2016–17 UTAH SYMPHONY SEASON / NOV – DEC
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Contents
November & December 2016 Performances Purchase tickets at utahsymphony.org or call 801-533-6683
NOVEMBER 4–5 | 7:30 PM
6 Welcome
DVOŘÁK’S “NEW WORLD” SYMPHONY
8 Utah Symphony 10 Board of Trustees 15 Music Director 16 Memorable Moments 20 Why do we Record?
NOVEMBER 11–12 | 7:30 PM
22 A Day in the Life of a Live Recording
BRAHMS & TCHAIKOVSKY
26 Spotlight: Louis-Philippe Robillard 29 Who we Are 33 Tagged & Hashtagged! NOVEMBER 18–19 | 7:30 PM
34 Season Sponsors
THE MUSIC OF PROKOFIEV
35–42 Today‘s Concert(s) 44 Support USUO 48 Season Honorees 50 Corporate & Foundation Donors
NOVEMBER 26–27 | 7:30 PM
52 Individual Donors
MESSIAH SING-IN
58 Tanner & Crescendo Societies 59 Legacy Giving 62 Administration DECEMBER 2–3 | 7:30 PM
67 House Rules 68 Utah Symphony Guild
DECEMBER 2 | 10 AM
71 Education
BEETHOVEN & RACHMANINOFF
72 Acknowledgments
DECEMBER 9–10 | 7:30 PM DECEMBER 10 | 11 AM
CIRQUE MUSICA HOLIDAY SPECTACULAR! Program notes and artist bios for upcoming and past performances are available on utahsymphony.org.
DECEMBER 23 | 7 PM DECEMBER 24 | 1 PM JANUARY 3 | 6:30 PM
HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCERER’S STONE IN CONCERT
@UtahSymphony
PUBLISHER Mills Publishing, Inc. PRESIDENT Dan Miller OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR Cynthia Bell Snow ART DIRECTOR /PRODUCTION MANAGER Jackie Medina GRAPHIC DESIGNERS Leslie Hanna Ken Magleby Patrick Witmer UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES Paula Bell Karen Malan Dan Miller Paul Nicholas OFFICE ASSISTANT Jessica Alder ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Ruth Gainey EDITOR Melissa Robison
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The UTAH SYMPHONY | UTAH OPERA program is published by Mills Publishing, Inc., 772 East 3300 South, Suite 200, Salt Lake City, Utah 84106. Phone: 801-467-8833 Email: advertising@millspub.com Website: millspub.com. Mills Publishing produces playbills for many performing arts groups. Advertisers do not necessarily agree or disagree with content or views expressed on stage. Please contact us for playbill advertising opportunities. © COPYRIGHT 2016
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Welcome
Photo Credit: Brandon Flint
On behalf of the board, musicians, and staff of Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, it is our pleasure to welcome you to Abravanel Hall and today’s Utah Symphony concert. By attending, you are living proof that Utahns are the nation’s premier arts lovers. A survey recently released by the National Endowment for the Arts confirms Utah as the state with the highest percentage of adults in the nation attending live performances. In 2015, nearly 32 percent of Americans attended at least one live music, theater, or dance performance. In Utah, that rate was 51 percent. Congratulations! Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is proud to be a long-standing contributor to the diverse and far-reaching cultural landscape of this state. From its beginning more than 75 years ago, the orchestra has relied on community activism. And because our community has been exceptionally generous in supporting an ambitious artistic vision, the orchestra has grown into one of America’s leading ensembles. Annually USUO performs more than 100 subscription concerts and operas at its home venues and 240 education concerts across
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the state. Remarkably, nearly one third of our audience is comprised of students! We take seriously our responsibility for the next generation of Utahns, and believe that our history of instilling a love of great live music in young people throughout our state has contributed to placing Utah as the No. 1 for performing arts attendance. This organization is a state treasure as firmly woven into Utah’s fabric as its red rocks and snow-covered mountains. And like the natural beauty of the state, USUO enriches lives, elevates our community, and is worth cherishing for generations to come. Thank you for all you do to make possible this mission. Sincerely, Paul Meecham President & CEO
Thierry Fischer Symphony Music Director
David Petersen Chair, Board of Trustees
UTAH SYMPHONY
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Utah Symphony Thierry Fischer, Music Director / The Maurice Abravanel Chair, endowed by the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation Rei Hotoda Associate Conductor Barlow Bradford Symphony Chorus Director VIOLIN* Madeline Adkins Concertmaster The Jon M. & Karen Huntsman Chair, in honor of Wendell J. & Belva B. Ashton Kathryn Eberle Associate Concertmaster The Richard K. & Shirley S. Hemingway Chair Ralph Matson Associate Concertmaster David Park Assistant Concertmaster Claude Halter Principal Second Wen Yuan Gu Associate Principal Second Karen Wyatt Acting Assistant Principal Second Leonard Braus• Associate Concertmaster Emeritus Jerry Chiu• Joseph Evans LoiAnne Eyring Lun Jiang Rebekah Johnson Tina Johnson†† Paige Kossuth†† Veronica Kulig David Langr Melissa Thorley Lewis Yuki MacQueen Alexander Martin Rebecca Moench Hugh Palmer• David Porter Lynn Maxine Rosen Barbara Ann Scowcroft• M. Judd Sheranian Lynnette Stewart Julie Wunderle VIOLA* Brant Bayless Principal The Sue & Walker Wallace Chair Roberta Zalkind Associate Principal
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Elizabeth Beilman Julie Edwards Joel Gibbs Carl Johansen Scott Lewis Christopher McKellar Whittney Thomas CELLO* Rainer Eudeikis Principal The J. Ryan Selberg Memorial Chair Matthew Johnson Associate Principal John Eckstein Walter Haman Andrew Larson Anne Lee Louis-Philippe Robillard Kevin Shumway Pegsoon Whang BASS* David Yavornitzky Principal
ENGLISH HORN Lissa Stolz
BASS TROMBONE Graeme Mutchler
CLARINET Tad Calcara Principal The Norman C. & Barbara Lindquist Tanner Chair, in memory of Jean Lindquist Pell
TUBA Gary Ofenloch Principal
Erin Svoboda Associate Principal
Eric Hopkins Associate Principal
Lee Livengood BASS CLARINET Lee Livengood E-FLAT CLARINET Erin Svoboda BASSOON Lori Wike Principal The Edward & Barbara Moreton Chair
TIMPANI George Brown Principal
PERCUSSION Keith Carrick Principal Eric Hopkins Michael Pape KEYBOARD Jason Hardink Principal LIBRARIANS Clovis Lark Principal
Corbin Johnston Associate Principal
Leon Chodos Associate Principal
James Allyn Benjamin Henderson†† Edward Merritt Claudia Norton Jens Tenbroek Thomas Zera#
CONTRABASSOON Leon Chodos
ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL Walter Zeschin Director of Orchestra Personnel
HORN Edmund Rollett Acting Principal
Nathan Lutz Orchestra Personnel Manager
HARP Louise Vickerman Principal FLUTE Mercedes Smith Principal The Val A. Browning Chair Lisa Byrnes Associate Principal Caitlyn Valovick Moore PICCOLO Caitlyn Valovick Moore OBOE Robert Stephenson Principal The Gerald B. & Barbara F. Stringfellow Chair James Hall Associate Principal
Jennifer Rhodes
Alexander Love†† Acting Associate Principal Llewellyn B. Humphreys Brian Blanchard Stephen Proser TRUMPET Travis Peterson Principal Jeff Luke Associate Principal Peter Margulies Nick Norton# TROMBONE Mark Davidson Principal
Maureen Conroy
STAGE MANAGEMENT Chip Dance Production & Stage Manager Mark Barraclough Assistant Stage & Properties Manager • First Violin •• Second Violin * String Seating Rotates † Leave of Absence # Sabbatical †† Substitute Member
Sam Elliot†† Acting Associate Principal
Lissa Stolz
UTAH SYMPHONY
Board of Trustees
ELECTED BOARD David A. Petersen* Chair
Naoma Tate Thomas Thatcher Bob Wheaton Kim R. Wilson Thomas Wright
Jesselie B. Anderson Doyle L. Arnold* Dr. J. Richard Baringer Judith M. Billings Howard S. Clark Gary L. Crocker David Dee*
Alex J. Dunn Kristen Fletcher Kem C. Gardner* Lynnette Hansen Matthew S. Holland Thomas N. Jacobson Ronald W. Jibson* Tyler Kruzich Thomas M. Love R. David McMillan Brad W. Merrill Theodore F. Newlin III* Dee O’Donnell Dr. Dinesh C. Patel Frank R. Pignanelli Shari H. Quinney Brad Rencher Bert Roberts Joanne F. Shiebler* Diane Stewart
LIFETIME BOARD William C. Bailey Edwin B. Firmage Jon Huntsman, Sr. Jon Huntsman, Jr. G. Frank Joklik
Clark D. Jones Herbert C. Livsey, Esq. David T. Mortensen Scott S. Parker Patricia A. Richards
Harris Simmons Verl R. Topham M. Walker Wallace David B. Winder
TRUSTEES EMERITI Carolyn Abravanel Haven J. Barlow John Bates
Burton L. Gordon Richard G. Horne Warren K. McOmber
E. Jeffrey Smith Barbara Tanner
HONORARY BOARD Rodney H. Brady Ariel Bybee Kathryn Carter R. Don Cash Bruce L. Christensen Raymond J. Dardano Geralyn Dreyfous Lisa Eccles
Spencer F. Eccles The Right Reverend Carolyn Tanner Irish Dr. Anthony W. Middleton, Jr. Marilyn H. Neilson O. Don Ostler Stanley B. Parrish Marcia Price
David E. Salisbury Jeffrey W. Shields, Esq. Diana Ellis Smith Ardean Watts
NATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL Joanne F. Shiebler Chair (Utah)
Susan H. Carlyle (Texas)
Harold W. Milner (Nevada)
David L. Brown (S. California)
Robert Dibblee (Virginia)
Marcia Price (Utah)
Anthon S. Cannon, Jr. (S. California)
Senator Orrin G. Hatch (Washington, D.C.)
