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MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
West Wisconsin Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203 414.291.6010 | mso.org
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 1 15 November 11 & 12 — Classics Fresh Air & Beethoven’s Eroica 21 November 18 & 19 — Classics Ravel & Chopin 29 November 26-28 — Pops Disney in Concert: A Dream is a Wish 37 December 8-11 — Pops Holiday Pops 41 December 16-18 — Special Handel’s Messiah 47 December 20 — Special The Texas Tenors 51 December 21 — BSC Presents Sing-A-Long-A Sound of Music 55 December 30-January 1 — Film Ghostbusters 5 Orchestra Roster 7 Conductor Bios 11 Milwaukee Symphony Chorus 60 Endowment Musical Legacy Society 61 Annual Fund 63 Bravo Corporate and Foundation Support 64 Matching Gifts/Golden Note Partners Marquee Circle/Tributes 67 MSO Board of Directors 68 MSO Administration ENCORE Volume 41 No. 2
Connect with us! MSOrchestra @MilwSymphOrch MilwSymphOrch @MilwSymphOrch NOVEMBER 2022 JANUARY 2023 ENCORE
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2 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
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MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 3
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MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, led by Music Director Ken-David Masur, is among the finest orchestras in the nation and the largest cultural institution in Wisconsin. Since its inception in 1959, the MSO has found innovative ways to give music a home in the region, develop music appreciation and talent among area youth, and raise the national reputation of Milwaukee. The MSO’s full-time professional musicians perform over 135 classics, pops, family, education, and community concerts each season in venues throughout the state. A pioneer among American orchestras, the MSO has performed world and American premieres of works by John Adams, Roberto Sierra, Phillip Glass, Geoffrey Gordon, Marc Neikrug, and Matthias Pintscher, as well as garnered national recognition as the first American orchestra to offer live recordings on iTunes. Now in its 51st season, the orchestra’s nationally syndicated radio broadcast series, the longest consecutive-running series of any U.S. orchestra, is heard annually by more than two million listeners on 147 subscriber stations in 38 of the top 100 markets.
In January of 2021, the MSO completed a years-long project to restore and renovate a former movie palace in the heart of downtown Milwaukee. The Bradley Symphony Center officially opened to audiences in October 2021. This project has sparked a renewal on West Wisconsin Avenue and continues to be a catalyst in the community.
The MSO’s standard of excellence extends beyond the concert hall and into the community, reaching more than 40,000 children and their families through its Arts in Community Education (ACE) program, Youth and Teen concerts, Family Series, and Meet the Music pre-concert talks. Celebrating its 33rd year, the nationally-recognized ACE program integrates arts education across all subjects and disciplines, providing opportunities for students when budget cuts may eliminate arts programing. The program provides lesson plans and supporting materials, classroom visits from MSO musician ensembles and artists from local organizations, and an MSO concert tailored to each grade level. This season, more than 5,800 students and 500 teachers and faculty are expected participate in ACE both in person and in a virtual format.
4 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Photo by Jonathan Kirn
2022.23 SEASON
KEN-DAVID MASUR
Music Director
Polly and Bill Van Dyke Music Director Chair
EDO DE WAART
Music Director Laureate
YANIV DINUR Resident Conductor
CHERYL FRAZES HILL
Chorus Director
Margaret Hawkins Chorus Director Chair
CELLOS
Susan Babini, Principal, Dorothea C. Mayer Cello Chair
Nicholas Mariscal, Assistant Principal
Scott Tisdel, Associate Principal Emeritus Madeleine Kabat
Peter Szczepanek Peter J. Thomas Adrien Zitoun
BASSES
Jon McCullough-Benner, Principal, Donald B. Abert Bass Chair
Andrew Raciti, Associate Principal Nash Tomey, Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)
Brittany Conrad
Peter Hatch
Paris Myers
HARP
CONTRABASSOON
Beth W. Giacobassi
HORNS
Matthew Annin, Principal, Krause Family French Horn Chair
Krystof Pipal, Associate Principal Dietrich Hemann, Andy Nunemaker French Horn Chair
Darcy Hamlin Kelsey Williams**
TRUMPETS
Matthew Ernst, Principal, Walter L. Robb Family Trumpet Chair
David Cohen, Associate Principal, Martin J. Krebs Associate Principal Trumpet Chair
Alan Campbell, Fred Fuller Trumpet Chair
TIM
O
THY
J. BENSON Assistant Chorus Director
FIRST VIOLINS
Ilana Setapen, Acting Concertmaster, Charles and Marie Caestecker Concer tmaster Chair
Jeanyi Kim, Acting Associate Concer tmaster (2nd Chair)
Alexander Ayers
Yuka Kadota
Ji-Yeon Lee**
Dylana Leung
Allison Lovera
Lijia Phang
Margot Schwartz
Alexandra Switala**
SECOND VIOLINS
Jennifer Startt, Principal, Andrea and Woodrow Leung Second Violin Chair
Timothy Klabunde, Assistant Principal
John Bian, Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)
Glenn Asch
Lisa Johnson Fuller
Paul Hauer
Hyewon Kim
Shengnan Li*
Laurie Shawger
Mary Terranova
VIOLAS
Rober t Levine, Principal, Richard O. and Judith A. Wagner Family Principal Viola Chair
Samantha Rodriguez, Acting Assistant Principal, Friends of Janet F. Ruggeri Viola Chair
Alejandro Duque, Acting Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)
Elizabeth Breslin
Nathan Hackett
Erin H. Pipal
Helen Reich
Julia Coronelli, Principal, Walter Schroeder Harp Chair
FLUTES
Sonora Slocum, Principal, Margaret and Roy Butter Flute Chair
Heather Zinninger, Assistant Principal Jennifer Bouton Schaub
PICCOLO
Jennifer Bouton Schaub
OBOES
Katherine Young Steele, Principal, Milwaukee Symphony League Oboe Chair
Kevin Pearl, Assistant Principal Margaret Butler
ENGLISH HORN
Margaret Butler, Philip and Beatrice Blank English Horn Chair in memoriam to John Mar tin
CLARINETS
Todd Levy, Principal, Franklyn Esenberg Clarinet Chair
Benjamin Adler, Assistant Principal, Donald and Ruth P. Taylor Assistant Principal Clarinet Chair Taylor Eiffert
E FLAT CLARINET
Benjamin Adler
BASS CLARINET
Taylor Eiffert
BASSOONS
Catherine Van Handel, Principal, Muriel C. and John D. Silbar Family Bassoon Chair
Rudi Heinrich, Assistant Principal Beth W. Giacobassi
TROMBONES
Megumi Kanda, Principal, Marjorie Tiefenthaler Trombone Chair
Kirk Ferguson, Assistant Principal
BASS TROMBONE
John Thevenet, Richard M. Kimball Bass Trombone Chair
TUBA Robyn Black, Principal
TIMPANI Dean Borghesani, Principal Chris Riggs, Assistant Principal
PERCUSSION
Rober t Klieger, Principal Chris Riggs
PIANO
Melitta S. Pick Endowed Piano Chair
PERSONNEL MANAGER
Françoise Moquin, Director of Orchestra Personnel
LIBRARIAN
Paul Beck, Principal Librarian, Anonymous Donor, Principal Librarian Chair
PRODUCTION
Tristan Wallace, Technical Manager & Live Audio Supervisor Paolo Scarabel, Stage Technician & Deck Super visor
* Leave of Absence 2022.23 Season
** Acting member of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra 2022.23 Season
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 5
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KEN-DAVID MASUR, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Hailed as “fearless, bold, and a life-force” (San Diego Union) and “a brilliant and commanding conductor with unmistakable charisma” (Leipzig Volkszeitung), Ken-David is music director of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.
In 2022.23, Masur leads a range of programs with the Milwaukee Symphony, where his programming throughout the season explores the natural world and its relationship to humanity. He also continues the second year of an MSO artistic partnership with pianist Aaron Diehl and leads choral and symphonic works including Mendelssohn’s Elijah and Mahler’s Symphony No. 2. As principal conductor of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, Masur leads concerts throughout the season, including an annual Bach Marathon. Other engagements include subscription weeks with the Nashville and Omaha symphony orchestras, and a return to Poland’s Wroclaw Philharmonic.
In 2021.22, Masur made debuts with the San Francisco Symphony, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, and led performances with the Rochester Philharmonic and the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra. Following the gala opening of the Bradley Symphony Center, highlights of the MSO season included a semi-staged production of Peer Gynt. In the summer of 2022, Masur debuted at the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan, leading three programs with the Festival Orchestra, including members of the Berlin and Vienna philharmonics, and another concert with the Sapporo Symphony. He debuted at Classical Tahoe in three programs that were broadcast on PBS; and led the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Branford Marsalis, and James Taylor at Tanglewood in a celebration of the composer John
Masur has conducted distinguished orchestras around the world, including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, l’Orchestre National de France, the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony, the Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse, the National Philharmonic of Russia, and orchestras throughout the United States, France, Germany, Korea, Japan, and
Previously Masur was associate conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, where he led numerous concerts, at Symphony Hall and at Tanglewood, of new and standard works featuring guest artists such as Renée Fleming, Dawn Upshaw, Emanuel Ax, Garrick Ohlsson, Joshua Bell, Louis Lortie, Kirill Gerstein, Nikolaj Lugansky, and others. For eight years, Masur served as principal guest conductor of the Munich Symphony, and has also served as associate conductor of the San Diego Symphony and as resident conductor of the San Antonio Symphony.
Music education and working with the next generation of young artists are of major importance to Masur. In addition to his work with the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, he has led orchestras and masterclasses at Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Chamber Orchestra, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Peck School of the Arts, New England Conservatory, Boston University, Boston Conservatory, the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra, and at other leading universities and conservatories throughout the world.
Masur is passionate about the growth, encouragement and application of contemporary music and has conducted and commissioned dozens of new works, many of which have premiered at the Chelsea Music Festival, an annual summer music festival in New York City founded and directed by Masur and his wife, pianist Melinda Lee Masur. The Festival seeks to engage audiences with its ground-breaking collaborations between the performing, visual and culinary arts, and has been praised by The New York Times as a “gem of a series.”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 7
Photo by Adam DeTour
EDO DE WAART, MUSIC DIRECTOR LAUREATE
Throughout his long and illustrious career, renowned Dutch has held a multitude of posts with orchestras around the world, including music directorships with Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, the Minnesota Orchestra, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Antwerp Symphony, New Zealand Symphony, and Sydney Symphony Orchestra, and a chief conductorship with De Nederlandse Opera and Santa Fe Opera. Edo de Waart is principal guest conductor of San Diego Symphony, conductor laureate of both Antwerp Symphony Orchestra and Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra and music director laureate of Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.
Edo de Waart kicks off the 2022.23 season by returning to Sydney Symphony Orchestra with three performances in the newly renovated Sydney Opera House. Further engagements include Milwaukee, San Diego, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Antwerp symphony orchestras, and a special recording project of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 and Grieg’s Concerto for Piano with Royal Scottish National
As an opera conductor, Edo de Waart has enjoyed success in a large and varied repertoire in many of the world’s greatest opera houses. He has conducted at Bayreuth, Salzburg Festival, Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, Grand Théâtre de Genève, Opéra Bastille, Santa Fe Opera, and the Metropolitan Opera. With the aim of bringing opera to broader audiences where concert halls prevent full staging, he has, as music director in Milwaukee, Antwerp, and Hong
A renowned orchestral trainer, he has been involved with projects working with talented young players at the Juilliard and Colburn schools and the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara. Edo de Waart’s extensive catalogue encompasses releases for Philips, Virgin, EMI, Telarc, and RCA. Recent recordings include Henderickx’s Symphony No. 1 and Oboe Concerto, Mahler’s Symphony No. 1, and Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius, all with Royal Flemish Philharmonic. Beginning his career as an assistant conductor to Leonard Bernstein at New York Philharmonic, Edo de Waart then returned to Holland where he was appointed assistant conductor to Bernard Haitink at the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Edo de Waart has received a number of awards for his musical achievements, including becoming a Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion and an Honorary Officer in the General Division of the Order of Australia. He is also an honorary fellow of the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts.
8 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Photo by Jesse Willems
YANIV DINUR, RESIDENT CONDUCTOR
Winner of the 2019 Sir Georg Solti Conducting Fellow Award, is the resident conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and music director of the New Bedford Symphony Orchestra. He is lauded for his insightful interpretations and unique ability to connect with concertgoers of all ages and backgrounds, from season subscribers to symphony newcomers.
Dinur conducts more than 50 concerts per season with the Milwaukee Symphony and was named by the Milwaukee as one of the city’s most impressive young leaders currently making a positive difference in Milwaukee.
In New Bedford, he has brought star soloists such as Yefim Bronfman, Pinchas Zukerman, Karen Gomyo, and Vadim Gluzman to play with the orchestra. Under his leadership, the New Bedford Symphony has been nationally recognized for its bold, engaging programming and artistic quality, leading to the League of American Orchestras selecting the orchestra to Dinur’s recent and upcoming guest conducting highlights include subscription debuts with the symphonies of San Diego, Edmonton, Tulsa, Sarasota, Fort Worth, and Orchestra Haydn in Italy. He made his conducting debut at the age of 19 with the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, which led to multiple return engagements. Since then, he has conducted orchestras around the world, including the Israel Philharmonic, Jerusalem Symphony, Houston Symphony, Louisiana Philharmonic, Detroit Symphony, New World Symphony, San Antonio Symphony, Portugal Symphony, Sofia Festival Orchestra/Bulgaria, State Orchestra of St. Petersburg, Torino Philharmonic, and the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa.
