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For more information on building your brand with InTUNE, contact Matt Ross at 713.417.6857 or Matt@venturesmarketing.com and make our audiences your customers.
March is a big month for us here at the Symphony. We kick things off with our Etta James Tribute, At Last!, with Crystal Monee Hall and Principal POPS Conductor Steven Reineke. We welcome back Music Director Juraj Valčuha for two weeks of Tragedy and Triumph, featuring Mahler’s Sixth Symphony (which we haven’t performed since 2006) and Beethoven’s Eroica, along with Emanuel Ax in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 25 and the Houston Symphony premiere of Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds in Us We finish the month off with our own Brinton Averil Smith playing Dvořák’s Cello Concerto on a program conducted by Xian Zhang that also features selections from Prokofiev’s colorful ballet score Romeo and Juliet and Dorothy Chang’s Northern Star.
We also announce the 2024–25 season this month, and it’s epic. We’ll welcome guests, including Yefim Bronfman, Yo-Yo Ma, and Daniil Trifonov; delve into the music of Bohemia, Vienna, and the opera in special festivals led by our Music Director; celebrate the Spielberg-Williams collaboration, 007, and the Bee Gees on our Bank of America POPS Series; and mark three special birthdays with appearances by Christoph Eschenbach (his 85th), Michael Tilson Thomas (his 80 th), and Pink Martini (their 30 th). And you can only experience it all here in Jones Hall, with your Houston Symphony. Subscriptions go on sale March 6, so visit our website or call our patron service center for more information then.
Before all of that, we have three and a half months
of remarkable musical experiences left in our 2023–24 Season. And you still have time to become a Houston Symphony donor and enjoy exclusive access and events. We have a special series of curated experiences available only to our Classical and POPS donors. These gatherings—which include elegant receptions, intimate meet-and-greets, and access to private rehearsals—provide an opportunity for donors to engage closely with our musicians and deepen their connection to the Symphony community. Already this season, donors have had a chance to spend time with Juraj, Steven, Michael Krajewski, Tony DeSare, and our amazing clarinet and oboe sections. For more information on become a donor, please turn to page 50.
Finally, the Houston Symphony is a community resource—we serve more than 200,000 people with our education and community engagement programming this season. One example of that—we just completed our season of School Concerts, serving more than 53,000 students from across greater Houston with performances at Jones Hall and the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion. One of my favorite conversations, which I’ve had many times over the years, is with patrons whose first experience of our Symphony was coming to Jones Hall with their class. I love watching the awestruck looks on the young people’s faces as they enter the lobby and hearing them cheer for our musicians, knowing the experience will stay with them for a lifetime.
Music is for all of us, and I’m so glad we get to share it with you. Enjoy the performance.
All my best,
Executive Director/CEO Margaret Alkek Williams ChairS S
Raiders of the Lost Ark in Concert
November 4 & 5
Valčuha Conducts Rachmaninoff
November 10, 11 & 12
Valčuha Conducts Ravel’s La valse
November 17, 18 & 19 S S
“I Will Survive”—Diva Legends
November 24, 25 & 26
Andrés Returns
December 1, 2 & 3
Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas
December 9 & 10
Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker
December 12
Handel’s Messiah
December 15, 16 & 17
Very Merry POPS
December 20, 21, 22 & 23
Holly Jolly Holiday
December 23
S
Swingin’ Sinatra: A New Year’s Celebration
January 5, 6 & 7
Mendelssohn’s Scottish Symphony + Yoonshin Song
January 12, 13 & 14
Takemitsu + Brahms’s Requiem
January 19, 20 & 21
Víkingur Ólafsson Plays Bach
January 28
Jazz, Love & Gershwin: A Century of Rhapsody in Blue February 2, 3 & 4
Get Up and Dance!
February 3
Perlman Conducts Tchaikovsky 5 February 8, 10 & 11
Eschenbach Conducts Bruckner 8 February 24 & 25
At Last! A Tribute to Etta James March 1, 2 & 3
Valčuha Conducts Mahler 6 March 15, 16 & 17
Mozart + Beethoven’s Eroica March 22, 23 & 24
Romeo and Juliet + Dvořák’s Cello Concerto March 29 & 30
21st Century Broadway April 5, 6 & 7
I’m a Superhero! April 6
Classical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to The Beatles April 18 & 19
Disney’s Encanto™ in Concert Live to Film April 20 & 21
Carmina burana April 26, 27 & 28
Pines of Rome + Grieg’s Piano Concerto May 2, 4 & 5
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets™ in Concert May 10 & 11
Itzhak Perlman: In the Fiddler’s House May 12
The Music of Star Wars May 17, 18 & 19
Adams’s El Niño May 25 & 26
An Alpine Symphony June 1 & 2
Salome in Concert June 7 & 9
The Music of ABBA
June 15
Jurassic Park in Concert June 22 & 23
The Music of the Rolling Stones June 28 & 29
Since the opening of Jones Hall in 1966, millions of arts patrons have enjoyed countless musical and stage performances at the venue. Dominating an entire city block, Jones Hall features a stunning travertine marble facade, 66-foot ceilings, and a brilliantly lit grand entrance. Jones Hall is a monument to the memory of Jesse Holman Jones, a towering figure in Houston during the first half of the 20 th century.
We strive to provide the best possible auditory experience of our world-class orchestra. Noise from phones, candy wrappers, and talking is distracting to the performers on stage and those around you. Please help us make everyone’s concert enjoyable by silencing electronic devices now and remaining quiet during the performance.
The Encore Café and in-hall bars are open for Symphony performances, and food and drink will be permitted in bar areas. Food is not permitted inside the auditorium. Patrons may bring drinks into the auditorium for Bank of America POPS Series concerts and Symphony Specials. Drinks are not permitted inside the auditorium for Classical concerts.
For lost and found inquiries, please contact Patron Experience Coordinator Freddie Piegsa during the performance. He also can be reached at freddie.piegsa@houstonsymphony.org. You also may contact Houston First after the performances at 832.487.7050
For Classical concerts, if a work has several movements it is traditional to hold applause until the end of the last movement. If you are unsure when a piece ends, check the program or wait for the conductor to face the audience. If you feel truly inspired, however, do not be afraid to applaud!
Children ages six and up are welcome to all Classical, Bank of America POPS, and Symphony Special concerts. Children of all ages are welcome at PNC Family Series performances. Children must have a ticket for all ticketed events.
Each performance typically allows for late seating, which is scheduled in intervals and determined by the conductor. Our ushers and Patron Experience Coordinator will instruct you on when late seating is allowed.
Subscribers to six or more Classical or Bank of America
POPS concerts, as well as PNC Family Subscribers, may exchange their tickets at no cost. Tickets to Symphony Specials or single ticket purchases are ineligible for exchange or refund.
If you are unable to make a performance, your ticket may be donated prior to the concert for a tax-donation receipt. Donations and exchanges may be made in person, over the phone, or online.
Houston Symphony High School Nights, sponsored by Oxy, has returned for its second season at Jones Hall. The High School Nights initiative welcomed back high school students from the Greater Houston area who participate in their school’s orchestra and band programs to attend Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow Classical Series concerts at Jones Hall. Following the success of its inaugural year last season, the initiative continues this season with four High School Nights across two Classical concerts—the Barber’s Violin Concerto + Duke Ellington concert in October and this month’s Tragedy & Triumph Festival performance of Mozart + Beethoven’s Eroica. High School Nights provide students with the opportunity to come together and experience the magic of live orchestral music with their peers and regular concert attendees. This season, we anticipate serving 1,700 students from 32 schools across Greater Houston.
Like the Student Concert Series, High School Nights are designed to inspire students to further their involvement in music and continue playing their instruments. Before each performance, high school ensemble directors are provided with educational resources to help connect their students with what to listen for and expect at the Symphony performance. And like last season’s inaugural year, teachers have already noticed an increase in their students’ musical interest since attending the Symphony concerts. “This experience put a glow on my students’ faces,” said Isaias Degollado, the orchestra director at Liberty High School. “They were talking about the performance all the way back to school on the bus.
When we started class the following Monday, the students were so inspired to work on their tone, balance, and bow technique.”
High School Nights is a part of the Houston Symphony’s Education and Community Engagement initiatives which serve thousands of Houstonians through educational programs, free and low-cost performances, community engagement activities, and more. If you’d like to support High School Nights and the Symphony’s mission to make music accessible to Houstonians from all walks of life, visit houstonsymphony.org/donate.
—Lauren BuchananHouston Symphony Music Director Juraj Valčuha is recognized for his effortless expressiveness and depth of musicianship. With sharp baton technique and natural stage presence, the impressive ease of his interpretations translate even the most complex scores into immersive experiences.
Before joining the Houston Symphony in June 2022, Juraj was Music Director of the Teatro di San Carlo, Naples, from 2016 to 2022 and first guest conductor of the Konzerthausorchester Berlin. He was Chief Conductor of the Orchestra Sinfonica Nazionale della Rai from 2009 to 2016.
The 2005–06 Season marked the start of his international career on the podium of the Orchestre National de France followed by remarkable debuts in the United Kingdom with the Philharmonia London, in Germany with the Munich Philharmonic, in the United States with the Pittsburgh Symphony, and in Italy with Puccini's La Bohème in Bologna.
He has since led the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, Dresden Staatskapelle, Munich Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic, Swedish Radio Symphony, Amsterdam Royal Concertgebouw, Rotterdam Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, Maggio Musicale in Florence, Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
Music Director Roy and Lillie Cullen Chair
Rome, Milan's Filarmonica della Scala, Montréal Symphony, and the NHK and Yomiuri orchestras in Tokyo.
He enjoys regular collaborations with the Minnesota Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Pittsburgh Symphony, and San Francisco Symphony. International touring with the Orchestra Sinfonica della Rai took them to the Musikverein in Vienna and Philharmonie in Berlin, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Zurich, Munich, to the Enesco Festival in Bucharest, and the Abu Dhabi Classics. With the Konzerthausorchester Berlin, he visited Riga, Vilnius, and Tallinn to mark the 100 th anniversary of the Baltic nations.
In Europe, he is acclaimed on the podium of the Munich Philharmonic, the NDR Hamburg and Frankfurt Radio orchestras, as well as the Vienna Symphony, Czech Philharmonic, Orchestre National de France, Orchestre de Paris, BBC Symphony and Philharmonia London, and the Swedish Radio Orchestra.
Juraj champions the compositions of living composers and aims to program contemporary pieces in most of his concerts. He has conducted world premieres, including Christopher Rouse’s Supplica with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Steven Mackey’s violin concerto with Leila Josefowicz and the BBC
Symphony in Manchester, and Nico Muhly’s Bright Idea with the Houston Symphony. In 2005, he conducted, in the presence of the composer, Steve Reich’s Four Seasons at the Melos-Ethos Festival in Bratislava. Other composers he has supported and continues to follow with interest are Bryce Dessner, Steven Stucky, Andrew Norman, James MacMillan, Luca Francesconi, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, Anna Clyne, and Jessie Montgomery, among others.
Including his engagements in Houston, the 2023–24 Season takes him to the Pittsburgh, San Francisco, Chicago, and Minnesota Orchestras as well as to the Yomiuri Nippon Orchestra in Tokyo. On the European stage, he performs Fanciulla del West and Tristan and Isolde at the Bavarian State Opera and at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Jenufa at the Opera di Roma, and Salome at the Semperoper in Dresden. He leads concerts with the RAI Orchestra, the Orchestra dell'Accademia di Santa Cecilia, the Orchestre National de France, the NDR, SWR, and the Bamberg Symphony, among others.
Born in Bratislava, Slovakia, Juraj studied composition and conducting in his birth place, then at the conservatory in St. Petersburg (with Ilya Musin), and finally, at the Conservatoire Supérieur de la Musique in Paris.
