Bailey Performance Center 10th anniversary

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Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Family Per for m ance Center CELEBR AT I NG 10 Y E A R S Celebr ating 10 Year s


PHOTO CREDITS: Cover Brian C. Robbins Page 8 David Caselli Page 11 Jason Braverman Page 17 Anne Almasy Page 18 Emily Lester Page 19 DV Photo Video Page 20 Brian C. Robbins Page 21 Patrick Boling Page 22 Anne Always Page 23 Tim Harman Page 25 Emily Lester Page 26 Brian C. Robbins Page 27 Tracie L. Hinnant (Bailey & Morgan) Page 27 Emily Lester (Mr & Mrs. Morgan) Page 28 Tracie L. Hinnant Page 29 Ashley Schenck Page 30 Kimberly New Pages 30,31 Shea Trenbeath Page 32 Jason Braverman Page 33 Jason Braverman Page 34 Jason Braverman Page 35 Joseph Greenway Page 36 DV Photo Video Page 37 Stephen Jones Page 38 DV Photo Video Page 39 DV Photo Video Page 42 Joseph Greenway Page 43 Joseph Greenway Page 44 KSU School of Music Page 47 Cheryl Anderson Ciucevich Page 50 Brian C. Robbins

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating the 10th anniver sary of the Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Family Per for m ance Center October 2007-October 2017

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


The Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center at Kennesaw State University has become an integral part of the university and the surrounding communities. Home to the School of Music, the Bailey Performance Center provides students and faculty with a world-class venue for performance and study. Built at a time when the School of Music was desperately in need of space, it became a driving force in the school’s ability to grow into an exceptional environment for those interested in pursuing a music degree, and has helped form the musical and cultural art leaders of the 21st century. Opening on Saturday, October 6, 2007, the Center and Concert Hall has engaged the university community, our neighbors in Cobb County and northwest Georgia, and artists and dignitaries from around the world. Please join us in celebrating the 10th anniversary of this world-class facility.

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Sam Olens

Kennesaw State University President

WELCOME

In my former role as Chairman of the Cobb County Commission, I was invited in 2006 to participate in the ground breaking for the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center at Kennesaw State University. It presented a perfect opportunity to make a public point of the shared importance and value of the arts in the county and at one of its most significant institutions. As we mark the 10th anniversary of this outstanding performance facility, I stand proudly now as the president of Kennesaw State, knowing that the Bailey Performance Center has far surpassed what any of us could have imagined at its inception. As the venue for some of the finest presentations of artistic expression, it stands on par with the nation’s most revered performance spaces. The world-class acoustics alone, which I have learned are a true measure of quality in performance space, set it apart regionally. That no expense was spared to create a space in which artists and patrons could experience the pure joy of performance is a testament to the value Kennesaw State places on the arts.

Throughout its first 10 years, the Bailey Performance Center has served our students and faculty, providing them an opportunity to experience performance and practice their art at the highest level. At the same time, the Center has served as a beacon and a bridge for performers, students and audiences from our local community and from across the globe. It has allowed Kennesaw State to host performers from the Republic of Korea and the People’s Republic of China, among so many other international visitors. The former presidents of Ghana, Liberia and Mexico have addressed audiences from its stage, as have major thought leaders of our time. In these ways, the Bailey Performance Center has become part of the excellence and engagement that has contributed to the University’s continued growth. It is my pleasure to pay a special tribute to the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center. Congratulations on 10 exceptional years!

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Construction of the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center began in April 2006. Pictured above, left to right: former Attorney General and former Chairman of the Cobb County Commission, and current KSU president Sam Olens; Fred Bentley Sr.; KSU President Emerita Dr. Betty Siegel; Russell Clayton; Bernard A. Zuckerman; and founding Dean of the College of the Arts Joseph Meeks. Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Patty Poulter

College of the Arts Dean Since joining Kennesaw State University as the Dean of the College of the Arts in the summer of 2013, I have enjoyed numerous musical performances of every genre, from both professionals and students alike, at the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center. I consider this wonderful venue the front porch of the University, welcoming patrons from a variety of communities to experience the joy of live music.

employing combined forces of voices and instruments, Morgan Hall in the Bailey Performance Center advantages every musical encounter.

I have watched as families introduced their children to symphonic music during the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s family performance of “Peter and the Wolf.� I have experienced collective awe during performances of virtuosic and artistic excellence by our students, faculty, and various artists from around the world, including the Atlanta Opera, eighth blackbird, and Street Corner Symphony. I have been captivated by the innovative offerings presented during the Kennesaw State Festival of New Music.