An accomplished pianist, Dinur made his concerto debut with the Milwaukee Symphony in 2019, playing and conducting Mozart’s D Minor Concerto. He received critical acclaim for his “fluid, beautifully executed piano passages” and “deeply musical playing” (Milwaukee Journal ).
Born in Jerusalem, Dinur began studying the piano at the age of six with his aunt, Olga Shachar, and later with Prof. Alexander Tamir, Tatiana Alexanderov, Mark Dukelsky, and Edna Golandsky. He studied conducing in Israel with Dr. Evgeny Zirlin and Prof. Mendi Rodan, and holds a Doctorate in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance, where he was a student of Prof. Kenneth Kiesler.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 9
Photo by Erin Kavanaugh
10 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FRANKLY MUSIC SEA SO N No 19 22•23 franklymusic.org Milwaukee Youth Arts Center Frank Almond with Rene Izquierdo & Elina Chekan These concerts are supported in part by a grant from the Milwaukee Arts Board and the Wisconsin Arts Board with funds from the State of Wisconsin. PROUD AFFILIATE DEC 11 7:00pm SUNDAY 2022 | 2023 Season January 29 Requiem by Paula Foley Tillen with Milwaukee Opera Theatre | Plymouth Church April 30 Concert with Kansas City’s William Baker Festival Singers | St. Joseph’s Chapel May 13 Spring Concert | location TBD November 20 Fauré Requiem at the Catedral with the Cathedral Choir of St. John the Evangelist December 3 Christmas Concert with the Stevan Sijacki Choir of St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral December 17 Tidings of Comfort & Joy | St. Marcus Lutheran Church www.chantclaire.org |
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY CHORUS
magnificent Symphony No. 2, known as the “Resurrection” Symphony.
The 150-member volunteer chorus has been praised by reviewers for “technical agility,” “remarkable ensemble cohesion,” and “tremendous clarity.” In addition to performances with the MSO, the chorus has appeared on public television and recorded performances for radio stations throughout the country. The chorus has performed a cappella concerts to sold-out audiences and has made guest appearances with other performing arts groups including Present Music, Milwaukee Ballet, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The chorus has also made appearances at suburban Chicago’s famed Ravinia Festival.
The Margaret Hawkins Chorus Director Chair was funded by a chorus-led campaign in 2006 in honor of the founding choral director, Margaret Hawkins, during the ensemble’s 30th anniversary season.
Comprised of teachers, lawyers, students, doctors, musicians, homemakers, and more, each of its members brings not only musical quality, but a sheer love of music to their task. “We have the best seats in the house,” one member said, a sentiment echoed throughout the membership. Please visit mso.org/chorus for more information on becoming a part of the Milwaukee Symphony Chorus.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 11
Photo by Jonathan Kirn
CHORUS MEMBERS & STAFF
Barbara A. Ahlf
Laura Albright-Wengler
* James B. Anello
u Thomas R. Bagwell
Mary Ann Beatty
Marshall Beck man Maria Cornelia Beilke
* JoAnn Berk
Edward Blumenthal
u Scott Bolens
Becca Bowen
Neil R. Brooks
Michelle Budny Maggie Burk Ellen N. Burmeister
Gabrielle Campbell Gerardo Carcar Elise Cismesia
Ian Clark
Sarah M. Cook
Amanda Coplan Sarah Culhane Colin Destache
Becky Diesler
Rebeca A. Dishaw Megan Kathleen Dixson
Kimberly Duncan Rachel Dutler
u James Edgar Marlene K . Ego
Joe Ehlinger
Hannah Ellison Jay Endres
Amanda Swygard Fairchild
Michael Faust Sarah N. Ferreira
Catherine Fettig Carly Marie Fitzgerald
Robert Friebus
Karen Frink
Maria Fuller
George Galloway
James T. Gallup
Kara Grajkowski Charyl Granatella Virginia D. Grossman
Ashley Gutting Mark R. Hagner Eric W. Hanrehan
Beth Harenda
Madeline Hehemann u Karen Heins Mary Catherine Helgren Kurt Hellermann
Sara E. Herrick
Michelle Hieber t Rae-Myra Hilliard Laura Hochmuth
Amy Hudson Matthew Hunt Stan Husi u Tina Itson
• Christine Jameson Paula J. Jeske
Andrew Johnson John Jorgensen Heidi L. Kastern u Michelle Beschta Klotz
Robert Anton Knier Jill Kortebein
Kaleigh Kozak-Lichtman u Joseph M. Krechel
Harry Krueger
Rick Landin
Jana Larson
Alexandra Lerch-Gaggl
Robert Lochhead Kristine Lorbeske
STAFF
Cheryl Frazes Hill, chorus director
Timothy J. Benson, assistant director
Christina Williams, chorus manager Kayoko Miyazawa, rehearsal pianist Darwin J. Sanders, language/diction coach
Sarah Magid
Grace Majewski
Joy Mast Saige Matson Justin J. Maurer Kathr yn McGinn Kathleen Or tman Miller Megan Miller
Victor Montañez Cruz
• Marjorie Moon Bailey Moorhead Jennifer Mueller Matthew Neu Kristin Nikkel Jason Niles Mary Beth Norton Alice Nuteson Thomas Ohlgren Robert Paddock Molly Pagryzinski Grace Parlier R. Scott Pierce u Jessica E. Pihar t Olivia Pogodzinski Gabriel Poulson
Kaitlin Quigley * Jason Reuschlein James Reynolds Marc Charles Ricard Amanda Robison Carlos Rojo Bridget Sampson James Sampson Darwin J. Sanders John T. Schilling Sarah Schmeiser Rand C. Schmidt u Allison Schnier Bob Schuppel Matthew Seider
Bennett Shebesta u Hannah Sheppard
David Siegwor th Kristen M. Singer Tim Socha u Bruce Soto
Joel P. Spiess
Ashley Sprangers
* Todd Stacey u Donald E. Stettler
Amanda D. Steven Scott Stieg
* Donna Stresing
Ashley Ellen Suresh
Dean-Yar Tigrani Clare Urbansk i Jessica Wagner Barbara Wanless Tess Weink auf Emma Mingesz Weiss Michael Werni Erin Weyers Grant Wheeler Christina Williams Emilie Williams Kathleen Wojcik-May Kevin R. Woller Maureen Woyci
* Jamie M. Yu Stephanie Zimmer
u Section Leader 6 Mentor
• Librarian
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DR. CHERYL FRAZES HILL, CHORUS DIRECTOR
Dr. Cheryl Frazes Hill is now in her sixth season as director of the Milwaukee Symphony Chorus. In addition to her role in Milwaukee, she is the associate conductor of the Chicago Symphony Chorus. Frazes Hill is Professor Emeritus at Roosevelt University’s Chicago College of Performing Arts, where she served for 20 years as director of choral activities. During the 2022.23 season, Frazes Hill will prepare the Milwaukee Symphony Chorus for classical performances of Brahms’s Gesang der Parzen, Schicksalslied, and Academic Festival Overture, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, Holst’s The Planets, and Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony.
In her role as the Chicago Symphony Chorus associate conductor, she has prepared the chorus for Maestros Boulez, Barenboim, Levine, Mehta, Tilson Thomas, Conlon, Alsop, and many others. She most recently prepared the Chicago Symphony Chorus for performances of , conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen. Recordings of Frazes Hill’s chorus preparations on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra label include Beethoven, A tribute to Daniel Barenboim and Chicago Symphony Chorus: A 50th anniversary Celebration.
Under her direction, the Roosevelt University choruses have been featured in prestigious and diverse events, including appearances at national and regional music conferences, and performances with professional orchestras including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Sinfonietta, the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and the Illinois Philharmonic. The Roosevelt Conservatory Chorus received enthusiastic reviews for their American premiere of Jacob Ter Velduis’s Mountaintop. Other recent performances have included the internationally acclaimed production of Defiant Requiem and appearances with The Rolling Stones during a recent United States concert tour.
Frazes Hill received her Doctorate in Conducting and her Master of Music degree from Northwestern University and two undergraduate degrees from the University of Illinois. An accomplished vocalist, she is a featured soloist, nominated for a Grammy Award in the CBS Masterworks release Mozart, Music for Basset Horns. An award-winning conductor/educator, Frazes Hill has received the ACDA Harold Decker Conducting Award, the Commendation of Excellence in Teaching from the Golden Apple Foundation the Illinois Governor’s Award, Roosevelt University’s Presidential Award for Social Justice, the Northwestern University Alumni Merit Award, and the Outstanding Teaching Award from the University of Chicago, among many others.
A published author, Margaret Hillis: Unsung Pioneer is her newly released book, a biography of the famed female conductor, available on Amazon and in bookstores. She is nationally published on topics of her research in music education and choral conducting. Frazes Hill is a frequent guest conductor and guest speaker, most recently featured with conductor Marin Alsop at Ravinia Festival’s Breaking Barriers: Women on the Podium.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 13
C
enter for A rts and P erformance 2022-2023
YESTERDAY AND TODAY:
THE INTERACTIVE BEATLES EXPERIENCE
Friday, November 18, 2022 • 7:30 p.m.
An amazing program of Beatles music determined completely by the audience through request cards filled out prior to the show.
SILVER BELLS AND DIAMONDS
Saturday, December 10, 2022 • 2:30 p.m.
Enjoy great holiday favorites along with hit songs from the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s.
KO-THI DANCE COMPANY
Friday, February 3, 2023 • 7:30 p.m. Ko-Thi Dance Company passionately preserves and performs dance and music rooted in the cultures of the African Diaspora.
ALLIANCE BRASS Friday, March 31, 2023 • 7:30 p.m.
Alliance Brass has emerged as one of the country’s most exciting ensembles.
PIANO CELEBRATIONS SERIES
Celebrate the beauty, power, and majesty of the Steinway grand piano in this series: Barron Ryan Saturday, February 11, 2023 • 2:30 p.m.
Anderson & Roe Piano Duo Sunday, April 16, 2023 • 2:30 p.m.
Center for Arts and Performance | Schwan Concert Hall 8815 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Box Office: 414.443.8802
For more information, tickets, and video samples visit: wlc.edu/guestartistseries
14 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SEASON
FRESH AIR & BEETHOVEN’S EROICA
Friday, November 11, 2022 at 11:15 am
Saturday, November 12, 2022 at 7:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
Ken-David Masur, conductor
Baiba Skride, violin
JEAN SIBELIUS
Night Ride and Sunrise, Opus 55
SEBASTIAN CURRIER
Aether, for violin and orchestra Baiba Skride, violin
INTERMISSION
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55, “Eroica”
I. Allegro con brio
II. Marcia funebre: Adagio assai
III. Scherzo: Allegro vivace
IV. Finale: Allegro molto
The 2022.23 Classics Series is presented by the UNITED PERFORMING ARTS FUND
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours.
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 15
Guest Artist Biographies
BAIBA SKRIDE
Baiba Skride’s natural approach to music‐making has endeared her to many of today’s most important conductors and orchestras worldwide. She performs regularly with orchestras such as the Berliner Philharmoniker, Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Concertgebouworkest, Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Orchestre de Paris, London Symphony Orchestra, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Oslo Philharmonic, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, and NHK Symphony Orchestra.
Highlights of the 2022.23 season include Shostakovich’s Violin Concerto No. 2, which she will perform and record on the Deutsche Grammophon label with Andris Nelsons and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the UK premiere of Victoria Borisova‐Ollas’s violin concerto A Portrait of a Lady by Swan Lake with Cristian Măcelaru and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and Gubaidulina’s “Offertorium” with the NHK Symphony Orchestra. She appears for the first time with the Karajan‐Akademie der Berliner Philharmoniker and Brucknerorchester Linz. In addition, she returns to the Iceland Symphony Orchestra to give the Iceland premiere of Gubaidulina’s Triple Concerto with Harriet Krijgh (cello) and Elsbeth Moser (bajan), to the Dresdner Philharmonie with Dima Slobodeniouk, and other orchestras such as Taipei Symphony Orchestra, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, and the Philharmonia Orchestra.
Skride is an internationally sought‐after chamber musician and commits to the long‐established duo with her sister Lauma Skride. She is one of the founding members of the Skride Quartet. In 2022.23, the Skride Quartet returns to Copenhagen, Riga, and the U.S. She also performs in trio with Lauma Skride and Harriet Krijgh as well as in various chamber music projects.
Skride’s latest album Violin Unlimited was released in May 2022. Her prolific discography includes all Mozart concertos with the Swedish Chamber Orchestra and Bartók with the WDR Sinfonieorchester, both with Eivind Aadland, as well as an American disc featuring Bernstein, Korngold, and Rózsa, and the debut recording of the Skride Quartet, all under the Orfeo label.
Skride was born into a musical Latvian family in Riga and continued her studies from 1995 at the Rostock University of Music and Theatre. In 2001, she won the first prize of the Queen Elisabeth Competition. She plays the Yfrah Neaman Stradivarius kindly on loan by the Neaman family through the Beare’s International Violin Society.
16 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Program notes by J. Mark Baker
Tension, energy, and triumph abound in Beethoven’s history-changing “Eroica” Symphony. In contrast, Sebastian Currier’s delicate and mesmerizing Aether evokes “the air the gods breathe.” Sibelius’s evocative tone poem Night Ride and Sunrise opens the program. Welcome, Baiba Skride!