Alvin Richer (Arizona)
William H. Nelson* Vice Chair Annette W. Jarvis* Secretary John D’Arcy* Treasurer Paul Meecham* President & CEO
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MUSICIAN REPRESENTATIVES
Mark Davidson* Lissa Stolz* EX OFFICIO
Carol Radinger Utah Symphony Guild Paul C. Kunz Ogden Symphony Ballet Association Judith Vander Heide Ogden Opera Guild *Executive Committee Member
UTAH SYMPHONY
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Music Director
Music Director of the Utah Symphony since 2009 and currently extended to 2019, Thierry Fischer has revitalized the orchestra with creative programming, critically acclaimed performances, and new recordings. Highlights of his tenure include a multi-season Haydn symphony cycle; Mahler, Beethoven and Nielsen cycles; and a tour of Utah’s five national parks. In celebration of its 75th anniversary season, the orchestra appeared at Carnegie Hall in April 2016 to critical acclaim and released an album of newly commissioned works by Nico Muhly, Andrew Norman, and Augusta Read Thomas on Reference Recordings. Following a well-reviewed Mahler 1 CD, they recorded Mahler’s 8th Symphony in Utah with the world-renowned Mormon Tabernacle Choir, due for release later this season.
Thierry Fischer Music Director The Maurice Abravanel Chair, endowed by the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation
In September 2016 Fischer was appointed Principal Guest Conductor of the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, starting January 2017 and running concurrently with his Utah position for an initial 3 years. He will visit Seoul at least 4 times a season and will play an important role in the artistic planning. In Summer 2016 Fischer toured with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, and debuted at the Mostly Mozart Festival in New York and at the Maggio Musicale Festival in Florence. Guesting in the past couple of years has also included Boston Symphony, Atlanta, Cincinnati and Detroit Symphonies, Oslo Philharmonic, Rotterdam Philharmonic, Salzburg Mozarteumorchester, Munich Chamber, Swedish Chamber and the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, as well as the BBC Symphony at the Barbican and the London Sinfonietta. In Autumn 2016 he conducts the Sao Paulo Philharmonic—his first visit to South America. Fischer started out as Principal Flute in Hamburg and at the Zurich Opera. His conducting career began in his 30s when he replaced an ailing colleague, subsequently directing his first few concerts with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe where he was Principal Flute under Claudio Abbado. He spent his apprentice years in Holland, and became Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor of the Ulster Orchestra 2001–06. He was Chief Conductor of the Nagoya Philharmonic 2008–11, making his Suntory Hall debut in Tokyo in May 2010, and is now Honorary Guest Conductor.
UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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Memorable Moments at Abravanel Hall CHARLES IVES SYMPHONY CYCLE Explore the symphonic world of American composer (and life insurance salesman) Charles Ives (1874–1954) who is known for synthesizing ideas from American popular music with European religious and art music. Thierry Fischer conducts all four of his symphonies this season, beginning with his Symphony No. 1 on November 4–5 and Symphony No. 3 on November 11–12. Symphony No. 1 combines ideas from famous composers including Tchaikovsky, Schubert, and Dvořák, while you’ll hear many nineteenth-century American hymns in Symphony No. 3. Ives’ remaining symphonies will be performed on January 6–7 (No. 2) and February 17–18 (No. 4)
CONCERTO DEBUT OF CONCERTMASTER MADELINE ADKINS Madeline Adkins recently made her debut as the Utah Symphony’s new concertmaster in September 2016, and she makes her concerto debut with the Utah Symphony on November 18–19 with a performance of Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2. Experience this lyric and virtuosic work with touches of Russian folk music and imaginative combinations of instruments, including castanets which elicit memories of its 1935 premiere in Madrid.
LIVE RECORDING OF PROKOFIEV’S FILM MUSIC The Utah Symphony recently released live recordings of Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 and Dawn to Dust, which featured three world premieres by the Utah Symphony at Abravanel Hall. Next spring Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir will be released on Reference Recordings, but first Thierry Fischer, the Utah Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, the University of Utah choirs, and mezzosoprano Alisa Kolosova record a live performance featuring Prokofiev's music from the films Lieutenant Kijé and Alexander Nevsky on November 18–19.
Purchase tickets at utahsymphony.org or call 801-533-6683 16
UTAH SYMPHONY
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Memorable Moments at Abravanel Hall DECK THE HALLS AT ABRAVANEL HALL Few places are more magical than downtown Salt Lake City and Abravanel Hall during the holidays. The Utah Symphony’s holiday season begins the weekend after Thanksgiving with the annual Messiah Sing-in on November 26–27 and continues with an unforgettable combination of cirque skill and live symphonic music with Cirque Musica Holiday Spectacular on December 9–10. We also continue our annual Saturday morning family concert tradition of Here Comes Santa Claus! on December 17 while starting a new holiday tradition by featuring the first of eight Harry Potter™ films in concert on December 23–24. Also, Celtic Woman makes an appearance on December 21 with the Utah Symphony as part of their “Home for Christmas” holiday tour. BEETHOVEN PIANO CONCERTO CYCLE CONTINUES Audiences have been buzzing about September’s unforgettable opening performances from the Beethoven Piano Concerto Cycle with Jonathan Biss performing Piano Concerto No. 1 and Emanuel Ax performing Piano Concerto No. 5. Next up is Jeffrey Kahane’s performance of Piano Concerto No. 2 on December 2–3 with conductor Hans Graf.
HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCERER’S STONE™
IN CONCERT In September the Utah Symphony announced that the Harry Potter™ Film Concert Series would be coming to Abravanel Hall with the Utah Symphony performing every note from the scores of all eight Harry Potter™ films live while the film plays in high-definition above the orchestra. Both performances of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone™ in Concert sold out in record time, signaling that this new annual tradition is one that is not to be missed! An additional performance has been added for January 3. Read ahead about our upcoming performances. Program notes and artist biographies for upcoming concerts are available online at www.utahsymphony.org. UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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Why do we Record? By Jeff Counts
On November 18 and 19, Utah Symphony will embark on its fourth live recording in three years, this time featuring two iconic film scores by Prokofiev, “Lieutenant Kijé” and “Alexander Nevsky.” These performances will be captured by Sound Mirror and Reference Recordings, who recorded and released Thierry Fischer’s first CDs as Music Director of Utah Symphony, Mahler Symphony No. 1 “Titan” and “Dawn to Dust,” featuring world premiere commissions by American composers Augusta Read Thomas, Nico Muhly and Andrew Norman. Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 will be released next spring. One question remains in the hearts and minds of audiences upon which I hope to shed some light. Every orchestra has a personality, a set of traits that makes it unique and identifiable to even a novice listener. Dynamic rather than static, these traits are developed and polished over years, many years, during which an orchestra’s ‘sound’ evolves in subtle but meaningful ways. Several obvious factors contribute to this process—periodic changes in leadership and personnel, the building of a new hall, etc.—but quietly important among them is the willingness of an orchestra to embrace certain extracurricular activities. Commissioning, touring and recording can all raise the collective level of an ensemble significantly. The making of recordings, in particular, requires an orchestra to make music in a manner that sharpens the artistic intent of everyone involved, and this very positive surge of energy resonates long after the sessions themselves are over. Orchestras grow noticeably when they record,
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and their recordings have the potential distinction of being both the impetus for increased excellence and the lasting proof of it. Put simply, recordings allow an orchestra, normally confined to the ephemerality of live performance, to create something that preserves and celebrates its distinct character for all time. Recordings can also confirm an orchestra’s place in a great international interpretive debate that would not be possible without them. Whose version of Mahler 1 is most convincing? Which version of the Lieutenant Kijé Suite has the most wit and charm? Only orchestras with recordings get to participate in this game because those are the orchestras that have chosen to offer up their work as part of the historical record. Recordings are about taking risks. Recordings are about challenging expectations. Recordings are about crafting a legacy.
UTAH SYMPHONY
2016/17 CULTURAL FESTIVAL
ARTS IN SERVICE TO THE MILITARY
Our 2016–17 cultural festival shines a spotlight on veterans and current military, focusing on ways our arts community can appreciate and support them. As part of this festival, many local arts organizations will present events on military themes and will also provide access for active and separated military personnel to a variety of arts performances. We will also draw attention to veterans’ active art-making as a means of self-expression. FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE:
The Western US Premiere of The Long Walk by Utah Opera Guest writer events with Brian Castner, author of the memoir The Long Walk Performances and events based on military experiences, produced by Salt Lake Acting Company, Art Access, Ballet West, U of U Creative Writing, and more Annual Veterans Creative Arts Festival at the VA SLC Medical Center Free/discounted tickets to performances and other events for veterans and current military FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT
USUO.ORG/FESTIVAL
A Day In The Life Of A Live Recording By Alex Martin
Mahler Symphony No. 8 patch session at the Tabernacle, photo credit Karen Wyatt
The day begins much like any concert weekend. I arrive at the hall around 9 AM for the dress rehearsal which starts at 9:30. After a few minutes of sipping coffee and chatting with colleagues, I get my violin out and warm up with what I’ve decided are the most difficult parts of the concert. The rehearsal is run like most dress rehearsals in that we try to hammer out the last remaining details without tiring ourselves out too much. There have been microphones set up all over the stage for the entire week; an exciting but at times nerve-wracking reminder that this weekend’s performances will become a part of our orchestra’s history and legacy. Once rehearsal has ended, I head home for a light lunch and hopefully a quick nap in anticipation of a late night. After napping
I practice for a bit, but not necessarily that night’s music. I may begin looking at next week’s music or work on music for a project outside of the symphony. Around 5 PM it’s time to eat a light dinner and relax for a bit. If baseball—one of my non-musical passions and a useful calming force—is still being played, I’ll watch a game until it’s time to head to the hall. I try to be dressed and ready by 7 PM for a 7:30 concert. On stage I go over those same tricky parts that I used to warm up for the rehearsal while at the same time conserving precious energy. At times during the concert I forget that we’re being recorded only to be reminded periodically by an ill-timed sneeze or cough that every imperfection, even if not the orchestra’s fault, is being documented. Continued on page 25.