FIRST VIOLIN
Yoonshin Song, Concertmaster
Max Levine Chair
Eric Halen, Co-Concertmaster
Ellen E. Kelley Chair
Boson Mo, Assistant Concertmaster
Fondren Foundation Chair
Qi Ming, Assistant Concertmaster
Marina Brubaker
Tong Yan
MiHee Chung
Sophia Silivos
Rodica Gonzalez
Ferenc Illenyi
Si-Yang Lao
Kurt Johnson
Christopher Neal
Sergei Galperin
SECOND VIOLIN
MuChen Hsieh, Principal
Teresa Wang+, Associate Principal
Amy Semes
Annie Kuan-Yu Chen
Mihaela Frusina
Jing Zheng
Tianjie Lu
Anastasia Ehrlich
Tina Zhang
Tianxu Liu+
Samuel Park+
VIOLA
Joan DerHovsepian, Principal
Wei Jiang, Acting Associate Principal
Sheldon Person
Fay Shapiro
Keoni Bolding
Samuel Pedersen
Suzanne LeFevre+
Elizabeth Golofeev+
Meredith Harris+
Yvonne Smith+
CELLO
Brinton Averil Smith, Principal
Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow Chair
Christopher French, Associate Principal
Anthony Kitai
Louis-Marie Fardet
Jeffrey Butler
Maki Kubota
Xiao Wong
Charles Seo
Jeremy Kreutz
COMMUNITY-EMBEDDED MUSICIANS
Lindsey Baggett, violin
David Connor, double bass
Rainel Joubert, violin
ASSISTANT LIBRARIANS
Hae-a Lee
Anna Thompson
Steven Reineke, Principal POPS Conductor
Andrés Orozco-Estrada, Conductor Laureate
Gonzalo Farias, Assistant Conductor
DOUBLE BASS
Robin Kesselman, Principal
Timothy Dilenschneider, Associate Principal
Eric Larson
Andrew Pedersen
Burke Shaw
Donald Howey
Ryan Avila+
Luke Rogers+
FLUTE
Aralee Dorough, Principal General Maurice Hirsch Chair
Matthew Roitstein*, Associate Principal
Judy Dines, Acting Associate Principal Mark Teplitsky+
Kathryn Ladner
PICCOLO
Kathryn Ladner
OBOE
Jonathan Fischer, Principal Lucy Binyon Stude Chair
Anne Leek, Associate Principal
Colin Gatwood
Adam Dinitz
ENGLISH HORN
Adam Dinitz
CLARINET
Mark Nuccio, Principal Bobbie Nau Chair
Thomas LeGrand, Associate Principal
Christian Schubert
Alexander Potiomkin
E-FLAT CLARINET
Thomas LeGrand
BASS CLARINET
Alexander Potiomkin, Tassie and Constantine S. Nicandros Chair
BASSOON
Rian Craypo, Principal
Isaac Schultz, Associate Principal
Elise Wagner
Adam Trussell
STAGE PERSONNEL
Stefan Stout, Stage Manager
José Rios, Assistant Stage Manager
Nicholas DiFonzo, Head Video Engineer
Justin Herriford, Head Audio Engineer
Connor Morrow, Head Stage Technician
Giancarlo Minotti, Audio Production Manager
CONTRABASSOON
Adam Trussell
HORN
William VerMeulen, Principal
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander K. McLanahan
Endowed Chair
Robert Johnson, Associate Principal
Nathan Cloeter, Assistant Principal/Utility
Brian Thomas
Brian Mangrum
Ian Mayton
Barbara J. Burger Chair
TRUMPET
Mark Hughes, Principal
George P. and Cynthia Woods
Mitchell Chair
John Parker, Associate Principal
Robert Walp, Assistant Principal
Richard Harris
TROMBONE
Bradley White, Acting Principal
Ryan Rongone+
Phillip Freeman
BASS TROMBONE
Phillip Freeman
TUBA
Dave Kirk, Principal
TIMPANI
Leonardo Soto, Principal
Matthew Strauss, Associate Principal
PERCUSSION
Brian Del Signore, Principal
Mark Griffith
Matthew Strauss
HARP
Allegra Lilly, Principal
KEYBOARD
Scott Holshouser, Principal
LIBRARIAN
Luke Bryson, Principal
*on leave
+ contracted substitute
Barbara J. Burger
President
Janet F. Clark Chair
Jonathan Ayre Chair, Finance
Brad W. Corson Chair, Governance & Leadership
Manuel Delgado Chair, Marketing & Communications
Evan B. Glick Chair, Popular Programming
Lidiya Gold Chair, Development
Sippi Khurana, M.D. Chair, Education
Jonathan Ayre
Gary Beauchamp
Eric Brueggeman
Bill Bullock
Barbara J. Burger
Mary Kathryn Campion, Ph.D.
John Cassidy, M.D.
Janet F. Clark
Lidiya Gold
Claudio Gutiérrez
William D. Hunt
Rick Jaramillo
David J. M. Key
Sippi Khurana, M.D.
John Rydman Immediate Past President
Mike S. Stude Chairman Emeritus
Paul Morico General Counsel
Barbara McCelvey Secretary
John Mangum^ Executive Director/CEO
Margaret Alkek Williams Chair
Mary Lynn Marks Chair, Volunteers & Special Events
Robert Orr Chair, Strategic Planning
Ed Schneider Chair, Community Partnerships
John Rydman Chair, Artistic & Orchestra Affairs
Jesse B. Tutor Chair, Audit
Steven P. Mach ^ Immediate Past Chairman
Bobby Tudor^ At-Large Member
Mary Fusillo^ President, Houston Symphony League
James H. Lee^ President, Houston Symphony Endowment
Juraj Valčuha^ Music Director, Roy and Lillie Cullen Chair
Rian Craypo Musician Representative
Joan DerHovsepian^ Musician Representative
Mark Hughes^ Musician Representative
Mark Nuccio^ Musician Representative
Sherry Rodriguez^ Assistant Secretary
Carey Kirkpatrick
Kenny Kurtzman
Cindy Levit
Isabel Stude Lummis
Cora Sue Mach **
Rodney Margolis**
Jay Marks **
Mary Lynn Marks
Elissa Martin
Barbara McCelvey
Paul R. Morico
Robert Orr
Chris Powers
John Rydman**
Ed Schneider
Anthony Speier
William J. Toomey II
Bobby Tudor **
Betty Tutor **
Jesse B. Tutor **
Gretchen Watkins
Robert Weiner
Margaret Alkek Williams **
Brad W. Corson
Rian Craypo
Manuel Delgado
Joan DerHovsepian
Mary Fusillo
Evan B. Glick
Mark Hughes
James H. Lee
Steven P. Mach
John Mangum
Mark Nuccio
Sherry Rodriguez
Juraj Valčuha
David J. Beck
James M. Bell Jr.
Carrie Brandsberg-Dahl
Nancy Shelton Bratic
Terry Ann Brown**
Lindsay Buchanan
Ralph Burch
Dougal Cameron
John T. Cater**
Robert Chanon
Michael H. Clark
Virginia Clark
Brad W. Corson
Andrew Davis, Ph.D.
Denise Davis
Manuel Delgado
Allen Deutsch, M.D.
Tracy Dieterich
Joan Duff
Connie Dyer
PAST
Jeffrey B. Firestone
Eugene A. Fong
Aggie L. Foster
Julia Anderson Frankel
Ronald G. Franklin
Carolyn Gaidos
Evan B. Glick
Jeff Hiller
Grace Ho
Gary L. Hollingsworth
Brian James
Dawn James
I. Ray Kirk, M.D.
David Krieger
Matthew Loden
Steven P. Mach
Michael Mann, M.D.
Jack Matzer
Jackie Wolens Mazow
Alexander K. McLanahan**
Mrs. Edwin B. Parker
Miss Ima Hogg
Mrs. H. M. Garwood
Joseph A. Mullen, M.D.
Joseph S. Smith
Walter H. Walne
H. R. Cullen
Gen. Maurice Hirsch
Charles F. Jones
Fayez Sarofim
John T. Cater
Richard G. Merrill
Ellen Elizardi Kelley
John D. Platt
E.C. Vandagrift Jr.
J. Hugh Roff Jr.
PAST PRESIDENTS OF THE HOUSTON SYMPHONY LEAGUE
Miss Ima Hogg
Mrs. John F. Grant
Mrs. J. R. Parten
Mrs. Andrew E. Rutter
Mrs. Aubrey Leno Carter
Mrs. Stuart Sherar
Mrs. Julian Barrows
Ms. Hazel Ledbetter
Mrs. Albert P. Jones
Mrs. Ben A. Calhoun
Mrs. James Griffith Lawhon
Mrs. Olaf LaCour Olsen
Mrs. Ralph Ellis Gunn
Mrs. Leon Jaworski
Mrs. Garrett R. Tucker Jr.
Mrs. M. T. Launius Jr.
Mrs. Thompson McCleary
Mrs. Theodore W. Cooper
Mrs. Allen W. Carruth
Mrs. David Hannah Jr.
Mary Louis Kister
Mrs. Edward W. Kelley Jr.
Mrs. John W. Herndon
Mrs. Charles Franzen
Mrs. Harold R. DeMoss Jr.
Mrs. Edward H. Soderstrom
Mrs. Lilly Kucera Andress
Ms. Marilou Bonner
Mrs. W. Harold Sellers
Mrs. Harry H. Gendel
Mrs. Robert M. Eury
Mrs. E. C. Vandagrift Jr.
Mrs. J. Stephen Marks
Terry Ann Brown
Dougal A. Cameron
Janet F. Clark
Marilyn Miles
Aprill Nelson
Tammy Tran Nguyen
Leslie Nossaman
Edward Osterberg Jr.
Zeljko Pavlovic
Gloria G. Pryzant
Miwa Sakashita
Andrew Schwaitzberg
Helen Shaffer**
Robert B. Sloan, D.D., Theol.
Jim R. Smith
Miles O. Smith**
Quentin Smith
Mike S. Stude **
Ishwaria Subbiah, M.D.
Shirley W. Toomim
Margaret Waisman, M.D.
Fredric A. Weber
Vicki West
Robert M. Hermance
Gene McDavid
Janice H. Barrow
Barry C. Burkholder
Rodney H. Margolis
Jeffrey B. Early
Michael E. Shannon
Ed Wulfe
Nancy Strohmer
Mary Ann McKeithan
Ann Cavanaugh
Mrs. James A. Shaffer
Lucy H. Lewis
Catherine McNamara
Shirley McGregor Pearson
Paula Jarrett
Cora Sue Mach
Kathi Rovere
Norma Jean Brown
Barbara McCelvey
Lori Sorcic Jansen
Nancy B. Willerson
Jane Clark
Nancy Littlejohn
Donna Shen
Barbara McCelvey
Steven J. Williams
David J. Wuthrich
Ellen A. Yarrell
Robert Yekovich
John Steven Cisneros, Ed.D.
Juan Zane Crawford, Ph. D.
Kirby Lodholz
Frank F. Wilson IV
**Lifetime Trustee
Jesse B. Tutor
Robert B. Tudor III
Robert A. Peiser
Steven P. Mach
Janet F. Clark
John Rydman
Dr. Susan Snider Osterberg
Dr. Kelli Cohen Fein
Vicki West
Mrs. Jesse Tutor
Darlene Clark
Beth Wolff
Maureen Higdon
Fran Fawcett Peterson
Leslie Siller
Cheryl Byington
John Mangum, Executive Director/CEO, Margaret Alkek Williams Chair
Elizabeth S. Condic, Chief Financial Officer
Vicky Dominguez, Chief Operating Officer
Lauren Buchanan, Development Communications Manager
Alex Canales, Development Ticket Concierge
Jessie De Arman, Development Associate, Gifts and Records
Timothy Dillow, Senior Director, Development
Amanda T. Dinitz, Senior Major Gifts Officer
Vivian Gonzalez, Development Officer
Karyn Mason, Development Officer
Hadia Mawlawi, Senior Associate, Endowment and Planned Giving
Ben McAndrew, Institutional Giving Associate
Meghan Miller, Special Events Associate
Emilie Moellmer, Annual Fund Manager
Chelsea Murray, Senior Development Associate, Administration
Erika Ngo, Development Intern
Tim Richey, Director, Individual Giving
Sherry Rodriguez, Corporate Relations Manager & Board Liaison
Katie Salvatore, Development Officer
Christine Ann Stevens, Senior Director, Development
Lena Streetman, Manager, Research and Development Operations
Stacey Swift, Director, Special Events
Sarah Thompson, Donor Stewardship Manager
Christina Trunzo, Director, Foundation Relations
Alexa Ustaszewski, Major Gifts Officer
Olivia Allred, Education and Community Engagement Coordinator
Jarrett Bastow, Education Manager
Allison Conlan, Director, Education and Community Engagement
José Arriaga, Systems Engineer
Henry Cantu, Finance Accountant
Kimberly Cegielski, Staff Accountant
Richard Jackson, Database Administrator
Joel James, Director of Human Resources
Tanya Lovetro, Director of Budgeting and Financial Reporting
Morgana Rickard, Controller
Gabriela Rivera, Senior Accountant
Pam Romo, Office Manager/HR Coordinator
Lee Whatley, Senior Director, IT and Analytics
Marketing and Communications
Mark Bailes, Marketing Revenue Manager
Olivia Cantrell, Content Marketing Coordinator
David Early, Marketing and External Relations Assistant
Heather Fails, Manager, Ticketing Database
Kathryn Judd, Director, Marketing
Yoo-Ell Lee, Graphics and Media Designer
Fiona Legesse-Sinha, Graphic Design Manager
Ciara Macaulay, Creative Director
Mariah Martinez, Email Marketing Coordinator
Eric Skelly, Senior Director, Communications
Alex Soares, Senior Director, Marketing Patron Services
Freddie Piegsa, Patron Experience Coordinator
Ashlan Walker, Manager, Patron Services
Jenny Zuniga, Director, Patron Services
Stephanie Alla, Associate Director of Artistic Planning
Becky Brown, Associate Director, Orchestra Personnel
Suré Eloff, Chorus Manager
Michael Gorman, Director, Orchestra Personnel
Julia Hall, Interim Director, Chorus
Nick Kemp, Artistic Operations Assistant
Hae-a Lee, Assistant Librarian
Giancarlo Minotti, Audio Production Manager
Lauren Moore, Associate Director, Concert Media and Production
José Rios, Assistant Stage Manager
Brad Sayles, Senior Recording Engineer
Claudia Schmitz, Artist Liaison and Assistant to the Music Director
Stefan Stout, Stage Manager
Anna Thompson, Assistant Librarian
Meredith Williams, Associate Director, Concert Operations and Production
Rebecca Zabinski, Senior Director, Artistic Planning
The Houston Symphony’s Community-Embedded Musicians (CEMs) are a vital part of the Symphony’s mission to provide high quality music education programs and performances for the Houston community. This season, our CEMs—along with the Community-Embedded Fellows (CEFs) whom they mentor—have been hard at work strengthening the Symphony’s bond with the community through hospital and dementia center visits, free music education programs like DeLUXE K!ds In Harmony, and other interactive community performances and activities. The 2023–24 Season also brought exciting changes to the CEM and CEF initiative that has helped us continue our commitment to making extraordinary musical experiences available to all.