JEAN SIBELIUS
Born 8 December 1865; Hämeenlinna, Finland Died 20 September 1957; Jarvenpää, Finland
Night Ride and Sunrise, Opus 55
Composed: 1908
First performance: 23 January 1909; St. Petersburg, Russia
Last MSO performance: MSO premiere Instrumentation: 2 flutes; piccolo; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; bass clarinet; 2 bassoons; contrabassoon; 4 horns; 2 trumpets; 3 trombones; tuba; timpani; percussion (bass drum, cymbals, snare drum, suspended cymbals, tambourine, triangle); strings Approximate duration: 16 minutes
Jean Sibelius was born into a Swedish-speaking family in a hamlet in south central Finland. The man who would become the most famous Finn in history did not begin to speak the Finnish language until age eight and acquired complete proficiency in the language only as a young man. His official first name was Johan; as an adolescent, he adopted the gallicized “Jean.” And though he was prolific in many genres – tone poems, choral music and songs, chamber music, solo piano works – his stature rests chiefly on his accomplishment as a composer of symphonies. Sibelius was in his early 40s when he composed Night Ride and Sunrise [Öinen ratsastus ja auringonnousu]. Chronologically, it comes between Symphonies No. 3 and No. 4. The work was completed in 1908, the same year Sibelius developed a serious illness and underwent several operations, both in Helsinki and Berlin, for suspected cancer of the throat. For a few years, he was forced to give up alcohol and cigars. Musicologist Robert Layton suggests that “…the bleak possibilities which the illness opened up may well have served to contribute to the austerity, concentration, and depth of the works which followed in its wake.”
This picturesque tone poem presents itself in three discernable parts. The first is a protracted galloping section in which woodwind and brass solos emerge amid the relentless rhythm of the strings. The middle portion is vintage Sibelius: a hymn-like melody in the strings, surrounded by a kaleidoscope of orchestral colorings. Slowly, the Northern sun begins to rise, as its first exquisite rays emerge in the horns.
Across the years, Sibelius gave various accounts of the inspiration for this music. He told his friend Karl Ekman that his first visit to the Colosseum in Rome in 1901 had prompted it. In his later years, he related to his secretary Santeri Levas a sleigh ride from Helsinki to Kerava, “around the turn of the century,” during which he experienced an extraordinary sunrise. Whatever the case, it is indeed a breath of fresh Nordic air.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 17
SEBASTIAN CURRIER
Born 16 March 1959; Huntingdon, Pennsylvania , for violin and orchestra
2 May 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Last MSO performance: MSO premiere 2 flutes (2nd doubling on piccolo); 2 oboes (2nd doubling on English horn); 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 4 horns; 2 trumpets; 2 trombones; percussion (anvil, bass drum, brake drum, cymbal, glockenspiel, hi-hat, high cymbal, high woodblock, low cymbal, snare drum, tambourine, triangle, vibraphone); harp; piano; celeste; strings Approximate duration: 25 minutes
Educated at the Juilliard School and the Eastman School of Music and the recipient of many prestigious awards, Sebastian Currier has garnered the attention of musicians across the globe. His catalogue includes compositions for solo instruments, voice, chorus and orchestra, and pieces for ensembles, both large and small. His numerous commissions include works for the Berlin Philharmonic and, for violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, Time Machines and Aftersong. He has taught at Princeton and Columbia universities.
Aether, a co-commission of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, was composed for and dedicated to Baiba Skride, who gave its premiere with Andris Nelson and the BSO. Set in four continuous movements, it is a violin concerto in all but name. The composer has offered the following illuminating comments:
For much of the 18th and 19th centuries “aether” was thought to be an invisible substance that pervaded all of universe between celestial bodies. It was the medium through which light waves were thought to travel. The word itself looks back to Greek mythology. It means “pure, fresh air” and was thought to be the air of the upper atmosphere, the air the gods breathed.
With Einstein’s theory of relativity, the concept became outmoded, but it still lingers as a term referring to something remote, mysterious, invisible, and out of reach. Conceptually, Aether, starts with a rather standard multimovement structure of a symphony or a concerto, but in the finished work this form is deconstructed and reconfigured.
There are four primary movements. The first is a sort of Nachtmusik [night music] where instruments from the orchestra play phrases that the violin imitates. In the second movement there’s a continual struggle between lyrical impulses and aggressive outbursts. The third movement is a sustained, lyrical slow movement where the violin soars above the orchestra. The fourth is an energetic, virtuosic finale.
But that’s not actually how the piece unfolds. As the piece begins, we hear very, very quiet, distant, mysterious chords in the strings, with the winds making ephemeral air sounds. It’s vague and atmospheric. It’s the medium in which the four movements are contained; it’s the “aether” that surrounds the firmer, more concrete structures of the four movements. It begins the piece, ends it, and occurs between all the four movements. The movements don’t really conclude but just trail off into oblivion or, as in the fourth movement, are interrupted unexpectedly. They float within this medium of aether. The violin is noticeably absent from these ethereal sections, except the last. Here the violin steps off the solid structure created by the movements and floats into the aether, gradually disappearing into nothingness.
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LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Baptized 17 December 1770; Bonn, Germany Died 26 March 1827; Vienna, Austria
Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55, “Eroica” Composed: 1804
First performance: 7 April 1805; Vienna
Last MSO performance: June 2016; Carlos Kalmar, conductor Instrumentation: 2 flutes; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 3 horns; 2 trumpets; timpani; strings
Approximate duration: 47 minutes
Beethoven spent the summer of 1802 in the village of Heiligenstadt (now part of larger Vienna). It was a musically prolific time for him, but the 31-year-old master was already aware that his hearing was beginning to deteriorate. In October, as he prepared to return to central Vienna, he carefully wrote a document to his two brothers describing his depression, but declaring he had now rejected the idea of suicide. This “Heiligenstadt Testament” is a heartbreaking testimony to the despair that frequently overtook him during this period in his life.
From that low ebb of despondency, Beethoven effected a speedy recovery through hard work, churning out his oratorio Christ on the Mount of Olives in early 1803. Fidelio, his only opera, was written in 1804-05. Between them came the Eroica (“Heroic”) Symphony, an opus Beethoven scholar Joseph Kerman has called “a watershed work, one that marks a turning point in the history of modern music.” Kerman goes on to explain that Beethoven was concerned not only with the musical and technical aspects of composition, but also with conveying his own spiritual journey and growth process. This “symphonic ideal,” states Kerman, “Beethoven perfected at a stroke with his Third Symphony and further celebrated with his Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Ninth. The forcefulness, expanded range, and evident radical intent of these works sets them apart from symphonies in the 18th-century tradition.”
It is well known that Beethoven took Napoleon as his inspiration for the Symphony No. 3 and later was angered and disillusioned when the revolutionary hero turned despot and had himself crowned emperor. The “Bonaparte” Symphony then became the “Sinfonia Eroica.” From our 21stcentury vantage point, it is easy to declare Beethoven the true hero here. The Third Symphony as a whole – and its first two movements in particular – was on a larger scale than any instrumental work the master had yet written; it was many years before he wrote another of such dimensions. Following two strong E-flat major chords, the cellos quietly sing the waltz-like melody that will provide Beethoven with much of the musical material for this movement. Typically, Classical-era symphonies have a central development section shorter than the opening exposition. Beethoven turns this around completely, expanding on his material at great length, taking the listener in unexpected directions. A weighty and protracted funeral march in C minor makes up the second movement. Musicologists have suggested that Beethoven was here influenced by French composers of the revolutionary era, as well as by the operas of Luigi Cherubini (Beethoven’s favorite living composer) and Etienne Mehul. All is not gloomy in this movement, however: Listen for a lyrical interlude in C major that soon turns triumphant. And there’s even a brief fugal section.
The scherzo’s softly scampering staccato strings and jaunty woodwind melodies disperse all funereal thoughts. The bold trio – with fanfares played by three horns – stands in marked contrast. The scurrying then returns, and a short, intriguing coda ends the movement. The ingenious Finale is a set of variations based on a theme Beethoven had used in his ballet The Creatures of Prometheus and in the 15 Variations, Opus 35 (“Eroica Variations”) for piano. The styles range from solemn to humorous and make use of both the major and minor modes. Listen for everything from imitative counterpoint to a swaying dance, from warlike passages to an ample hymn tune. In the splendid coda, jubilant salvos from the three horns bring this history-changing work to its “heroic” conclusion.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 19
CLASSICAL PROGRESSIONS SERIES
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CLASSICAL PROGRESSIONS SPONSOR JoAnne & Don Krause Scan for more info on these performances
Canadian Brass Christmas December 11, 2022 at 2pm
Milwaukee Musaik March 19, 2023 at 2pm
Frank Almond & Emi Ferguson March 11, 2023 at 7pm
Ana Vidovic in Partnership with the Milwaukee Classical Guitar Society February 11, 2023 at 7pm
RAVEL & CHOPIN
Friday, November 18, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, November 19, 2022 at 7:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
David Robertson, conductor
Orli Shaham, piano
MAURICE RAVEL
Une barque sur l’océan [A Boat on the Ocean]
FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN
Concerto No. 2 in F minor for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 21
I. Maestoso
II. Larghetto
III. Allegro vivace
Orli Shaham, piano
INTERMISSION
OLIVIER MESSIAEN
L’ascension [The Ascension]
I. Majesty of Christ beseeching His glory of His Father
II. Serene hallelujahs of a soul that longs for heaven
III. Hallelujah on the trumpet, hallelujah on the cymbal
IV. Prayer of Christ ascending to His Father
MAURICE RAVEL
La valse [The Waltz]
The MSO Steinway Piano was made possible through a generous gift from MICHAEL AND JEANNE SCHMITZ. The 2022.23 Classics Series is presented by the UNITED PERFORMING ARTS FUND
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours.
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 21
22 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Mention this playbill & get 10% off or use code: encore22 online Milwaukee books, gifts, tours & more A CURATED MILWAUKEE SHOPPING EXPERIENCE 235 E. Michigan St. historicmilwaukee.org 414-277-7795 Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 10 am to 3 pm Shop Online
Guest Artist Biographies
DAVID ROBERTSON
David Robertson – conductor, artist, composer, thinker, and American musical visionary – occupies the most prominent podiums in opera, orchestral, and new music. He is a champion of contemporary composers and an ingenious and adventurous programmer. Robertson has served in numerous artistic leadership positions, such as chief conductor and artistic director of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, a transformative 13-year tenure as music director of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, with the Orchestre National de Lyon, BBC Symphony Orchestra, and, as protégé of Pierre Boulez, the Ensemble InterContemporain.
He appears with the world’s great orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Vienna Philharmonic, and many major ensembles and festivals on five continents.
Since his 1996 Metropolitan Opera debut, Robertson has conducted a breathtaking range of Met projects, including the 2019.20 season opening premiere production of Porgy and Bess, for which he shared a Grammy Award, Best Opera Recording, in March 2021. In 2022, he conducted the Met Opera revival of the production, in addition to making his Rome Opera debut conducting Janáček’s Káťa Kabanová.
Robertson is a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of France and is the recipient of numerous artistic awards. He serves on the Tianjin Juilliard Advisory Council, complementing his role as Director of Conducting Studies, Distinguished Visiting Faculty of The Juilliard School, New York.
ORLI SHAHAM
A consummate musician recognized for her grace, subtlety, and brilliance, the pianist Orli Shaham is hailed by critics on four continents. The New York Times called her a “brilliant pianist,” The Chicago Tribune referred to her as “a first-rate Mozartean,” and London’s Guardian said Shaham’s playing at the Proms was “perfection.”
Shaham has performed with many of the major orchestras around the world and has appeared in recital internationally, from Carnegie Hall to the Sydney Opera House. She is artistic director of Pacific Symphony’s chamber series Café Ludwig in California since 2007 and artistic director of the interactive children’s concert series, Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard, which she founded in 2010.
Highlights of Shaham’s 2022.23 concert season include performances with the Finnish Radio Symphony, Pacific Symphony, Orlando Philharmonic, and Vancouver Symphony (USA), where she was named VSO’s inaugural artist-in-residence. In 2022, she released volumes 2 and 3 of the complete Mozart piano sonatas. Her Mozart recording project also includes volume 1 of the piano sonatas and piano concertos with St. Louis Symphony, all of which are part of her discography of a dozen titles on Canary Classics, Deutsche Gramophone, Sony, and other labels. Orli Shaham is a co-host and creative for the national radio program From the Top. She is on the piano and chamber music faculty at The Juilliard School and is chair of the board of trustees at Kaufman Music Center in New York.
Orli Shaham has been a Steinway Artist since 2003. Orli Shaham appears by arrangement with Colbert Artists Management, Inc. colbertartists.com
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 23
Program notes by J. Mark Baker
Music mystical, sparkling, and graceful comprises tonight’s concert: Audience favorite Orli Shaham plays Chopin’s second piano concerto, four meditations by Messiaen contemplate religious belief, and two alluring works by Ravel bookend the program.
MAURICE RAVEL
Born 7 March 1875; Ciboure, France Died 28 December 1937; Paris, France
Un barque sur l’océan [A Boat on the Ocean]
Composed: 1904-05 (piano solo); 1906, revised 1926 (orchestration)
First performance: 6 January 1906; Paris, France (piano solo)
Last MSO performance: MSO premiere
Instrumentation: 3 flutes (2nd and 3rd doubling on piccolo); 2 oboes; English horn; 2 clarinets; bass clarinet; 2 bassoons; 4 horns; 2 trumpets; 3 trombones; tuba; timpani; percussion (bass drum, cymbals, glockenspiel, gong, triangle); 2 harps; celeste; strings
Approximate duration: 7 minutes
Un barque sur l’océan [A Boat on the Ocean] began its life as a solo work – and what a pianistic tour-de-force it is! – one of five pieces in a suite entitled Miroirs [Reflections]. Ravel dedicated each of these miniature Impressionistic sound pictures to one of his friends, members of a coterie called Les Apaches [The Hooligans], artistic allies who met for discussion and to share their work. “A Boat on the Ocean” is dedicated to the painter Paul Sordes. A dozen years later, Ravel would orchestrate another of these, Alborado del gracioso [Dawn Song of the Jester]. Both remain favorites in the orchestral repertoire.