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UTAH SYMPHONY
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A Day in the Life of a Live Recording Continued from page 22.
Mahler Symphony No. 8 patch session at the Tabernacle, photo credit Karen Wyatt
Once the concert has ended around 9:30 PM, we all head upstairs for a much-needed, hourlong break. I change out of my tuxedo and into something more comfortable. On a normal weekend, our work night would be over, but on this particular night it is critical that we stay in concentration mode. I do this by continuing to converse with colleagues and munching on the pizza that is often provided to keep us all from fading.
concert (we’re not robots!). But often there are also things out of our control that we have to record again. One of those ill-timed audience coughs may be reason enough to re-record a part of the music. If applause in the concert started before the last note had completely faded out (this is a fairly common occurrence), we will re-record the very end to capture that perfect fade of the last note into silence.
Once back on stage, we have exactly forty minutes to patch things up. It can be tricky to fix everything we have to in that short amount of time. These patches include things that may not have been pristine in the
Finally, shortly after 11 PM, we’ve run out of patch time and our day has ended. We’ve exhausted ourselves doing everything we can and now our product is in the hands of the recording engineers…
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Spotlight: Louis-Philippe Robillard The Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is delighted to introduce Louis-Philippe Robillard, the newest member of the Utah Symphony. Louis is a cellist, joining us after eight seasons with the Fort Worth Symphony and three years with the New World Symphony following his musical education at the Conservatoire de Musique de Montréal, Canada and at the Mannes School of Music in Manhattan, New York.
Louis-Philippe Robillard Cello
Louis is the youngest in his family and grew up in Canada near Montreal. He comes from a music-loving household though he is the only musician in his family. He remembers hearing the cello for the very first time when he was five years old on his family LP player. He recalls going to kindergarten that day and drawing a picture of the cello that he saw on the LP record and later showing it to his parents saying, “I want to play that.” He started playing and soon discovered his favorite work: Bach’s Cello Suites. “I never get tired of listening to it,” he says. “There is a spiritual, meditative quality to it. Also, as a player, there are so many different ways of interpreting it convincingly.” Louis’s enthusiasm and passion for music, which began with the LP player, is what he says he hopes to bring to the Utah Symphony. Upon joining the Utah Symphony he says that he greatly enjoys working with Thierry Fischer because he finds the energy and passion with which Fischer conducts “inspiring.” Robillard is also an outdoorsman and enjoys the beautiful Utah mountains near his new home in Salt Lake City: “It’s like a dream. I can just get out and 30 minutes later I’m skiing or on the trails.”
Arrive early and enjoy a fun, behind the music lecture for each of our Masterworks concerts. 6:45 PM in the First Tier Room, Abravanel Hall
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UTAH SYMPHONY
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Who we Are
Founded during the Great Depression as a Works Progress Administration orchestra under Roosevelt’s New Deal, the Utah Symphony today is the premier provider of symphonic music in the Intermountain West and one of only 15 year-round orchestras in the nation. Recognized as a leading American ensemble largely because of the efforts of Maurice Abravanel (Music Director 1947–1979), the Utah Symphony released over 100 recordings during his tenure, including the first complete recording of all of Gustav Mahler’s symphonies by an American orchestra. Named the orchestra’s seventh music director in 2009, Thierry Fischer renewed the orchestra’s commitment to Abravanel’s legacy of artistic excellence and an active recording schedule, as evidenced by the recent, live recording of Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 “Titan” (2015) and the release of three Utah Symphony commissions by American composers Andrew Norman, Nico Muhly, and Augusta Read Thomas (2016). Building on a history of seven international tours, Maestro Fischer and the Utah Symphony performed the nationally covered Mighty 5® Tour in 2014, visiting all five national parks UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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in Utah and, in 2016, impressed audiences at New York City’s esteemed Carnegie Hall. Under Maestro Fischer’s inspiring leadership, the Utah Symphony features leading musicians and internationally recognized soloists through refreshed and ambitious programming; as a result, the orchestra is attracting increased audiences and unprecedented community support. In addition to more than 65 subscription concerts in its home venue, Abravanel Hall in Salt Lake City, the Utah Symphony plays for Utah Opera’s four annual productions for 20 opera performances; presents the six-week Deer Valley® Music Festival each summer in Park City, Utah; and performs numerous outreach concerts throughout the state, drawing an audience of over 350,000 each year. The 40+ education outreach programs developed by Utah Symphony | Utah Opera (USUO), the orchestra’s parent organization, reach approximately 70,000 students annually from all Utah school districts in more than 240 educational outreach concerts and activities. With its many subscription, education, and outreach concerts and tours, the Utah Symphony is one of the most engaged orchestras in the nation. 29
/upcoming concerts Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto January 6 & 7, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Thierry Fischer, conductor Noah Bendix-Balgley, violin
IVES WEBERN TCHAIKOVSKY
Utah Symphony Orchestra
Symphony No. 2 Variations for Orchestra Violin Concerto
Underappreciated in its time, this piece is now an irrefutable star of the violin concerto repertoire. Get lost in the dichotomy of a performance both fierce and emotional, yet supremely under control.
Tristan and Isolde January 13 & 14, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Mark Wigglesworth, conductor Francesco Piemontesi, piano
Utah Symphony Orchestra
MOZART Piano Concerto No. 27 WAGNER Tristan and Isolde, an orchestral passion (ARR. HENK DE VLIEGER) The music that drives Wagner’s epic opera of love and tragedy is powerful. Join the Utah Symphony as they perform orchestral excerpts from the score that is often cited as a major influence on the direction of 20th century composition.
Leigh’s Man of La Mancha January 21, 23, 25, 27, 2017 / 7:30 PM January 29, 2017 / 2 PM JANET QUINNEY LAWSON CAPITOL THEATRE
Some call Don Quixote a fool. Others call him a lunatic. But in Man of La Mancha, you might end up calling him an inspiration as you follow the unlikely journey of a man who dreams the impossible dream of a better world all around him. Believe in his dream with this rousing performance by Utah Opera.
Brahms’ Symphony No. 2 February 3 & 4, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Thierry Fischer, conductor Narek Hakhnazaryan, cello
BRAHMS SHOSTAKOVICH BRAHMS
Utah Symphony Orchestra
Academic Festival Overture Cello Concerto No. 1 Symphony No. 2
Brahms’ masterful compositions will transport you into a state of rustic bliss.
MASTERWORKS
FAMILY
ENTERTAINMENT
SPECIAL
OPERA
Jerry Herman: The Broadway Legacy Concert February 10 & 11, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Randall Craig Fleischer, conductor Debbie Gravitte, Klea Blackhurst, Ron Raines, Jason Graae, Scott Coulter, John Boswell, vocalists
From Hello, Dolly! and Mame to Mack and Mabel and La Cage aux Folles, Jerry Herman’s songs have lit up Broadway for decades with toe-tapping, soul-stirring musical showstoppers. Now we’re sharing his great musical legacy with a new generation of music lovers.
Mozart’s Requiem February 17 & 18, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Thierry Fischer, conductor Barlow Bradford, chorus director Joélle Harvey, soprano Sarah Coit, mezzo-soprano
MOZART IVES
Benjamin Butterfield, tenor Derrick Parker, bass-baritone University of Utah Choirs Utah Symphony Chorus Utah Symphony Orchestra
Requiem Symphony No. 4
Mozart‘s weighty masterpiece, famously left unfinished at his death, invites you to explore grief, remembrance, and reconciliation.
Brahms’ Symphony No. 4 February 24 & 25, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Thierry Fischer, conductor François Leleux, oboe
HUMMEL MICHAEL JARRELL BRAHMS
Utah Symphony Orchestra
Introduction, Theme, and Variations for Oboe and Orchestra Aquateinte (Utah Symphony commission) Symphony No. 4
Experience this powerful performance, which draws from the rich history of classical music while pushing the form to exciting new heights.
Pokémon: Symphonic Evolutions March 4, 2017 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL Jeron Moore, lead creative Chad Seiter, composer
Susie Benchasil Seiter, conductor Utah Symphony Orchestra
Executive Producer: Princeton Entertainment Organization/Ed Kasses.
Take a symphonic journey with all the sights and sounds of Pokémon! Experience the evolution of Pokémon on giant video screens with the Utah Symphony playing your favorite themes live. Don’t miss this chance to meet-up with fans of all ages.