Our CEM initiative expanded this season with the addition of violinist Lindsey Baggett. She joins our long-serving CEMs David Connor and Rainel Joubert to lead our robust Education and Community Engagement initiatives. Lindsey is a familiar face around the Houston Symphony—she has been a frequent substitute for the Symphony since 2013, including three seasons as a contracted substitute. "I'm excited to step into this role,” says Lindsey on becoming a CEM. “One aspect I am passionate about is providing hands-on music education to children in the DeLUXE K!ds In Harmony program. It is rewarding to witness their growing enthusiasm for music." Our CEMs have continued to make regular visits to Houston-area dementia centers, hospitals, schools, and other community centers throughout the season. In addition to these collaborative performances and projects, we also brought back pre- and post-Student Concert classroom visits at select middle schools in January and February. A popular pre-pandemic program, these visits allow the CEMs to build a deeper relationship with students in their classrooms and provide interactive experiences that promote a deeper understanding of the music students' experience at Student Concerts.
There have also been exciting updates to our Community-Embedded Fellowship program this season. Our Shepherd School of Music Brown Foundation Fellow, Christian Harvey, has remained with us for a second year as a CEF, but we have
welcomed a new teaching artist fellow from the Moores School of Music—Samuel Savanich. Originally designed for graduate students, the Moores School of Music Community-Embedded Fellowship has shifted to accept undergraduate students who are interested in developing their skills in music education. Samuel, violin, is currently a freshman student pursuing a bachelor of music degree in music performance and music education. He has previous experience assisting music teachers with students in grades five through nine and has served as a camp counselor in numerous youth programs. He also organized a local charity concert in 2022, For Ukraine, that benefited Ukrainian refugees. Samuel is excited to gain more experience in mentoring young musicians and wants to help them refine their technique and develop their love of music.
The Houston Symphony's Community-Embedded Musician and Fellowship initiatives continue to evolve and thrive, exemplifying the orchestra's dedication to making music accessible to all. These new additions to the team mark the start of an exciting chapter in the Symphony's journey toward ensuring the transformative power of music reaches every corner of Houston.
—Lauren Buchanan CEM Lindsey Baggett teaches a DeLUXE K!ds In Harmony student. Moores School of Music CEF Sam Savanich helps a DeLUXE K!ds In Harmony student during practice.Steven Reineke, conductor
*Crystal Monee Hall, vocalist
*Marcus Paul James, vocalist
*Josh Sklair, guitar
*Donto James, drums
*Sametto James, bass
0:03 MANCINI – "Peter Gunn" from Peter Gunn
0:02 JAMES-KIRKLAND-WOODS/O’NEIL – “Something’s Got a Hold on Me”
0:03 GAYTEN-BOCAGE/O’NEIL – “My Dearest Darling”
0:02 THOMPSON/O’NEIL – “Anything to Say You’re Mine”
0:03 AGER-SCHWARTZ-WEVER/O’NEIL – “Trust in Me”
0:03 BELLE-LEONARD-PRIMA-RHODES/O’NEIL – “A Sunday Kind of Love”
0:03 DIXON/O’NEIL – “I Just Want to Make Love to You”
0:05 LAWRENCE-MEKLER-WILLIAMSON/MURCIANO –“All the Way Down”
0:03 NEWMAN/O’NEIL – “You Can Leave Your Hat On”
INTERMISSION
0:02 GERSHWIN/CAMPBELL-WATSON – “Strike Up the Band” from Strike Up the Band
0:02 CLAPP/O’NEIL – “Girl of My Dreams”
0:03 JAMES-FUQUA/O’NEIL – “It’s a Cryin’ Shame”
0:02 JAMES-FUQUA/O’NEIL – “If I Can’t Have You”
0:02 JAMES-FUQUA/O’NEIL – “My Heart Cries”
0:02 JAMES-FUQUA/O’NEIL – “Spoonful”
0:03 ARLEN/O’NEIL – “Stormy Weather”
0:02 DAVIS-GORDY-FUQUA/O’NEIL – “All I Could Do Was Cry”
0:03 WARREN/O’NEIL – “At Last”
*Houston Symphony debut
Friday, March 1
Saturday, March 2
Sunday, March 3
Jones Hall 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall & Livestream 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall 2:30 p.m.
Sponsor
Sponsor
In Memory of Helen Hudspeth
Flores
Premier Guarantor
Thank you to our Houston Symphony Livestream
Consortium Donors:
Guarantor
Barbara J. Burger
The Elkins Foundation
Underwriter
Alana R. Spiwak & Sam L. Stolbun
Sponsor
John & Dorothy McDonald
Video enhancement of Houston Symphony concerts is made possible by the Albert & Ethel Herzstein Foundation through a special gift celebrating the Foundation’s 50 th anniversary in 2015
• Jamesetta Hawkins, or more commonly known as Etta James, was an American icon, known for her rhythm and blues songs. Her biggest hits include “At Last,” “Tell Mama,” “I Would Rather Go Blind,” and “All I Could Do Was Cry.”
• Etta James formed her first musical group at age 12. The group was first called the Creolettes, but the name was later changed to Peaches.
• Between 1960 and 1995, Etta James was nominated for ten Grammy Awards, but she did not win her first until 1995 with the tenth nomination. She went on to win five more Grammys.
• Including her Grammy nominations and awards, Etta James has received more than 30 awards and recognitions from eight organizations. Some highlights include the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and a nomination for a Blues Music Award nearly every year since the organization’s founding in 1980.
Principal POPS Conductor
Steven Reineke is one of North America's leading conductors of popular music. He is in his second decade as Music Director of The New York Pops at Carnegie Hall. Additionally, he is Principal Pops Conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Toronto Symphony Orchestras.
Steven is a frequent guest conductor and can be seen on the podium with the Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas, San Francisco, and Detroit Symphony Orchestras.
On stage, Steven creates and collaborates with a range of leading artists from the worlds of hip-hop, R & B, Broadway, television, and rock, including Maxwell, Common, Kendrick Lamar, Nas, Ne-Yo, Barry Manilow, Cynthia Erivo, Ben Rector, Cody Fry, Sutton Foster, Amos Lee, Dispatch, Jason Mraz, and Ben Folds, among others. In 2017, he was featured on National Public Radio's All Things Considered leading the National Symphony Orchestra— in a first for the show's 45-year history—performing live music excerpts between news segments. In 2018, Steven led the National Symphony Orchestra with hip-hop legend Nas performing his seminal
album Illmatic on PBS's Great Performances.
As the creator of hundreds of orchestral arrangements, Steven’s work is performed worldwide and can be heard on numerous Cincinnati Pops Orchestra recordings. His symphonic works Celebration Fanfare, Legend of Sleepy Hollow, and Casey at the Bat are performed frequently in North America, including performances by the New York Philharmonic and Los Angeles Philharmonic. His Sun Valley Festival Fanfare was used to commemorate the Sun Valley Summer Symphony’s pavilion, and his Festival Te Deum and Swan’s Island Sojourn were debuted by the Cincinnati Symphony and Cincinnati Pops Orchestras. His numerous wind ensemble compositions are published by the C.L. Barnhouse Company and are performed by concert bands perennially.
A native of Ohio, Steven is a graduate of Miami University of Ohio (2020 Alumnus Distinguished Achievement Medal), where he earned bachelor of music degrees with honors in both trumpet performance and music composition. He currently resides in New York City with his husband Eric Gabbard.
Crystal Monee Hall’s varied career as a singer, songwriter, instrumentalist, and actress has included roles on Broadway (Rent), sold-out tours with acclaimed musicians Mickey Hart (Grateful Dead) and Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), a performance as featured vocalist on Saturday Night Live, and a guest appearance on the HBO comedy-drama High Maintenance. She has released three albums (one solo and two with Hart) with work from her most recent EP "If You Breathe" called “riveting” by Billboard Magazine. Her newest release seamlessly blends her love for world, blues, jazz, soul, and contemporary R&B, showcasing her talent as a songwriter, while highlighting a voice that has captivated audiences worldwide. Currently, Crystal is a featured vocalist on Broadway superstar Kristin Chenoweth’s “For the Girls” concerts at Broadway’s Nederlander Theater. Her songwriting comes front and center when Chenoweth performs her original tune “Reasons for Hope,” co-written by the show’s musical director, Mary-Mitchell Campbell.
A high-profile music moment was a feature with country superstar Thomas Rhett on Saturday Night Live in 2019. Rolling Stone took notice of her standout performance of “Don’t Threaten Me with a Good Time,” saying it “put on display the superb, soulful talents of Crystal Monee Hall.” The two encored the performance at Rhett’s sold-out show at Madison Square Garden.
She was featured in Ben Platt’s Netflix concert special filmed at Radio City Music Hall. She also performed with him on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and
Good Morning America as well as the run of his sold-out Sing to Me Instead Tour. Cynthia Erivo’s PBS special features Hall in the role of soprano during her knockout performance of “Ain’t No Way.” Crystal joined Kesha as part of her powerful 2018 Grammy Awards performance in support of the #TimesUp movement, provided supporting vocals for Mariah Carey's Christmas residency at New York's Beacon Theater, and performed alongside Kanye West and Chance the Rapper during their debut performance of "Ultralight Beam" on SNL. Crystal sang backing vocals for Craig David's "All We Needed," the official song of the BBC's 2016 Children in Need campaign.
Brooklyn native Marcus Paul James (MPJ) was born into a Baptist family with a Panamanian DJ father. He was raised in the church and sang in the choir loft as soon as he could stand. At home, MPJ was surrounded by the timeless voices of Luther Vandross, Stevie Wonder, Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, and other R&B/Rock/Gospel greats.
The influence of these artists etched a love for GOOD MUSIC into his soul. Songwriting became a natural progression as he committed to finding his own voice and style. Using nothing much but his soulful voice and eclectic flair, MPJ landed roles in Tony Awardwinning Broadway musicals like RENT, In The Heights, NBC's The Wiz - LIVE, Ain't Too Proud: The Life and Times of the Temptations. He also received a Grammy Award for his work on FOX’s The Greatest Showman for which he also received an Oscar nomination for the song “This Is Me." MPJ was also part of Lin Manuel Miranda’s new film adaption of In The Heights and Netflix's “Tick Tick, Boom.” He has also been vocally featured in films Collateral Beauty, Dear Evan Hansen, and the newly released holiday film Spirited
Musical director for Etta James from 1985 to 2012, Josh Sklair has worked with the best in jazz, blues, rhythm and blues, pop, and rock. He has worked on stage or in the recording studio with Paul Anka (currently), Sophie B. Hawkins, Jon Lucien, The Jones Girls, Jeffrey Osborne, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley,
The Shirelles, Cedar Walton, The Coasters, Del Shannon, Herbie Hancock, Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Diane Warren, Albert Hammond, Lamont Dozier, and many others.
After briefly attending Berklee School of Music in Boston, Josh graduated from the Guitar Institute of Technology in Los Angeles in 1979.
His long and fruitful association with the iconic Etta James resulted in his receiving two Grammy Awards for producing. He contributed his guitar playing, arrangements, and compositions on more than a dozen albums and countless concert performances. During his tenure with Etta, Josh saw her receive much of the recognition and acknowledgement she had long deserved: five Grammy Awards, induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and many other prestigious awards for her invaluable and unique contribution to American music.
Donto James is a recording engineer, music producer, drummer, two-time Grammy Award winner, and the son of iconic singer Etta James. Drumming
from a young age, he recorded and performed with Etta James and The Roots Band through the end of the late singer’s career. Donto earned Grammy Awards as a co-producer for Etta James’s Let’s Roll (2003) and Blues to the Bone (2004).
Sametto James, son of Etta James, is a music producer, bass player, and two-time Grammy Award winner. He began playing bass at a young age and joined the family band alongside his mother and brother, Donto, recording and performing with Etta James and
The Roots Band. Sametto earned Grammy Awards as a co-producer for Etta James’s Let’s Roll and Blues to the Bone.
Be part of the magic and join us on the Rice University campus for one of over 400 performances each year, most of which are free.