As the story goes, in 1905 Ravel accepted an invitation from his friends Alfred Edwards, a journalist, and his Russian wife Misia, a pianist, to join them on a seven-week cruise. It’s quite likely that the feelings and observations he experienced on this sojourn influenced his writing of Un barque sur l’océan. Flowing arpeggios immediately conjure the picture of water, as Ravel employs varied orchestral timbres and techniques to paint the endless space of the ocean. Ravel instructs that the rhythm be souple [flexible], which adds to the swaying effect in both the theme and its accompaniment.
Midway through the piece, the ocean’s serenity is interrupted by a storm, which leads to an immense, dissonant climax. A slower-paced section, set over a G-sharp ostinato, lets us know that the boat has survived the storm. The ending returns us to the peaceful opening where all is quiet. A quietly pealing celesta bids farewell, and Ravel marks the concluding measure s’enteignant [snuffed out].
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FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN
Born 1 March 1810; Zelazowa Wola (near Warsaw), Poland Died 17 October 1849; Paris, France
Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Opus 21 Composed: 1829-30
First performance: 17 March 1830; Warsaw, Poland
Last MSO performance: November 2013; Edo de Waart, conductor; Ingrid Fliter, piano
Instrumentation: 2 flutes; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 2 horns; 2 trumpets; bass trombone; timpani; strings
Approximate duration: 32 minutes
Music appreciation books sometimes refer to Frédéric Chopin as “the poet of the piano.” And while that appellation is not totally misguided, it remains somewhat shallow. It’s true that, with the exception of the two early concertos, a late cello sonata, some 20 songs, and a few miscellaneous pieces, he wrote exclusively for the solo piano. Nevertheless, as his compositional craft reached its zenith, in his early 30s, his innovative harmonies – clashing melodies, enigmatic sonorities, unresolved seventh chords, surprising modulations, forays into modality or chromaticism – had a profound influence on the music of Liszt, Wagner, Fauré, Debussy, Grieg, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninoff, among many others.
Chopin was in his late teens when he penned the F minor concerto. Despite its numbering, it predates the Opus 11 concerto, which was published first. (The same is true of Beethoven’s first two works in the genre.) From its premiere performance, at the National Theatre in Warsaw, the piece was well-received. In the opinion of his compatriots, Chopin was quickly establishing himself as a national composer.
Scholars tell us that Chopin’s Opus 21 owes much of its elegance to the influence of the prolific Austrian composer Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837), one most celebrated pianists of the time. The Maestoso opens with a dotted-rhythm from the orchestra, driving the agitated theme forward toward the piano’s first entrance. Translucent, dazzling passages emphasize the soloist’s role; meanwhile, the orchestra functions to undergird, adding color and texture.
The young composer admitted to friends that his infatuation with Konstancja Gładkowska, a soprano and Chopin’s classmate at the conservatory in Warsaw, served to inspire the delicate, languorous A-flat major Larghetto. Here, one senses the Bel Canto ornamentation of the operatic arias of Vincenzo Bellini, with whom Chopin shared a friendship and mutual admiration. Likewise, the movement seems to presage the eloquent nocturnes he would pen in years to come.
In the final Allegro vivace, the piano takes the lead in presenting the thematic material. Chopin features the mazurka, a dance from his native Poland; there’s also a whiff of the Viennese waltz style. The music is playful and coquettish as it scampers all over the keyboard, taking special advantage of the instrument’s bright, higher timbres. The soloist is afforded ample opportunity for flights of virtuosic fancy as the final F major coda brings this affable work to a sparkling conclusion.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 25
OLIVIER MESSIAEN
Born 10 December 1908; Avignon, France Died 27 April 1992; Paris, France
L’ascension [The Ascension]
Composed: 1933; transcribed for organ in 1934 First performance: 1935; Paris, France
Last MSO performance: October 2016; Yaniv Dinur, conductor Instrumentation: 3 flutes; 2 oboes; English horn; 2 clarinets; bass clarinet; 3 bassoons; 4 horns; 3 trumpets; 3 trombones; tuba; timpani; percussion (bass drum; cymbals; tambourine, triangle); strings
Approximate duration: 27 minutes
Oliver Messiaen holds an important place in music of the 20th century, both as the father of the European avant-garde and as a highly original figure in his own right. He studied at the Paris Conservatoire with Paul Dukas and Marcel Dupré and later taught there (Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen were among his pupils), while also serving as the organist at the Église de la Sainte-Trinité, in the tradition of Franck and Widor. Always religiously devout, many of his works are explorations of Roman Catholic mysticism, but with strong pantheistic overtones. Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time (1940), written in a Silesian Nazi POW camp for the only available instruments – violin, clarinet, cello, piano – is one of the great chamber music works of the 20th century.
Messiaen was in his mid-20s when he composed L’ascension, which he described as “four symphonic meditations for orchestra.” Each movement includes a quotation that identifies the inspiration for its descriptive title:
I. Majesty of Christ beseeching His glory of His Father: “Father, the hour is come! Glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son may also glorify Thee.” (John 17:1)
“Very slow and magisterial,” the composer instructs. The principal trumpet acts as the voice of Christ, its plaintive, ascending motifs seeming to call out to heaven, supported by highly chromatic harmony from the winds and brass. Silence plays a key role here, as each of the entreaties breaks off into a moment of reflection.
II. Serene hallelujahs of a soul that longs for heaven: “We beseech Thee, Almighty God, that we may in mind dwell in Heaven.” (Ascension Mass)
At the outset, the stark beauty of plainchant is suggested by unison winds, playing a winding melody. The sylvan voice of the English horn then converses with a chorus of birdsong (a characteristic of much of Messiaen’s music), supported by string harmonics. Textures vary, but thicken as the movement continues, eventually ending in jubilation.
III. Hallelujah on the trumpet, hallelujah on the cymbal: “The Lord is gone up with the sound of a trumpet. O clap your hands all ye people; shout unto God with the voice of triumph.” (Psalm 47: 1, 5)
Sprightly trumpet fanfares open the third meditation, a dazzling scherzo marked “Vif et joyeux” [lively and cheerful]. Toward the end, there’s an exuberant, dancing fugato.
IV. Prayer of Christ ascending to His Father: “I have manifested Thy name unto men… And now I am no more in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to Thee.” (John 17: 6, 11) Scored entirely for divided strings, “extremely slow and solemn,” the final meditation perfectly depicts its title. The music – celestial, mysterious, luminous – ascends heavenward. Having completed the orchestral version, Messiaen – virtuoso organist that he was – felt the need to transcribe L’ascension for his instrument. The work is more often heard in that version,
26 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
in which the composer chose to write a more idiomatic keyboard toccata in place of the orchestral scherzo. Its title is Transports de joie d’une âme devant la gloire du Christ qui est la sienne [Transports of joy of a soul before the glory of Christ which is his].
MAURICE RAVEL
Born 7 March 1875; Ciboure, France Died 28 December 1937; Paris, France
La valse [The Waltz] Composed: 1919-20
First performance: 12 December 1920; Paris, France
Last MSO performance: January 2018; Fabien Gabel, conductor
Instrumentation: 3 flutes (3rd doubling on piccolo); 3 oboes (3rd doubling on English horn); 2 clarinets; bass clarinet; 2 bassoons; contrabassoon; 4 horns; 3 trumpets; 3 trombones; tuba; timpani; percussion (antique cymbals, bass drum, castanets, cymbals, glockenspiel, snare drum, tam tam, tambourine, triangle); 2 harps; strings
Approximate duration: 12 minutes
La valse is Ravel’s masterfully evocative homage to the Viennese waltz. He provided a brief programmatic description: Swirling clouds afford glimpses, through rifts, of waltzing couples. The clouds scatter little by little; one can distinguish an immense hall with a whirling crowd. The scene grows progressively brighter. The sight of chandeliers bursts forth at the fortissimo. An imperial court, about 1855.
Composed at the behest of Sergei Diaghilev, La valse was not what the Ballet Russe impresario expected. “This is not a ballet,” he opined. “It is a painting of a ballet.” Diaghilev refused to stage it, and he and Ravel never worked together again. Undeterred, the French master published the opus as a “choreographic poem for orchestra.” It was finally presented as a ballet in 1926 when Ida Rubinstein’s troupe presented it in Antwerp. Two years later, they introduced it to Paris, and gave the premiere of Bolero two days later.
In a 1937 tribute to Ravel, following the composer’s death, the French musicologist Paul Landormy said of La valse: “[It is] the most unexpected of the compositions of Ravel, revealing to us heretofore unexpected depths of Romanticism, power, vigor, and rapture in this musician whose expression is usually limited to the manifestations of an essentially classical genius.”
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 27
DISNEY IN CONCERT
A Dream is a Wish is produced by Symphony Pops Music
Sherilyn Draper – Director and Writer
Ted Ricketts – Musical Director
Presentation licensed by Disney Concerts, © All rights reserved
Friday, November 25, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, November 26, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, November 27, 2022 at 2:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
Yaniv Dinur, conductor
Lisa Livesay, vocalist
Whitney Claire Kaufman, vocalist
Aaron Phillips, vocalist
Andrew Johnson, vocalist
DISNEY MEMORIES OVERTURE
Arranged by Brad Kelley
© 2014 Walt Disney Music Company & Wonderland Music Company, Inc. You Can Fly, You Can Fly, You Can Fly The Second Star to the Right Alice in Wonderland
I’m Late Bella Notte April Showers Valse des Fleurs-Fantasia
SONGS FROM DISNEY’S THE LITTLE MERMAID
Music by Alan Menken / Lyrics by Howard Ashman / Arranged by A. Menken, R. Merkin, T. Pasatieri and T. Ricketts / © 1990 Wonderland Music Co., Inc. Part of Your World Under the Sea Poor Unfortunate Souls Kiss the Girl
“H OW FAR I’LL GO”
Words and Music by Lin-Manuel Miranda / © 2016 Walt Disney Music Company
DISNEY’S ALADDIN ORCHESTRAL SUITE
Music by Alan Menken / Lyrics by Howard Ashman and Tim Rice / Arranged by Danny Troob and Bruce Healey © 1992 Wonderland Music Co., Inc. & Walt Disney Music Company
Arabian Nights Friend Like Me A Whole New World
“INTO THE UNKNOWN”
Words and Music by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez Orchestrations by Dave Metzger / © 2019 Wonderland Music Company, Inc.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 29
DISNEY IN CONCERT CONTINUED
Nants Ingonyama Circle of Life
I Just Can’t Wait to Be King Can You Feel the Love Tonight
INTERMISSION
DISNEY’S BEAUTY AND THE BEAST ORCHESTRAL SUITE
Music by Alan Menken / Lyrics by Howard Ashman / Arranged by Danny Troob and Franck van der Heijden / Edited by Ted Ricketts © 1992 Wonderland Music Co., Inc. (BMI) & Walt Disney Music Company (ASCAP)
Belle Be Our Guest Beauty and the Beast
A DREAM IS A WISH MEDLEY (SONGS FROM DISNEY’S CINDERELLA )
Music and Lyrics by Mack David, Al Hoffman, and Jerry Livingston Arranged by Joe Dubin, Sid Fine, and Ted Ricketts / © 1948 Walt Disney Music Company (ASCAP)
Cinderella A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo (The Magic Song) So This Is Love (The Cinderella Waltz)
“GO THE DISTANCE”
Music by Alan Menken / Lyrics by David Zippel / Arranged by Brad Kelley © 1997 Wonderland Music Co., Inc. (BMI) & Walt Disney Music Company (ASCAP)
BATTLE WITH THE FORCES OF EVIL
(adapted from a theme by Tchaikovsky) George Bruns / © 1952 Wonderland Music Company, Inc.
FROZEN MEDLEY
Words and Music by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez Underscore composed by Christopher Best / Orchestrations by Dave Metzger / Adapted by Ted Ricketts © 2013 Wonderland Music Company, Inc.
The Great Thaw Elsa and Anna Do You Want to Build a Snowman
For the First Time in Forever
In Summer Let it Go
This weekend’s media sponsor is WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO.
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours. This program is subject to change.
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
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Guest Artist Biographies
LISA LIVESAY
Lisa Livesay is thrilled to travel the world with Disney in Concert, singing the beloved music of her childhood! Career highlights include playing Glinda in Wicked on Broadway and appearing in the film Monday Nights at 7 with Oscar winner Edward James Olmos. She is featured in audiobook musicals such as Puss in Boots and Spin!, for which she won Audie awards. Livesay resides in Los Angeles, where she contributes to soundtracks for film and TV. In her spare time, Livesay is earning her degree in interdisciplinary arts and sciences at the City College of New York. Boundless love and gratitude to her biggest fans - her family.