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2016/17 UTAH SYMPHONY SEASON
December 21, 2016 / 7:30 PM / ABRAVANEL HALL UTAH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SUSAN MCFADDEN, MÁIRÉAD CARLIN, ÉAHBHA MCMAHON, TARA MCNEILL guest artist
Celebrate this holiday season with the celestial voices of multi-platinum Irish singing sensation Celtic Woman as they present Home for Christmas with the Utah Symphony. Tickets start at $40 / (801) 533-NOTE (6683) / UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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Tagged & Hashtagged! We loved seeing your photos from the opening concerts of our 2016–17 season!
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@the_sinsel 10/10 would watch Tchaik’s 5th again. Who could argue?
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He insisted on seeing Emanuel Ax. How could @laundryhater refuse?
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program
Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
Beethoven & Rachmaninoff December 2–3 / 2016 / 7:30PM / ABRAVANEL HALL HANS GRAF , Con du ctor JEFFREY KAHANE , Pian o
MOZART
Symphony No. 19 in E-flat Major, K. 132 I. II. III. IV.
BEETHOVEN
Allegro Andante Menuetto Allegro
Concerto No. 2 in B-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 19 I. II. III.
Allegro con brio Adagio Rondo: Molto allegro
JEFFREY KAHANE , Pian o
/ INTERMISSION /
RACHMANINOFF
Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Opus 44 I. Lento - Allegro moderato II. Adagio ma non troppo - Allegro vivace III. Allegro - Allegro vivace - Allegro (Tempo primo) Allegretto - Allegro vivace
B E E T H OV E N C O N C E R TO C YC L E S P O N S O R
C O N D U C TO R S P O N S O R
KEM & CAROLYN GARDNER
MASTERWORKS
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Hans Graf Conductor
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artists’ profiles
Known for his wide range of repertoire and creative programming, the distinguished Austrian conductor Hans Graf is one of today’s most highly respected musicians. Hans Graf is a frequent guest with all of the major North American orchestras. His recent and upcoming guest engagements include appearances with the Cleveland and Philadelphia Orchestras; the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics; the Boston, San Francisco, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Detroit, Dallas, Baltimore, Indianapolis, New Jersey, Milwaukee, Colorado, Utah and National Symphonies; and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, among others. Mr. Graf made his Carnegie Hall debut with the Houston Symphony in January 2006 and returned to Carnegie Hall leading the Orchestra of St. Luke’s in March 2007. Born near Linz, Austria, Hans Graf first studied violin and piano. After receiving diplomas in piano and conducting from the Musikhochschule in Graz, he continued his studies in Italy with Franco Ferrara and Sergui Celibadache and in Russia with Arvid Jansons. Mr. Graf has been awarded the Chevalier de l’Ordre de la Legion d’Honneur by the French government for championing French music around the world as well as the Grand Decoration of Honour in Gold for Services to the Republic of Austria.
MASTERWORKS
Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
Jeffrey Kahane Piano
MASTERWORKS
artists’ profiles
Equally at home at the keyboard or on the podium, Jeffrey Kahane has established an international reputation as a truly versatile artist, recognized by audiences around the world for his mastery of a diverse repertoire ranging from Bach, Mozart and Beethoven to Gershwin, Golijov and John Adams. Since making his Carnegie Hall debut in 1983, Mr. Kahane has given recitals in many of the nation’s major music centers. Jeffrey Kahane made his conducting debut at the Oregon Bach Festival in 1988. Since then, he has guest conducted many of the major US orchestras. Currently in his 20th season as Music Director of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Mr. Kahane concluded his tenure as Music Director of the Colorado Symphony in June 2010 and for ten seasons was Music Director of the Santa Rosa Symphony, where he is now Conductor Laureate. 2016–17 season highlights include return visits to the Oregon Bach Festival, the Ravinia Festival, New York’s Mostly Mozart Festival, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, CAL Performances at UC Berkeley and reengagements with the Houston, Oregon, Utah, Colorado and Alabama Symphonies. Jeffrey Kahane resides in Los Angeles with his wife, Martha. They have two children— Gabriel, a composer, pianist and singer/songwriter, and Annie, a dancer and poet.
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program notes
Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)
Symphony No. 19 in E-flat Major, K. 132 INSTRUMENTATION: 2
clarinets, 4 horns, strings
PERFORMANCE TIME: 16
BACKGROUND
minutes
Reckonings of Mozart’s “great” symphonies usually start with number 25, composed when he was 17. It was then, when he was in his late teens, that the masterpieces started to come with some regularity. This was a time when Mozart was trying his hand at all forms, and—perhaps bolstered in confidence by his first big operatic success, Lucio Silla—combined his early mastery of form with his boldness as an innovator. His Symphony No. 19 came on the cusp of this period. Composed in July, 1772, it is one of several that Mozart wrote that year, demonstrating his ease with symphonies as well as hints of the more familiar works to come. In fact, the beginning of the 19th centers on a motif that Mozart would later use in the opening of his Piano Concerto No. 22, also in E-flat major.
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1/5
Mozart had been itching to write operas since childhood, and had already completed a number of his early efforts in that direction by 1771; his eagerness to make his mark as an operatic composer surely framed his eagerness to explore Italy further. But the trip went far beyond that in the development of his music of 1771 and 1772, and the formation of his mature style. It was the second of three Italian journeys he would make in his lifetime, and his travels meant spending only five months of that year at home, returning to Salzburg on December 15. He spent the next ten months in residence. Somehow, in the midst of all that activity, he managed to complete one composition after another. In fact, for Mozart, the exertions of travel— generally masterminded by his father, Leopold—don’t seem to have hindered his ability to compose. On his first trip to Italy, about a year earlier, Mozart wrote five symphonies that are said to show strong influences of Italian style: light in texture and sunny in disposition, with highly repetitive (not to say mechanical) figures in the orchestra’s string section. The symphonies composed during and after his second Italian trip are more markedly Mozartian and less markedly Italian, showing increased attention to the aspects of symphonic composition we have come to expect from later Mozart, Beethoven and beyond: brilliant orchestral effects, a sense of grandeur, and a sense of drama that goes beyond mere formulaic development of themes. Though the Italian influence is
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Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
program notes
2/5
still there, after two calendar seasons back in Salzburg, in the midst of summer, he was perhaps in the mood to experiment with his Symphony No. 19: analysts point to a canny reversion to the style of Johann Christian Bach, who, in Mozart’s lifetime, was more admired than his father, Johann Sebastian. WHAT TO LISTEN FOR
Poet William Wordsworth’s clever assertion about criticism—that we “murder to dissect”—seems especially apt in listeningnotes for Mozart. We might as well seek instructions for looking at a flower. But without resorting to homicide we can identify the sense of Italian style in this symphony’s elegant lightness and a sense of cheer linked to the “buffo” bounciness of 18th-century Italian comic operas. The alternation of loud and soft, forte-piano, contributes to this effect. This symphony is also noted for greater dramatic emphasis on the finale than those that came earlier in Mozart’s canon. It’s an effect that heightens the dramatic weight of the entire work, and that Mozart would continue in many later symphonies. Later, Beethoven and his heirs would carry this idea to much further extremes. The last movement is generally identified as a “French rondo” in seven-part form (ABACADA); The New Grove describes it as a gavotte en rondeau “more boisterously Viennese than French.” Italy? France? Austria? Our advice is to forget the geography and enjoy the music.
MASTERWORKS
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827)
Concerto No. 2 in B-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 19 INSTRUMENTATION: flute,
2 oboes, 2 bassoons;
2 horns; strings PERFORMANCE TIME: 28
minutes
BACKGROUND
Down through the generations, the popular conception of Beethoven has almost become a caricature of the brooding, obsessive artist. In fact, we may owe this image as much to a modern-day comic strip as to anything else: Charles Schultz’s Schroeder, the child prodigy with the striped tee-shirt and glassy stare, oblivious of the world and its social conventions, hunched over his tiny piano channeling Beethoven…always Beethoven. Schultz’s wonderful depiction of the laserfocused Schroeder is based at least in part on our time-honored notions about the grumpy composer who supposedly couldn’t be bothered with niceties such as personal
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Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
program notes
grooming or good manners. In recent years, musicologists have been pushing back a bit against these clichés; after all, during Beethoven’s lifetime, musicians were dependent even more than other artists upon the patronage of aristocrats and politicos. Social grace and flattery were orders of the day when seeking their favors, and Beethoven had his share of well-connected patrons and pupils. In Mozart’s letters to his father, we can see how he chafed under this burden, and we can be sure that Beethoven did not simply ignore it. But neither did he take it in stride, and the real Beethoven seems to have had something of the ill-tempered and ill-groomed egotist in him—enough to inspire Goethe to some shocking humor when he described their meeting to friends. The myth puts distance between us and the real Beethoven, but the music brings us closer to him, especially the piano music. By the time he was in his late twenties, Beethoven was already gaining a wide reputation among cognoscenti as a virtuoso pianist and improviser. His five great piano concertos take us from this early period of composition, when he most clearly showed the influences of Mozart and Haydn and gained mastery of classical forms, through the late middle period, when he stretched forms and grappled with philosophical themes and historic ideas. The piano continued to be a touchstone of Beethoven’s musical thought throughout his life. His late piano sonatas stand among his boldest and most experimental works. Even with a scorecard, the chronology of Beethoven’s compositions is difficult to
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follow. With the piano concertos, as with the romances for violin, he wrote No. 2 earlier than No. 1, though even the opus numbers don’t clarify this fact. Music historians tell us that Beethoven was sketching musical ideas for his concertos while he was still in his teens, and that the first version of his Piano Concerto No. 2 dates from 1795, when he was 25, though he did not finalize it until 1798. It was published three years later. WHAT TO LISTEN FOR
Many listeners take the dates of Beethoven’s piano concertos as guideposts to navigate the composer’s stylistic periods, which are generally divided into early, middle and late; they identify his Piano Concerto No. 2 as the earliest of the early concertos, the most reminiscent of Mozart and Haydn. But the delay also reflects the seriousness of his intent regarding the concerto form. In his first three piano concertos, but especially in Nos. 1 and 2, we hear Beethoven strongly influenced by Mozart and Haydn, but with Beethoven’s flair for the elemental, dramatic statement already in evidence. Beautiful? Yes, and it met with immediate success after its premiere in 1795. Yet Beethoven expressed dissatisfaction with it, noting that it did not represent his best work. He submitted it for publication only with reluctance. Part of its success was surely as a showcase for Beethoven’s impressive technique (he was soloist at the premiere). From the first movement’s triumphant opening statement, the concerto requires dazzling fingerwork in both hands. For the first movement cadenza— an unaccompanied passage that was often improvised in the classical era—most pianists
MASTERWORKS
program notes
Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
choose the very challenging, almost fugal version that Beethoven wrote much later, in 1809. This is followed by a slow (adagio) movement of great tenderness. Listeners who think they don’t know this concerto may experience a jolt of recognition as soon as the joyful third movement begins, a romp that is melodic and playful. Even during its occasional modulations into minor, it never loses its sunny disposition.
Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943)
Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Opus 44 INSTRUMENTATION: 2 flutes, piccolo, 2 oboes, English horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon; 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba; timpani, percussion, harp, celeste; strings PERFORMANCE TIME: 38
BACKGROUND
minutes
If Tchaikovsky was the central and best known of the Russian Romantic composers, and if Glinka was the first and the father figure, then Rachmaninoff embodied their artistic culmination. As a conservatory student in Moscow and St. Petersburg, he focused intensively on both piano technique
MASTERWORKS
4/5
and composition, and he was recognized as a great pianist throughout his career; just before his death, he was touring the U.S. as a piano soloist. Despite his latterday moodiness and a bit of harmonic adventurism, you can hear that his style was rooted in the 1800s and in Russia as deeply as his predecessors’. But Glinka and Tchaikovsky remained in the motherland and died there in 1857 and 1893, respectively. Listening to Rachmaninoff’s long, brooding lines—their sweetness tinged with melancholy—it is surprising to learn that he died in the U.S. during World War II in relatively secure and luxurious circumstances, mingling with the expatriate artists who found safety in the Hollywood community. At the encouragement of another Russian expat composer, Igor Stravinsky, he had come to the United States in 1939 and became a naturalized U.S. citizen. He had a home in Beverly Hills. But Stravinsky felt far more comfortable here, and as a composer he inhabited a very different, more modern era. By temperament, Rachmaninoff had more in common with Tchaikovsky, who was born more than three decades earlier. Both men suffered from paralyzing dark moods that would probably be diagnosed as clinical depression today. For both, writing music was often an agonized struggle through this darkness. Yet both also desperately wanted critical approval, especially early in their careers, when success with the symphonic form was like a diploma for a serious composer.
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Beethoven & Rachmaninoff
program notes
We can scarcely imagine the debilitating sense of failure and self-doubt that Rachmaninoff experienced with the failure of his first symphony in 1895, a debacle compounded by his extreme sensitivity and sheer bad luck: after sweating over the score, he had to endure a disastrous premiere performance at which the conductor was so drunk on vodka that he could barely grasp the baton. This left Rachmaninoff so helpless to compose that he resorted to hypnotherapy to cure his composer’s block. His breakthrough composition, the glorious Piano Concerto No. 2, won deserving acclaim, but did not come until six years later. Yet even after following this triumph with his highly successful Symphony No. 2 in 1908, Rachmaninoff was still understandably wary of the symphony. He followed his second with a remarkable cantata based on a Russian translation of Edgar Allen Poe’s poem The Bells in 1913, which he labeled his “third symphony”—there was, after all, precedent with Beethoven’s choral symphony and Mahler’s massive “Symphony of a Thousand,” which premiered in 1910—but Rachmaninoff did not return to the symphonic genre in earnest until 1935–36, some 40 years after his first symphony and 30 years after his second. With his Symphony No. 3 in A minor, the previous, spurious “third” ceded the title. WHAT TO LISTEN FOR
After decades of carrying the burdens of his emotional illness and insecurities, did Rachmaninoff find ways to moderate them, or work around them? Certainly, his third symphony displays the qualities we associate with his earlier music. These include plush melodies couched in luxuriously thick
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5/5
harmonies and sweeping, long, sculptural lines; virtuosic instrumental demands; and a willingness to venture into intense, swooning romanticism when the symphony’s development takes it there. But this work doesn’t spend quite so much time in those realms as Rachmaninoff did in past works; his second symphony, for example, is about 50 percent longer. Listening to Rachmaninoff’s symphonies, and to Mahler’s, has been likened to drowsing in a warm bath by candlelight, perhaps with some really good wine. Our senses are lulled by the engaging melodies; rich harmonies and orchestral textures surround us, in this case starting with the depths of clarinet, cellos and muted horn before we even hear the opening movement’s principal theme—a theme that will wind its way through the entire work. Enthusiasts who like to hunt for quoted themes as they listen may hear a hint of Wagner’s Ring—a theme associated with a dwarf named Mime—along with the AngloAmerican folk tune Home Sweet Home. The sense of emotional expansiveness continues through the second movement, but the vibrant third, marked allegro vivace, brings a jolt of energy. As the symphony comes to a close, the themes we heard in the first movement resurface, now transmuted into brightness and positive resolution. Rachmaninoff’s inner struggles and insecurities did not end with this symphony. But listening to it, we might guess that they did; its progression from an opening of deliberative exploration of themes through energetic restatement to emphatic closure shows that Rachmaninoff, 40 years after his first disastrous experience as a symphonist, found traditional mastery of the form.
MASTERWORKS
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Season Honorees We applaud our generous donors, who through cash gifts and multi-year pledges make our programs possible. This list reflects commitments received as of September 20, 2016. Millenium $250,000 & above Edward Ashwood & Candice Johnson Gael Benson Diane & Hal Brierley The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Foundation Lawrence T. & Janet T. Dee Foundation E.R. & Katherine W. Dumke George S. & Dolores DorĂŠ Eccles Foundation Kem & Carolyn Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Martin Greenberg Anthony & Renee Marlon Larry H. & Gail Miller Family Foundation Carol & Ted Newlin O. C. Tanner Company Patricia A. Richards & William K. Nichols James A. & Marilyn Parke Perkins-Prothro Foundation John & Marcia Price Foundation Questar Corporation Salt Lake County Theodore Schmidt Shiebler Family Foundation Sorenson Legacy Foundation The Sam & Diane Stewart Family Foundation Sam & Diane Stewart Naoma Tate & the Family of Hal Tate Utah State Legislature Utah State Board of Education Jacquelyn Wentz ZAP Zions Bank Encore $100,000 & above Anonymous Doyle Arnold & Anne Glarner Dr. J. R. Baringer & Dr. Jeannette J. Townsend Thierry & Catherine Fischer** Roger & Susan Horn The Right Reverend Carolyn Tanner Irish** Emma Eccles Jones Foundation Ronald & Janet Jibson
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$5,000 to $9,999 Anonymous (4) Fred & Linda Babcock Dr. & Mrs. Clisto Beaty Mr. & Mrs. Jim Blair Carol, Rete & Celine Browning Judy & Larry Brownstein Neill & Linda Brownstein Thomas Christofferson Amalia Cochran Marc & Kathryn Cohen David & Karen Dee Spencer & Cleone† Eccles Tom Farkas Jack & Marianne Ferraro John F. Foley, M.D. & Dorene Sambado, M.D.** Joseph & Dixie Furlong Jeffrey L. Giese, M.D. & Mary E. Gesicki David & SandyLee Griswold** Ray & Howard Grossman John & Dorothy Hancock Robert & Carolee Harmon Gary & Christine Hunter Mary P. Jacobs† & Jerald H. Jacobs Family Dale & Beverly Johnson G. Frank & Pamela Joklik Jeanne Kimball Thomas & Jamie Love Paul Meecham & Laura Leach Rayna & Glen Mintz Nathan & Karen B. Morgan Dr. Thomas Parks & Dr. Patricia Legant Leslie Peterson & Kevin Higgins Brooks & Lenna Quinn Dr. Richard & Frances Reiser James & Gail Riepe Robert & Kim Rollo Eric & Shirley Schoenholz Suzanne Scott