Featured Program
Tragedy & Triumph festival:
Juraj Valčuha, conductor
1:19 MAHLER – Symphony No. 6 in A minor, Tragic
I. Allegro energico, ma non troppo
II. Andante moderato
III. Scherzo: Wuchtig
IV. Finale: Sostenuto
Friday, March 15
Saturday, March 16
Sunday, March 17
Mr. & Mrs. Rodney H. Margolis
Sponsor
Eugene Fong
Partner
Houston Symphony Young Associates Council
Partner
The 2023–24 Classical Season is in thanksgiving for Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow
Thank you to our Houston Symphony Livestream Consortium Donors: Guarantor
Barbara J. Burger
The Elkins Foundation
Underwriter
Alana R. Spiwak & Sam L. Stolbun
Sponsor
John & Dorothy McDonald
Video enhancement of Houston Symphony concerts is made possible by the Albert & Ethel Herzstein Foundation through a special gift celebrating the Foundation’s 50 th anniversary in 2015
The Classical Season is endowed by The Wortham Foundation, Inc ., in memory of Gus S. and Lyndall F. Wortham
Jones Hall 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall & Livestream 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall 2:30 p.m.
MAHLER
Symphony No. 6, Tragic (1904)
Mahler composed his Sixth Symphony in 1903 and 1904, during what was perhaps the happiest period of his life. Professionally, he was at the height of his career as director of the Vienna Court Opera. Additionally, in 1902 he had married the young, beautiful, and fiercely intelligent Alma Schindler, who soon gave him two daughters. According to his usual habit, he composed his Sixth Symphony during his summer holiday at the family’s lakeside villa in the Carinthian Alps.
In her memoirs, Alma described her husband’s strict daily regimen: “He got up at six or half past and rang for the cook to prepare his breakfast instantly and take it up the steep and slippery path to his hut, which was in a wood nearly two hundred feet higher up than the villa. [...] He had a piano there and a complete Goethe and Kant on his shelves; for music, only Bach.” Afternoons were devoted to vigorous exercise: a swim in the lake and a long hike, “or run, rather,” with his wife. “Sometimes I was too exhausted to go on,” Alma remembered. “[Mahler] used to put his arm round me and say, ‘I love you.’ Instantly, I was filled with fresh energy and on we tore.”
It is of course one of the great ironies of Mahler’s life that this idyllic setting produced his darkest, most tragic masterpiece. Of the symphony, Bruno Walter, Mahler’s conducting protégé, wrote, “[...] the Sixth is the product of a decidedly pessimistic turn of mind, its fundamental mood being caused by the bitter taste in the potion of life. [...] it utters a decided ‘No,’ especially in its last movement, in which the relentlessness of the struggle of ‘all against all’ seems to have been turned into music. [...] Mahler called it his Tragic Symphony.”
The symphony opens with a march in A minor that immediately sets the serious tone of the work. This powerful music ends with a motif that recurs throughout the symphony: a major chord followed by its parallel minor and accompanied by a distinctive rhythm:
Many have interpreted this as a Tchaikovskian “fate” motif; certainly, the progression from major to minor—from harmonic “light” to “darkness”— pithily encapsulates the symphony’s character.
A mysterious woodwind chorale accompanied by fragments of the march in pizzicato strings then leads to “a great soaring theme,” which Alma remembered as Mahler’s attempt to portray her musically. The melody certainly has all the hallmarks of a late-Romantic era love theme. A tumultuous development based on these main ideas unexpectedly finds its way to a tranquil passage featuring cowbells, which Mahler frequently used to evoke the realm of nature. After plunging back into the fray, the movement ultimately ends with a triumphant iteration of the Alma theme. Offering respite after the first movement’s intensity, the Andante begins in E-flat major, the most distant key from the A minor in which the symphony began. The music thus seems to belong to another world. It has two main ideas: the first is the tender, song-like melody that opens the movement; the second, a haunting motif that first appears in the English horn. These ideas alternate and become the basis for further developments, including another pastoral episode accompanied by cowbells. The movement then builds to an emotionally intense climax before dying away.
The beginning of the Scherzo recalls the first movement’s opening march; indeed, some commentators have interpreted it as a grotesque caricature of the more heroic first movement. Like the Andante, it has two main ideas: after the sardonic opening, the major-to-minor harmonies of the fate motif return to introduce a quiet, gentle idea in the oboe. This second section almost has the character of an 18th-century courtly dance, except that the meter is in a constant state of flux. Variations on these two kinds of music—the mock march and the unstable dance—alternate throughout the movement. The overall effect is uncanny. Alma interpreted the movement as “the arhythmic games” of her “two little children, tottering in zigzags over the sand. Ominously, the childish voices became more and more tragic, and at the end died out in a whimper.”
Her interpretation of the symphony was undoubtedly influenced by the tragic events that befell Mahler in 1907. “In the last movement he described himself and his downfall or, as he later said, that of his hero: ‘It is the hero, on whom fall three blows of fate, the last of which fells him as a tree is felled.’ [...] On him, too fell three blows of fate, and the last felled him,” she wrote, referring to his departure from the Vienna Court Opera, the death of their eldest daughter from scarlet fever, and the diagnosis of the heart disease which would ultimately end Mahler’s life.
MAHLER
Symphony No. 6, Tragic (1904)
These “three blows of fate” correspond to the finale’s most singular feature: three “hammer blows” which occur at pivotal moments. Supporting Alma’s recollection, Mahler indicated that the sound he was after should be similar to that of an ax felling a tree, and percussionists have since found various means of creating this innovative and enigmatic orchestral effect. In line with the Romantic-era desire to move the weight of the symphony toward a climactic ending, Mahler’s finale is the longest, most complex, and most dramatic movement. Listeners can perhaps best orient themselves by the hammer blows. Amid fierce struggle and ghastly, phantasmagorical music, the orchestra repeatedly builds to seemingly triumphant climaxes, only to be cut down by the hammer blows, the last of which proves fatal. At times a superstitious composer, Mahler attached so much significance to this final hammer blow that he removed it from the second edition of the score, but almost all modern performances retain it. After this final hammer blow, the fate motif brings the symphony to its shattering conclusion. —Calvin Dotsey
Juraj Valčuha, conductor
See p. 6 for bio
Park at One Market Square Garage, the recommended parking partner of the Houston Symphony. The new garage—located at 800 Preston Street with entrances on Milam, Prairie, and Travis—is just a block from Jones Hall. At the epicenter of downtown, One Market Square is convenient for the entire Theater District as well as CBD office towers and Historic District restaurants; it is easily accessible from I-45, I-10, US-59, Memorial Drive, and Allen Parkway.
In partnership with the Houston Symphony, One Market Square Garage elevates your concert-going experience from prelude to coda. In addition to 24/7 on-site staffing, One Market Square offers a 20 percent discount for Symphony patrons. Bring your parking ticket with you to use the validator kiosk in the Jones Hall lobby before or after the concert or during intermission.
Juraj Valčuha , conductor
Emanuel Ax, piano
0:09 M. MAZZOLI – These Worlds In Us
0:30 MOZART – Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K.503
I. Allegro maestoso
II. Andante
III. Allegretto
INTERMISSION
0:47 BEETHOVEN – Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55 (Eroica)
I. Allegro con brio
II. Marcia funebre: Adagio assai
III. Scherzo and Trio: Allegro vivace
IV. Finale: Allegro molto
Friday, March 22
Saturday, March 23
Sunday, March 24
Jones Hall 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall & Livestream 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall 2:30 p.m.
Sponsor
Gary and Marian Beauchamp/ The Beauchamp Foundation Guarantor
The 2023–24 Classical Season is in thanksgiving for Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow
Margaret Alkek Williams
Spotlight Series
Thank you to our Houston Symphony Livestream Consortium Donors:
Guarantor
Barbara J. Burger
The Elkins Foundation
Underwriter
Alana R. Spiwak & Sam L. Stolbun
Sponsor
John & Dorothy McDonald
Video enhancement of Houston Symphony concerts is made possible by the Albert & Ethel Herzstein Foundation through a special gift celebrating the Foundation’s 50 th anniversary in 2015
The Classical Season is endowed by The Wortham Foundation, Inc ., in memory of Gus S. and Lyndall F. Wortham
The Houston Symphony’s Tragedy & Triumph Festival concludes this weekend as Music Director Juraj Valčuha leads a program that scales the heights, plumbs the depths, and illustrates one of the great revolutions in music history. Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds In Us is a profound meditation on war and loss, inspired by both her father’s service in Vietnam and a poem by James Tate. World renowned pianist Emanuel Ax then joins the orchestra for Mozart’s beloved Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, a work that epitomizes the elegance and grace of the Classical era, particularly in its sensuously beautiful slow movement. Mozart’s refined sound world prepares the ear to appreciate the shocking revolution wrought by Beethoven’s Eroica, a work that perhaps more than any other shattered the decorum of the Classical style and ushered in the Romantic era. No pairing could better highlight Beethoven’s innovative new sound, the likes of which had never been heard before.
—Calvin DotseyThese Worlds In Us (2006)
MOZART
Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K.503 (1786)
The title These Worlds In Us comes from James Tate’s poem The Lost Pilot, a meditation on his father’s death in World War II: (excerpt)
My head cocked towards the sky, I cannot get off the ground, and you, passing over again,
fast, perfect and unwilling to tell me that you are doing well, or that it was a mistake
that placed you in that world, and me in this; or that misfortune placed these worlds in us.
This piece is dedicated to my father, who was a soldier during the Vietnam War. In talking to him, it occurred to me that, as we grow older, we accumulate worlds of intense memory within us, and that grief is often not far from joy. I like the idea that music can reflect painful and blissful sentiments in a single note or gesture, and sought to create a sound palette that I hope is at once completely new and strangely familiar to the listener. The theme of this work, a mournful line first played by the violins, collapses into glissandos almost immediately after it appears, giving the impression that the piece has been submerged under water or played on a turntable that is grinding to a halt. The melodicas (mouth organs) played by the percussionists in the opening and final gestures mimic the wheeze of a broken accordion, lending a particular vulnerability to the bookends of the work. The rhythmic structures and cyclical nature of the piece are inspired by the unique tension and logic of Balinese music, and the march-like figures in the percussion bring to mind the militaristic inspiration for the work as well as the relentless energy of electronica drum beats. —Missy
MazzoliBeyond the sheer number and quality of his piano concertos, Mozart’s great achievement in this medium consisted in merging the soloistic principles inherited from the baroque concerto with the organic logic inherent in classical symphonic form. That success is nowhere more apparent than in the great C major Concerto, K.503, that crowned a string of 15 piano concertos Mozart composed during the five-year period 1782–86.
While it may not be the most popular concerto among this group, it is certainly one of the grandest and most probing. Its tonality of C major prompts a spirit of boldness in the music, immediately announced in a
MOZART
Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K.503 (1786)
BEETHOVEN
Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55 , Eroica (1803)
martial introduction full of the sound of trumpets and drums. Amazingly, Mozart anticipates some of Haydn’s symphonic experiments by using this introductory theme to punctuate major sections in the first movement— the entrance of the piano, the recapitulation, and the end of the coda following the solo cadenza.
Like many a Mozart sonata-allegro form, the first movement contains numerous short themes. In the case of this concerto, they provide unity as well as variety, for most of these themes stem from a common rhythm of three eighth notes followed by one or more quarter notes. The movement is also one of the most contrapuntal examples of Mozart’s concerto writing, for the orchestra is heavily involved in thematic display and development, sometimes with several different melodic lines competing for the listener’s attention. Chiaroscuro harmonies shade the brilliant character of the music, as the prevailing C major unexpectedly gives way to C minor episodes and thematic sequences suddenly leap to remote tonalities. The Andante stands nicely in the company of poetic slow movements found in many of Mozart’s mature concertos. The poignant theme of this song form is fully stated by the orchestra before the piano enters with a more decorative version. The large seven-part rondo concluding the concerto is a typically bubbling Mozart finale. Once again, the orchestra leads off and, once the piano enters, there is almost a steady stream of decorative figuration, again unexpectedly changing its rhythmic values to provide delightful variety to the music.
Though Mozart apparently composed the concerto for an Advent concert in 1786, there is no documentation that the concert took place. It may have been performed at a Lenten concert in 1787, and it was included in a concert at Leipzig’s Gewandhaus on May 12, 1789, during a tour Mozart made of northern Germany. Sadly, the concert was so poorly subscribed that Mozart had to give away most of the tickets.
—Carl R. Cunningham
Perhaps no piece of music has been more pivotal in music history than Beethoven’s Third Symphony, a work provoked by personal crisis and geopolitical turmoil. After the French Revolution of 1789, many— including Beethoven—hoped a freer, more egalitarian society would emerge. The ensuing wars and reign of terror threatened these hopes, and Europe waited for a hero to save the revolution. By 1803, when Beethoven wrote this symphony, he seemed to have appeared: Napoleon Bonaparte.
Compounding the political crisis that surrounded Beethoven was an internal one—for years, Beethoven had experienced a gradual hearing loss that would eventually render him deaf. In 1802, Beethoven wrestled with this terrifying fate. He wrote that he was driven “almost to despair, a little more of that and I would have ended my life. It was only my art that held me back.”
Beethoven resolved to take a “new path” in his music, aspiring to create the symphonic equivalent of a Homeric epic with Napoleon as his subject.
Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55 , Eroica (1803)
The music would be full of raw, wild dissonances and rhythms that could express epic struggle. Once completed, Beethoven would take the symphony to France. Like Homer’s Iliad, the first movement begins amid battle with two explosive chords. After this call to arms, the cellos intone the main idea of the movement. Their deep, rich sound gives the opening idea a masculine character, suggesting this is the hero. Fragmentary, lyrical ideas vie with more violent ones until a series of disorienting chords leads to a return to the beginning. This repetition (one of Beethoven’s few nods to tradition) allows listeners a second chance to process this complex music before the development begins. During the tumultuous development, the fragmentary ideas of the exposition interact, building to a crisis. The orchestra lunges from one dissonance to another, climaxing with a harrowing cry. After a pause, a ghostly new theme appears in the oboes. The music dies away until a lone horn call signals the heroic theme’s return, and the other main ideas reappear as well. After a reprise of the ghostly theme from the development, the music gradually crescendos as the heroic idea returns in triumph. The second movement is a reminder of the terrible cost of war. Modeled on funeral marches written in revolutionary France, it begins with a hushed melody for strings; the double basses imitate military drums. The movement alternates between music expressing intense grief, bittersweet memories, and heroic commemoration of the dead, building to an intense climax. The music returns to life in the third movement, interpreted by some as an expression of soldierly comradery. An oboe introduces a rustic melody, and the tune is passed from instrument to instrument like a whispered joke until the full orchestra finally says it out loud. The contrasting middle section features a trio of hunting horns. The finale, too, begins with a musical joke: a grand flourish leads to an anticlimactic, unadorned bass line. Beethoven drew this bass line from The Creatures of Prometheus, his 1801 ballet about the titan who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humanity, bringing enlightenment. The movement has thus been interpreted as the hero’s works of peace. Beethoven transforms the bass line in a series of imaginative variations that climaxes with a slow hymn. Beginning with the oboe, the instruments take up the hymn until all play it together.
Perhaps this is Beethoven’s vision of a creative society at peace. By 1804, Beethoven was eager to move to France, but one event upset his plans. His student Ferdinand Ries related, “At the very top of the title page [of the symphony] stood the word ‘Buonaparte’...I was the first to tell him the news that Bonaparte had declared himself emperor, whereupon he flew into a rage and shouted: ‘So he too is nothing more than an ordinary man. Now he will also trample all human rights underfoot [...]’ Beethoven went to the table, took hold of the title page at the top, ripped it all the way through, and flung it to the floor.” When the symphony was published in 1806, the title page read: “Heroic Symphony, in celebration of the memory of a great man.” In the end, it is likely not Napoleon, but Beethoven’s own personal struggles—especially with his hearing loss—that provided his ultimate inspiration. Though it was not his intention, many believe Beethoven himself is the true hero of this “heroic” symphony. —Calvin
DotseyJuraj Valčuha, conductor
See p. 6 for bio
Born to Polish parents in what is today Lviv, Ukraine, Emanuel Ax moved to Winnipeg, Canada, with his family when he was a young boy. He made his New York debut in the Young Concert Artists Series, and in 1974 won the first Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Competition in Tel Aviv. In 1975, he won the Michaels Award of Young Concert Artists, followed four years later by the Avery Fisher
Prize.
The 2023–24 Season focuses on the world premiere of Anders Hillborg’s piano concerto, commissioned for him by the San Francisco Symphony and EsaPekka Salonen, with subsequent performances in Stockholm and New York. A continuation of the “Beethoven For 3” touring and recording project with partners Leonidas Kavakos and Yo-Yo Ma took them to the mid-west in January. In recital, Emanuel was heard on the west coast in the fall and mid-west/east coast in the spring, and will culminate at Carnegie Hall in April. An extensive European tour includes concerts in Holland, Italy, Germany, France, and the Czech Republic.
Emanuel has been a Sony Classical exclusive recording artist since 1987, and following the success of the Brahms Trios with Kavakos and Ma, the trio launched an ambitious, multi-year project to record all the Beethoven Trios and Symphonies arranged for trio of which the
first two discs have recently been released. He has received Grammy Awards for the second and third volumes of his cycle of Haydn’s piano sonatas. He has also made a series of Grammy-winning recordings with cellist Yo-Yo Ma of the Beethoven and Brahms sonatas for cello and piano. In the 2004–05 Season, Emanuel contributed to an International Emmy Award-Winning BBC documentary commemorating the Holocaust that aired on the 60 th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. In 2013, his recording, Variations, received the Echo Klassik Award for Solo Recording of the Year (19 th Century Music/ Piano).
Emanuel Ax is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and holds honorary doctorates of music from Skidmore College, New England Conservatory of Music, Yale University, and Columbia University. For more information about his career, please visit www.EmanuelAx.com.
Founded in 1920 and headquartered in Houston, Occidental Petroleum is one of the largest U.S. oil and gas exploration and production companies, with more than 33,000 employees and contractors globally, including approximately 12,000 here in Texas. Occidental works to enhance the communities where it operates by investing time and resources in programs that educate and invigorate those around them. Occidental’s employees are the backbone of these efforts; their ideas, enthusiasm, and energy help to strengthen communities and make the neighborhoods where the company operates even better places to live.
Occidental Petroleum is a generous supporter of the Houston Symphony and its industry-leading High School Residency program.
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Xian Zhang, conductor Brinton Averil Smith, cello
0:07 D. CHANG – Northern Star
0:40 DVOŘÁK – Cello Concerto in B minor, Opus 104, B. 191
I. Allegro
II. Adagio ma non troppo
III. Finale: Allegro moderato INTERMISSION
0:24 PROKOFIEV – Selections from Romeo and Juliet, Opus 64 Montagues and Capulets
The Young Juliet Minuet Masks
The Death of Tybalt Romeo at the Tomb of Juliet
Friday, March 29
Saturday, March 30
Jones Hall 8:00 p.m.
Jones Hall & Livestream 8:00 p.m.
The 2023–24 Classical Season is in thanksgiving for Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow
Thank you to our Houston Symphony Livestream Consortium Donors: Guarantor
Barbara J. Burger
The Elkins Foundation Underwriter
Alana R. Spiwak & Sam L. Stolbun
Sponsor
John & Dorothy McDonald
Video enhancement of Houston Symphony concerts is made possible by the Albert & Ethel Herzstein Foundation through a special gift celebrating the Foundation’s 50 th anniversary in 2015
The Classical Season is endowed by The Wortham Foundation, Inc ., in memory of Gus S. and Lyndall F. Wortham
This weekend, the Houston Symphony welcomes acclaimed guest conductor Xian Zhang to the podium for a program of works with a decidedly romantic thrust. Originally written for the True North Symphonic Ballet project, Dorothy Chang’s Northern Star explores the metaphor of the North Star as a guiding light which leads from “darkness in the aftermath of war and destruction [...] back to humanity” with finely wrought music that gradually accelerates. The Houston Symphony’s own Principal Cellist Brinton Averil Smith then takes center stage for perhaps the greatest of all cello concertos. Composed at the end of the composer’s time in the United States, Dvořák’s Cello Concerto is a deeply personal work composed in response to the final illness and passing of a woman he loved. Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet needs no introduction, but perhaps more than any other musical adaption, Prokofiev’s ballet based on this timeless tale captures the adolescent vitality of the play’s characters with its unique blend of irony, psychological insight, and unforgettable melodies. —Calvin Dotsey
Northern Star (2017)
Northern Star was commissioned by the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra as the fourth movement of the True North Symphonic Ballet project, a large-scale collaboration in honor of Canada’s 150th celebration, curated by the CPO’s New Music Advisor Vincent Ho. Beginning from a place of darkness in the aftermath of war and destruction, the work centers around the northern star as the shining light that illuminates our way back to humanity. —Dorothy Chang
Cello Concerto in B minor, Opus 104, b. 191 (1895)
Dvořák’s B minor Cello Concerto is the most popular work of its kind, but Dvořák approached the idea of writing it only after hearing the premiere of Victor Herbert’s successful concerto, toward the end of his three-year stay in New York. The work—Dvořák’s second attempt at the form—was written during a three-month period between November 8, 1894, and February 9, 1895. Following a cello concerto he left unfinished more than 20 years earlier, it was prompted by the persistent urging of his old friend, Bohemian cellist Hans Wihan, to whom Dvořák dedicated the work. Unfortunately, the concerto was the source of some disagreement as Wihan edited some passages for greater effectiveness and added a cadenza—all which Dvořák opposed. The cadenza was excised from the published version, but Wilhan’s other changes were retained.
The concerto opens directly with the main theme—a tightly focused fournote motive that is immediately turned upside down into a nearly exact mirror image of itself. After being stated and developed in the clarinet, violins and, finally, the full orchestra, it gives way to a blooming second theme that counts as one of the most famous solo passages in the horn literature. At that point, a short martial theme for full orchestra leads to the entrance of the solo cello, which expounds upon the first and second themes. In the development section, Dvořák concentrates upon the main theme, subjecting it to many mood transformations. Following a long passage of increasingly agitated figuration in the solo cello, the broad second theme bursts forth in the full orchestra, announcing the recapitulation section. The main theme is reserved for the first movement’s climactic coda.
The slow movement is a series of very tender, yearning melodies and is considered one of the most personal, revealing movements Dvořák ever composed. An extended duet for the clarinets leads off the movement, accompanied by other woodwinds in a running conversation with the solo cello. A sudden brief outburst—considered by some the evocation of a funeral march—briefly interrupts the lyrical mood, only to be followed by an orchestral adaptation of Dvořák’s plaintive song, “Leave Me Alone,” Opus 82, No. 1. Because the song was a favorite of Dvořák’s beloved sister-in-law, Josefa Čermáková, this sighing flute/cello duet is often regarded as the composer’s personal response to the news that she was very ill back home in Bohemia. (Like Mozart, Dvořák married the sister of the woman he really loved.)
Cello Concerto in B minor, Opus 104, b. 191 (1895)
The finale is essentially a large rondo combining a string of rustic, robust dance melodies with gentler, song-like interludes. A slow, nostalgic metamorphosis of the concerto’s main theme occurs in the coda, emphasizing Dvořák's longing for his homeland. When the composer returned to Bohemia in the spring of 1895, he learned to his sorrow that Josefa had passed away. At that point, he revised and lengthened the coda, adding a reminiscence of her second movement theme as well as the main theme of the first movement.—Carl R. Cunningham
PROKOFIEV
Selections from Romeo and Juliet (1935)
Amid the turmoil of the Russian Revolution and the impending Russian Civil War, Prokofiev left the nascent Soviet Union in 1918; he would spend much of the following 18 years living in the United States and France. Although he completed many masterpieces, Prokofiev was dissatisfied with his career in the West; his musical style, neither traditional enough for the traditionalists nor avant-garde enough for the modernists, was misunderstood, and he felt he did not receive enough opportunities to compose major works.
For these reasons, he began to visit the Soviet Union in 1927; perhaps his music would fare better in his native land, where audiences had given him his first successes. The Soviet authorities were all too happy to encourage Prokofiev in this direction—many artists had left the Soviet Union both during and after the revolution. Winning one back would be a signal to the world of the cultural legitimacy of the new regime.
It was within this context that in 1934 the Leningrad opera house commissioned Prokofiev to compose a ballet on Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. The project was fraught with difficulties. The Kirov dropped the commission, which was picked up by the Bolshoi in Moscow instead. Further problems arose when Prokofiev presented his first draft in 1935. Even though he was an experienced ballet composer, his music was criticized as too complicated for dancers. Another conflict was likely self-created: Perhaps to please Soviet censors, Prokofiev and his collaborators initially chose to let Shakespeare’s star-crossed lovers live happily ever after—typically, happy endings were favored as they were more compatible with propagandistic themes. In this case, however, authorities balked at deviating from Shakespeare and insisted on a rewrite. Ironically, Prokofiev recycled much of the happy ending music in Juliet’s death scene.
Worried about the fate of his ballet, Prokofiev was persuaded to permanently relocate to Russia with his wife and sons in 1936. Despite promises of special travel privileges, his passport was confiscated just in time for Stalin’s infamous purges of 1937. The director of the Bolshoi did not survive, and the ballet’s Moscow premiere was canceled. Instead, the work was first performed in comparatively provincial Brno. Only in 1940 (after administrators imposed further revisions) was the ballet staged in Leningrad. Despite everything, it proved one of the brilliant successes of Prokofiev’s career.
Selections from Romeo and Juliet (1935)
During the uncertain days of 1936, however, Prokofiev prepared several suites of excerpts from Romeo and Juliet to ensure his music would be heard even if the ballet was not staged. These excerpts, which differ in some respects from the music in the final score, continue to be popular in concert halls today.