WHITNEY CLAIRE KAUFMAN
Whitney Claire Kaufman recently completed two years with the North American Tour of the Broadway smash-hit Mamma Mia! (Ensemble, Understudy for Sophie and Lisa). Her performance as Sophie garnered rave reviews from the Boston Globe. Kaufman has performed as guest soloist with the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra and the Pacific Symphony Orchestra, guest soloist with the Florida Orchestra, and has appeared in Cabaret (Sally Bowles), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, (Peaseblossom), Marisol (June), The Los Angeles Theatre Ensembles’s production of Wounded, as well as many other theatrical productions. TV credits include General Hospital and the hit ABC series Modern Family. As both a singer and voice-over performer in film and television, Kaufman has been heard in productions That Championship Season, The Secret of NiMH 2, and two MGM animated series: All She recently recorded songs written by Oscar-winning composer Dimitri Tiomkin. Kaufman graduated with honors from Chapman University with a BFA in theater performance. Her favorite Disney movie is The Little Mermaid, with Cinderella as a close second.
AARON PHILLIPS
Aaron Phillips is very excited to be part of this wonderful production. Phillips is an Ovation Award nominated actor/singer, proud member of Actor’s Equity, and can frequently be seen on film and TV. Past theatre credits include: Jekyll and Hyde (John Utterson), Batboy: The Musical (Batboy/Edgar), Songs for a New World, and Les Misérables (Foreman/Combeferre). Opera credits include: La bohème with the Greensboro Opera Company, conducted by Valery Ryvkin, Pirates of Penzance (Pirate King) and Lakme (Frederic) by Delibes. Phillips recently appeared in a staged reading of The Bone Wars (O’Conner) with the prestigious New York playwright group, Youngbloods. You may have seen Phillips as Carl, half of the duo that is the face of Lipton Iced Tea. He is also an accomplished voice-over talent and can be heard in video games World of Warcraft, Grand Theft Auto V, Red Dead Redemption, and Lord of the Rings. He is a man of many voices for commercials, cartoons, and music sessions everywhere. Phillips has been a Disney fan his entire life and is happy to help bring this music to fans of all ages.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 31
Guest Artist Biographies
ANDREW JOHNSON
Andrew Johnson is a Disney kid at heart and is humbled to share the music and magic from the stage! He has toured all over the United States, Europe, and Asia as a lead vocalist and dancer, and his performances have been broadcast on national and international television. Johnson has performed on FOX’s The X-Factor, The and the MTV Video Music Awards. He has sung background for artists such as Demi Lovato, Fifth Harmony, LeAnn Rimes, and Florence and the Machine. His theatrical credits Frozen-Live at the Hyperion (Prince Hans), Rent (Benny), Five (Four-Eyed Moe), and Joseph and the Amazing (Joseph). Johnson has shared the stage with singers/actresses Shirley Jones and Bernadette Peters and has performed live duets with recording artists Patti LaBelle, Erykah Badu, and singer/actress Jodi Benson (the original voice ). He is a singer/songwriter and recording artist, and his music is available worldwide on iTunes under his artist name DRWMCHL. He would like to thank his family for their love and support and Ted Ricketts for the opportunity of being part of this show.
32 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
* Each company gets 4 complimentary tickets and the opportunity to purchase up to 4 discounted tickets. For more information, email Institutional Giving Manager, Maggie Seer at seerm@mso.org or call 414.226.7832. MSO Corporate Subscription PREVIEW EVENT SAVE THE DATE! Join us* for the MSO’s Holiday Pops concert and Preview Event on Friday, December 9 at 7:30 PM to hear the MSO perform in the new Allen-Bradley Hall and learn about our new Corporate Subscription opportunities.
Steve Hall © Hall + Merrick Photographers
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MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 33
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MADISON MEDICAL AFFILIATES
Amy DeGueme, M.D. Elaine Drobny, M.D. Antoni Gofron, M.D. Usonwanne Ibekwe, M.D. Brent Jones, M.D. Kawaljeet Kaur, M.D.
ENDOCRINOLOGY
Abdullah Fayyad, M.D. Vijay Khiani, M.D. Gene Kligman, M.D. Venelin Kounev, M.D. Srihari Ramanujam, M.D. Chad Stepke, M.D.
GASTROENTEROLOGY
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PULMONARY
Rachel Oosterbaan, M.D. John Sanidas, M.D. Abraham Varghese, M.D. James Volberding, M.D.
M.D.
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M.D.
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Baugrud, M.D. John Betz, M.D. Matthew Connolly, M.D. Kevin DiNapoli, M.D. Deidre Faust,
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Lent, M.D. Kristin Schroederus, M.D. ALLERGY & IMMUNOLOGY
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Amanda
Lisa
36 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Including classic hits such as “Ain’t That a Kick in the Head,” “Everybody Loves Somebody,” “That’s Amore” and more! January 20 – March 19, 2023
By Armen Pandola | Directed by Jonathan Hetler
January 10 – February 12, 2023 Hilarious slapstick, mistaken identities, and a town full of well-meaning (but mostly ridiculous) characters lead to sheer
delight on the
By William Shakespeare | Directed by Laura Braza
theatrical
Quadracci
Powerhouse stage.
Presented by The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
Corporate Sponsor Milwaukee Repertory Theater THIS WINTER AT MILWAUKEE REP #WeRepMilwaukee www.MilwaukeeRep.com | 414-224-9490
Presented by Kristine & Wayne Lueders
HOLIDAY POPS
Thursday, December 8, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Friday, December 9, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, December 10, 2022 at 2:30 pm
Saturday, December 10, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, December 11, 2022 at 2:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
Jeff Tyzik, conductor Milwaukee Symphony Chorus Cheryl Frazes Hill, director
EMIL WALDTEUFEL/arr. Jeff Tyzik
The Skater’s Overture
LEROY ANDERSON Sleigh Ride
TRADITIONAL/arr. Jeff Tyzik Wexford Carol / Christmas Eve Reel
PIOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY/arr. Jeff Tyzik Nutcracker Mini Jazz Suite Dance of the Sugar Plums Danse Arabian Swing Dance á la Russe
TRADITIONAL/arr. Arthur Harris We Wish You a Merry Christmas Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
TRADITIONAL/arr. Dan Forrest The First Noël Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
ADOLPHE ADAM/arr. Gary Fry
O Holy Night Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 37
Continued on page 38
HOLIDAY POPS CONTINUED
JOHN PHILIP SOUSA & JAMES S. PIERPONT/arr. Robert W. Smith Jingle Bells Forever
INTERMISSION
JEFF TYZIK Carol of the Kings
TRADITIONAL/arr. Jeff Tyzik Mis zeh Hidlik
GARY FRY A World of Joy Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
DÉ LIGOURI/arr. Jeff Tyzik Tu scendi dalle stelle
IRVING BERLIN/arr. Robert Russell Bennett White Christmas
PIOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY
“Waltz of the Flowers” from The Nutcracker, Opus 71a
TRADITIONAL/arr. Roger Wilhelm Silent Night Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL/arr. Jeff Tyzik
“Hallelujah” from Messiah Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
This weekend’s media sponsor is WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO.
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours. All programs are subject to change. Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
38 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Guest Artist Biographies
Grammy Award winner Jeff Tyzik is one of America’s most innovative and sought after pops conductors. Tyzik is recognized for his brilliant arrangements, original programming and engaging rapport with audiences of all ages. Tyzik holds The Dot and Paul Mason Principal Pops Conductor’s Podium at the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and also serves as principal pops conductor of the Seattle Symphony, the Detroit Symphony, the Oregon Symphony, and The Florida Orchestra. This season, Tyzik will celebrate his 23rd season as principal pops conductor of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra.
Frequently invited as a guest conductor, Tyzik has appeared with the Boston Pops, Cincinnati Pops, Milwaukee Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony, Toronto Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. In May 2007, the Harmonia Mundi label released his recording of works by Gershwin with pianist Jon Nakamatsu and the RPO, which stayed in the Top 10 on the Billboard classical chart for over three months. Alex Ross of called it “one of the snappiest Gershwin discs in years”.
Committed to performing music of all genres, Tyzik has collaborated with such diverse artists as Megan Hilty, Chris Botti, Matthew Morrison, Wynonna Judd, Tony Bennett, Art Garfunkel, Dawn Upshaw, Marilyn Horne, Arturo Sandoval, The Chieftains, Mark O’Connor, Doc Severinsen, and John Pizzarelli. He has created numerous original programs that include the greatest music from jazz and classical to Motown, Broadway, film, dance, Latin, and swing. Tyzik holds Bachelor of Music and Master of Music
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 39
40 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 1840 N. Prospect Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
HANDEL’S MESSIAH
Friday, December 16, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, December 17, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Sunday, December 18, 2022 at 2:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY
HALL
Ken-David Masur, conductor
Milwaukee Symphony Chorus
Cheryl Frazes Hill, director
PART
I
1. Sinfonia (Overture) 2. Arioso (Tenor): Comfort ye my people 3. Aria (Tenor): Ev’ry valley shall be exalted 4. Chorus: And the glory of the Lord 5. Recitative (Baritone): Thus saith the Lord 6. Aria (Mezzo): But who may abide the day of his coming? 7. Chorus: And he shall purify
Recitative (Mezzo): Behold, a virgin shall conceive 8. Air and Chorus (Mezzo): O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion 9. Arioso (Baritone): For behold, darkness shall cover the earth 10. Air (Baritone): The people that walked in darkness 11. Chorus: For unto us a child is born 12. Pifa (Pastoral Symphony)
Recitative (Soprano): There were shepherds abiding in the field 13. Arioso (Soprano): And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them
Recitative (Soprano): And the angel said unto them 14. Arioso (Soprano): And suddenly there was with the angel 15. Chorus: Glory to God 16. Air (Soprano): Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion 18. Chorus: His yoke is easy, and his burthen is light
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 41
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL Messiah, HWV 56
INTERMISSION
42 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Stories with heart. (And lungs.) TICKETS NOW ON SALE florentineopera.org
HANDEL’S MESSIAH continued
PART II
19. Chorus: Behold the Lamb of God 20. Air (Mezzo): He was despised 21. Chorus: Surely he hath borne our griefs 22. Chorus: And with his stripes we are healed 23. Chorus: All we like sheep have gone astray 24. Arioso ( Tenor): All they that see him laugh him to scorn 25. Chorus: He trusted in God 26. Recitative (Tenor): Thy rebuke hath broken his heart 27. Arioso ( Tenor): Behold, and see if there be any sorrow 28. Recitative (Soprano): He was cut off out of the land of the living 29. Air (Soprano): But thou didst not leave his soul in hell 30. Chorus: Lift up your heads, O ye gates 33. Chorus: The Lord gave the word 34a. Air (Soprano): How beautiful are the feet of him 35a. Chorus: Their sound is gone out 36. Air (Baritone): Why do the nations so furiously rage together? 37. Chorus: Let us break their bonds asunder Recitative (Tenor): He that dwelleth in heaven 38. Air (Tenor): Thou shalt break them 39. Chorus: Hallelujah
PART
III
40. Air (Soprano): I know that my Redeemer liveth 41. Chorus: Since by man came death 42. Recitative (Baritone): Behold, I tell you a mystery 43. Air (Baritone): The trumpet shall sound 47. Chorus: Wor thy is the Lamb that was slain
This weekend’s media sponsor is WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours and 30 minutes. Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 43
44 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA DEVOTING TALENT & CREATIVITY TO BUILDING PLACES THAT TRANSFORM LIFE AND WORK . WWW.VJSCS.COM PROUD SUPPORTER OF THE ARTS. SAINT JOHN’S ON THE LAKE | MILWAUKEE, WI FEBRUARY 5, 12, 19, 2023 A Tradition of Distinction! SINCE 1953 THE SYMPHONY SERIES August 1-19, 2023 Door Community Auditorium Fish Creek, WI www.musicfestival.com | 920.854.4060 FebruaryFest 2 PM A CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES The Kress Pavilion Egg Harbor, WI $75 Series Subscription $30 Single Tickets $10 Students/Children Christoph Ptack, President & CEO
Program notes by J. Mark Baker
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL
Born 23 February 1685; Halle, Germany Died 14 April 1759; London, England
Messiah, HWV 56
Composed: 1741
First performance: 13 April 1742; Dublin, Ireland
Last MSO performance: December 2021; Ken-David Masur, conductor; Alisa Jordheim, soprano; Ginger Costa-Jackson, mezzo soprano; David Portillo, tenor; Ethan Vincent, baritone
Instrumentation: 2 oboes; bassoon; 2 trumpets; timpani; harpsicord; organ; strings
Approximate duration: 2 hours and 5 minutes
In a manic white heat, the 56-year-old Handel composed his beloved, best-known work in just was written between 22 August and 14 September 1741. Despite the appropriation and adaptation of music written earlier – most notably, several Italian love duets from July 1741 – the feat remains a miracle in the history of Western music. The master himself led the Dublin premiere the following spring. The proceeds went to several worthy causes, including the Charitable Musical Society for the Relief of Imprisoned Debtors. To this very day, Messiah continues to impact the social and cultural fabric of society.
When he penned Messiah, Handel had been a part of London musical life for some 30 years, mainly as a composer of Italian opera. With the growth of the middle class, that genre started to fall into disfavor, a clear sign of opposition to the nobility, its principal patrons. Handel – a German in England creating stage works in Italian – then began also to write oratorios in English. Success came, though not immediately, with Messiah.
Among Handel’s oratorios, Messiah is an anomaly: 1) There are no characters such as one finds in, say, Sampson or Saul or Solomon; 2) There is no plot in the ordinary sense; in other words, Messiah is not a sequence of scenes from the life of Jesus linked together to form a dramatic whole; 3) The words are taken entirely from the Bible, a characteristic shared only with Israel in Egypt (1739).
