal & Harwell, PLC Nordstrom Community Giving Publix Super Markets Charities, Inc. Ryman Hospitality Properties Foundation


CAPITAL FUNDS

ca p ital

The Nashville Symphony wishes to acknowledge and thank the following individuals, foundations and corporations for their commitment to the Symphony. This list recognizes donors who contributed $15,000 or more to one of the Symphony’s endowment or capital campaigns. These capital campaigns make it possible to ensure a sustainable future for a nationally recognized orchestra worthy of Music City. $1M+

Dollar General Corporation Laura Turner Dugas The Frist Foundation Amy Grant & Vince Gill Patricia & H. Rodes Hart Mr. & Mrs. Spencer Hays HCA Ingram Charitable Fund Lee Ann & Orrin Ingram The Martin Foundation Ellen Harrison Martin Mr. & Mrs. R. Clayton McWhorter The Memorial Foundation Metropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County

Anne* & Dick Ragsdale Mr. & Mrs. Ben R. Rechter Estate of Walter B & Huldah Cheek Sharp State of Tennessee Margaret & Cal Turner Jr. James Stephen Turner Charitable Foundation Vanderbilt University The Vandewater Family Foundation Ms. Johnna Benedict Watson Colleen & Ted Welch The Anne Potter Wilson Foundation

Mr. Tom Black Dr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist, Jr. Giarratana Development, LLC Carl & Connie Haley Mr. & Mrs. J. Michael Hayes

HCA Foundation, in honor of Dr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. McCabe Jr. Regions Bank Mr. & Mrs. James C. Seabury III

Estate of Anita Stallworth SunTrust Bank Tennessee Arts Commission Laura Anne Turner

$250,000+

American Constructors, Inc. Barbara & Jack Bovender American Retirement Corp. Connie & Tom Cigarran E.B.S. Foundation Gordon & Shaun Inman

Harry & Jan Jacobson The Judy & Noah Liff Foundation Robert Straus Lipman Mrs. Jack C. Massey* Mr. & Mrs. Henry McCall Lynn & Ken Melkus

Richard L. & Sharalena Miller National Endowment for the Arts Justin & Valere Potter Foundation Irvin & Beverly Small Anne H. & Robert K. Zelle

$100,000+

Mr. & Mrs. Dale Allen Phyllis & Ben* Alper Andrews Cadillac/Land Rover Nashville Averitt Express Barbara B. & Michael W. Barton BellSouth Julie & Frank Boehm Richard & Judith Bracken Mr. & Mrs. James C. Bradford Jr. Boult, Cummings, Conners & Berry, PLC The Charles R. Carroll Family Fred J. Cassetty Mr.* & Mrs. Michael J. Chasanoff Leslie Sharp Christodoulopoulos Charitable Trust CLARCOR Mr. & Mrs. William S. Cochran Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Fite Cone Corrections Corporation of America Estate of Dorothy Parkes Cox Janine, Ben, John & Jenny Cundiff Deloitte & Touche LLP The Rev. Canon & Mrs. Fred Dettwiller Marty & Betty Dickens Michael D. & Carol E. Ennis Family Annette & Irwin* Eskind The Jane & Richard Eskind & Family Foundation

The M. Stratton Foster Charitable Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Steven B. Franklin Front Brown Todd LLC Gannett Foundation / The Tennessean Dr. Priscilla Partridge de Garcia & Dr. Pedro E. Garcia Gordon & Constance Gee Genesco Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Joel C. Gordon Guardsmark, LLC Billy Ray & Joan* Hearn The Hendrix Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Hooker & Family Mr. & Mrs. Elliott Warner Jones Walter & Sarah Knestrick ESaDesign Team Earl Swensson Associates Inc. I.C. Thomasson Associates Inc. KSi/Structural Engineers Lattimore, Black, Morgan & Cain PC Mr. & Mrs. Fred Wiehl Lazenby Sally M. Levine Andrew Woodfin Miller Foundation Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. Nashville Symphony Chorus Nashville Symphony Orchestra League Pat & John W. Nelley Jr.