“Montagues and Capulets” fuses a dissonant crescendo embodying the vendetta between the two families with the famous “Dance of the Knights” from the ball scene. Next, “The Young Juliet” accompanies the titular heroine’s first appearance. The opening captures her girlish playfulness as she teases her nurse, while in a more meditative section her mother tells her she must soon wed. The “Minuet” opens the ball scene, followed immediately by “Masks,” in which Romeo and the Montagues prepare to crash the party. “The Death of Tybalt” includes music from the fatal duels of first Mercutio and Tybalt and then Tybalt and Romeo. Last, “Romeo at the Tomb of Juliet” expresses the anguish of both the Capulets and later Romeo at Juliet’s grave.—Calvin
DotseyThis season marks Xian Zhang’s eighth season as Music Director of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, which celebrated its centennial last season. She also holds the positions of Principal Guest Conductor of Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and Conductor Emeritus of Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano, having previously held the position of Music Director, 2009–2016.
In high demand as a guest conductor, Xian juggles an
exceptionally busy diary of guest engagements alongside her titled commitments. During the 2023–24 Season, she conducts Puccini’s Madama Butterfly at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. Anthony Minghella’s acclaimed production features a star-filled cast with Aleksandra Kurzak, Eleanora Buratto, and Asmik Grigorian sharing the role of CioCio-San, and Matthew Polezani as Pinkerton.
Following a busy summer 2023 season, which saw her conducting Boston Symphony at Tanglewood, Xian’s symphonic highlights include returns to the Houston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Seattle Symphony, Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo, Orchestra of St Luke’s, and the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C. She remains a popular guest of the London Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, San Francisco
Symphony, Detroit Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Montreal Symphony, Toronto Symphony, NAC Ottawa, Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse, Belgian National Orchestra, and the Norwegian Opera, where she returned last season for Puccini’s Tosca.
Letters for The Future (released in 2022), Xian’s recording on Deutsche Grammophon with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and Time for Three, won multiple Grammy awards in both the Best Contemporary Classical Composition (Kevin Puts’s Contact) and Best Classical Instrumental Solo categories.
Xian previously served as Principal Guest Conductor of the BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales, the first female conductor to hold a titled role with a BBC orchestra. In 2002, she won first prize in the Maazel-Vilar Conductor's Competition. She was
appointed New York Philharmonic’s Assistant Conductor in 2002, subsequently becoming the orchestra’s Associate Conductor and the first holder of the Arturo Toscanini Chair.
Critics have hailed Houston Symphony Principal Cellist Brinton Averil Smith as a “virtuoso cellist with few equals.” Reviewing his internationally acclaimed debut recording of Miklós Rózsa’s Cello Concerto, Gramophone proclaimed him a “hugely eloquent, impassioned soloist,” and wrote of his most recent release, Exiles in Paradise, “Smith teems with old-school elegance.” Classics
Today wrote of his live recording of Castelnuovo-Tedesco's Cello Concerto with the Houston Symphony, “Smith plays the living daylights out of it. His full tone, impeccable intonation, and fleet passage work lets the music soar,” while BBC Music magazine declared, “his is a cast iron technique of verve and refinement put entirely at the service of the music. The artistry on display here is breathtaking...”
Brinton's engagements include performances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and recital and concerto appearances throughout the United States. His broadcast performances include CBS's Sunday Morning and NPR’s Performance Today, while his live performances on YouTube have been viewed more than one million times. Brinton has collaborated with cellists Yo-Yo Ma and Lynn Harrell; pianists Yefim Bronfman, Emanuel Ax, Jeffrey Kahane, and Kirill Gerstein; and violinists Gil Shaham and James Ehnes. He is a faculty member of the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University and the Aspen Music Festival. Prior to joining the Houston Symphony
in 2005, he was a member of the New York Philharmonic and the principal cellist of the Fort Worth and San Diego symphonies. The son of a mathematician and a pianist, Brinton was admitted to Arizona State University at age 10 and completed a B.A. in mathematics at age 17. While a cello student of Eleonore Schoenfeld at the University of Southern California, he completed work at age 19 for an M.A. in mathematics. He subsequently studied with the legendary cellist Zara Nelsova at The Juilliard School where he received a doctor of musical arts degree, writing on the playing of Emanuel Feuermann. Brinton lives in Houston with his wife, the pianist Evelyn Chen, and their enormous but benevolent dog. Their daughter, Calista, is a soprano studying at Northwestern University. His cello was made by Gaetano Pasta in Brescia, c.1710.
Rémy Martin is among the oldest cognac producers still in existence, embodying the artistry and craftsmanship of French distilling traditions. Founded in 1724, Rémy Martin has established itself as a symbol of luxury and refinement, renowned for producing some of the world's finest cognacs. The company's dedication to crafting exquisite blends, such as the renowned Louis XIII, reflects an unwavering commitment to perfection. Rémy Martin is a proud sponsor of the Houston Symphony. With a shared passion for excellence, Rémy Martin and the Houston Symphony bring forth a harmonious union of musical artistry and elevated experiences.
Visit remymartin.com to learn more.
The Houston Symphony’s Young Associates Council (YAC) is a community of philanthropic young professionals aged 45 and under who share a common love for music and a desire to engage with the Houston Symphony in a meaningful way. In addition to exclusive benefits and special musically focused events, YAC members receive invitations to a wide variety of exciting experiences from behind-the-scenes interactions with the musicians of the Houston Symphony to jawdropping private performances by world-class virtuosos and more.
The Young Associates Council is a vital part of the Houston Symphony, paving the way for the future of the organization. As a group, the YAC is pleased to sponsor the Tragedy & Triumph Festival: Valčuha Conducts Mahler 6 weekend. With more than 100 members from a wide range of professional industries, the YAC is the perfect place to connect with other music lovers from a variety of different backgrounds. Whether you're a seasoned symphony enthusiast or a newcomer to the world of classical music, the YAC invites you to experience everything the Houston Symphony has to offer as part of our inclusive community!
SCAN HERE TO JOIN!
Interested in joining us?
Contact Katie Salvatore, Development Officer, at yac@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8544 to learn more!
The Young Associates Council introduces young professionals to the Houston Symphony in a way that is accessible and comfortable so they can gain a further appreciation of music. Our hope is that participating in the YAC encourages a lifetime of support of the Symphony.
2018
My husband and I have always enjoyed attending Houston Symphony concerts, first as a couple and now with our children! The YAC’s fundraising effort to sponsor a concert allows us to show our appreciation for Juraj and how impressed we are with the orchestra’s performance under his baton.
Liana Schwaitzberg
2017
Joining the YAC has allowed me to support Houston’s vibrant arts community and build meaningful relationships with like-minded young professionals. I feel so lucky to have a front-row seat to the Symphony’s good works across the city, including its Education and Community Engagement initiatives.
2021
Kirby Lodholz YAC Chair, Member Since YAC Member Since Lindsay Buchanan YAC Member SinceThe 2024 Houston Symphony Ball, Vienna Fête Impériale, returned to The Post Oak Hotel at Uptown Houston on January 27 for a night of elegance and sophistication. Chaired by Tammie & Dr. Charles Johnson and Drs. Alice Mao Brams & Matt Brams, the Ball raised more than $1 million for the Symphony’s Education and Community Engagement initiatives.
This glamorous evening celebrated the Houston Symphony and the culture of Vienna, a major center of arts and cultural development in Europe and the one of the most important cities to the history of classical music. The event featured a ceremonial program that paid tribute to 18th century balls and included a debutante Viennese waltz opening. The white tie–encouraged event welcomed more than 400 revelers who bid on unique and extravagant items and experiences in a luxury silent auction chaired by Deborah Laws & Christine Johnson.
The space was transformed into an enchanted Viennese-inspired ballroom by The Events Company Guests enjoyed a gourmet multi-course dinner by the hotel’s own Executive Chef Jean-Luc Royere, accompanied by wine pairings meticulously selected by Lindy & John Rydman and Lisa Rydman Lindsey of Spec’s Wines, Spirits & Finer Foods. After dinner, guests moved to the dance floor and danced the night away with the Grammy-nominated artists of Q The Band.
The 2024 Ball also recognized some of the Symphony’s greatest supporters and advocates. This year’s honorees were Dr. Sippi Khurana (Stewart Orton Golden Baton Award of Extraordinary Volunteer Service), Brigitte & Bashar Kalai (Houston Symphony Philanthropy Award), and Betty & Jesse Tutor (Houston Symphony Lifetime Achievement Award). They were honored for their support of the Symphony, philanthropic contributions to the arts, and impact on the Houston community.
Ball Chairs Dr. Charles & Tammie Johnson, Honorees Bashar & Brigitte Kalai, Ajay & Sippi Khurana, Betty & Jesse Tutor, and Chairs Drs. Alice Mao Brams & Matt Brams 2024 Houston Symphony Ball at the Post Oak Hotel Margaret Alkek Williams and Houston Symphony Executive Director/CEO John Mangum Daniel Irion & Kirk Kveton Guests enjoy the 2024 Houston Symphony Ball Auction Roslyn Bazzelle Mitchell and Elia GabbanelliJanet
Becky
World Premiere
DACAMERA co-commission
ETIENNE CHARLES
DACAMERA and The Shepherd School of Music at Rice University present MATTHEW AUCOIN COMPOSER AND CONDUCTOR PETER SELLARS DIRECTOR
APRIL 19–20
A weekend exploring music and our evolving human responses to the environment.
FRIDAY, APRIL 19 | 8 pm
Cullen Theater, Wortham Theater Center
A new multimedia creation by the trumpeter/composer, employing sounds, stories, images, film and musical styles from at-risk coastal communities.
World Premiere | Concert Performance
SATURDAY, APRIL 20 | 8 pm
Brockman Hall for Opera, Shepherd School of Music, Rice University
Music for New Bodies is an immersion in vast planetary processes, exploring humankind’s impact on our planet and cycles so immense that they are beyond human influence.
April 26, 27 & 28 | Jones Hall
Also coming soon:
Pines of Rome + Grieg’s Piano Concerto Gold Classics
The Houston Symphony gratefully acknowledges those who support our artistic, educational, and community engagement programs through their generosity to our Annual Fund and Special Events. For more information, please contact Tim Richey, Director, Individual Giving, at tim.richey@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8531.
As of February 29, 2024
$100,000+
Gary and Marian Beauchamp/ The Beauchamp Foundation
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$15,000+
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$50,000+
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* Deceased
Houston Symphony
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Anonymous
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$5,000+
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** Education and Community Engagement Donor
* Deceased
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Jr.
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Anonymous (8)
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Evelyn Leightman
Mr. William W. Lindley
Matthew and Kristen Loden
Kirby and David Lodholz
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Lubanko
Mr. & Mrs. Peter MacGregor
Ms. Mary Marquardsen
David and Heidi Massin
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher McCarty
William D. & Karinne McCullough
Mary Ann & David McKeithan
Stephen & Marilyn Miles
Larry and Lyn Miller
David and Jamie Ming
Ginni and Richard Mithoff
David R. Moore
Amanda Morgan
Richard & Juliet Moynihan
Stephanie Weber and Paul Muri
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Murphy
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey B. Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Nocella
Ms. Barbara Nussmann
Macky Osorio
Dr. Michael A. Ozer and Ms. Patricia A. Kalmans
Nancy Parra
George & Elizabeth Passela
Mrs. Fran Fawcett Peterson
Linda Tarpley Peterson
Dr. and Mr. Vanitha Pothuri
Roland and Linda Pringle
Mrs. Dana Puddy
Mr. & Mrs. Florante Quiocho
Clinton and Leigh Rappole
Dr. Michael and Janet
Rasmussen
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Reading, MD
Mr. and Mrs. David Reeves
Mr. & Mrs. J.B. Reimer
Patricia Richards
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Rockecharlie
Mrs. Diane Roederer
Dr. and Mrs. Franklin Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Ruez
Mr. & Mrs. John Ryder
Mr. Robert T. Sakowitz
Harold H. Sandstead, M.D.
Lawrence P. Schanzmeyer
Mr. Tony W. Schlicht
Dr. Mark A. Schusterman
Ms. Becky V. Shaw
Mr. Carlos Sierra
Leslie Siller
Hinda Simon
Georgiana Stanley
Jeaneen and Tim Stastny
Christine Ann Stevens & Richard Crishock
Mr. & Mrs. Hans Strohmer
Mr. Bill Stubbs
Dr. and Mrs. Van W. Teeters
Emily H. & David K. Terry
Juliana and Stephen Tew
Musicians of the Houston Symphony Inc.
Jean and Doug Thomas
Courtney & Bill Toomey
Sal and Denise Torrisi
Patricia Van Allan
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Walt
H. Richard Walton
Nancy Ames and Danny Ward
Alton and Carolyn Warren
Ms. Katherine Warren
Dr. and Mrs. Richard T. Weiss
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Winkler
Scott and Lori Wulfe
Mrs. Linda Yelin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zabriskie
Anonymous (4)
The Houston Symphony has entered a new era with the introduction of internationally acclaimed conductor, Juraj Valčuha, as our Music Director. The purpose of the Music Director Fund is to provide leadership support to allow Maestro Valčuha to realize his artistic vision.
To join the Music Director Fund, supporters make a leadership gift of $100,000 above and beyond their annual giving. To participate, please contact Christine Ann Stevens, Senior Director, Development at christine.stevens@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8521.