The Scripture selections, compiled by art collector and music patron Charles Jennens (17001773), are divided into three parts.
· Part I: The coming of the Messiah is foretold by the prophets and brought to fruition in the birth of Jesus.
· Part II: Humanity is redeemed by Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross.
· Part III: The power of death is destroyed by Christ’s mighty resurrection.
In Messiah, Handel uniquely fuses several musical traditions: Italian opera, the English anthem, and the German passion. He gleans the fruits of a lifetime’s musical experience, writing masterfully for the soloists and orchestra. But arguably it is the astonishing power and variety of the choruses that raise the work to a higher level altogether. A man of the theatre, Handel knew how to lay hold on the dramatic potential of a given text, cogently pointing up its significance.
280 years since its first performance, Messiah remains one of the greatest oratorios of all time, an icon in the history of European music. Its ability to speak to millions of people – regardless of culture or creed – remains forever undiminished.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 45
46 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Tuesday, December 20, 2022 at 7:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
Yaniv Dinur, conductor
The Texas Tenors
Marcus Collins
JC Fisher John Hagen
The 3-Bottle Band
Josh Hanlon, piano
Larry Hanson, guitars
Peter Generous, drums
THE TEXAS TENORS
DEEP IN THE HEART OF
CHRISTMAS
Billboard #1 Recording Artists and 3-time Emmy Award Winners
THE TEXAS TENORS in
DEEP IN THE HEART OF CHRISTMAS featuring THE 3-BOTTLE BAND
PROGRAM TO BE ANNOUNCED FROM STAGE
The MSO Steinway Piano was made possible through a generous gift from MICHAEL AND JEANNE SCHMITZ
The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours. All programs are subject to change. Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 47
Guest Artist Biographies
MARCUS COLLINS “The Contemporary Tenor”
Marcus Collins was born in a small town and began to sing at the age of four. He first learned how to sing by emulating his favorite radio artists like Garth Brooks and George Michael before training classically in college. Along with numerous talent shows, fairs, and cruise ships, Collins has also performed in New York City with the cast of Hairspray, Off-Broadway’s Altar Boyz as Matthew, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, and as Jinx in Forever Plaid
Beyond music, he has worked extensively as an actor with appearances in over 100 episodes of network television, 25 films, and numerous commercials including P.S. I Love You, Across the Universe, 30 Rock, Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles, Sex and the City, recurring roles on One Life to Live and As the World Turns, and the lead character in the video game Alone in the Dark Collins’s is proud to bring a contemporary element to The Texas Tenors and would like to thank everyone who voted for the group, America’s Got Talent, and his family for their love and support. Marcus Collins’s website is MarcusCollins.us.
JOHN HAGEN “The Tenor”
John Hagen has been described as “astonishing ... a superb tenor of deep musicality,” making his Lincoln Center debut in New York City in Teatro Grattacielo’s mounting of Mascagni’s Guglielmo Ratcliff. Hagen created three tenor roles in the world premiere of The Lost Dauphane for Pamiro Opera airing on PBS.
Hagen has performed a vast array of operatic roles ranging from Alfredo in La traviata to the title role in Otello for Cleveland Opera on tour. His favorite Broadway roles include Billy Bigelow in Carousel and Che in Evita. Hagen has received many awards and accolades throughout his career including finalist in the New Jersey Opera Association of Verismo Opera competition held at Carnegie Hall, Metropolitan Opera Auditions Regional Finalist, and winner of numerous competitions mounted by the National Association of Teachers of Singing.
Hagen is highly regarded for his performances of the Verdi Requiem and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, performing these works with more than a dozen symphonies including the Austin, Corpus Christi, Omaha, Nebraska, and Cedar Rapids symphonies. Hagen has taught voice and vocal pedagogy at Wartburg College and at his alma mater, the University of Northern Iowa.
48 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Guest Artist Biographies
JC FISHER “The Romantic Tenor”
JC Fisher has entertained audiences around the world for the past 15 years. In high school, he had a passion for sports and enjoyed singing in church. He discovered a deeper love of singing at Wichita State University, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in music.
Fisher performed various roles, including Rodolfo in La bohème, Tamino in The Magic Flute, Ernesto in Don Pasquale, Henrick in A Little Night Music, and even Miss America’s duet partner at the 1997 Miss Kansas Pageant.
After college, Fisher traveled to Lucca, Italy, where he sang in the Puccini Festival under the direction of acclaimed Italian maestro Lorenzo Malfatti. He then created a home base in Katy, Texas, before sailing the high seas aboard over 75 cruise ships worldwide with his one-man show. This allowed JC to create a program with many different genres of music and world-class arrangements, which eventually led to his idea of forming The Texas Tenors with his two best friends. His most memorable performance though turned out to be from college, where he found the young woman who would become his wife. Jennifer Vannatta, Miss Kansas 1998, married Fisher in 2004. They have three children: Jackson, Jenson, and Jennings.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 49
UPROOTED CUBAN IN WISCONSIN A new podcast from WPR Reports wpr.org/uprooted
50 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA WWW.FEERICKFUNERALHOME.COM 2025 East Capitol Drive • Shorewood, WI 53211 Telephone: 414.962.8383 Life is a Symphony
SING-A-LONG-A SOUND OF MUSIC
Wednesday, December 21, 2022 at 7:30 pm ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
The evening begins with your host leading a vocal warm-up, judging the fancy dress competition, and teaching you how to use your items in your free interactive props bag.
The audience then takes over as the stars of the show and almost anything can happen as you sit back, relax, and sing along to the film.
The length of this concert is approximately 3 hours and 30 minutes. All programs are subject to change.
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 51
The Cathedral of Saint John the Evangelist
Cathedral churches have
to
a significant role historically in supporting the arts.
part of this noble tradition at Saint John’s. Please join us!
❖ T e n e b r a e S u n d a y , A p r i l 2 , 2 0 2 3 ❖ 5:15PM
Featuring the Cathedral Choir singing the music of Allegri, Anerio, Farrant, Lassus, and Victoria in a stunning choral commemoration of Holy Week, this service is free and open to the public. There will be a freewill offering.
❖
Friday, April 28, 2023 ❖ 8:00PM
Join the Cathedral Choir and Cathedral Women’s Choir for our annual paraliturgical evening of choral organ music celebrating the Fine Arts at the Cathedral. Please contact the Cathedral for tickets.
Wednesday from March through December, for the most part, we have 30 minute concerts from 12:15PM 12:45PM These programs are free and feature some of the area’s finest musicians. Please join the Cathedral Choir for the 11:00AM Mass most Sundays from mid-September through Corpus Christi as well as major solemnities such as Christmas and Holy Week. Please join us for Mass!
812 N Jackson St ❖ Milwaukee WI 53202 ❖ (414) 276-9814 ❖ www.stjohncathedral.org
52 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
played
We are proud
be
L a t i n o A r t s S t r i n g P r o g r a m S p r i n g C o n c e r t a t t h e C a t h e d r a l S u n d a y , M a y 7 , 2 0 2 3 ❖ 4:00PM ❖ A l l e l u i a ! W i t n e s s e s t o t h e R e s u r r e c t i o n ( G r a n d M u s i c )
❖ D a v i d J o n i e s , O r g a n i s t a n d R o s s
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C o n c e r t T h u r s d a y
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W e d n e s d a y C o n c e r t S e r i e s / C a t h e d r a l C h o i r M a s s e s
❖ To generate sales for your business, advertise in any of our premium programs. Call Scott for more information: Scott Howland Sales & Marketing Director 414.469.7779 scott.encore@att.net • Milwaukee Repertory Theater • Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra • Florentine Opera Company • Milwaukee Ballet • Broadway at the Marcus Center • Skylight Music Theatre • Sharon Lynne Wilson Center THIS PROGRAM PROVIDED BY ENCORE
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Every
History
Let’s start at the very beginning, a very good place to start… Allegedly the first ever sing-a-long happened at an old people’s home in Inverness. The nurses wanted to involve the old people in an interactive group therapy and so screened Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and gave out song sheets so that everyone could sing-a-long. The idea was then developed for the Gay and Lesbian Film Festival in London in 1999 before opening at the Prince Charles Cinema in August of that year. Initially, there was an eight-show run, but the show sold out very quickly, picking up amazing TV coverage and amassing a stack of newspaper stories. The regular shows of Sing-a-long-a Sound of Music then began at the Prince Charles Cinema and the show has been running there ever since.
Sing-a-long-a Sound of Music has been on tour around the UK since January 2000 visiting almost every major venue in the country. In 2001 over 7,000 dressed up to an outdoors singa-long-a at the famous Kenwood House in London. The show has also taken the world by storm including Amsterdam, Dublin, New York, St. Louis, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Toronto, Sydney, Melbourne, Auckland, Oslo, Stockholm and many other major cities around the globe. A highlight has been a series of sell-out performances to 18,000 people each time at the famous Hollywood Bowl.
In 2001, Elton John and 40 of his friends dressed up as nuns to “sing-a-long with Julie,” hiring the show for a private party to celebrate David Furnish’s birthday. After a celebratory lunch at the Ivy, the party of 40 donned habits and tuned their vocal chords to sing-a-long and celebrity faces spotted under their wimples included Elton and David, Lulu, Janet Street Porter, Neil Tennant of The Pet Shop Boys, Hugh Grant, and Joan Collins.
Sing-a-long-a Sound of Music was followed by the first ever live show – Sing-a-long-a Abba, which celebrated its 10th Anniversary with a tour in 2011. It enjoyed a highly successful run at The Whitehall Theatre in London’s West End in 2003 and has played in Toronto, New Zealand, and St. Petersburg, Russia, as well as a sell-out run at the Edinburgh Festival in 2002.
2011 saw the addition of Sing-a-long-a Grease, the film that audiences have been asking for since the very beginning. It has been running in London since May 2011 and will tour the UK from January 2012.
Other Sing-a-long-a shows include Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (launched by Donny Osmond in 2002), The Wizard of Oz, Rocky Horror Picture Show, Hairspray and, in 2004, the second live show, Sing-a-long-a Elvis.
The production
The world-famous Sing-a-long-a format has been delighting audiences since 1999. The important thing about Sing-a-long-a is that it’s completely inclusive – you join in as much or as little as you want. It’s not compulsory to dress up but many people do and it really adds to the fun. There’s a 30-minute pre-film show during which the host leads you through a vocal warm-up, prepares you for special moments throughout the film and judges the fancy dress competition. Everyone receives a free fun pack with special props for the “magic moments” that make the evening go with a bang.
Singalonga Productions
Singalonga Productions is based in London, UK and has been touring the shows since 1999. The productions are managed by a small team, with extensive expertise in cinema and theatre management, and can be seen throughout the UK and the rest of the world. You can follow Singalonga Productions at: singalonga.net • facebook.com/singalongasoundofmusic facebook.com/sin galongagrease • Instagram@singalonga
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 53
54 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 777 North Jefferson Street AltheasFineLingerie.com WHO YOU GONNA CALL?
FILM WITH ORCHESTRA
Friday, December 30, 2022 at 7:30 pm
Saturday, December 31, 2022 at 2:30 pm
Sunday, January 1, 2023 at 2:30 pm
ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL
Yaniv Dinur, conductor
GHOSTBUSTERS (1984) FILM WITH LIVE ORCHESTRA AN IVAN REITMAN FILM MUSIC BY ELMER BERNSTEIN A SCHIRMER THEATRICAL PRODUCTION COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents An IVAN REITMAN Film
A BLACK RHINO/BERNIE BRILLSTEIN Production Starring BILL MURRAY · DAN AYKROYD and SIGOURNEY WEAVER
Also Starring HAROLD RAMIS · RICK MORANIS
Music by ELMER BERNSTEIN Executive Producer BERNIE BRILLSTEIN
Written by DAN AYKROYD and HAROLD RAMIS Produced and Directed by IVAN REITMAN
GHOSTBUSTERS © 1984 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All rights reserved.
Creative Team
Robert Thompson, President & Creative Producer Alyssa Foster, Executive Producer Alex Kosick, Assistant Producer
Peter M. Bernstein, Score Arranger & Consultant Black Ink Presents, Technical Consulting
Marc Mann of Music Production Services, Inc., Synth Designer & Score Consultant Jeff Sugg of Handmade Media, LLC, Production Designer Ronen Shai, Production Editor & Senior Multimedia Editor
Schirmer Theatrical is a concert production company specializing in the creation of symphonic experiences, film with live orchestra concerts, and theatrical productions.
This weekend’s media sponsor is WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO. The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours and 25 minutes. Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available on iTunes and at mso.org. MSO Binaural recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 55
Artist Biography
ELMER BERNSTEIN
In the history of film music, Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004) is among the iconic and legendary. With a career that spanned an unparalleled five decades, he composed more than 150 original movie scores and nearly 80 for television. Bernstein created some of the most recognizable and memorable themes in Hollywood history and in doing so redefined how movies were scored. His score for The Man With the Golden Arm brought intense, aggressive jazz to the big screen; the rousing Western anthem of The Magnificent Seven set the standard for western scores for years to come; the lyrical and quietly moving music
To Kill a Mockingbird is simply timeless; and the jaunty, thumb-nosing march of The Great Escape is still heard 50 years later.
In the ’70s and ’80s, his comedy scores for National Lampoon’s Animal House and Ghostbusters changed the way comedy films have been scored ever since. Working for everyone from Cecil B. DeMille (The Ten Commandments) to Martin Scorsese (The Age of Innocence), his career connects Old Hollywood to the new. He is also the only person to be nominated for an Academy Award in every decade from the 1950s to the 2000s.
IVAN REITMAN
Ghostbusters Director & Producer Ivan Reitman (1946-2022) has been the creative force behind films beloved by audiences around the world – from raucous comedies like Animal House and Stripes, to more sophisticated delights like Dave, Six Days Seven Nights, and Twins.
The year 2019 was busy for Reitman when he worked closely as a producer with director and son Jason Reitman on the next chapter of the Ghostbusters franchise, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, in addition to A Babysitter’s Guide To Monster-Hunting for Netflix. The career that has brought so much laughter to us began in Canada, where Reitman’s family emigrated from Czechoslovakia when he was four years old. Reitman studied music at McMaster University, but soon turned his talents to film and theater, when he joined forces with the National Lampoon and brought us the groundbreaking sensation, Animal House. Following the success of that film, Reitman returned home to Canada to direct Meatballs, still considered one of the most successful films made in Canada.
His string of hits continued with Stripes and the Ghostbusters series, which teamed Bill Murray with Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis; Dave, starring Kevin Kline and Sigourney Weaver; Legal Eagles, starring Robert Redford and Debra Winger; Six Days Seven Nights, with Harrison Ford and Anne Heche; Evolution, starring David Duchovny and Julianne Moore; and a series of films that revealed an untapped comic persona for action hero Arnold Schwarzenegger: Twins, Junior, (both co-starring Danny DeVito) and Kindergarten Cop
In 1984, Reitman was honored as Director of the Year by the National Association of Theater Owners and the next year received a Special Achievement Award at the Canadian Genie Awards.
56 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Artist Biography
In 1979, and again in 1989, for the films Animal House and Twins, Reitman was honored with the People’s Choice Award. In November of 1994, Reitman became the third director honored by Variety magazine in a special “Billion Dollar Director” issue. At the end of 2000, Reitman’s films Animal House and Ghostbusters were honored as two of the twentieth century’s funniest movies by the American Film Institute. Reitman led The Montecito Picture Company, a film and television production company, with partner Tom Pollock. He was married to former Quebec film actress Genevieve Robert for more than 40 years. Together, they had three children and lived in Santa Barbara, California.
Composer
“[Ghostbusters] was probably one of the most difficult jobs I ever had to do just to, and I don’t mean this as a pun, but to find the right note. The score was not easy. It was extremely difficult. Ivan Reitman and I must have talked on the phone every single day while I was working on it, just trying to help ourselves find the right approach.”
“One of the reasons that the scores work is that I do not denigrate the film. I don’t try to do anything hokey, I don’t try to make the music funny. My theory is that if the comedy is working in the film, let the film do the comedy, and let the music get behind the emotion or the ac tion, so as to add another element.”
“It’s basically a very original film – I don’t think anybody’s ever seen a film quite like it! – and it walks a very, very fine line. Part of it is comedy, and yet you have to take the ghost business quite seriously. You have to believe, along with these guys, that the ghosts really do exist. Therefore the score also had to walk a very fine line.”
– ELMER BERNSTEIN, 1985
Orchestrator and conductor Peter M. Bernstein’s reflections on collaborating with his father for Ghostbusters:
By the time Ghostbusters arrived, I had been working for my father as an orchestrator for a decade and as a composer in my own right for three years. I was just a few months away from my first real success with LucasFilm’s Ewok television movies (Ewoks: Caravan of Courage and a year later Ewoks: The Battle for Endor), and we were both aware that our years of working closely together were drawing to a graceful close. We had a great time in those days, and I was able to learn much about his craft while being continuously amazed at his ability to enhance the movies he scored. Ghostbusters was no exception, as he walked a fine line between composing for a comedy on the one hand, but one where the ghostly storyline had to be believed on the other. We had the mechanics of doing this down to a science. He trusted me as an orchestrator with his most minimal sketches when time pressures demanded it, and I trusted him as conductor and leader of the recording to deal with of all the additions, suggestions, and musical asides that I could come up with. In short, both of us felt free to experiment and confident in the outcome. Ghostbusters was a pressure-packed project: a major summer release full of special effects with a short schedule. My job at the recordings was to sit between the director, Ivan Reitman, to make sure his suggestions were being heard, and the recording engineer to make sure all the instruments were being heard. Even though there was pressure and hard work and long hours there was also a lot of fun, and an awareness of what a special and unique time Ghostbusters was for both of us.
– PETER M. BERNSTEIN, FEBRUARY 2018
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 57
Elmer Bernstein’s reflections on Ghostbusters and working with Ivan Reitman, from his 1985 CinemaScore interview, “Elmer Bernstein and Ghostbusters”:
ALL OF YOUR PLANS, ALL IN THREE BLOCKS
Visit Saint Kate for a pre-show dinner at ARIA, then come back for drinks and a stroll through our art galleries.
Or, just stay the night. Either way, the fun doesn't have to end after curtain close.
58 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SEE YOU AFTER THE SHOW. 139 EAST KILBOURN AVENUE AT THE CORNER OF WATER AND KILBOURN DOWNTOWN MILWAUKEE SAINTKATEARTS.COM
WE'LL
.
UPAF IS FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS that you are here to enjoy today. We’re for thousands of local artists in the spotlight and behind the scenes. We’re for you — the audience — rediscovering excitement, inspiration and connection. We’re for Milwaukee, Tosa, Waukesha, Racine & beyond. We’re for being together, surrounded by the magic of music, dance, song and theater.
We’re for raising our community up.
You’re for the arts too, so please join us to ensure that our world-class performing arts groups make a full recovery.
DONATE TODAY. UPAF.ORG/DONATE
MUSIC | DANCE | SONG | THEATER
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 59
Milwaukee Ballet, Marie Collins, Photo by Mark Frohna. Skylight Music Theatre, Raven Dockery, Photo by Mark Frohna.
MILWAUKEE
MSO ENDOWMENT
Visionaries
Commitments of $1,000,000 and above
Jane Bradley Pettit
Charles and Marie Caestecker
Concer tmaster Chair
Herzfeld Foundation
Krause Family Principal Horn Chair
Phyllis and Harleth Pubanz
Gertrude M. Puelicher Education Fund
Stein Family Foundation
Principal Pops Conductor Chair Polly and Bill Van Dyke Music Director Chair
Philanthropists
Commitments of $500,000 and above
Donald B. Abert Principal Bass Chair
Mr. Richard Blomquist
Patrice L. (Patti) Bringe Margaret and Roy Butter
Principal Flute Chair
Donald and Judy Christl
Fred Fuller Trumpet Chair
Andrea and Woodrow Leung Principal Second Violin Chair and Fred Fuller
Dorothea C. Mayer Principal Cello Chair
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
League Principal Oboe Chair
Northwestern Mutual Foundation
Melitta S. Pick Endowed Piano Chair
Walter L. Robb Family
Principal Trumpet Chair
Robert T. Rolfs Foundation
Michael and Jeanne Schmitz President and Executive Director Chair
Gertrude Elser and John Edward Schroeder Guest Artist Fund
Walter Schroeder Foundation
Principal Harp Chair
Muriel C. and John D. Silbar Family Principal Bassoon Chair
Marjorie Tiefenthaler
Principal Trombone Chair
Richard O. and Judith A. Wagner Family Principal Viola Chair
Benefactors
Commitments of $100,000 and above
Two Anonymous Donors Patty and Jay Baker Fund for Guest Artists
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J.O. Blachly Philip Blank English Horn Chair in memoriam to John Martin and his favorite cousin, Beatrice Blank Judith and Stanton Bluestone
Estate of Lloyd Broehm
Louise Cattoi, in memory of David and Angela Cattoi
Lynn Chappy Salon Series
Elizabeth Elser Doolittle Charitable Trust
Franklyn Esenberg
Principal Clarinet Chair
David L. Harrison Endowment for Music Education
Richard M. Kimball
Bass Trombone Chair
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Judith A. Keyes MSOL Docent Fund
Charles A. Krause
Donald and JoAnne Krause Music Education Endowment Fund
Martin J. Krebs
Co-Principal Trumpet Chair
Charles and Barbara Lund Marcus Corporation Foundation Guest Artist Fund
Andy Nunemaker French Horn Chair John and Elizabeth Ogden Gordana and Milan Racic
The Erika Richman MSO-MYSO Reading Workshop Fund Pat and Allen Rieselbach
Friends of Janet F. Ruggeri
Assistant Principal Viola Chair Allison M. & Dale R. Smith Percussion Fund
Estate of Walter S. Smolenski, Jr. Bert L. & Patricia S. Steigleder Charitable Trust
Donald B. and Ruth P. Taylor
Assistant Principal Clarinet Chair Mrs. William D. Vogel
Barbara and Ted Wiley Jack Winter Guest Artist Fund
Fern L. Young Endowment Fund for Guest Artists
MUSICAL LEGACY SOCIETY
The Musical Legacy Society recognizes and appreciates the individuals who have made a planned gift to the MSO. The MSO invites you to join these generous donors who have remembered the Orchestra in their estate plans.
Nine Anonymous Donors George R. Affeldt
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Aring, Jr. Dana and Gail Atkins
Robert Balderson
Adam Bauman
Priscilla and Anthony Beadell Mr. F. L. Bidinger
Dr. Philip and Beatrice Blank Mr. Richard Blomquist Judith and Stanton Bluestone Patrice L. (Patti) Bringe
Jean S. Britt
Laurette Broehm
Neil Brooks
Anthony and Vicki Cecalupo
Lynn Chappy
Donald and Judy Christl Jo Ann Corrao
Lois Ellen Debbink
Mary Ann Delzer
Julie Doneis
Donn Dresselhuys Beth and Ted Durant
Rosemarie Eierman
Franklyn Esenberg
John and Sue Esser
Jo Ann Falletta
Donald L. Feinsilver, M.D. Frank and Pauline Fichtner
Susie and Robert Fono Ruth and John Fredericks
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Goldsmith
Brett Goodman
Roberta Gordon
Marta P. and Doyne M. Haas Ms. Jean I. Hamann Ms. Sybille Hamilton
Kristin A. Hansen
David L. Harrison
Judy Harrison
Cheryl H. and Roy L. Hauswirth
Cliff Heise
Sidney and Suzanne Herszenson
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Hoke
Glenda Holm
Jean and Charles Holmburg
Myra Huth
William and Janet Isbister
Lee and Barbara Jacobi
Leon and Betsy Janssen
Marilyn W. John
Faith L. Johnson
Mary G. Johnson Bill and Char Johnson
Jayne J. Jordan
Judy and Gary Jorgensen
Debra Jupka
James A. and Robin S. Kasch
Howard Kaspin
James H. Keyes
Judith A. Keyes
Richard and Sarah Kimball
Ronald J. and Catherine Klokner
Mary Krall
JoAnne and Donald Krause
Martin J. and Alice Krebs
Ronald and Vicki Krizek
Cynthia Krueger-Prost
Steven E. Landfried
Mr. Bruce R. Laning
Victor Larson
Arthur and Nancy Laskin
Tom and Lise Lawson
Andrea and Woodrow Leung
Mr. Robert D. Lidicker
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Liebenstein Drs. John and Theresa Liu
Dr. John and Kristie Malone
Dana and Jeff Marks Ms. Kathleen Marquardt JoAnne Matchette
Rita T. and James C. McDonald
Patricia and James McGavock
Nancy McGiveran
Nancy McKinley-Ehlinger
Mrs. Christel U. Mildenberg
Christian and Kate Mitchell
Joan Moeller
Ms. Melodi Muehlbauer
Robert Mulcahy
Kathleen M. Murphy
Andy Nunemaker
Diana and Gerald Ogren
Lynn and Lawrence Olsen
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Orth
Lygere Panagopoulos
Jamshed and Deborah Patel Gerald T. and Carol K. Petersen
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R. Poe
Julie Quinlan Brame and Jason Brame Ms. Harvian Raasch-Hooten
Gordana and Milan Racic
Christine Radiske and Herbert Quigley
Steve and Susan Ragatz
Catherine A. Regner
Ms. Monica D. Reida
Pat and David Rierson
Pat and Allen Rieselbach
Dr. Thomas and Mary Roberts
Gayle G. Rosemann and Paul E. McElwee
Roger B. Ruggeri and Andrea K. Wagoner
Nina Sarenac
Mary B. Schley in recognition of David L. Schley
Dr. Robert and Patty Schmidt
Michael J. and Jeanne E. Schmitz
James Schultz and Donna Menzer Mason Sherwood and Mark Franke
60 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
MSO Endowment/Musical Legacy Society
Musical Legacy Society/Annual Fund
Margles Singleton
Lois Bernard and William Small
Dale and Allison Smith
Susan G. Stein
John Stewig and Richard Bradley
Dr. Robert A. and Kathleen Sullo
Terry Burko and David Taggart
Lois Tetzlaff
E. Charlotte Theis
David Tolan
Thora Vervoren
Dr. Richard O. and Judith A. Wagner
Veronica Wallace-Kraemer
Michael Walton
Brian A. Warnecke
Earl Wasserman
Alice Weiss
Sally Wells
Carol and James Wiensch
Floyd Woldt
Sandra and Ross Workman
Marion Youngquist
For more information on becoming a Musical Legacy Society member, please contact the Development Office at 414.226.7891.
ANNUAL FUND
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra truly values the music lovers in the concert hall and we thank our contributors to the Annual Fund for investing their time and support to this treasure. We gratefully acknowledge the contributions to the Annual Fund as of August 23, 2022.