O’Charley’s Partnership 2000 Bonnie & David Perdue Mr. & Mrs. Philip Maurice Pfeffer Mr. & Mrs. Dale W. Polley Mary C. Ragland Foundation The John M. Rivers Jr. Foundation Inc. Carol & John Rochford Mr. & Mrs. Alex A. Rogers Anne & Joseph Russell & Family Daniel & Monica Scokin Bill & Sharon Sheriff Mr. & Mrs. Martin E. Simmons Luke & Susan Simons Mr. & Mrs. Michael W. Smith Barbara & Lester* Speyer The Starr Foundation Hope & Howard Stringer Louis B. & Patricia C. Todd Jr. Lillias & Fred Viehmann The Henry Laird Smith Foundation Mr. & Mrs. E.W. Wendell Mr. David M. Wilds Mr. & Mrs. W. Ridley Wills III Mr. & Mrs. David K. Wilson

$50,000+

Adams and Reese / Stokes Bartholomew LLP American Airlines American General Life & Accident Insurance Company

Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz J B & Carylon Baker Dr. & Mrs. T.B. Boyd III William H. Braddy III

Dr. Ian & Katherine* Brick Mr. & Mrs.* Martin S. Brown Sr. Michael & Jane Ann Cain Mike Curb/Curb Records Inc. The Danner Foundation

fun d s

AmSouth Foundation Andrea Waitt Carlton Family Foundation The Ayers Foundation Bank of America Alvin & Sally Beaman Foundation Lee A. Beaman, Trustee Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Bottorff Ann* & Monroe* Carell Caterpillar Inc. & Its Employees The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee Mike Curb Family Foundation CaremarkRx Greg & Collie Daily

$500,000+

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Ro’s Oriental Rugs, Inc. Mrs. Dan C. Rudy* Mary Ruth & Bob Shell Mr. & Mrs. Richard Speer Stites & Harbison, PLLC Mr. & Mrs. Bruce D. Sullivan Alan D. Valentine Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis, LLP Estate of Christine Glenn Webb David & Gail Williams Nicholas S. Zeppos & Lydia A. Howarth

$25,000+

AMSURG Family of Kenneth Schermerhorn The Bank of Nashville Bass, Berry & Sims PLC Tom & Wendy Beasley The Bernard Family Foundation The Honorable Philip Bredesen & Ms. Andrea Conte The Very Rev. Robert E. & Linda M. Brodie Mr.* & Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl III Mr. & Mrs. Frank M. Bumstead Community Counselling Service Co., Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Cook Jr. Doug & Sondra Cruickshanks Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Dale Gail & Ted DeDee In Memory of Ann F. Eisenstein Enco Materials, Inc./Wilber Sensing Jr., Chair Emeritus Nancy Leach & Bill Hoskins John & Carole Ferguson Estate of Dudley C. Fort Mr. & Mrs. F. Tom Foster Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Keith D. Frazier John & Lorelee Gawaluck Giancarlo & Shirley Guerrero Mr. & Mrs. James Earl Hastings Hawkins Partners, Inc. Landscape Architects Neil & Helen Hemphill Hilton Nashville Downtown In Memory of Ellen Bowers Hofstead Hudson Family Foundation Iroquois Capital Group, LLC John F. & Jane Berry Jacques Mercedes E. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Randall L. Kinnard KraftCPAs PLLC Estate of Barbara J. Kuhn Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence M. Lipman The Howard Littlejohn Family The Loventhal and Jones Families Mimsye & Leon May Kevin P. & Deborah A. McDermott Rock & Linda Morphis Carole & Ed Nelson Nissan North America, Inc.

Odom’s Tennessee Pride Sausage, Inc. Larry D. Odom, Chairman/CEO Hal N. & Peggy S. Pennington Celeste Casey* & James Hugh Reed III* Renasant Bank Jan & Stephen S. Riven Lavona & Clyde Russell Dr. & Mrs. Michael H. Schatzlein Kenneth D. Schermerhorn* Lucy & Wilbur Sensing Nelson & Sheila Shields Michael & Lisa Shmerling Joanne & Gary Slaughter Doug & Nan Smith Hans & Nancy Stabell Ann & Robert H. Street Mr. & Mrs. William J. Tyne Washington Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. W. Ridley Wills II Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Wimberly Janet & Alan Yuspeh Shirley Zeitlin

$15,000+

Kent & Donna Adams Ruth Crockarell Adkins Aladdin Industries, LLC American Brokerage Company, Inc. American Paper & Twine Co. Mr. & Mrs. William F. Andrews Dr. Alice A. & Mr. Richard Arnemann Mr. & Mrs. J. Hunter Atkins Sue G. Atkinson Mr. & Mrs. Albert Balestiere Baring Industries Brenda C. Bass Russell W. Bates James S. & Jane C. Beard Allison & John Beasley Ruth Bennett & Steve Croxall Frank & Elizabeth Berklacich Ann & Jobe* Bernard Mr. & Mrs. Boyd Bogle III John Auston Bridges Mr. & Mrs. Roger T. Briggs Jr. Cathy & Martin Brown Jr. Grennebaum Doll & McDonald PLLC Patricia & Manny* Buzzell Mr. & Mrs. Gerald G. Calhoun Mr. & Mrs. William H. Cammack Terry W. Chandler Neil & Emily Christy Chase Cole Dr. & Mrs. Lindsey W. Cooper Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Andrew D. Crawford Barbara & Willie K. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. DeVooght Mr. & Mrs. Matthew H. Dobson V Mike & Carolyn Edwards Mr. John W. Eley & Ms. Donna J. Scott

Sylvia & Robert H. Elman Martin & Alice Emmett Larry P. & Diane M. English Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey B. Eskind Bob & Judy Fisher Karen & Eugene C. Fleming Mr. & Mrs. H. Lee Barfield II Cathey & Wilford Fuqua Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Gaeto The Grimstad & Stream Families Heidtke & Company, Inc. Robert C. Hilton Dr. & Mrs. Stephen P. Humphrey Franklin Y. Hundley Jr. Margie & Nick* Hunter Joseph Hutts Mr. & Mrs. T.J. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. David B. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Russell A. Jones Jr. John Kelingos Education Fund Beatriz Perez & Paul Knollmaier Pamela & Michael Koban Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth G. Langone Richard & Delorse Lewis Robert A. Livingston Frances & Eugene Lotochinski Mr.* & Mrs. Robert C.H. Mathews, Jr. Betsy Vinson McInnes Jack & Lynn May Mr. & Mrs. James Lee McGregor Dr. & Mrs. Alexander C. McLeod MR. & Mrs. Robert E. McNeilly III Dr. Arthur McLeod Mellor Mary & Max Merrell Donald J. & Hillary L. Meyers Christopher & Patricia Mixon

NewsChannel 5 Network Susan & Rick Oliver Piedmont Natural Gas David & Adrienne Piston Charles H. Potter Jr. Joseph & Edna Presley Nancy M. Falls & Neil M. Price Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Pruett Linda & Art Rebrovick Mr. & Mrs. Doyle R. Rippee Dr. & Mrs. Clifford Roberson Mr. & Mrs. Walter M. Robinson Jr. Anne & Charles Roos Ron Rossmann Joan Blum Shayne Mr. & Mrs. Irby C. Simpkins, Jr. Patti & Brian Smallwood Murray & Hazel Somerville Southwind Health Partners® The Grimstad & Stream Families Dr. Steve A. Hyman & Mark Lee Taylor John B. & Elva Thomison Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Trammell Jr. Eli & Deborah Tullis Mr. & Mrs. James M. Usdan Louise B. Wallace Foundation Mr.* & Mrs. George W. Weesner Ann & Charles* Wells In Memory of Leah Rose B. Werthan Mr.* & Mrs.* Albert Werthan Betty & Bernard Werthan Foundation Olin West, Jr. Charitable Lead Trust Mr. & Mrs. Toby S. Wilt Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. Wolfe Dr. Artmas L. Worthy Mr. & Mrs. Julian Zander Jr. InConcert

57

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Mr. & Mrs. Clay T. Jackson KPMG LLP Mrs. Heloise Werthan Kuhn John T. Lewis Gilbert Stroud Merritt Mr. & Mrs. David K. Morgan Musicians of the Nashville Symphony Anne & Peter Neff Cano & Esen Ozgener Ponder & Co. Eric Raefsky, M.D. & Ms. Victoria Heil Delphine & Ken Roberts

ca p ital

Dee & Jerald Doochin Ernst & Young Mr. & Mrs. David S. Ewing Ezell Foundation / Purity Foundation Mr.* & Mrs. Sam M. Fleming In Memory of Kenneth Schermerhorn Letty-Lou Gilbert, Joe Gilbert & Family James C. Gooch & Jennie P. Smith Edward A. & Nancy Goodrich Bill & Ruth Ann Leach Harnisch Hastings Architecture Associates, LLC Dr. & Mrs.* George W. Holcomb Jr.


N a s h v i l l e S y m p h o n y Legacy Society leaving a legacy, building a future le g ac y societ y Principal clarinet James Zimmermann is one of many NSO musicians who are passing along the gift of music to a younger generation.

The Nashville Symphony is committed to serving Nashville with worldclass music and education programs not just for today, but for generations to come. If you share the same vision for your orchestra and your community, please consider a making a planned gift to the Nashville Symphony. Your gift will leave a lasting impact on Middle Tennessee and beyond! You can make a gift that costs you nothing during your lifetime — it’s true! By making the Nashville Symphony the beneficiary of your will, trust, retirement plan, life insurance policy or other estate planning vehicle, you’ll help guarantee our financial strength tomorrow without affecting your cash flow or your family’s financial stability today. The Legacy Society honors those who include a gift to the Nashville Symphony in their estate plans. Accepting our offer of membership allows us to honor your future gift and to say “thank you” now. Be “instrumental” in our success by sharing your passion for music with future generations. For more information on the many creative ways to make a planned gift, please visit www.nashvillesymphony.org/plannedgiving or call

Pictured is the commemorative lapel pin given exclusively to members of the Nashville Symphony Legacy Society.

Anonymous (2) Barbara B. & Michael W. Barton Diane and David L. Black Julie & Frank Boehm Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Bottorff Charles W. Cagle Donna & Steven Clark George D. Clark, Jr. Dr. Cliff Cockerham & Dr. Sherry Cummings W. Ovid Collins, Jr.* Mrs. Barbara J. Conder* Mr. & Mrs. Roy Covert William M. & Mildred P.* Duncan Deborah Faye Duncan Annette & Irwin* Eskind Judy & Tom Foster Dr. Priscilla Partridge de Garcia & Dr. Pedro E. Garcia James C. Gooch Ed & Nancy Goodrich Carl T. Haley

Wade Kelley at 615.687.6615.

David W. & Judith S. Hayes Billy Ray Hearn Judith Hodges Judith S. Humphreys Martha R. Ingram Elliott Warner Jones & Marilyn Lee Jones Anne T. Knauff Heloise Werthan Kuhn Sally M. Levine John T. Lewis Todd M. Liebergen Clare* & Samuel Loventhal Mrs. Ernestine M. Lynfoot Ellen Harrison Martin Dr. Arthur McLeod Mellor Richard L. Miller Cynthia & Richard Morin Anne T. & Peter L. Neff Mr. & Mrs. Michael Nowlin Pamela K. & Philip Maurice Pfeffer Joseph Presley

Eric Raefsky, MD & Victoria Heil David & Edria Ragosin Mr. & Mrs. Ben R. Rechter Fran C. Rogers Kristi Lynn Seehafer Mr.* & Mrs. Martin E. Simmons Irvin & Beverly Small Mary & K.C. Smythe Dr. & Mrs. W. Anderson Spickard Jr. Dr. John B. Thomison Sr.* Louis B. Todd Judy & Steve Turner Alan D. & Jan L. Valentine Mrs. Johnna Benedict Watson Dr. Colleen Conway Welch & Mr. Ted Houston Welch Barbara & Bud Zander Shirley Zeitlin Anne H. & Robert K.* Zelle *deceased

A Gift That Costs You Nothing During Your Lifetime Bequests are gifts left by a will that may include cash, securities, real estate or other assets. This is the best-known and most common type of deferred gift, because it does not impact a person's cash flow, lifestyle or family security. And it can be easy to arrange. The gift may be designated as a specified asset or amount, or as a percentage of your estate. The value of the bequest is deductible from your estate prior to computation of estate taxes. If you already have a will, you can add the Nashville Symphony as a beneficiary simply by amending your will with a document known as a codicil. To learn more, visit NashvilleSymphony.org/GiftsFromWills Have you included the Nashville Symphony in your will? Please let us know, even if you prefer to make an anonymous gift.

PLEASE NOTE: The material presented is not offered as legal or tax advice. You are urged to seek the advice of your tax advisor, attorney and/or financial planner to determine whether a contemplated gift fits well into your overall circumstances and planning. 58

J A N UA RY 2 0 1 4


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A ME R I C A N C H R ONICL E S: T h e A rt o f No r ma n Ro ck w ell November 1, 2013–February 9, 2014 Organized by the Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge, Massachusetts

This exhibition is made possible with the generous support from the National Endowment of the Arts, American Masterpieces Program; the Henry Luce Foundation; Curtis Publishing Co.; Norman Rockwell Family Agency; and the Stockman Family Foundation. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities.

Presenting Sponsors:

Supporting Sponsor:

Hospitality Sponsor:

Anne and Joe Russell

LOOKING EAST: Western Artists and the Allure of Japan January 31–May 11, 2014 Organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Supporting Sponsor:

For a complete list of exhibitions, visit www.fristcenter.org. The Frist Center for the Visual Arts is supported in part by:

FRIST CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS | 919 Broadway | Downtown Nashville Triple Self-Portrait (detail). Cover illustration for The Saturday Evening Post, February 13, 1960. © 1960: SEPS. Norman Rockwell Museum Collections. Organized by the Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Claude Monet. The Water Lily Pond (detail), 1900. Oil on canvas, 35 1/2 x 36 1/2 in. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Given

in memory of Governor Alva T. Fuller by the Fuller Foundation, 61.959. Photograph © 2014 MFA, Boston CapStar_Arts Ads-Sizes_CapStar_ArtsAd_6.625x5.125 10/30/12 9:57 AM Page 1

FC4573_Mab_PerformingArts_Winter.indd 1

11/11/13 2:30 PM

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FOR GENERATIONS, WE’VE HELPED CLIENTS MANAGE WEALTH. IT’S TIME FOR AN INTRODUCTION. We’re FTB Advisors. We’ve been part of the community for decades providing wealth management services for First Tennessee customers. Our financial advisors have helped thousands of people chart their financial goals with portfolios designed personally for them. Today, we’re launching a new name, FTB Advisors, to better reflect the breadth of advice we offer in investing, financial planning, trust and insurance services. No two people or goals are alike. Discover how our personal approach can help you.