Margaret Alkek Williams
Robin Angly & Miles Smith
Janice Barrow*
Gary and Marian Beauchamp/The Beauchamp Foundation
Barbara J. Burger
Albert & Anne Chao
Jane and Robert* Cizik
Janet F. Clark
Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
Gardenia Foundation
Cindy E. Levit
Barbara and Pat McCelvey
John & Lindy Rydman / Spec’s Wines, Spirits & Finer Foods
Mike Stude
The Houston Symphony’s Young Associates Council (YAC) is a philanthropic membership group for young professionals, music aficionados, and performing arts supporters interested in exploring symphonic music within Houston’s flourishing artistic landscape. YAC members are afforded exclusive opportunities to participate in musically focused events that take place not only in Jones Hall, but also in the city’s most sought-after venues, private homes, and friendly neighborhood hangouts. From behind-the-scenes interactions with the musicians of the Houston Symphony to jaw-dropping private performances by world-class virtuosos, the Houston Symphony’s Young Associates Council offers incomparable insight and accessibility to the music and musicians that are shaping the next era of orchestral music.
Kirby Lodholz, Chair
Carrie Brandsberg-Dahl, Vice Chair
Carrie and Sverre BrandsbergDahl#
Eric Brueggeman
Lindsay Buchanan#
Vicky Dominguez
Carolyn and Patrick Gaidos
Claudio Gutiérrez
Lori Harrington and Parashar Saikia
Elaine and Jeff Hiller#
Carey Kirkpatrick
Elissa and Jarrod Martin
Christopher P. Armstrong and Laura Schaffer
Lauren and Mark Bahorich
Tim Ong and Michael Baugh
Emily Bivona and Ryan Manser
Haydée del Calvo and Esteban Montero
Xandro Canales
Kendrick Alridge
Amber Ali
Fiona Anklesaria
Luisa Banos and Vladi Gorelik
Mandy Beatriz
Adair and Kevin Brueggeman
David Chaluh
Lincoln Chen
Megan and John Degenstein
Aurelia and Jeffrey Detwiler
Chante Westmoreland Dillard and Joseph Dillard
Evin Ashley Erdoğdu
Ryan Cantrell
Denise and Brandon Davis
Andria Elkins
Laurel Flores#
Allegra Lilly and Robin Kesselman#
Kirby and David Lodholz#
Kelser McMiller#
Laurel Flores, Communications Chair
Jeff Hiller, Membership Chair
Joshua McDonald
Aprill Nelson#
Liana and Andrew Schwaitzberg#
Aerin and Quentin Smith#
Justin Stenberg#
Ishwaria and Vivek Subbiah
Gwen and Jay McMurrey
David R. Moore
Sergio Morales
Emily and Joseph MorrelPorter Hedges LLP
Stephanie Weber and Paul Muri
Maxine Olefsky and Justin Kenney
Kusum and K. Cody Patel#
Carlos Sierra
Kristin and Leonard Wood
Owen Zhang
Adam Ewald
Florence Francis
Kallie Gallagher
Patrick B. Garvey
Amy Goodpasture
Rebecca and Andrew Gould
Nicholas Gruy
Kendall and Chris Hanno
Ashley and John Horstman
C. Birk Hutchens
Mariya Idenova
Jonathan T. Jan
Anna Kaplan
For more information, please contact Katie Salvatore, Development Officer, at katie.salvatore@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8544.
Lina Liu
Marisa and Tandy Lofland
Joel Luks
Miriam Meriwani
Shane A. Miller
Zoe Miller
David Moyer
Trevor Myers
Lee Bar-Eli and Cliff Nash
Lauren Paine
Blake Plaster
Anna Robshaw
Clarice Jacobson and Brian Rosenzweig
Chicovia Scott
Tim Sesby
Leonardo Soto
Bryce Swinford
Elise Wagner#
Alexander Webb
Kathy Zhang-Rutledge and Mack Wilson
Marquis Wincher
# Steering Committee
The Houston Symphony is proud to recognize the leadership support of our corporate, foundation, and government partners that allows the orchestra to reach new heights in musical performance, education, and community engagement, for Greater Houston and the Gulf Coast Region.
CORPORATE PARTNERS (as of February 29, 2024)
Principal Corporate Guarantor ($250,000 and above)
Spec’s Wines, Spirits & Finer Foods / Spec’s Charitable Foundation**
Grand Guarantor ($150,000 and above)
ConocoPhillips**
Guarantor ($100,000 and above)
Bank of America
Boston Consulting Group* Frost Bank
Underwriter ($50,000 and above)
Amerapex
Baker Botts L.L.P.*
Cameron Management*
Chevron**
CKP*
Houston Christian University
Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo**
Sponsor ($25,000 and above)
EOG Resources
The Events Company*
ExxonMobil
H-E-B/H-E-B Tournament of Champions**
Partner ($15,000 and above)
Beam Suntory City Kitchen* Faberge
Supporter ($10,000 and above)
American Tank and Vessel, Inc.
Accordant Advisors*
Houston First Corporation*
Marine Foods Express, Ltd.**
Mark Kamin & Associates
Benefactor ($5,000 and above)
Beck Redden LLP
Russell Reynolds Associates, Inc.
Patron (Gifts below $5,000)
Amazon
Avatar Innovations
Baker Hughes
Christian Dior
KPMG US Foundation, Inc.
Houston Methodist* KTRK ABC-13*
Kalsi Engineering Oliver Wyman* PaperCity*
Kinder Morgan Foundation** Kirkland & Ellis
The Lancaster Hotel* Nexus Health Systems
Oxy**
PNC**
Rémy Martin Sewell
Neiman Marcus*
One Market Square Garage* Rand Group, LLC* Silver Eagle Distributors Houston, LLC
Gorman’s Uniform Service Jackson & Company*
New Timmy Chan Corporation Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, L.L.P.
University of St. Thomas* Volume Social Club*
Shell USA, Inc.**
Silver Eagle Beverages Truist
Univision Houston & Amor 106.5FM Vinson & Elkins LLP
Lockton Companies of Houston USI Southwest
Quantum Energy Partners
Sire Spirits
Beth Wolff Realtors
Vivaldi Music Academy
Zenfilm*
Wortham Insurance & Risk Management
Mercantil ONEOK, Inc.
Nippon Steel North America, Inc.
Quantum Bass Center*
SEI, Global Institutional Group
For information on becoming a corporate partner, please contact Timothy Dillow, Senior Director, Development, at timothy.dillow@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8538.
SERCA Wines*
Smith, Graham & Company
Soren Pedersen Catering & Events*
Stewart Title Company
TAM International, Inc.
* Includes in-kind support
**Education and Community Engagement Support
FOUNDATIONS & GOVERNMENT AGENCIES (as of February 29, 2024)
Diamond Guarantor ($1,000,000 and above)
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
Houston Symphony Endowment**
Premier Guarantor ($500,000 and above)
The Alkek and Williams Foundation
Grand Guarantor ($150,000 and above)
City of Houston through the Miller Theatre Advisory Board**
The Cullen Foundation
Guarantor ($100,000 and above)
The Jerry C. Dearing Family Foundation
Underwriter ($50,000 and above)
Albert and Ethel Herzstein Charitable Foundation Beauchamp Foundation
The Elkins Foundation
Sponsor ($25,000 and above)
The Melbern G. & Susanne M. Glasscock Foundation**
Partner ($15,000 and above)
Ruth & Ted Bauer Family Foundation**
William E. & Natoma Pyle Harvey Charitable Foundation**
The Hood-Barrow Foundation
Supporter ($10,000 and above)
Edward H. Andrews
The Carleen & Alde Fridge Foundation
George & Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation
Benefactor ($5,000 and above)
Leon Jaworski Foundation
Patron (Gifts below $5,000)
The Lubrizol Foundation
The Scurlock Foundation
Houston Symphony League
The Wortham Foundation, Inc.
City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
The Hearst Foundation**
The Humphreys Foundation
MD Anderson Foundation
The Houston Arts Combined Endowment Fund
The Fondren Foundation
Houston Symphony Chorus Endowment
LTR Lewis Cloverdale Foundation
William S. & Lora Jean Kilroy Foundation
The Vivian L. Smith Foundation**
The Schissler Foundation
Sterling-Turner Foundation
The Vaughn Foundation
The C. Howard Pieper Foundation
Texas Commission on the Arts**
John P. McGovern Foundation** The Powell Foundation**
The William Stamps Farish Fund
Petrello Family Foundation
The Pierce Runnells Foundation
Strake Foundation**
The Radoff Family Foundation
Keith & Mattie Stevenson Foundation
For information about becoming a foundation or government partner, please contact Christina Trunzo, Director, Foundation Relations, at christina.trunzo@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8530. **Education and Community Engagement Support
The Houston Symphony Endowment is organized and operated exclusively for the benefit of the Houston Symphony Society. Your contributions to the Endowment ensure the financial sustainability of your orchestra now and for generations to come.
A named endowed fund is a wonderful way to honor a loved one or to celebrate you and your family’s passion for the Houston Symphony. Named funds may be permanently established within the Houston Symphony Endowment with a minimum contribution of $250,000. Your fund can be designated for general purposes or specific interests.
One of the most impactful funds you can create is an Endowed Orchestra Chair. Opportunities to endow an Orchestral Chair begin at $1,500,000. Endowing a chair provides the Houston Symphony with funds to attract, retain, and support musicians of the highest caliber.
For more information about how you may support the Houston Symphony Endowment through a bequest or with a gift during your lifetime, please contact Hadia Mawlawi, Senior Associate, Endowment and Planned Giving, at hadia.mawlawi@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8532.
James H. Lee, President
David Krieger
Janice H. and Thomas D. Barrow Chair
Brinton Averil Smith, Principal Cello
Barbara J. Burger Chair
Ian Mayton, Horn
The Brown Foundation Guest Pianist Fund
The Brown Foundation Miller Outdoor Theatre Fund in memory of Hanni and Stewart Orton, Legacy Society Co-Founders
Margarett and Alice Brown Fund for Education
Janet F. Clark Fund
Roy and Lillie Cullen Chair
Juraj Valčuha, Music Director
The Cullen Foundation Maestro’s Fund
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts Fund for Creative Initiatives
The Margaret and James Elkins Foundation Fund
The Virginia Lee Elverson Trust Fund
Fondren Foundation Chair Boson Mo, Assistant Concertmaster
William Randolph Hearst Endowed Fund for Education Programs
William Dee Hunt
Ajay Khurana
The General and Mrs. Maurice Hirsch Memorial Concert Fund in memory of Theresa Meyer and Jules Hirsch, beloved parents of General Maurice Hirsch, and Rosetta Hirsch Weil and Josie Hirsch Bloch, beloved sisters of General Maurice Hirsch
General Maurice Hirsch Chair
Aralee Dorough, Principal Flute
Houston Symphony Chorus Fund
Joan and Marvin Kaplan Fund
Ellen E. Kelley Chair
Eric Halen, Co-Concertmaster
Max Levine Chair
Yoonshin Song, Concertmaster
Mary R. Lewis Fund for Piano Performance
M.D. Anderson Foundation Fund
Mary Lynn and Steve Marks Fund
Barbara and Pat McCelvey Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander K. McLanahan Endowed Chair
William VerMeulen, Principal Horn
Monroe L. Mendelsohn Jr. Fund
Lynn Mathre Scott Wise
George P. and Cynthia Woods Mitchell Summer Concerts Fund
Bobbie Nau Chair
Mark Nuccio, Principal Clarinet
C. Howard Pieper Foundation Fund
Walter W. Sapp Fund, Legacy Society Co-Founder
Fayez Sarofim Guest Violinist Fund through the Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
The Schissler Foundation Fund
Spec’s Charitable Foundation Salute to Educators Concert Fund
The Micijah S. Stude Special Production Fund
Bobby and Phoebe Tudor Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor Endowed Fund
Margaret Alkek Williams Chair John Mangum, Executive Director/CEO
The Wortham Foundation Classical Series Fund in memory of Gus S. and Lyndall F. Wortham
The Legacy Society honors those who have included the Houston Symphony Endowment in their long-term estate plans through a bequest in a will, life-income gifts, or other deferred-giving arrangements.
For more information, please contact Hadia Mawlawi, Senior Associate, Endowment and Planned Giving, at hadia.mawlawi@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8532.