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Stuart & Molly Silloway Lynn Suksdorf Alexander & Sarah Uhle Albert & Yvette Ungricht Kathleen Digre & Michael Varner $3,000 to $4,999 Anonymous (4) Craig & Joanna Adamson Robert W. Brandt Jonathan & Julie Bullen Richard & Suzanne Burbidge Lindsay & Carla Carlisle Mark & Marci Casp Rebecca Marriott Champion Paul & Denise Christian Edward & Carleen Clark Gary & Debbi Cook David & Sandra Cope** Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth R. Cutler Mike Deputy Carol & Greg Easton Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ehrlich Midge Farkas Peter Fillerup† Flynn Family Foundation C. Chauncey & Emily Hall Kenneth & Kate Handley Dr. & Mrs. Bradford D. Hare Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Huffman James & Penny Keras Hanko & Laura Kiessner Harrison & Elaine Levy Bill Ligety & Cyndi Sharp Herbert C. & Wilma S. Livsey Daniel & Noemi P. Mattis Michael & Julie McFadden Rich & Cherie Meeboer Richard & Jayne Middleton Richard & Ginni Mithoff Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Muller James & Ann Neal
UTAH SYMPHONY
www.darlingmeavenue.com
Individual Donors Marilyn H. Neilson Mr. & Mrs. Alvin Richer James & Anna Romano David & Lois Salisbury William G. Schwartz & Joann Givan Thomas & Gayle Sherry Gibbs & Catherine W. Smith Elizabeth Solomon Marilyn Sorensen Verl & Joyce Topham Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Trotta Dr. Ralph & Judith Vander Heide Susan & David† Wagstaff Ardean & Elna Watts Suzanne Weaver David & Jerre Winder E. Art Woolston & Connie Jo HepworthWoolston Chris & Lisa Young Gayle & Sam Youngblood $2,000 to $2,999 Anonymous (4) Robert & Cherry Anderson David & Rebecca Bateman E. Wayne & Barbara Baumgardner Dr. Melissa Bentley Anneli Bowen, M.D. & Glen M. Bowen M.D. Mr. & Mrs. John Brubaker Luann & James Campbell Chris & Lois Canale Coley & Jennifer Clark Shelly Coburn Raymond & Diana Compton Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Coppin David & Carol Coulter James & Rula Dickson Margarita Donnelly
Howard Edwards Neone F. Jones Family Thomas & Lynn Fey Robert & Annie-Lewis Garda Heidi Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Eric Garen Mark Gavre & Gudrun Mirin Diana George Susan Glassman & Richard Dudley Randin Graves Dennis & Sarah Hancock John B. & Joan Hanna Geraldine Hanni Richard Herbert Sunny & Wes Howell Dixie & Robert Huefner Jay & Julie Jacobson Annette & Joseph Jarvis Sharon Jenkins M. Craig & Rebecca Johns Bryce & Karen† Johnson Jill Johnson Pauline Weggeland-Johnson James R. Jones & Family J. Allen & Charlene Kimball Merele & Howard Kosowsky Val Lambson Donald L. & Alice A. Lappe Mr. & Mrs. Melvyn L. Lefkowitz Paul Lehman Roger Leslie James Lether Lisa & James Levy Elizabeth & Michael Liess Milt & Carol Lynnes David & Donna Lyon Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Lyski Lisa K. Mariano
Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is the proud recipient of Charity Navigator’s highest rating for sound fiscal management, commitment to accountability and transparency, and adherence to good governance and best practices—all of which allow us to execute our mission in a responsible way. 54
UTAH SYMPHONY
Individual Donors Jed & Kathryn Marti Christopher & Julie McBeth Warren K. & Virginia G. McOmber George & Nancy Melling Dr. Louis A. & Deborah Moench Barry & Kathy Mower Daniel & Janet Myers Thomas & Barbara O’Byrne Jason Olsen & Tim Thorpe O. Don & Barbara Ostler Linda S. Pembroke Ann G. Petersen Dr. & Mrs. S. Keith Petersen Jon Poesch Victor & Elizabeth Pollak Dan & June Ragan Dr. & Mrs. Marvin L. Rallison W. E. & Harriet R. Rasmussen Dr. Barbara S. Reid Joyce Rice Kenneth Roach & Cindy Powell Tom & Jeanne Rueger Thomas Safran Mark & Loulu Saltzman K. Gary† & Lynda† Shields Deborah & Brian Smith Christine St. Andre Larry R. & Sheila F. Stevens Steve & Betty Sullentrop Mr. & Mrs. Glen R. Traylor John & Susan Walker Susan Warshaw Bryan & Diana Watabe Jeremy & Hila Wenokur Caroline & Thomas Wright PATRONS
$1,000 to $1,999 Anonymous (2) Carolyn Abravanel Fran Akita Christine A. Allred Patricia Andersen
UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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Drs. Crystal & Dustin Armstrong Graham & Janet Baker Mr. Barry Bergquist Mr. & Mrs. William Bierer Reverend James Blaine Shauna Bona Jim & Marilyn Brezovec Timothy F. Buehner Foundation Mr. & Mrs. William D. Callister, Jr. Bartell & Kathleen Cardon Mr. & Mrs. Lee Forrest Carter Michael & Beth Chardack William J. Coles & Dr. Joan L. Coles Dr. & Mrs. David Coppin Margaret Dreyfous Alice Edvalson Janet Ellison Naomi K. Feigal Robert S. Felt, M.D. Susan Gillett Rose & Ralph Gochnour Robert & Joyce† Graham Dr. & Mrs. John Greenlee Arlen Hale Dr. Elizabeth Hammond Lex Hemphill & Nancy Melich John Edward Henderson Steve Hogan & Michelle Wright Connie C. Holbrook Patricia Horton Kay Howells David & Caroline Hundley Todd & Tatiana James Drs. Randy & Elizabeth Jensen Maxine & Bruce Johnson Chester & Marilyn Johnson Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Kalm Umur Kavlakoglu Susan Keyes Allison Kitching Carl & Gillean Kjeldsberg Robert & Karla Knox Julie Korenberg, Ph.D, M.D. & Stefan Pulst, M.D.
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I’VE NEVER UNDERSTOOD WHY MY HUMAN WON’T LEAVE THE HOUSE WITHOUT HER LEASH. I THINK SHE’S AFRAlD OF GETTING LOST. BUT IT’S OK, I KIND OF LIKE SHOWING HER AROUND. — HARPER adopted 08-18-09
Individual Donors Tim & Angela Laros Gary & Suzanne Larsen Dr. Vivian Lee Dennis & Pat Lombardi Peter Margulies & Louise Vickerman Edward & Grace McDonough Clifton & Terri McIntosh Johanna & Jack McManemin David & Colleen Merrill Dr. Nicole L. Mihalopoulos & Joshua Scoville Dr. Jean H. & Dr. Richard R. Miller John & Mary Ann Nelson Oren & Liz Nelson Stephen & Mary Nichols Ruth & William Ohlsen Blaine & Shari Palmer Nancy & Rori Piggot Mr. Steven Price Keith & Nancy Rattie Richard C. & Margaret V. Romano Lousje & Keith Rooker Bertram H. & Janet Schaap Ralph & Gwen Schamel Mr. Grant Schettler Mr. August L. Schultz Daniel & Angela Shaeffer Dennis & Annabelle Shrieve Barbara Slaymaker Dr. Otto F. Smith & Mrs. June Smith Dr. & Mrs. Michael H. Stevens Amy Sullivan & Alex Bocock Douglas & Susan Terry Carol A. Thomas Mrs. Rachel J. Varat-Navarro Mr. & Mrs. Brad E. Walton Nadine Ward Charles & Ellen Wells Margaret & Gary Wirth Marsha & Richard Workman Norman & Kathy Younker* Michael & Olga Zhdanov Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Zumbro Donations as received as of 9/20/2015
UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG
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“Music is the art which is most nigh to tears and memory.” ~Oscar Wilde IN HONOR OF
Dr. J. R. Baringer & Dr. Jeannette J. Townsend George Brown Paula J. Fowler Abe & Arline Markosian David Park Mark & Dianne Prothro Clark T. Randt, Jr. Patricia A. Richards Bill & Joanne Shiebler Kevin Sohma IN MEMORY OF
Jay T. Ball Mikhail Boguslavsky Ann Dick Ed Epstein Loraine L. Felton Neva Langley Fickling Herold L. “Huck” & Mary E. Gregory Judith Ann Harris Roger Hock Marian Holbrook Steve Horton Winona Simonsen Jensen Eric Johnson Joan McEvoy Maxine & Frank McIntyre Dr. Walter Needham Russell Alan Peters Chase N. Peterson Mardean Peterson Kenneth Randall Dr. Clifford Reusch Ann O’Neill Shigeoka Maestro Joseph Silverstein Barbara Singleton Tamie Speciale Marjorie Whitney John W. Williams Merrill L. Wilson, M.D
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Tanner & Crescendo Societies
“You are the music while the music lasts.” ~T.S. Eliot Utah Symphony | Utah Opera offers sincere thanks to our patrons who have included USUO in their financial and estate planning. Please contact Kate Throneburg at kthroneburg@usuo.org or 801-869-9028 for more information, or visit our website at usuo.giftplans.org.
TANNER SOCIETY OF UTAH SYMPHONY Beethoven Circle gifts valued at more than $100,000 Anonymous (3) Doyle Arnold & Anne Glarner Dr. J. Richard Baringer Haven J. Barlow Alexander Bodi† Edward† & Edith Brinn Captain Raymond & Diana Compton Elizabeth W. Colton† Anne C. Ewers
Grace Higson† Flemming & Lana Jensen James Read Lether Daniel & Noemi P. Mattis Joyce Merritt† Anthony & Carol W. Middleton, Jr., M.D. Robert & Dianne Miner Glenn Prestwich & Barbara Bentley Kenneth A.† & Jeraldine S. Randall
Robert L.† & Joyce Rice Mr. & Mrs. Alvin Richer Patricia A. Richards & William K. Nichols Sharon & David† Richards Harris H. & Amanda P. Simmons E. Jeffrey & Joyce Smith G. B. & B. F. Stringfellow Norman† & Barbara Tanner Mr. & Mrs. M. Walker Wallace
Herbert C. & Wilma Livsey Mrs. Helen F. Lloyd† Gaye Herman Marrash Ms. Wilma F. Marcus† Dr. & Mrs. Louis A. Moench Jerry & Marcia McClain Jim & Andrea Naccarato Stephen H. & Mary Nichols Pauline C. Pace† Mr. & Mrs. Scott Parker Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Pazzi Richard Q. Perry Chase† & Grethe Peterson Glenn H. & Karen F. Peterson Thomas A. & Sally† Quinn
Helen Sandack† Mr. Grant Schettler Glenda & Robert† Shrader Dr. Robert G. Snow† Mr. Robert C. Steiner & Dr. Jacquelyn Erbin† Kathleen Sargent† JoLynda Stillman Edwin & Joann Svikhart Frederic & Marilyn Wagner Jack R. & Mary Lois† Wheatley Afton B. Whitbeck† Edward J. & Marelynn Zipser
Mahler Circle Anonymous (3) Eva-Maria Adolphi Dr. Robert H.† & Marianne Harding Burgoyne Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Coombs Patricia Dougall Eager† Mr.† & Mrs.† Sid W. Foulger Paul (Hap) & Ann† Green Robert & Carolee Harmon Richard G. & Shauna† Horne Mr. Ray Horrocks† Richard W. James† Estate Mrs. Avanelle Learned† Ms. Marilyn Lindsay Turid V. Lipman
CRESCENDO SOCIETY OF UTAH OPERA Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. William C. Bailey Alexander Bodi† Berenice J. Bradshaw Estate Judy Brady & Drew W. Browning Dr. Robert H. † & Marianne Harding Burgoyne Elizabeth W. Colton† Dr. Richard J. & Mrs. Barbara N. Eliason Anne C. Ewers Edwin B. Firmage
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Joseph & Pat Gartman Paul (Hap) & Ann† Green John & Jean Henkels Clark D. Jones Turid V. Lipman Herbert C. & Wilma Livsey Constance Lundberg Gaye Herman Marrash Richard W. & Frances P. Muir Marilyn H. Neilson Carol & Ted Newlin Pauline C. Pace†
Stanley B. & Joyce Parrish Patricia A. Richards & William K. Nichols Mr. & Mrs. Alvin Richer Robert L.† & Joyce Rice Richard G. Sailer† Jeffrey W. Shields G. B. & B. F. Stringfellow Norman† & Barbara Tanner Dr. Ralph & Judith Vander Heide Edward J. & Marelynn Zipser †Deceased
UTAH SYMPHONY
Legacy Giving
There are many ways to leave a legacy, and for those who would like their legacy to include a long-term gift to Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, there are many options to consider. From leaving a gift in your will to leaving part or all of your IRA to USUO, your financial advisor or estate planning attorney can help you build a gift that can meet your goals and benefit USUO for years to come. You have the ability to build a musical future for the state of Utah. When you leave a gift to USUO in your estate plans, you are building a proud legacy that will inspire tomorrow’s musicians and music lovers. For over 75 years, USUO has been a leader in music excellence and community education. Your gift will make a difference. To learn more about how your estate planning can benefit both you and USUO, please call Kate Throneburg at 801-869-9028, or visit us online at usuo.giftplans.org.
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Stream KUER’s Classical Station on your mobile device. Download the KUER app from the App Store or Google Play. Visit kuer.org/app for details
THREE DELICIOUS COURSES ONE INCREDIBLE EVENING
Prime Time EXPERIENCE OUR
DINNER MENU
offered nightly until 6:30pm 3 —COURSE MENU STARTING AT
$ 44. 95
OUT ON THE TOWN
dining guide THE NEW YORKER 60 West Market Street. SLC’s premier dining establishment. Modern American cuisine is featured in refined dishes and approachable comfort food. From classic to innovative, from contemporary seafood to Angus Beef steaks – the menu provides options for every taste. Served in a casually elegant setting with impeccable service. Private dining rooms for corporate and social events. Lunch & Dinner. No membership required. L, D, LL, AT, RR, CC, VS. 801.363.0166
Consistently Rated “Tops”–Zagat 60 W. Market Street • 801.363.0166
Salt Lake City’s #1
MARKET STREET GRILL DOWNTOWN 48
Most Popular Restaurant
West Market Street. Unanimous favorites for seafood dining, providing exceptional service and award winning. The contemporary menu features the highest quality available. Select from an abundant offering of fresh seafood flown in daily, Angus Beef steaks, and a variety of non-seafood dishes. Open 7 days a week serving breakfast, lunch, dinner, Sunday Brunch. B, L, D, C, AT, S, LL, CC, VS. 801.322.4668
MARTINE 22 East 100 South. Award winning ambience, located in a historic brownstone. Martine offers Salt Lake City a sophisticated dining experience kept simple. Locally sourced ingredients, pre-event $25 three course prix fixe. Extensive bar and wine service. martinecafe.com L, D, T, LL, RA, CC, VS. 801-363-9328
–Zagat
48 W. Market Street (340 South) 801.322.4668
• An intimate euro café • Free Valet Parking 22 East 100 South
Phone • 801.363.9328 www.martinecafe.com Top Photo: Image licensed by Ingram Image
B-Breakfast L-Lunch D-Dinner S-Open Sunday DL-Delivery T-Take Out C-Children’s Menu SR-Senior Menu AT-After-Theatre LL-Liquor Licensee RR-Reservations Required RA-Reservations Accepted CC-Credit Cards Accepted VS-Vegetarian Selections
THANK YOU TO OUR ADVERTISERS Classical 89 Country Hills Eye Center Darling Me Avenue Daynes Music Eldredge Furniture Excellence in the Community Finca Grand America Hale Centre Theatre KCPW KUED KUER Larry H. Miller Lexus Little America MAC Montage Deer Valley
New Yorker Plan B Ruth’s Chris Steak House Shelter Pet Project Smith’s The Spectacle SummitVista Utah Food Bank Utah Food Services Utah Shakespeare Festival Zion Bank
If you would like to place an ad in this program, please contact Dan Miller at Mills Publishing, Inc. 801-467-8833
Administration ADMINISTRATION Paul Meecham President & CEO David Green Senior Vice President & COO Julie McBeth Executive Assistant to the CEO Jessica Chapman Executive Assistant to the COO & Office Manager SYMPHONY ARTISTIC Thierry Fischer Symphony Music Director Anthony Tolokan Vice President of Symphony Artistic Planning Rei Hotoda Associate Conductor Barlow Bradford Symphony Chorus Director Walter Zeschin Director of Orchestra Personnel Nathan Lutz Orchestra Personnel Manager Lance Jensen Executive Assistant to the Music Director and Symphony Chorus Manager SYMPHONY OPERATIONS Jeff Counts Vice President of Operations & General Manager Cassandra Dozet Director of Operations Chip Dance Production & Stage Manager Mark Barraclough Assistant Stage & Properties Manager Melissa Robison Program Publication & Front of House Manager Erin Lunsford Artist Logistics Coordinator 0PERA ARTISTIC Christopher McBeth Opera Artistic Director Michael Spassov Opera Chorus Master Carol Anderson Principal Coach Michelle Peterson Opera Company Manager Mandi Titcomb Opera Production Coordinator DEVELOPMENT Leslie Peterson Vice President of Development Hillary Hahn Senior Director of Institutional Gifts Natalie Cope Director of Special Events & DVMF Community Relations
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Melissa Klein Director of Individual Giving Alina Osika Manager of Corporate Partnerships Lisa Poppleton Grants Manager Kate Throneburg Manager of Individual Giving Conor Bentley Development Manager Heather Weinstock Manager of Special Events MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS Jon Miles Vice President of Marketing & Public Relations RenĂŠe Huang Director of Public Relations Chad Call Marketing Manager Mike Call Website Manager Ginamarie Marsala Marketing Communications Manager Aaron Sain Graphic Design & Branding Manager PATRON SERVICES Nina Richards Director of Ticket Sales & Patron Services Faith Myers Sales Manager Andrew J. Wilson Patron Services & Group Sales Assistant Robb Trujillo Group Sales Associate Ellesse Hargreaves Patron Services Coordinator Sarah Pehrson Jackie Seethaler Nicholas Siler Powell Smith Sales Associates Nick Barker Jordan Duberow Brittney Feller Hilary Hancock Ellesse Hargreaves Garrett Hatfield Nava Payandeh Ticket Agents ACCOUNTING & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Steve Hogan Vice President of Finance & CFO Mike Lund Director of Information Technologies SaraLyn Greenwood Controller Alison Mockli Payroll & Benefits Manager Jared Mollenkopf Patron Information Systems Manager Julie Cameron Accounts Payable Clerk
EDUCATION Paula Fowler Director of Education & Community Outreach Beverly Hawkins Symphony Education Manager Tracy Hansford Education Coordinator Kyleene Johnson Education Fellow Timothy Accurso Sarah Coit Markel Reed Abigail Rethwisch Christian Sanders Utah Opera Resident Artists OPERA TECHNICAL Jared Porter Opera Technical Director Kelly Nickle Properties Master Lane Latimer Assistant Props Keith Ladanye Production Carpenter John Cook Scenic Artist COSTUMES Verona Green Costume Director Melonie Fitch Rentals Supervisor Kierstin Gibbs LisaAnn DeLapp Rentals Assistants Amanda Reiser Meyer Wardrobe Supervisor Milivoj Poletan Tailor Tara DeGrey Cutter/Draper Anna Marie Coronado Milliner & Crafts Artisan Chris Chadwick Yoojean Song Connie Warner Stitchers Yancey J. Quick Wigs/Make-up Designer Shelley Carpenter Tanner Crawford Daniel Hill Michelle Laino Wigs/Make-up Crew
We would also like to recognize our interns and temporary and contracted staff for their work and dedication to the success of utah symphony | utah opera.
UTAH SYMPHONY
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House Rules
ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES
QUIET PLEASE
Assistive Listening Devices are available free of charge at each performance on a first-come, first-served basis at Abravanel Hall. Ask at the Coat Check for details.
As a courtesy to performers on stage and to other audience members, please turn off cell phones, pagers, beeping watches, or any other noisemaking device. Also, please refrain from allowing concession items such as candy wrappers and water bottles to become noisy during the performance.
WHEELCHAIR SEATING Ample wheelchair seating is available. Please inform our ticket office representative when making your reservation that you require wheelchair space. Arrive 30 minutes before curtain time to obtain curbside assistance from the House Manager.
LATECOMERS In consideration of patrons already seated in the hall, reserved seating will be held until curtain, after which alternate seating will be used. During some productions late seating may not occur until an intermission. When traveling to performances, please allow ample time for traffic delays, road construction, and parking.
YOUNG CHILDREN As a courtesy to other audience members, please ensure that children at performances are not disruptive during the show. Babes-in-arms are not allowed in the hall during performances unless specifically indicated.
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CLEANLINESS Thank you for placing all refuse in trash receptacles as you exit the theatre.
COPYRIGHT ADHERENCE In compliance with copyright laws, it is strictly prohibited to take any photographs or any audio or video recordings of the performance.
NEED EXTRA LEG ROOM? Let us know when making reservations; we can help.
EMERGENCY INFORMATION In the event of an emergency, please remain seated and wait for instructions. Emergency exits are located on both sides of the house. Please identify the exit closest to your location.
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THE UTAH SYMPHONY GUILD CONGRATULATES THE UTAH SYMPHONY ON ITS 75TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON. THE GUILD IS PROUD TO CONTINUE SUPPORTING THE SYMPHONY FOR MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION, PLEASE VISIT THE GIFT SHOP LOCATED IN THE LOBBY OR ONLINE AT: WWW.UTAHSYMPHONYGUILD.ORG
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Guild Programs include: Utah Symphony Youth Guild Outreach Violin Program School Docent Program Finishing Touches
www.utahsymphonyguild.org
utahsymphonyguild
2017 SEASON k ENTERTAINMENT
FEB 15 through ~ APR 8
Call 801.984.9000 or online at www.HCT.org
SEASON TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
DEC 31 through ~ FEB 4
APR 15 through ~ MAY 20
JUNE 2 through ~ AUG 12
AUG 25 through ~ OCT 14
SEPT 1 through ~ NOV 15
OCT 21 through ~ NOV 30
NOV 17 through ~ JAN 20
DEC 1 through ~ DEC 23
T H A N K YOU T O OU R 2017 S E A S ON S P ONS OR
2016/17 UTAH SYMPHONY SEASON 2016/17 UTAH SYMPHONY SEASON 2016/17 UTAH SYMPHONY SEASON
DO LOVE MUSIC AND KIDS? DOYOU YOU LOVE MUSIC AND KIDS? DO YOU LOVE MUSIC AND KIDS? Volunteer with Utah Symphony to teach kids about symphony concerts or help run a
Volunteer with Utah Symphony teach kids about symphony concerts or help Volunteer Utah Symphony to to teach kids about symphony concerts help runrun aa kids’ musicwith program. Two of Utah Symphony’s programs for youth needorvolunteers kids’ music program. Two of Utah Symphony’s programs for youth need volunteers kids’ music program. Twotheir of Utah who would like to share love Symphony’s of music withprograms students. for youth need volunteers who would share their love music with students. who would likelike to to share their love of of music with students. UTAH SYMPHONY 5TH GRADE CONCERTS are made more memorable UTAH SYMPHONY 5TH GRADE CONCERTS are made more UTAH SYMPHONY 5TH CONCERTS made more memorable because of the talents ofGRADE our docents, whoare visit classrooms tomemorable prepare because of the talents of our docents, who visit classrooms prepare because of the talents in of Abravanel our docents, who visit classrooms to to prepare students for a concert Hall. We provide the materials and train students for a concert in Abravanel Hall. We provide the materials and train students fortheir a concert in Abravanel Hall.every We provide the materials train docents in use. Docents visit nearly school that sends 5thand grade docents in their use. Docents visit nearly every school that sends 5th grade docents their use. Docents nearly schoolHall, thatserving sends 5th grade students in and teachers to our visit concerts at every Abravanel schools in students and teachers to our concerts at Abravanel Hall, serving schools students and teachers to our concerts at Abravanel Hall, serving schools the Alpine, Canyons, Davis, Granite, Jordan, Salt Lake and Tooele school in in the Alpine, Canyons, Davis, Granite, Jordan, Salt Lake and Tooele school the Alpine, Davis, Granite, Jordan, Salt and Tooele school districts. To Canyons, learn more, contact Beverly Hawkins atLake bhawkins@usuo.org. districts. To learn more, contact Beverly Hawkins at bhawkins@usuo.org. districts. To learn more, contact Beverly Hawkins at bhawkins@usuo.org.
“Love this program!” “Love this program!” “Love this program!” — Utah Symphony Docent — Utah Symphony Docent — Utah Symphony Docent
tools to look good and smart tools to look good and smart tools look good and smart at ourtopresentations.” at our presentations.” at our presentations.” — Utah Symphony Docent — Utah Symphony Docent — Utah Symphony Docent
THE MUSIC OUTREACH PROGRAM
THE MUSIC OUTREACH PROGRAM THE MUSIC PROGRAM program in OUTREACH Rose Park. Volunteers help with set up, class organization and logistics. program in Rose Park. Volunteers help with class organization and logistics. program Rose help setset up, class organization and logistics. Ability to in play thePark. violinVolunteers (even a little) iswith helpful butup, not necessary. Contact Doyle Ability to play the violin (even a little) is helpful but not necessary. Contact Doyle Ability to play the violin (even a little)if isyou’re helpfulinterested but not necessary. Clayburn at dcsunset13@gmail.com in helping Contact with thisDoyle program. Clayburn at dcsunset13@gmail.com if you’re interested in helping with this program. Clayburn at dcsunset13@gmail.com if you’re interested in helping with this program.
All lives can be enriched by the arts. Share your love of music with All lives can enriched the arts. Share your love music with All lives can bebe enriched byby the arts. Share your love ofof music with our young people. our young people. our young people. Please support our Education and Community Outreach programs. By donating you help provide arts events Please support our Education Community Outreach programs. donating help provide events Please support Education andand Community Outreach programs. By By donating youyou help provide artsarts events for students, aidour classroom teachers, invest in the future citizens of Utah, and support your Utah Symphony students, classroom teachers, invest inDevelopment the future citizens of Utah, support your Utah Symphony for for students, aidaid classroom teachers, invest in the future citizens of Utah, and support your Utah Symphony and Utah Opera. Donate today! Contact our Department atand (801) 869-9015. Utah Opera. Donate today! Contact Development Department at (801) 869-9015. andand Utah Opera. Donate today! Contact ourour Development Department at (801) 869-9015.
Acknowledgments UTAH SYMPHONY | UTAH OPERA 123 West South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84101 801-533-5626 EDITOR
Melissa Robison HUDSON PRINTING COMPANY www.hudsonprinting.com 241 West 1700 South Salt Lake City, UT 84115 801-486-4611 AUDITING AND ACCOUNTING SERVICES PROVIDED BY
Tanner, LLC LEGAL REPRESENTATION PROVIDED BY
Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, LLP Dorsey & Whitney, LLP Holland & Hart, LLP Jones Waldo GOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS REPRESENTATIVE
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Provided by Shuman Associates, New York City ADVERTISING SERVICES
Provided by Love Communications, Salt Lake City Utah Symphony | Utah Opera is funded by the Utah Division of Arts & Museums, Professional Outreach Programs in the Schools (POPS), Salt Lake City Arts Council, Salt Lake County Zoo, Arts, and Parks Tax (ZAP), Summit County Restaurant Tax, Summit County Recreation, Arts and Parks Tax (RAP), Park City Chamber Bureau. The organization is committed to equal opportunity in employment practices and actions, i.e. recruitment, employment, compensation, training, development, transfer, reassignment, corrective action and promotion, without regard to one or more of the following protected class: race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability, family status, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity and political affiliation or belief. Abravanel Hall and The Janet Quinney Lawson Capitol Theatre are owned and operated by the Salt Lake County Center for the Arts. By participating in or attending any activity in connection with Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, whether on or off the performance premises, you consent to the use of any print or digital photographs, pictures, film, or videotape taken of you for publicity, promotion, television, websites, or any other use, and expressly waive any right of privacy, compensation, copyright, or ownership right connected to same.
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UTAH SYMPHONY
OUR 2017 SEASON Nine Plays. Five Premieres. Four Enduring Classics.
June 29 – Oct. 21, 2017
As You Like It Shakespeare in Love Romeo and Juliet Guys and Dolls A Midsummer Night’s Dream Treasure Island The Tavern How To Fight Loneliness William Shakespeare’s Long Lost First Play (Abridged)
The Greater Escape. 800-PLAYTIX bard.org • #utahshakes
Last year Utah Food Bank distributed 31.3 million meals to Utahns in need statewide.
1 in 5 Utah kids are unsure where their next meal will come from
423,000 people are food insecure — 15% of Utah’s population
Go to UtahFoodBank.org today to donate, find food drop-off locations, or to find out more about volunteering.
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University of Utah Health Care Ear, Nose and Throat is proud to support the Utah Symphony | Utah Opera. Our physicians artfully orchestrate the latest medical advances with personalized, ovation-worthy service. healthcare.utah.edu/ent | 801.587.8368
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