START A CONVERSATION AT FTBAdvisors.com Insurance Products, Investments & Annuities: Not A Deposit | Not Guaranteed By The Bank Or Its Affiliates | Not FDIC Insured Not Insured By Any Federal Government Agency | May Go Down In Value | Insurance Products and Annuities: May be purchased from any agent or company, and the customer’s choice will not affect current or future credit decisions. FTB Advisors is the trade name for wealth management products and services provided by First Tennessee Bank National Association (“FTB”) and its affiliates. Financial planning and trust services provided by FTB. Investments and annuities available through FTB Advisors, Inc., member FINRA, SIPC, and a subsidiary of FTB. Insurance products available through FTB Advisors Insurance Services, Inc. (”FTBIS”). FTB Advisors, Inc. and FTBIS may offer annuities or transact insurance business only in states where they are licensed or where they are exempted or excluded from state insurance licensing requirements. FTB Advisors does not offer tax or legal advice. You should consult your personal tax and/or legal advisor concerning your individual situation. © 2013 First Tennessee Bank National Association. www.ftbadvisors.com


GUEST

I N F OR M AT I ON

VISTING THE SCHERMERHORN COAT cHECK

Guests are invited to check their coats at one of several complimentary coat check locations on each seating level. The most convenient is on the Lounge Level, located one floor below the Main Lobby. CAMERAS, CELL PHONES & OTHER DEVICES

Videocameras and recording devices are strictly prohibited in the concert hall or in any other space where a performance or rehearsal is taking place, but photographs are permitted anytime the house lights are illuminated. Cellular phones, beepers and watch alarms should be turned off once the performance starts. LATE SEATING

As a courtesy to performers and audience, each performance will have designated breaks when latecomers are seated. Those arriving after a performance begins will be asked to wait until the appropriate break to be seated. SERVICES FOR GUESTS WITH DISABILITIES

Schermerhorn Symphony Center meets or exceeds all criteria established by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Interior signage and all elevators make use of Braille lettering. An infrared hearing system is available for guests who are hearing impaired; headsets may be retrieved from

the Lounge Level coat-check area and from the Concert Concierge. Unisex restrooms are available on the Lounge Level for disabled guests needing special assistance. Accessible and companion seating are available at all seating and price levels. Transfer seating is also available to allow guests in wheelchairs to transfer easily to seats in the hall. Please arrange in advance for accessible seating by calling a customer service representative at 615.687.6400. EMERGENCY MESSAGES

Guests expecting urgent calls may leave their name and seat information (seating level, door number, row and seat number) with any usher. Anyone needing to reach guests during an event may call the Security Desk at 615.687.6610. LOST AND FOUND

Please check with the House Manager’s office for any items that may have been left in the building. The phone number for Lost and Found is 615.687.6450. CONCERT CONCIERGE

Have a question, request or comment? Please visit our Concert Concierge, which is available to help you with anything you might need during your visit. Located in the Main Lobby, Concert Concierge is open through the end of intermission.

PARKING NEW! FREE PARKING!

FREE parking is available in Lot R at LP Field, with shuttles running to and from the lot for just $3 per person roundtrip. This shuttle service is available for all SunTrust Classical, Bank of America Pops and Jazz Series concerts, along with many special events. For more information, call our Box Office at 615.687.6400. PARKING AT THE PINNACLE

Located directly across Third Avenue from the Schermerhorn, the Pinnacle at Symphony Place offers Symphony patrons pre-paid parking at a discount! To purchase, please call 615.687.6401.

VALET

Valet parking, provided by Parking Management Company, is available on Symphony Place, on the north side of the building between Third and Fourth avenues. We also offer pre-paid valet parking; for more details, call 615.687.6401.


Our doors are now open. Whether it’s 2 or 4 doors is completely up to you. With the completion of our brand new state of the art facility, Porsche of Nashville would like you to stop by and visit us at our new location in Cool Springs and see the full line of exciting 2014 Porsche vehicles.

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Let us

orchestrate your next event If you’re searching for the ideal location to host your next event, look no further than Schermerhorn Symphony Center. With 10 different spaces available, we can accommodate all of your event-planning needs, including:

Corporate meetings & retreats | Conferences & seminars | Executive luncheons | Board meetings | Receptions Take advantage of the following amenities when you host your event with us: Exclusive use of the facility | Your choice of 8 top-notch catering companies | State-of-the-art audiovisual equipment | Valet parking | And much more! Contact us today! 615.687.6611 | events@nashvillesymphony.org




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