In addition to musical performances, I have been honored to attend lectures by heads of state, prominent authors, public officials, and change makers. The Bailey is a vibrant, living place that allows for diversity of thinking and new ideas and opinions.

Whether a highly-nuanced and intimate performance or that of a major work

Bravi, tutti!

I am grateful to work at a university that so highly values the arts, and shows its commitment to the arts with such a fine building. I am grateful to those who came before me and made the Bailey Performance Center possible.

We know that the arts change lives, and the Bailey Performance Center is the conduit to that change. On the 10th anniversary of this great facility, we celebrate lives well-lived.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Stephen Plate School of Music Director When I joined Kennesaw State University in the fall of 2015 as the Director of the School of Music, I was really impressed with the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center and Morgan Hall. It is beautiful and almost European in its make-up and composition; the configuration of the seats gives movement to the room in terms of look and feel. I was impressed by the appearance, but it was nothing compared to how I felt the first time I heard music in the space. There isn’t a frequency in the Center that is not well heard, and there is not a bad seat in the house. There is a wonderful decay rate, and a perfect reverberation rate. I’ve never heard a bad performance in terms of the sound. Members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra who play here continue to say to me, “We hear things in your Hall that we never hear downtown. We hear each other.” They tell me that they love to play here.

For our students, Morgan Hall in the Bailey Performance Center is not only our crown jewel performance space, but it is also a classroom in which they interact, every single day. All of our groups rehearse at the Bailey, including choir, band, chamber groups, and orchestra ensembles. It’s such a vital space for the School of Music. An added bonus for the students is that they train in an acoustically-sound place. They hone their listening skills and learn how to be artistic listeners. Audience members will experience one of the most intimate, intellectually and aesthetically stimulating musical experiences they can have anywhere in the country. I hope that the community will take the opportunity to come and witness our great performance series. Happy 10th anniversary, Bailey. Here’s to the next decade of great music.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


HISTORY Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


From the years 2000 to 2006, the Department of Music experienced an unprecedented 70 percent growth. Fully accredited since 1985 by the National Association of Schools of Music, the department created orchestra and opera programs, as well as a jazz studies program. Strapped for space, it shared the Stillwell Theater with the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies, and many times was forced to perform at off-campus facilities. Joseph Meeks, the founding Dean of the College of the Arts, dreamed of a worldclass, acoustically-stellar performance hall right on campus.

Left photo: The Department of Music received full accreditation in 1985 from the National Association of Schools of Music. Right photos: Prior to the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center, the School of Music students performed in the Stillwell Theater.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Through several fundraising events and rigorous public funding applications, founding Dean of the College of the Arts and Emeritus Professor of Music Joseph D. Meeks and his Kennesaw State University development staff, including Stacie Barrow, Cheryl Anderson Ciucevich, and Wesley Wicker, made this dream a reality in 2006. The Department of Music received an outstanding opportunity to grow even more with a $6.5 million investment of both public and private funds into a new multi-purpose performance center on campus. When ground broke on April 22, 2006, the facility still did not have a name, and the fundraising team actively sought more private funds to help complete the project.

Right photo: Founding Dean of the College of the Arts Joseph Meeks surveys the future site of the Center.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Dr. Bobbie Bailey (1928-2015), a close friend of Dean Meeks and longtime Kennesaw State benefactor and trustee, stepped up to help. With her generous endowment of $1.75 million, the facility would finally have a name: The Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center. Further, the atrium inside the Center was dedicated to her lifelong friend Anna F. Henriquez. This was not the first time Dr. Bailey helped the Kennesaw State community. In 1991, Dr. Bailey established women’s athletic scholarships as well as endowing a new athletic facility, The Bobbie Bailey Athletic complex, dedicated to her in 2005. She also established music scholarships at Kennesaw State and Georgia State Universities. She served more than 22 years on the Kennesaw State University Foundation Board of Trustees, and, in 1998, was recognized for her lifetime achievements and philanthropy with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Kennesaw State. Above photo: Dr. Bobbie Bailey (1928–2015) supported Kennesaw State University with her generous gifts. Left photo: Founding Dean of the College of the Arts Joseph Meeks shows off the new walls of the Bailey Performance Center.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Left photo, left to right: former Director of the School of Music Peter Witte; KSU President Emerita Dr. Betty Siegel; Dr. Bobbie Bailey; former KSU President Dr. Daniel Papp; and founding College of the Arts Dean Joseph Meeks cut the ribbon at the grand opening. This photo: Since its opening in 2007, the Bailey Performance Center has hosted more than 132,000 audience members for almost 800 performances and counting.

On October 6, 2007, the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center officially opened to a crowd of more than 600 people entertained by a wide selection of works performed by the KSU Department of Music. With a gala and dedication to Dr. Bailey to celebrate, Music finally had a performance home at the heart of the Kennesaw State campus. Designed by John Abbott of the architectural firm Stevens & Wilkinson Stang and Newdow (now Stevens & Wilkinson) and built by The Facility Group, the Center houses a 624-seat concert hall, a 3,600-square-foot music rehearsal hall, an 1800-square-foot art gallery (Malinda Jolley Mortin Gallery) and a light-filled atrium. Acoustics for the concert hall were designed by David Kahn of Acoustic Dimensions (now Acoustic Distinctions), a company renowned for its work on the Victoria Concert Hall in England and the Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Dr. Bailey purchased a Steinway D grand piano for the grand opening event, and dedicated it to her mother, Mary Elizabeth Bailey. “Mother loved music and would sing to us at every opportunity. We couldn’t afford a piano, so when we visited our grandmother, Mother would sit down at the pump organ and play and sing for us. Because of her great love for her family and her passion for music, I am dedicating the Steinway Model D piano to her memory,” wrote Dr. Bailey in her dedication notes. Yet that wasn’t the last of her generosity to the Kennesaw State Department of Music.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


“After my visit to Steinway & Sons in New York City,” she told the audience during her speech that night, “I learned the importance of the university’s music department having Steinway accreditation. I was so inspired by their presentation, I am making the commitment to purchase the pianos necessary to make KSU an AllSteinway School of Music,” said Bailey. Kennesaw State received its All-Steinway designation in 2008, bringing it into the fold of music programs such as Juilliard and the Yale School of Music. Peter Witte, former director of the School of Music, said, “This space is magical. Dr. Bailey’s benevolence is an affirmation...first a performance center, now an All-Steinway distinction. Imagine what the future holds.”

Right photo: Dr. Bobbie Bailey in front of the piano she dedicated for her mother. The Steinway is known affectionately as “Miss Mary.”

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


For a music program to have a few Steinway pianos is excellent, but to become an AllSteinway school is a unique honor. Founding dean Joseph Meeks could not contain his excitement after learning the news. He said, “This distinction is an immeasurable asset to our program and enables us to offer the best instruments available to our music students.� The Steinway brand is internationally recognized as the epitome of quality in craftsmanship. Each piano is handcrafted and may take up to one year to complete, resulting in an instrument of excellent quality. The pianos are used in the music rehearsal hall, student practice rooms, studios and performance spaces.

Above photo: Founding Dean of the College of the Arts Joseph Meeks reacts to the All-Steinway announcement from Dr. Bobbie Bailey during the opening of the Bailey Performance Center. Left photo, from left to right: Ken Saliba (Steinway); Barbara Kirby; Sally Coveleskie (Steinway); founding College of the Arts Dean Joseph Meeks; Dr. Bobbie Bailey; Dan Papp; and Byron Brown (Steinway).

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Below: Dr. Bobbie Bailey and her sister Audrey Morgan at the Morgan Hall naming ceremony. Right: Audrey Morgan with her late husband Jack.

Dr. Bailey was not quite done honoring her family and friends, and she chose to honor her sister and brother-in-law by naming the Audrey B. and Jack E. Morgan, Sr. Concert Hall. The 624-seat concert hall currently showcases 170 performances a year, and the season grows constantly as the Center continues to expand its repertoire. The hall features state-of-theart variable acoustics, with the flexibility to be optimally configured for musical presentations, as well as state-of-the-art live audio reproduction, digital multi-track recording, and live video streaming. It has provided the community an opportunity to not only enjoy the musical abilities of Kennesaw State’s students and faculty, but also the talents of many professional classical music artists and groups, such as Midori, Jeremy Denk, and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. It is also used extensively as classroom and performance space for students not only in the School of Music, but also music students from area schools.

MORGAN HALL

Left: Dr. Bailey chose to honor her sister and brotherin-law by naming the performance hall the Audrey B. and Jack E. Morgan, Sr. Concert Hall.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


REHEARSAL HALL

Tucked behind Morgan Hall is a space known well by performers and students: the Katherine Scott Rehearsal Hall. The 3,600-square-foot rehearsal space is acoustically isolated from the performance hall but integrated in the facility’s audio recording and communications infrastructure. It provides the School of Music with an exceptional practice space, with the ability to record and reflect, and a space for workshops for the school to provide to the greater Atlanta community. Scott said, “I wanted to do something for Kennesaw State’s music students, and so I followed my passion.” Her generous gift provides financial support for the School of Music’s programs, upkeep of the rehearsal space, and assistance to help maintain the School’s 47 Steinway pianos.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center

Left: Students participate in a master class with the Aspen String Trio in the Katherine Scott Rehearsal Hall. This photo: Dr. Stephen Plate, Director of the School of Music; Katherine Scott; and Dr. Patty Poulter, College of the Arts Dean, at the naming ceremony of the rehearsal hall.


Celebr ating 10 Year s


ATRIUM The Bailey Performance Center is a physical symbol of Kennesaw State’s dedication to the arts. The Anna F. Henriquez Atrium welcomes patrons with its beautiful high ceilings and copious natural light. The naming of the building’s atrium is in honor of a long-time friend of Dr. Bobbie Bailey. During the naming ceremony, Dr. Bailey said, “I am honored to be able to give back and honor my wonderful friends and family.”

Above photo, left to right: Dr. Bobbie Bailey; founding College of the Arts Dean Joseph Meeks; and Anna Henriquez in the Bailey Performance Center atrium. Right photo: The Anna F. Henriquez atrium welcomes patrons to Morgan Hall and the Bailey Performance Center.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


PERFORMANCES Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


In its 10th year, the Bailey Performance Center will present more than 170 performances, ranging from students to faculty to professional composers and artists from across the globe. Since opening, the Center has hosted more than 132,000 audience members for almost 800 performances and counting. As part of its continually growing repertoire, the Bailey Performance Center houses several music ensembles: a symphony orchestra, several jazz and wind ensembles, an opera theater company, and faculty. Morgan Hall is also currently home to two resident groups: the Georgia Youth Symphony Orchestra and the KSU Community and Alumni Choir.

Left photo: One of the most popular concerts is the Collage Concert that benefits student scholarships and School of Music programming. The signature production, now in its 12th year, features soloists, chamber groups and ensembles totaling more than 200 student and faculty performers. The rapid-fire program of diverse works is presented as flowing vignette performances with unique lighting and stage design, creating a memorable and unique experience. This photo: Faculty member and violinist Helen Kim performs at the Collage Concert. Celebr ating 10 Year s


“The faculty of the School of Music are dedicated, passionate, entrepreneurial, and active in making music all around the world. They are a teaching faculty, but they are also a performing faculty,� said Dr. Stephen Plate, Director of the School of Music.

Above: Faculty and students participate in the annual Collage Concert. Right: School of Music faculty members violinist Helen Kim, pianist Robert Henry, and cellist Charae Krueger.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Performance Opportunities The School of Music offers a wide variety of performance opportunities for students: • • • • • • • • •

Chamber Singers Chorale Wind Symphony Jazz Ensemble I & II Symphony Orchestra University Philharmonic Orchestra Wind Ensemble University Band and Marching Band Classical Guitar Ensemble

• • • • • • • • •

Jazz Guitar Ensemble Jazz Combos String Quartets & Mixed Chamber groups Wind Chamber groups Brass Chamber groups Percussion Ensemble Gospel Choir Men’s Ensemble Celebr ating 10 Year s Women’s Choir


STUDENT PERFORMANCES

Photo: Drummer Jonathan Pace, saxophonists Michael Opitz and Brandon Radaker, bassist Brandon Boone, and guitarist Patrick Arthur from Jazz Combo 1 perform in Morgan Hall; the same students produced an original jazz CD released in 2017. Photo Right: School of Music student Brittany Jarrard plays the saxophone in Morgan Hall.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


Photo left: Dr. Alison Mann leads the women’s choir on the Bailey Performance Center stage. This photo: Members of the symphony orchestra gather outside the Bailey Performance Center before a 2016 concert.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


GUEST ARTISTS Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Each year, in addition to its student and faculty programming, the Bailey Performance Center hosts the Signature Series, the flagship concert series for the university. Formerly known as the Premiere Series, it has featured numerous world-renowned artists. For the 2017-2018 academic year, the Signature Series includes two performances from the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, as well as performances by the Vega String Quartet, Street Corner Symphony, American Contemporary Music Ensemble, and international trumpeter Allen Vizzutti performing with Kennesaw State’s jazz ensembles. Other notable guests include: Robert Spano Donald Runnicles The Atlanta Opera Alfredo Rodriguez The American Brass Quintet

Sylvia McNair The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Simone Dinnerstein Stefan Jackiw

Above: The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra performs with pianist Wu Han at Kennesaw State University in Morgan Hall. Left photo: Music director Robert Spano, currently in his 17th season, leads the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


MASTER CLASSES

The School of Music is committed to inviting notable guest artists to lead master classes for developing students. Among the renowned artists who have visited KSU are: Augustin Hadelich Sherrill Milnes Stephanie Blythe David Coucheron Christopher Rex Robert Spano Jeremy Denk

Kelly O’Connor Jessica Rivera David Lang Chen Yi Jennifer Koh Midori Gotō

Above: American-Japanese violinist Midori Gotō teaches a master class. Right photo: American operatic baritone Sherrill Milnes leads Camille Hathaway as part of a master class.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


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OUTREACH

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


In addition to the impressive concert schedule, the Bailey Performance Center also hosts many workshops, festivals, and educational opportunities that are open to the broader Atlanta community. In their third and seventh years, respectively, the Orchestra and Band Invitationals provide middle and high school students across the Atlanta area the opportunity to perform at the Center with assessment-based feedback from a nationally recognized guest clinician and Kennesaw State faculty. Students may participate in the following: Women’s Choral Day North Georgia Honor Orchestra Male Chorus Day Orchestra Invitational Young Artists Competition Bass Fest

Brass Blast Concert Band Invitational String Day Clarinet Day Summer Music Intensive

Above photo: High school students in the piano concentration during the Summer Arts Intensive. Left photo: Middle and high school students participate in Bass Fest.

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PARTNERSHIPS

Two groups call the Bailey Performance Center home: the Georgia Youth Symphony Orchestra (GYSO) and the Kennesaw State University Community and Alumni Choir (KSUCAC). The largest youth orchestra program in the Southeast, GYSO is an initiative to provide talented young musicians an opportunity to continue their musical development and concert performance skills with a full season of performances, and with the recording technology and world-class acoustics provided by Morgan Concert Hall. KSUCAC consists of about 100 members, representing a diverse blend of musical backgrounds and KSU affiliations who all share one goal – to share the joy of music with KSU and the community. Since the day of inception, the KSUCAC remains a non-auditioned choir and is one of the largest affiliated organizations of the Kennesaw State University campus.

Right photo: Faculty member and director Dr. Leslie Blackwell leads the Kennesaw State University Community and Alumni Choir.

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


Often described as the University’s front porch, the Bailey Performance Center

welcomes the community to celebrate both music and life together. In only ten years, the Bailey Center has become a significant center of excellence, offering both students and the community an opportunity to experience music and entertain new ideas and diversity of thought.

COMMUNITY

The Bailey Performance Center is not only home to musical performances, but also to numerous functions across Kennesaw State University. For example, each year, new students are welcomed to campus through orientation held at the Center, and other departments may also request the space for visiting groups. The impressive hall has hosted dignitaries such as former president of Ghana, John Dramani Mahama; the former president of Mexico, Vincente Fox; and U.S. Senator Johnny Isaakson. The Center was also the headquarters for the 2016 fall quarterly meeting of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.

Donald Runnicles, principle guest conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, said, “The Bailey Performance Center is simply a gorgeous instrument – as any musician relishes the unlimited scope of a special instrument, so any performing ensemble will celebrate the warm and vibrant acoustic and atmosphere this exciting hall affords. The Bailey Performance Center is a Georgia jewel.”

Left photo: During the 2009 Year of Korea, the Korean Association of Zither Musicians performed Gayegeum traditional music. Above, left photo: The Bailey Performance Center was host to the former president of Ghana. Above, right photo: President Sam Olens delivers opening remarks before welcoming U.S. Senator Johnny Isaakson.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


As you think about your legacy, please think of the School of Music and the positive impact your support can lend to the future of this amazing space and the students who use it every day. There are many ways you may show your continuing support: • Name a space in the Bailey Performance Center or the School of Music • Honor and memorialize a loved one through our 10th anniversary “Name A Seat” campaign • Sponsor a chair or section of the KSU Symphony or one of our many ensembles • Adopt a Steinway piano ensuring its care, tuning, and maintenance in perpetuity • Provide faculty and programming support in perpetuity through endowments • Endow scholarships • Sponsor our Signature Series To discuss ways in which you can contribute to the ongoing legacy of the Bailey Performance Center contact the School of Music at 470-578-6151. Thank you for your involvement and your leadership through giving.

BUILD ON A LEGACY

The Dr. Bobbie Bailey and Family Performance Center legacy is built on the vision of many, including Dr. Bobbie Bailey, Audrey Morgan, Katherine Scott, and Joseph Meeks. Without their passion for music and education, and their vision to see the possibilities, the community would not have this “jewel.” You may be a part of this legacy with your ongoing support for the facility and its programming.

Celebr ating 10 Year s


Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Family Per for m ance Center CELEBR AT I NG 10 Y E A R S

Dr . Bobbie Bailey & Fa mily Per for m a nce Center


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