Dr. and Mrs. George J. Abdo
Priscilla R. Angly
Jonathan and Ann Ayre
Myra W. Barber
Janice Barrow*
Jim Barton
James Bell
Joe Anne Berwick*
Joan H. Bitar, MD
James and S. Dale Brannon
Walter and Nancy Bratic
Joe Brazzatti
Terry Ann Brown
Mary Kathryn Campion and Stephen Liston
Drs. Dennis and Susan Carlyle
Janet F. Clark
Virginia A. Clark
Mr. William E. Colburn
Elizabeth DeWitts
Andria N. Elkins
Farida Abjani
Dr. Antonio Arana*
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Aron
George* and Betty Bashen
Ann Baker Beaudette*
Dorothy B. Black*
Kerry Levine Bollmann
Ermy Borlenghi Bonfield
Zu Broadwater
Dr. Joan K. Bruchas* and Mr. H. Philip Cowdin*
Mr. Christopher and Mrs. Erin Brunner
Eugene R. Bruns
David Neal Bush
Cheryl and Sam* Byington
Sylvia J. Carroll
Dr. Robert N. Chanon
William J. Clayton and Margaret A. Hughes
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Cooley
The Honorable* and Mrs. William Crassas
Karl A. Dahm
Dr. Lida S. Dahm
Leslie Barry Davidson
Susan Feickert
Ginny Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Gendel
Christine E.* and Michael B. George
Jean and Jack* Ellis
The Aubrey* and Sylvia Farb Family
Helen Hudspeth Flores*
Eugene Fong
Mrs. Aggie L. Foster
Stephen and Mariglyn Glenn
Evan B. Glick
Jo A. and Billie Jo Graves
Mario Gudmundsson
Claudio J. Gutiérrez
Deborah Happ and Richard Rost
Marilyn and Bob Hermance
Dr. Charles and Tammie Johnson
Dr. Rita Justice
Dr. James E. and Betty W. Key
Calvin and Helen Leeke
Mr.* and Mrs. U. J. LeGrange
Joella and Steven P. Mach
Mauro H. Gimenez and Connie A. Coulomb
Bill Grieves*
Mr. Robert M. Griswold
Randolph Lee Groninger
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry L. Hamaker
Gloria L. Herman*
Timothy Hogan and Elaine Anthony
Dr. Gary L. Hollingsworth
Dr. Edward J. and Mrs. Patti* Hurwitz
Dr. Kenneth Hyde
Brian and Catherine James
Barbara and Raymond Kalmans
Dr. and Mrs. I. Ray Kirk
Mrs. Frances E. Leland
Samuel J. Levine
Mrs. Lucy Lewis
Sandra Magers
David Ray Malone and David J. Sloat
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney H. Margolis
Jay and Shirley* Marks
James G. Matthews
Mary Ann and David McKeithan
Dr. Tracey Samuels and Mr. Robert McNamara
Martha and. Alexander Matiuk
Michelle and Jack Matzer
Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm L. Mazow
Bill and Karinne McCullough
Muffy and Mike McLanahan
Dr. Georgette M. Michko
Dr. Robert M. Mihalo*
Alfred Cameron Mitchell*
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Mueller
Drs. John and Dorothy Oehler
Gloria G. Pryzant
Constance E. Roy
Donna Scott
Charles and Andrea Seay
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Shaffer
Michael J. Shawiak
Jule* and Albert* Smith
Louis* and Mary Kay Snyder
Mr. and Mrs. D. Bradley McWilliams
Catherine Jane Merchant*
Marilyn Ross Miles and Stephen Warren Miles Foundation
Sidney and Ione Moran
Janet Moynihan*
Richard and Juliet Moynihan
Gretchen Ann Myers
Patience Myers
John N. Neighbors* in memory of Jean Marie Neighbors
Mr.* and Mrs. Richard C. Nelson
Bobbie Newman
John and Leslie Niemand
Leslie Nossaman
Dave G. Nussmann*
John Onstott
Macky Osorio
Susan and Edward Osterberg
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund and Megan Pantuliano
Christine and Red Pastorek
Peter* and Nina Peropoulos
Linda Tarpley Peterson
Sara M. Peterson
Mrs. Jenny Popatia in memory of Dr. Tajdin R. Popatia
Ronald Mikita* & Rex Spikes
David and Helen Stacy
Frank Shroeder Stanford in memory of Dr. Walter O. Stanford
Mike and Anita* Stude
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor
Elba L. Villarreal
Margaret Waisman, M.D. and Steven S. Callahan, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Fredric A. Weber
Robert G. Weiner & Toni Blankmann
Vicki West in honor of Hans Graf
Susan Gail Wood
Jo Dee Wright
Ellen A. Yarrell
Anonymous (3)
Geraldine Smith Priest
Dana Puddy
Patrick T. Quinn
Lila Rauch*
Ed and Janet Rinehart
Mr. Floyd W. Robinson
Walter Ross*
Dr. and Mrs. Kazuo Shimada
Lisa and Jerry Simon
Tad and Suzanne Smith
Sherry Snyder
Marie Speziale
Jean Stinson*
Emily H. and David K. Terry
Douglas Thomas
Stephen G. Tipps
Ann K. Tornyos
Steve Tostengard*, in memory of Ardyce Tostengard
Jana Vander Lee
Bill and Agnete Vaughan
Dean B. Walker
Stephen and Kristine Wallace
Geoffrey Westergaard
Nancy B. Willerson
Jennifer R. Wittman
Lorraine and Ed* Wulfe
David and Tara Wuthrich
Katherine and Mark Yzaguirre
Anonymous (8)
Donors at the Sponsorship Circle level and above are provided the opportunity to be recognized as sponsoring a Houston Symphony Musician.
For more information, please contact Alexa Ustaszewski, Major Gifts Officer, at alexa.ustaszewski@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8534.
(As of February 29, 2024)
Dr. Angela Apollo
Scott Holshouser, Principal Keyboard
Dr. Saúl and Ursula Balagura
Charles Seo, Cello
Gary and Marian Beauchamp/ The Beauchamp Foundation
Martha Chapman, Second Violin
Nancy and Walter Bratic
Christopher Neal, First Violin
Mr. Gordon J. Brodfuehrer
Maki Kubota, Cello
Mr. Robert Bunch and Ms. Lilia Khakimova
Alexander Potiomkin, Bass Clarinet and Clarinet
Ralph Burch
Robin Kesselman, Principal Double Bass
Barbara J. Burger
Andrew Pedersen, Double Bass
Mary Kathryn Campion, PhD
Rodica Gonzalez, First Violin
Drs. Dennis and Susan Carlyle
Louis-Marie Fardet, Cello
Jane Cizik
Qi Ming, Assistant Concertmaster
Janet F. Clark
MuChen Hsieh, Principal Second Violin
Michael H. Clark and Sallie Morian
Assistant Principal Viola
Virginia A. Clark
Lindsey Baggett, ViolinCommunity-Embedded Musician
Roger and Debby Cutler
Tong Yan, First Violin
Mike and Debra Dishberger
Phillip Freeman, Bass Trombone
Joan and Bob Duff
Robert Johnson, Associate Principal Horn
Aggie L. Foster & Steve Simon
Mihaela Frusina, Second Violin
Steve and Mary Gangelhoff
Judy Dines, Flute
Stephen and Mariglyn Glenn
Christian Schubert, Clarinet
Evan B. Glick
Fay Shapiro, Viola
Suzan and Julius Glickman
Thomas LeGrand, Associate Principal Clarinet and E-flat Clarinet
Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Gorman
Christopher French, Associate Principal Cello
Mark and Ragna Henrichs
Donald Howey, Double Bass
Gary L. Hollingsworth and Kenneth J. Hyde
Robert Walp, Assistant Principal Trumpet
Mrs. James E. Hooks
Burke Shaw, Double Bass
Drs. M.S. and Marie-Luise
Kalsi
Eric Halen, Co-Concertmaster
Joan & Marvin Kaplan
Foundation/The Kaplan, Brooks, and Bruch Families
Mark Nuccio, Principal Clarinet
Dr. Sippi and Mr. Ajay Khurana
David Connor, Double Bass –Community-Embedded Musician
Dr. and Mrs. I. Ray Kirk
John C. Parker, Associate Principal Trumpet
Cindy E. Levit
Adam Trussell, Bassoon and Contrabassoon
Max Levit
Sergei Galperin, First Violin
Cora Sue and Harry* Mach
Joan DerHovsepian, Principal Viola
Joella and Steven P. Mach
Eric Larson, Double Bass
Mrs. Carolyn and Dr. Michael Mann
Ian Mayton, Horn
Cindy Mao and Michael Ma
Si-Yang Lao, First Violin
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney H.
Margolis
Eric Halen, Co-Concertmaster
Mr. and Mrs. J. Stephen Marks
Brian Del Signore, Principal Percussion
Mr. Jay Marks
Sergei Galperin, First Violin
Michelle and Jack Matzer
Kurt Johnson, First Violin
Barbara and Pat McCelvey
Adam Dinitz, English Horn
Muffy and Mike McLanahan
William VerMeulen, Principal Horn
Dr. Eric McLaughlin and Mr. Eliodoro Castillo
Jonathan Fischer, Principal Oboe
Martha and Marvin McMurrey
Rodica Gonzalez, First Violin
Dr. Miguel & Mrs. Valerie MiroQuesada
Leonardo Soto, Principal Timpani
Rita and Paul Morico
Elise Wagner, Bassoon
Scott and Judy Nyquist
Sheldon Person, Viola
Dr. Susan Osterberg and Mr. Edward C. Osterberg Jr. MiHee Chung, First Violin
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan E.
Parker
Jeffrey Butler, Cello
Mr. David Peavy and Dr. Stephen McCauley
Jeremy Kreutz, Cello
Gloria and Joe Pryzant
Matthew Strauss, Percussion
Allan and Jean Quiat
Richard Harris, Trumpet
Laurie A. Rachford
Timothy Dilenschneider, Associate Principal Double Bass
Ron and Demi Rand
Annie Chen, Second Violin
Ed & Janet Rinehart
Amy Semes, Associate Principal Violin
Mrs. Sybil F. Roos
Mark Hughes, Principal Trumpet
Mr. Glen A. Rosenbaum
Aralee Dorough, Principal Flute
John and Lindy Rydman / Spec’s Wines, Spirits & Finer Foods
Anthony Kitai, Cello
Kathy and Ed Segner
Kathryn Ladner, Flute & Piccolo
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Shaffer
Eric Halen, Co-Concertmaster
Margaret and Joel Shannon
Rainel Joubert, Violin–Community-Embedded Musician
Tad and Suzanne Smith
Marina Brubaker, First Violin
Alana R. Spiwak and Sam L. Stolbun
Wei Jiang, Acting Associate Principal Viola
Mike Stude
Brinton Averil Smith, Principal Cello
Bobby and Phoebe Tudor
Bradley White, Acting Principal Trombone
Mr. & Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor
Joan DerHovsepian, Principal Viola
Margaret Waisman, M.D. and Steven S. Callahan, Ph.D. Mark Griffith, Percussion
Stephen and Kristine Wallace
Rian Craypo, Principal Bassoon
Mr. & Mrs. Fredric A. Weber
Allegra Lilly, Harp
Robert G. Weiner and Toni Blankman
Anastasia Ehrlich, Second Violin
Vicki West
Rodica Gonzalez, First Violin
Steven and Nancy Williams
MiHee Chung, First Violin
Jeanie Kilroy Wilson and Wallace S. Wilson
Xiao Wong, Cello
Nina and Michael Zilkha
Kurt Johnson, First Violin
Thank you to our Donors. We are grateful to the generous donors who have contributed $43,650,000 to date toward our $60 million goal.
(As of February 29, 2024)
Nancy and Charles Davidson
$5
The Brown Foundation, Inc.
The City of Houston / Houston First Corporation
Janice H. Barrow
The Robert and Jane Cizik Family
Janet F. Clark
ConocoPhillips
The Cullen Foundation
The Cullen Trust for the Performing Arts
The Elkins Foundation
Houston Endowment
Barbara and Pat McCelvey
The Shirley and David Toomim Family
The Wortham Foundation, Inc.
Anne and Albert Chao
Mr. & Mrs. J. Stephen Marks
Beverly and James Postl
Vivian L. Smith Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor
For more information, please contact Tim Dillow, Senior Director of Development, at timothy.dillow@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8538 or Christine Ann Stevens, Senior Director of Development, christine.stevens@houstonsymphony.org or 713.337.8521
When you donate to the Annual Fund, you help the Houston Symphony bring world-class orchestral performances to Greater Houston and serve thousands of Houstonians through free and low-cost concerts, and our Education and Community Engagement initiatives. Take a look at some of the accomplishments we were able to achieve in the 2022–23 Season thanks to your contributions:
3 23
153 102 22 CONCERTS GUEST ARTISTS/CONDUCTORS HOUSTON SYMPHONY DEBUTS
28,690 WORLD PREMIERES
TOTAL LIVE FROM JONES HALL LIVESTREAM CONCERTS
EDUCATION AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT INITIATIVES
122,340 Houstonians served through Education and Community Engagement Initiatives
46 Orchestra musicians participated in nearly 428 community engagement events at hospitals, schools, senior centers, and community venues
20 Student Concerts
5 Free Neighborhood Concerts
5 Free/low-cost concerts at Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
4 Free concerts at Miller Outdoor Theatre
LIVE FROM JONES HALL LIVESTREAM VIEWS
Scan here to donate to the Annual Fund online:
Symphony beginnings
• Houston Symphony Orchestra Association officers in 1913 consisted of 5 women (4 of 6 officers were women)
• 6 out of 13 concertmasters have been women
• Violinists Rosetta Hirsch and Marian Jenkins were charter members of the Houston Symphony in 1913
• The number of women in the orchestra fluctuated between 14 and 21 during his tenure; while New York Philharmonic and Boston Symphony Orchestra had no female players at this time and the NBC Symphony had one
• Special attire was designed for women to closely match the men’s formal attire consisting of white vests, black jackets, and floor length skirts
Coming soon: