Proud Sponsor
The City of Kamloops is a proud sponsor and wishes the symphony all the best during its 2022–2023 season.

A Greeting from the President of the Symphony Board and the New Executive Director
As the gates of summer close behind us, I am inspired by the thought that other gates now open and a new season unfolds before us. I welcome all of you to the rich variety of our 2023/24 season. From the rhapsodic to the romantic, the traditional to the contemporary, your orchestra is eager to bring you many months of music with an excitingly diverse series of concerts and artists.
Whether the music is Canadian or international, popular or time-honoured, the performance is here— live and local. I hope you will let the KSO be your musical home for live performances in the coming months.
And this year it is my pleasure to extend the warmest Kamloops welcome to our new Executive Director, Christopher Young, whose hands will help guide this new season and many seasons to come.
John McDonald Board PresidentI am thrilled to extend a warm welcome to each and every one of you as we embark on an exciting new season with the Kamloops Symphony.
I am honored to stand before you as the newly appointed Executive Director, and it is with great enthusiasm that I join this remarkable community of passionate audiences and musicians
As we gather for our first program of the season, I am reminded of the power of music to connect us, uplift our spirits, and inspire change. Throughout the season, we aim to bring you exceptional performances that transcend boundaries, and delight, move and challenge us. Our talented musicians have poured their hearts and souls into creating unforgettable experiences for you, and will continue to do so under the guidance of our music director Dina Gilbert.
I look forward to getting to know each of you, forging new friendships, and collaborating to ensure the Kamloops Symphony continues to thrive and bring the joy of music to our beloved communities. Your support means the world to us, and together, we will create a beautiful symphony of memories that will last a lifetime.
Thank you for entrusting us with the privilege of enriching your lives through music. Here's to a sensational season ahead!
Yours in music, Christopher Young Executive Director KSO & KSO Music School
The Kamloops Symphony wishes to acknowledge that this concert is taking place on Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc territory within the traditional lands of the Secwépemc Nation.
BC Interior Community Foundation
Kamloops Symphony Foundation
Shuswap Community Foundation SOCAN Foundation




Kamloops Symphony Society
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
John McDonald, ICD.D | President
Steve Powrie | Vice President
Tyler Klymchuk | Treasurer
Kait Methot | Secretary
Kathy Collier
Lisa Fuller
Christy Gauley
Lucille Gnanasihamany
Gabriele Klein
Rod Michell
Daleen Millard
Sydney Takahashi
Simon Walter
HONOURARY LIFE MEMBERS
Bonnie Jetsen
Art Hooper
ADMINISTRATION
Executive Director
Christopher Young
Music Director
Dina Gilbert
Office Administrator
Sue Adams
Operations Coordinator
Sam Bregoliss
Marketing Coordinator
Ryan Noakes
Librarian
Sally Arai
Orchestra Personnel Manager
Olivia Martin
Production Assistant
Adrien Fillion
Chorus Master
Tomas Bijok
Collaborative Pianist
Daniela O’Fee
Chorus Administrator
Proud Member of Orchestras Canada, the national association for Canadian orchestras

Marnie Smith
Music Director Emeritus
Bruce Dunn
MUSIC DIRECTOR
Music Director Dina Gilbert is a Canadian conductor passionate about communicating with audiences of all ages to broaden their appreciation of orchestral music through innovative collaborations. This commitment, along with her extensive knowledge of the orchestra repertoire, has brought her to conduct orchestras across Canada as well as in France, Spain, the United States, Colombia and Japan. She has received critical acclaim for her energic presence on the podium, her versatility, and her audacious programming.
In addition to conducting the Kamloops Symphony, highlights of the 20232024 season include return invitations with the Toronto Symphony, Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, the Orchestre symphonique de Québec, the Orchestre National des Pays de la Loire, as well as debuts with the Walla Walla Symphony and the Kingston Symphony. As the Principal Conductor of the Orchestre des Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal, Dina will perform Prokofiev’s Cinderella, as well as works of Lili Boulanger, Clara Schumann, Louise Farrenc and Kaija Saariaho in the ballet premiere of La Dame aux Camélias by choreographer Peter Quanz.
Her innate curiosity towards nonclassical musical genres and her willingness to democratize classical music has brought her to conduct the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and the Orchestre national de Lyon in several Hip Hop Symphonic
programs featuring renowned Hip hop artists I AM, MC Solaar, Youssoupha and Bigflo & Oli. Dina is also renowned for her expertise in conducting multidisciplinary projects such as film concert performances (The Red Violin, The Artist, E.T. the Extraterrestrial).
As the founder and artistic director of the Ensemble Arkea, a Montrealbased chamber orchestra, Dina has premiered over thirty works from emerging Canadian composers and has reached thousands of children with her interactive and participative Conducting 101 workshops. From 2013 to 2016, Dina Gilbert was the assistant conductor of the Orchestre symphonique de Montreal and Maestro Kent Nagano, also assisting notable guest conductors including Zubin Mehta and Sir Roger Norrington. In April 2016, she received great acclaim for stepping in to replace Maestro Alain Altinoglu with the OSM in a program showcasing Gustav Holst’s The Planets. Featured in the recent documentary “Femmes symphoniques”, Dina Gilbert earned her doctorate from the Université de Montréal andpolished her skills in masterclasses with Kenneth Kiesler, Pinchas Zukerman, Neeme Järvi and the musicians from the Kritische Orchester in Berlin. Awarded the Opus Prize of “Découverte de l’année” in 2017, Dina Gilbert was also named as one of the “50 personnalités créant l’extraordinaire au Québec” in 2018 by the Urbania Magazine.

Proud Supporters of the KAMLOOPS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
With great pleasure, I invite you to discover our 2023/24 Season, one that features local and international artists and celebrates tradition—and innovation—in symphonic music. Rich and diverse, our programming this season highlights beloved works by Mahler, Mozart, and Ravel, and gives you the opportunity to hear many exciting pieces for the first time in Kamloops.

You’ll be at the edge of your seat with some of the most riveting American music, such as Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, and immersed in the tragic love story of Prokofiev’s Romeo & Juliet. Your young ones will even have a chance to discover the KSO with a special Family Concert, the Canadian premiere of author Dan Brown’s Wild Symphony.
Celebrate the festive season with Christmas with the KSO, then come on a Hypnotic Journey with a multi-sensory experience featuring the music of Julie Thériault. We will then bewitch you with music from the Red Violin, and Light the Night will carry you into Alma Mahler’s world through projected illustrations, in a symphonic graphic novel. You’ll also get to hear a different side of your orchestra when we perform the music of Pink Floyd with Jeans n’ Classics, mash up expression of struggle, mourning, and hope for the future when Mozart Meets Margit Sky, and share the stage with versatile Juno Award winner Jeremy Dutcher
From celebrating the 100th birthday of the Kamloops-born “Dean of Canadian Jazz” Phil Nimmons, to sharing the stage with our very own KSO Chorus, we will also collaborate with stellar artists from our region, including Rachel Casponi, Heidi Muendel, Martin Krátký, and Margit Sky Project.
We can’t wait for you to join us for this exciting season!
Dina Gilbert
Sponsors


SERIES SPONSORS


SEASON SPONSORS



PERFORNMANCE SPONSORS







Orchestra
FIRST VIOLIN
Cvetozar Vutev
—concertmaster*
Elyse Jacobson
—assistant concertmaster*
Susan Aylard
Meredith Bates
Evelyn Creaser-Rumley
Michelle Gao
Carol Hur
Molly MacKinnon
SECOND VIOLIN
Boris Ulanowicz*
Susan Cottrell
Annette Dominik
Narumi Higuchi
Haley Leach
Sandra Wilmot
VIOLA
Ashley Kroecher*
Catherine Chen
Samantha Kung
Caroline Olsen
Wennie Wei
CELLO
Martin Kratky*
Doug Gorkoff
Laure Matiakh
Olivia Walsh
BASS
Michael Vaughan++
Lukas Peladeau
Yefeng Yin
FLUTE
Jeff Pelletier++
Thomas Law
OBOE
Marea Chernoff*
Lauris Davis
CLARINET
Sally Arai*
Julie Begg
BASS CLARINET
Marcella Barz
BASSOON
Olivia Martin*
*Principal +Acting Principal ++Substitute Principal
Chair Sponsors
HORN
Sam McNally*
Heather Walker
TRUMPET
Mark D’Angelo*
Rob Hogeveen
Jeremy Vint
TROMBONE
Bob Rogers++
Cindy Hogeveen
Rod Simmons
TUBA
Brett Lacroix-Durocher++
TIMPANI
Brian Nesselroad++
PERCUSSION
Martin Fisk++
Jacob Kyger
HARP
Naomi Cloutier*
Geoff & Judith Benson | concertmaster

Rod Michell | assistant concertmaster
Gabriele Klein | principal second violin
June McClure | principal viola
Anonymous | principal cello
Eleanor Nicoll | principal flute
John & Joyce Henderson | principal clarinet
Kelvin Barlow | principal bassoon
Hugh & Marilyn Fallis | principal trumpet
RHAPSODY IN BLUE
PROGRAMME
Dina Gilbert, Conductor
Rachel Casponi, Soprano
Daniel Clarke Bouchard, Piano
Samuel Barber ................................Knoxville: Summer of 1915
George Gershwin ............................Summertime
Florence Price .................................Piano Concerto in D minor
INTERMISSION
Phil Nimmons ................................ Phil Nimmons Medley
Arr. Stephanie Hamelin Tomala (I Love to Play – Tides – Too Late Now – Not soon enough)
George Gershwin ............................Rhapsody in Blue
PERFORMANCE SPONSORS











Phil Nimmons
Celebrating the 100th Birthday of Phil Nimmons!
Born in Kamloops BC, Phil Nimmons, OC OOnt is leader of NIMMONS ‘N’ NINE PLUS SIX and the PHIL NIMMONS QUARTET. He studied piano and clarinet in Vancouver, and later worked at The Juilliard School (NY) and the Royal Conservatory of Music (Toronto). As a composer, he functions in the classical and jazz media. Much of the music played by Nimmons ‘n’ Nine Plus Six has been written and/or arranged by Phil Nimmons. As an educator, he cofounded, with Oscar Peterson and Ray Brown, the Advanced School of Contemporary Music in Toronto (1960), and following that was the Director of the University of Toronto’s Jazz Ensemble, where he currently holds the title ‘Director Emeritus’.
Phil received his earliest education in Vancouver (BC), and is a graduate of the University of British Columbia (B.A., Pre-Med). He was then a scholarship student at The Juilliard School of Music (New York), and he completed his postgraduate studies in composition at The Royal Conservatory of Music (Toronto) and the University of Toronto. Phil was a student of notable professors, Dr. Arnold Walter, Professor John Weinzweig, and Professor Richard Johnston.
Phil was a founding member of the Canadian League of Composers (1951) and the Advanced School of Contemporary Music in Toronto (19601966).

Phil has toured extensively throughout Europe and Canada. He has represented Canada on a world tour and his Atlantic Provinces Tour was funded as a special cultural event.
Phil has written contemporary classical works for piano, strings, flute, voice, instrumental in addition to over 400 original jazz compositions. His compositions include Film scores; Radio, TV, Stage Plays, Theatre Specials; CBC, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Royal Alexander Theatre, Crest Theatre; O’Keefe Centre, EXPO ‘67; World Music Week—CBC/IMC of UNESCO, 1975; World Olympics, 1976; The Trojan Women, St. Lawrence Centre.
Highlights amongst the hundreds of orchestrations include: Norman Campbell’s television premiere of Anne of Green Gables and Oscar Peterson’s themes for Ontario Place film Big North Ontario.
YEARS
admin@kamloopssymphony.com




Stephanie Hamelin Tomala Composer
Stephanie Hamelin Tomala is a Canadian-American composer, violinist, pianist and singer with Ecuadorian and Lebanese roots. 4 time Socan foundation award winner, she has written music for over 200 short films, multiple documentary feature films as well as the series “L’industrie de la Vieillesse,” directed by Denys Desjardins for which she was nominated for a Gemini award in 2021 (Prix Gémeaux) in the emerging artist category for her work as a composer. She has composed music for multiple National Film Board of Canada productions since 2020. She is also known for her concert music with two wins in a row for her string quartet music at the composition competition SmackDown string quartet held in Texas in 20192020. She was also nominated in the contemporary/classical instrumental composition category for her orchestral piece Ceremonial Tribute to Krakow at the 2021 ceremony awards of the Hollywood Music in Media Awards. She received an honorable mention at the 2022 HER MUSIC AWARDS and won the emergent culture Télé-Québec prize in 2022. She recently was nominated in the category best original score for a feature documentary for the music of the film I lost my mom, directed by Denys Desjardins. Some of her arrangements and compositions have been featured on network television such as CRAVE, SUPER ÉCRAN, Radio-Canada/CBC, IciTou. tv, Canal Savoir, Illico, and Unis Tv.




Daniel Clarke Bouchard Piano
Daniel Clarke Bouchard began playing the piano at the age of five and gave his first piano recital at the age of six. He received the Grand Prize at the Joy of Music Festival held at McGill University. In 2009, he won the gold medal at the Montreal Classical Music Festival. In 2010, he won Gold at the Quebec Music Educators Association Competition. In 2011, Daniel won first place at the Canadian Music Competition and received the Yamaha, Canimex and Gilles Chatel scholarships.
Daniel has shared the stage many times with the great Oliver Jones, who was his mentor and idol growing up. Daniel performed at the 2012 International Jazz Festival with Molly Johnson, at the Tedx Youth Conference, and at the Place des Arts with the Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir and Trevor Payne. Daniel also performed for the Vision Awards Gala in Montreal. He also was the Jeunesses Musicales of Canada’s cultural ambassador in 2014.

Daniel is known by his fans for his numerous appearances on television. His first big television appearance came on the show “Kiwis et des hommes” in 2011. Ever since, he has been interviewed countless times on CBC Radio and RadioCanada and articles have been written about him in magazines and newspapers all across the world. Recently, he made appearances on the Ellen DeGeneres Show, Tout Le Monde En Parle, Canada AM and the George Stroumboulopoulos show.
In 2014, he was invited to perform on stage with Earth, Wind and Fire as part of their Shining Star World Tour.
Daniel has performed with many orchestras, including the Montreal Symphony Orchestra with Dina Gilbert, the National Arts Center Orchestra with Alexander Shelley, the I Musici of Montreal with Jean-Michel Malouf, the Sinfonia de Lanaudière with Stephane Laforest, the Metropolitain Orchestra of Montreal with Daniel Myssyk and Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the Appassionata Ensemble with Daniel Myssyk, with the world-renowned Auryn Quartet and several others. Daniel has won numerous awards, including the Félix Award for the 2014 Classical Album of the Year, the 2014 Montreal International Music Competition’s Choquette Symcox Award and the 2017 SPACQ Foundation’s Eval-Manigat Award.
Rachel Casponi Soprano

Rachel Casponi is a performer, director and educator holding a Bachelor of Arats in Music and Drama from university of Windsor and a Master of Music from the University of Western Ontario. She has worked across Canada including with BC’s North Peace Community Choir that she led at their Carnegie Hall performance. A regular performer with the Chamber Musicians of Kamloops and director of local choirs, Rachel teaches for the Kamloops-Thompson School District and Kamloops Music Collective.
PROGRAMME NOTES
Yes indeed, Shakespeare knew about summer, as he knew about most things—that “Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines.” Yet, like most of us, he lamented summer’s brevity—that “summer’s lease hath all too short a date.” Now, we are fortunate (as Shakespeare was not), in that we have the Kamloops Symphony ready to launch their 2023–24 season in a delightful concert that begins by savoring warm memories of summer.
Samuel Barber (1910–1981)
Knoxville: Summer of 1915 (1947)
SSamuel Barber (composer of the widely and justly admired Adagio for Strings) was the musically precocious son of a Philadelphia physician and his wife. At age 14 he was accepted into Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute of music to study piano, voice and composition. He was successful almost immediately with works like the Overture to The School for
Scandal, (1931) and Music for a Scene from Shelley (1933); these and other compositions won him Pulitzer prizes and also a prestigious American Prix de Rome. When the USA entered World War 2 in December 1941, Barber was conscripted but did not see active service owing to imperfect eyesight. Nonetheless, his war years were productive musically, seeing the
completion of his Second Symphony and, just after the war’s end, his Cello Concerto and his ballet Medea for Martha Graham. These works clearly established his musical reputation in the Western Hemisphere alongside that of Aaron Copland.
In spite all his wartime productivity, the war’s disruption provoked other reactions in Barber, a yearning perhaps for a return to the quiet and grace and earlier certainties of his youth. Knoxville: Summer of 1915 which he completed early in 1947, a time when his father’s health was in serious decline, reflects these feelings. The work is a setting for soprano and orchestra of a passage of poetic prose by author James Agee (1909-1955), an autobiographical fragment that Barber had encountered a year earlier. As Barber himself described, “the summer evening [Agee] describes in his native southern town reminded me so much of similar evenings when I was a child at home.”
The setting is lightly scored, and opens with a sentence from Agee’s novel A Death in the Family: “We are talking now of summer evenings in Knoxville Tennessee in a time that I lived there so successfully disguised to myself as a child.” A five-bar introduction leads to a lilting section for the soloist, Andante un poco mosso, a catalogue of evening sounds and scents. The orchestra reprises this material until the noisy rumble of a streetcar interrupts. The orchestra and soloist carry us forward as the night sky becomes “one blue dew” and the family group rests “on the rough wet grass”. The singer enumerates (and blesses) his adult companions and at the mention of death, “the hour of their taking away,” the music becomes Maestoso. Then comes the restful concluding section, “After a little while I am taken in and put to bed…” and we are left to ponder the child’s final wistful thought—that those closest to him “will not ever tell me who I am.”
George Gershwin (1898–1937)
“Summertime” from Porgy and Bess (1935)
Porgy and Bess is based on the novel, Porgy, by poet DuBose Heyward. It was first staged in Boston in the fall of 1935. The critics were not enthusiastic. It ran for only 124 performances and was a loss financially: Gershwin did not even make in royalties what it had cost him to have the orchestral parts printed. But the composer himself loved it. “I think the music is so marvelous” he commented—“I really can’t believe I wrote it.”
For Gershwin Porgy and Bess was, by his own admission, “a labour of love.” He viewed it as an opera, but an opera for the theatre not for the opera house, and that meant he could write songs for it. “I am not ashamed of writing songs at any time so long as they are good songs.” Well, Porgy and Bess is full of the lovely melodies Gershwin produced at all stages of his career, and the tender cradle song, “Summertime,” with its echoes of
negro spiritual, is among the loveliest of them all, a blend of vitality and
sadness that is part of special appeal of Gershwin’s music.
Florence Price (1887–1953) Piano Concerto in One Movement (1934)
Florence Price was born in 1887 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Her mother was a music teacher and it was she who directed Florence’s early musical education. Her talent showed early: she gave her first piano performance at age four and had her first composition published at age eleven. Opportunities for more advanced musical education for women of colour were distinctly limited in the South so her mother enrolled her in the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. There she majored in piano and organ and studied composition. After graduation she returned to the South, taught and married. Racial pressures of the Jim Crow era, however, prompted her move north to Chicago, and it was here that she made connections with other black artists, Marion Anderson and Langston Hughes among them, and began to find success herself. In 1932 Price won first prize in the Wanamaker Foundation Awards for her Symphony in E minor, and in the following year the symphony received its premiere with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra—the first composition by an African-American woman to be played by a major orchestra, an event that brought her a measure of national recognition. Changes in musical styles before and after World War 2, and Price’s death in 1953 overshadowed the impact of her
music, as did the actual loss of some of her works. Recent rediscovery of a cache of her manuscripts, including violin concertos and another symphony, have begun to restore her reputation once more.
Price’s Concerto in One Movement for piano was premiered in Chicago in 1934 with Price herself as pianist. The premiere was followed by another performance in Chicago by the Woman’s Symphony of Chicago, with Price’s student Margaret Bonds as soloist.
Although its title declares otherwise, Price’s piano concerto is comprised of three different “movements,” Moderato—Adagio—Allegretto , that are played through without interruption. A meditative call on the trumpet opens the concerto with fragments of a theme, the melody encompassing the pentatonic scale in D minor, deliberately calling to mind African American folk song. The woodwinds reply and this dialogue continues briefly until the piano introduces itself emphatically in an impressive cadenza. The second movement, Adagio, in the key of D major, is almost a piano solo with little orchestral accompaniment. The pentatonic scale helps voice the melody’s unmistakable Spiritual qualities. And this lyrical theme is treated in a variety of ways: “calls”
and responses between oboe and the lightly scored orchestra with piano embellishments, western harmonies that converge with chromatic excursions, even a few jazzy outbreaks. The concluding movement, also, draws on black musical traditions, this time a spirited folk dance, specifically the lively body percussion style known as “pattin’ juba.” Price uses this dance
form in other of her works both for piano and for orchestra. Here she develops the movement’s theme through a range of keys and rhythmic patterns, and exciting interchanges between orchestra and piano which, with all its inherent folksy energy, brings the concerto to a boisterous conclusion.
Phil Nimmons (Born in Kamloops in 1923)
Medley of Original Tunes
(I Love to Play – Tides – Too Late Now – Not soon enough) arranged by Stéphanie Hamelin Tomala
Now is a time to celebrate the achievements of a great Canadian musician, a centenarian no less, Kamloops born, Vancouver raised, clarinetist, composer, arranger, bandleader and educator Phil Nimmons through a special commission by the Kamloops Symphony in which you will discover four of his original tunes arranged by Stéphanie Hamelin Tomala.
Nimmons originally attended UBC intending a career in medicine, and while there he played in local dance bands, including that of longtime band leader Dal Richards, and began his calling as an arranger and composer. Medicine’s loss was Canadian jazz’s gain. Nimmons went to the Juilliard School in 194547 to study clarinet, and then to the Royal Conservatory of music to study composition. In 1953 he formed his own jazz group which in 1957 became the Nimmons’N’Nine, and then, in 1965, was enlarged to
Nimmon’N’Nine plus Six. This big band group performed and gave clinics in many Canadian schools, toured widely in Canada and twice performed at Canadian Armed Forces bases in Europe.
Nimmons was a founding member of the Canadian League of Composers, and also established jazz programmes at several schools and universities, including Banff, and the University of Toronto where he became director emeritus of the degree program in jazz studies. His composing career has been long—his early compositions include a Sonatina for flute (1948), Toccata (1949), String Quartet (1950), and many other works through the 1960’s and 1970’s. After his band dissolved in the 1980’s he had more time for composition including several commissioned pieces, some for fellow clarinetist James Campbell, as well as a trumpet concerto and a concerto for vibraphone and piano. Over the years, his composing has
included collaborations with radio, especially CBC, with television, in film work and, naturally, recording. We salute his astoundingly productive
and influential career for which he is justly referred to as the “Dean of Canadian Jazz”.
George Gershwin (1898–1937)
Rhapsody in Blue (1924)
Born in Brooklyn, American composer George Gershwin was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrant parents. He described himself musically as a “modern Romantic,” his style rooted in jazz and in the urban “folk music” of New York. That is, in part, because he left school early to make his living as a pianist and “song-plugger” in Tin Pan alley, playing the latest popular songs to entertain (and sell to) shoppers as they shopped. Initially self-taught as a composer he was, even before the age of twenty, contributing his own songs with increasing success. Inspired by the example of composers like Jerome Kern and Irving Berlin, his music introduced a new style of sophisticated jazz coloured by subtle rhythmic inflection and a delicacy that is uniquely Gershwin’s.
Gershwin had taken some lessons in composition and theory, however, and was eager to master “classical” techniques and to establish himself as a composer of concert as well as popular music. His opportunity came in 1924 with a commission from band leader Paul Whiteman for a concerto for piano and jazz band. The result was Gershwin’s first purely instrumental work, Rhapsody in Blue, which he described as “a kaleidoscope of America, of our vast melting pot.”
The adaptation of jazz to the concert hall was not entirely new—there had been French composer Milhaud’s ballet “La Création du Monde” in 1923, and ragtime flavoured pieces by Debussy and Stravinsky earlier still, though Gershwin may have been unaware of these. In Gershwin’s Rhapsody may hear echoes of Franz Liszt who evolved the loosely structured “rhapsody” form in the 19th Century, and at moments the piano style may remind us of Rachmaninov or Tchaikovsky. For the rest, from the opening clarinet glissando, to the solo “improvisations” on the piano, to the blues and jazzy riffs, Gershwin is pretty much right: this is music that has a distinctly American identity. That unique clarinet glissando by the way was itself a happy improvisation by the Whiteman orchestra’s clarinetist replacing the simple chromatic scale Gershwin had written. The first version of the Rhapsody was scored for Whiteman’s Big Band, but the version we will hear tonight is the orchestral one scored by the American composer, Ferde Grofé, the version most frequently performed nowadays.




Thank you to our wonderful team of volunteers
Volunteers
Nicholas Adams
Kathleen Alcock
Wendy Allen
Pierrette Beaton
Joan Bernard
Pam Bradley
Claire Ann Brodie
Faye Burles
Jo Chipperfield
Kathy Collier
Geoff Collier
John Corbishley
Jean Crowe
Libby Denbigh
Kathrine Dominik
Denise Douglas
Bruce Dunn
Sandy Eastwood
Jill Field
Mel Formanski
Deb Fransen
Lisa Fuller
Christy Gauley
Lucille Gnanasihamany
Dina Haque
Judy Hatch
Roy Haugan
Carole Hebden
Marylyne House
Carol Howie
Barb Humphrey
George Humphrey
Kathy Humphreys
Patricia Kaatz
Margaret Kerr
June Kitamura
Gabriele Klein
Tyler Klymchuk
Mary Lester
Maureen Light
Joan McDonald
John McDonald
Deb McKeown
Alison McKinnon
David McKinnon
Wendy McLean
Linda McMillan
Kait Methot
Rod Michell
Sharon Morrison
Davina Neve
Helen Newmarch
Rae Nixon
Bess and Kaytee Ovington
Carol Paulsen
Margret Peemoeller
Steve Powrie
Bonnie Pryce
Cherryl Rice
Wilma Scheer
Margaret Sharon
Sharlene Sharpe
Tom Stone
Sydney Takahashi
Annette Toop
Lynn Totten
Simon Walter
Mary Ann Whiting
Dave Whiting
Judy Wiebe
HIGHLIGHTS FROM OUR 2022/23 SEASON









$2000+
Donors Donors
CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE
Anonymous
Archie & Jane Dempster
Foundation
Beaulieu-Saucier
Gabriele Klein
June McClure
John & Joan McDonald
Rod Michell
Rae Nixon
Tacey Ruffner
Maureen Stewart
Sheila Stewart
TELUS
John Watson
$1000+ BENEFACTORS
Lorene & Ben Anders
Geoff & Judith Benson
Pauline & Jack Braaksma
Holly Campbell
Alan & Gwen Kerr
Delores Kroetch
Cindy Malinowski & Charles MacLennan
John & Joan McDonald
Elspeth McDougall
Daniel Mills
Helen & Bruce Newmarch
Eleanor Nicoll
Colene Palmer
Terry Simpson
Jolana Tamajka
$500+
OVATION
Anonymous (5)
Sharlene Anderson
Kim Buker
Jean Chacko
Tom Dickinson & Nancy Flood
Gibraltar Law Group
Roy & Helen Haugen
Carol Howie
Bob & Jo-Mary Hunter
Marjorie King
Maureen McCurdy
David & Alison McKinnon
Helen & Bruce Newmarch
Susie Safford & Carlos Tallent
Jerry Stack
M. Colleen Stainton
David & Rosemarie Stoltze
Stan Szpakowicz
Don & Margaret Waldon
Robert Walter & Jill Calder
$250+ ENCORE
Anonymous
Sue Adams
Peter & Debra
Allik-Petersenn
Francis & Helen Barnett
William & Pierrette Beaton
John Corbishley
Murray & Ann Crawford
Fred Cunningham & Helen Birdsall
Wilma de Jong
Joanne Dennstedt
Dan & Denise Douglas
Dawn Ebata
William and Sheena Flynn
Greg & Susan Hall
Lois K. Hollstedt
Gabriele Klein
Christina & Reimar
Kroecher Fund
$100+ BRAVO
Anonymous (2)
Luisa Ahlstrom
Darryl & Jeryl Auten
Wendy Bainbridge
Joan Bernard
Robin Bowolin
Percy & Bernice Brackett
Pamela Bradley
Alexander Crane
Phil Crossley
Jean Dahl
Roxanne Dauncey
Philip Durell
Jean Ethridge
Brett & Norma Fairbairn
Judith Fowles
Donna Geefs
Annette Glover
Lucille Gnanasihamany
Sheila Gorkoff
Peter & Judy Gray
Susan Hammond
William & Yvonne Heese
Frances Higginson
Greg & Danita Howard
Claire Johnson
Pat & Fred Kaatz
Lyle LeClaire
Catherine Lee
Mary Lester
D’Arcy & Mariko Lintott
James MacDonald
Ruth Majak
Keith & Shirley Martin
Ellen & John McCurrach
Kirsten McDougall
Marilyn McLean
Kaitlin Methot
Gudrun Meyer
Katy Michell
Dianne Miller
Brian Mills
Joan Moffat
Christy Morris
Kathleen Nadler
Charo Neville
Angi & Russ Noakes
Gillian Oliver
Marian Owens
Margaret Patten
Margaret Chrumka & Paul Clark
Fred & Nancy Leake
David & Alison McKinnon
Elizabeth McLeman
Chris & Marg Parfitt
Michael & Pamela Saul
Ray & Sue Sewell
Jerry Stack
Judy Wiebe
Janice Pedersson
Penny & Carl Pentilchuk
Steve Powrie
Thomas Preston
Nicole & Steven Remesz
Cherryl & Rick Rice
Jason Richard
Terry & Susanne Rogers
Kathy Sinclair
Carol & Wolfgang Sinnemann
Barbara & Carman Smith
Donald & Sandra Staff
Ed Takahashi
Syd Takahashi
David Todd
Lynne Totten
Nicole Tougas
Judith Treherne
Robert Ulevog
Lynne Van Hamme
Dave & Maryanne Whiting
Eric & Mary Wiebe
Judy Wiebe
Lois & David Williams
Michael Wisla
The above represents the individuals and corporations who have donated to the Kamloops Symphony Society in the last twelve months. For any errors or omissions, please do let us know at 250.372.5000 or info@kamloopssymphony.com.