Conductor Circle
$100,000 and above Bobbi and Jim Caraway
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Kaiser Donald and JoAnne Krause
Marty Krebs
Nancy Laskin
Sheldon and Marianne Lubar Charitable Fund of the Lubar Family Foundation
Michael Schmitz
Julia and David Uihlein
The Estate of Donald R. Whitaker
$50,000 and above
Two Anonymous Donors Laura and Mike Arnow
Isabel Bader
Anthony and Vicki Cecalupo
Drs. Alan and Carol Pohl
$25,000 and above
Two Anonymous Donors
Elaine Burke
Thomas E. Caestecker
Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn Esenberg Gail Groenwoldt and Jeff Yabuki
Doug and Jane Hagerman
Judy and Gary Jorgensen
Robert and Gail Korb
Dr. Brent and Susan Martin
Lorry Uihlein Charitable Lead Unitrust Thora Vervoren
$15,000 and above
Two Anonymous Donors
Richard and JoAnn Beightol Mary and Terry Briscoe Mary and James Connelly
Dr. Deborah and Jeff Costakos
Mrs. Alyce Coyne Katayama
Cynthia and Brian Dearing Lee Fitzsimonds
Roberta Gordon
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Hoke Jewish Community Foundation Eileen & Howard Dubner Donor Advised Fund
Judith A. Keyes
Charles and Barbara Lund William and Marian Nasgovitz Paul Nausieda and Evonne Winston Lois and Richard Pauls
Pat Rieselbach
Allison M. and Dale R. Smith
Susi and Dick Stoll
Drs. Robert Taylor and Janice McFarland Taylor
Haruki Toyama
Charles T. Urban and Joan M. Coufal
$10,000 and above
Three Anonymous Donors
Frances and Lowell Adams Sue and Louie Andrew
Lois Bernard
Keith and Kate Brewer Ms. Dorothy Diggs
Jennifer Dirks
Elizabeth and Herodotos Ellinas Bruce T. Faure M.D. Mary Lou M. Findley George E. Forish, Jr. Mrs. Susan G. Gebhardt
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Bernard J. and Marie E. Weiss Fund
Judith J. Goetz
Katherine Hauser
Ms. Charlotte Hayslett
Mr. and Mrs. Eric E. Hobbs
Karen Hung and Bob Coletti
Geraldine Lash
Mr. Peter L. Mahler
Keith Mardak and Mary Vandenberg Mark and Donna Metzendorf Christian and Kate Mitchell Bob and Barbara Monnat Patrick and Mary Murphy Mr. and Ms. Bruce Myers
Andy Nunemaker Brian and Maura Packham
Julie Peay Leslie and Aaron Plamann Christine Radiske and Herbert Quigley John and Mary Rickmeier Sara and Jay Schwister Nancy and Greg Smith Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Tiffany Mr. and Mrs. Francis Wasielewski Herbert Zien and Elizabeth Levins
Principal Circle
$5,000 and above
Four Anonymous Donors
Mark and Laura Barnard Clair and Mary Baum Donna and Donald Baumgartner
Natalie Beckwith
Richard and Kay Bibler
William and Barbara Boles George S. and Sally Ann Borkowski Suzy and John Brennan Jean Britt
Roger Byhardt
Donald and Judy Christl Sandra and Russell Dagon Karen Dobbs and Chris DeNardis
Joanne Doehler
Dr. and Mrs. Harry A. Easom Paul and Connie Flagg
Elizabeth and William Genne Richard and Ellen Glaisner
Alison Graf and Richard Schreiner Drs. Carla and Robert Hay James and Crystal Hegge Ms. Mary E. Henke
Mark and Judy Hibbard
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Hlavac James and Karen Hyde Lee and Barbara Jacobi
Jayne J. Jordan
Lynn and Tom Kassouf Kenneth and Alice Kayser Dr. and Mrs. Kim Kolaga Family Charitable Trust
Christine Krueger
Peter and Kathleen Lillegren
Gerald and Elaine Mainman
Michael and Maureen McCabe
Dr. Ann H. and Mr. Michael J. McDonald Genie and David Meissner
Mr. and Mrs. George Meyer
Judith Fitzgerald Miller
Dr. Mary Ellen Mitchanis
William J. Murgas
Mark Niehaus
Barbara and Layton Olsen
Elaine Pagedas
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Petrie
Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Pierce-Ruhland Jim and Fran Proulx
Alice E. Read Dr. Marcia J.S. Richards Steve and Fran Richman Pat and David Rierson Dr. Thomas and Mary Roberts Kay Schanke
Richard Eli Schoen Brian M. Schwellinger
Loretto and Dick Steinmetz John Stewig and Richard Bradley Kathleen and Frank Thometz John and Karen Tomashek Mrs. James Urdan Mrs. George Walcott Tracy S. Wang, MD
Jim Ward
Nora and Jude Werra
Mr. and Mrs. Donald S. Wilson Jessica R. Wirth Diana J. Wood
$3,500 and above Three Anonymous Donors Fred and Kay Austermann Dr. Philip and the spirit of Beatrice Blank
Dr. Bruce and Marsha Camitta
Lynda and Tom Curl Beth and Ted Durant
Dr. Eric Durant and Scott Swickard Fred and Debby Ganaway
Virginia Hall
Jean and Thomas Harbeck
Family Foundation
Margarete and David Harvey
Drs. Margie Boyles and Stephen Hinkle
Barbara Hunt
David and Mel Johnson
Olof Jonsdottir and Thorsteinn Skulason Mary S. Knudten
Calvin and Lynn Kozlowski Anthony and Susan Krausen
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 61
Annual Fund
Stanley Kritzik
Norm and Judy Lasca
Eugene and Gwen Lavin
Dr. Joseph and Amy Leung
Micaela Levine and Thomas St. John Merle and Sandra McDonald
Rusti and Steve Moffic Mr. and Mrs. Joel Needlman
Roger Ritzow
Dr. and Mrs. R. Nikolaus Schmidt
Elaine Schueler
James Schultz and Donna Menzer Mr. Thomas P. Schweda Sue and Boo Smith Nita Soref
Carlton Stansbury James and Catherine Startt Jeff and Jody Steren Gile and Linda Tojek Corinthia Van Orsdol and Donald Petersen
Mr. Wilfred Wollner
Carol and Richard Wythes Leo Zoeller
Orchestra Circle
$2,500 and above
Thomas Bagwell and Michelle Hiebert Marlene and Bert Bilsky
Scott Bolens and Elizabeth Forman Mr. David E. Cadle
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Chernof Steven and Buffy Duback
Dr. Donald Feinsilver and Jo Ann Corrao
Robert Gardenier and Lori Morse Gardenier Kurt and Rosemary Glaisner
Mr. Kim M. Graff
Leesley B. and Joan J. Hardy Charles and Jean Holmburg
Karen Hung and Bob Coletti
Leon and Betsy Janssen
Jewish Community Foundation
Dorothy & Merton Rotter Donor Advised Fund
Matthew and Kathryn Kamm
Megumi Kanda Hemann and Dietrich Hemann
Barbara Karol Benedict and Lee Kordus Mary E. Lacy
Frank Loo and Sally Long Dr. and Mrs. Debesh Mazumdar
Daniel and Constance McCarty
Guy and Mary Jo McDonald Mark and Carol Mitchell
William and Laverne Mueller
Raymond and Janice Perry
David J. Peterson
Barbara Recht
Ann Rosenthal and Benson Massey
Dottie Rotter
Judy and Tom Schmid
Rev. Doug and Marilyn Schoen
Mrs. George R. Slater
Roger and Judy Smith
John and Anne Thomas Ann and Joseph Wenzler
Floyd Woldt
Sandra Zingler
$1,500 and above
Six Anonymous Donors
Jantina and Donald Adriano
Ruth Agrusa
Dr. Joan Arvedson
Richard and Sara Aster
Robert Balderson
Priscilla and Anthony Beadell Jacqlynn Behnke
Richard Bergman
Elliott and Karen Berman Mrs. Kristine Best Dr. and Mrs. Squat Botley Walter and Virginia Boyer Cheri and Tom Briscoe Marcia P. Brooks and Edward J. Hammond
Barbara and Dr. Henry Burko Bobbi and Jim Caraway Karen and Harry Carlson
Teri Carpenter
B. Lauren and Margaret Charous Edith Christian
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Christie
Paul Dekker
Art and Rhonda Downey Sigrid Dynek and Barry Axelrood Rosemarie Eierman
Signe and Gerald Emmerich, Jr. Joseph and Joan Fall Robert and Kristin Fewel Jo Ann and Dale Frederickson
Jane K. Gertler
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Donna and Tony Meyer Fund
Judith and David Hecker
Robert Hey
Terry Huebner
Robert S. Jakubiak
Mr. Grady Crosby
Maja Jurisic and Don Fraker
Dr. Bruce and Anna Kaufman
Dr. Jack and Myrna Kaufman
Mr. and Mrs. F. Michael Kluiber Heidi and Tommy Knudsen
Julilly Kohler
Maritza and Mario Laguna Drs. Kaye and Prakash Laud Larry and Mary LeBlanc Mr. and Mrs. Mark Levy Bruce and Elizabeth Loder Kathleen Lovelace Wayne and Kristine Lueders Mr. and Mrs. Dean Mehlberg Gregory and Susan Milleville
Molly Mulroy Eric Nathan
Dr. Donna Recht and Dr. Robert Newby Laurie Ocepek
Lynn and Lawrence Olsen Susan M. Otto
Dr. and Mrs. James T. Paloucek Dr. David Paris
Jamshed and Deborah Patel Gerald T. and Carol K. Petersen
Yvonne Petersen
Jessica E. and Paul R. Pihart
Kathryn Koenen Potos
Cathy P. Procton
Jerome Randall & Mary Hauser
Susan Riedel
Emily and Mike Robertson
Lawrence and Katherine Schnuck Ms. Betty Jean Schuett Paul and Frances Seifert Dr. and Mrs. Kevin R. Siebenlist
Margles Singleton
Richard and Sheryl Smith Dr. and Mrs. C. John Snyder Kathy and Salvatore Spicuzza Jim Strey Joan Thompson
R. James and Jean Tobin
Sara Toenes
Mike and Peg Uihlein
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn F. Unkefer
Lauren Vollrath
Nancy Vrabec and Alastair Boake
Michael Walton
Larry and Adrienne Waters
Lynn and Richard Wesolek Rolland and Sharon Wilson John Winter Lee and Carol Wolcott Jim and Sandy Wrangell Mr. William Zeidler
$1,000 and above
Six Anonymous Donors
Mary Allmon and Michael Allen
Drs. Helmut and Sandra Ammon
Steven Barney
Margaret and Bruce Barr
James and Nora Barry Mr. James M. Baumgartner Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Beckman
Fiesha Lynn Bell
Eric Berg
Roger Bialcik
Robert Borch and Linda Wickstrom
Karen and Russell Brooker Ms. Dori Brown
Professor David and Diane Buck
Tom Buthod Ms. Carol A. Carpenter Dr. Curtis and Jean Carter Mr. John Chain Nicole and Jack Cook Ellen Debbink
Jennifer and Paul Deslongchamps
Julie Disseler
Madison Dohmen
Jack Douthitt and Michelle Zimmer
Gloria and Peter Drenzek
Don and Nora Dreske
Mary Ann Dude
Thomas Durkin and Joan Robotham Mr. Donald Elliott
Shirley Erwin
Mr. and Mrs. A. William Finke
Anne and Dean Fitzgerald
Stan and Janet Fox
Gordon and Christine Freese
Deborah Elam
Kimberly Gerber
Pearl Mary Goetsch
Stephen and Bernadine Graff
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Dresselhuys Family Fund
Jay Kay Foundation Fund
Mr. and Mrs. James Grigg
Claire and Glen Hackmann
Mr. Randall Hake
Joseph and Leila Hanson
Jean and John Henderson
Dr. Sidney and Suzanne Herszenson
Ms. Judy Hessel
Jenny and Bob Hillis
Eric and Susan Hillstrom
Mr. Jeffrey L. Hosler
John and Kathryn Housiaux
Barbara Hunteman
Mary and Charles Kamps
Robert and Sandra Kattman
Robert Keefe
Robert and Dorothy King
Eileen Kehoe and Bud Reinhold
Patrick and Jane Keily
Robert and Dorothy King
62 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Annual Fund/Bravo/Corporate and Foundation
Jane Kivlin and Thomas Kelly
Jonathan Koenig and Melissa Love Koenig
Julie and Michael Koss
Dr. Michael J. Krco
Sandra and Thomas Kuber
Greg and Marybeth Shuppe
Chris and Emilia Layden
Dale and Barbara Lenz
John and Janice Liebenstein
Matt and Patty Linn Ann Loder
Richard and Roberta London
Stephen and Jane Lukowicz
Joan Maas
Stephen and Judy Maersch
Mike and Jamy Malatesta
Dr. John and Kristie Malone
Mr. Peter Mamerow
Sara and Nathan Manning
Deidre Martin
Greg and Denise McCarthy
Joan McCracken
Joni and Joe McDevitt
Debra and Jeffrey Metz
Christel Mildenberg
Theodore and Kelsey Perlick Molinari
David and Gail Nelson
Jean A. Novy
Douglas E. Peterson
David and Carol Raasch
Dr. Francis J. Randall
Philip Reifenberg
Roberta and David Remstad
Karen and Paul Rice
Drs. Walter and Lisa Rich
Dan and Anna Robbins
Drs. Larry and Polly Ryan
Russell and Emily Sagmoen
Allen and Millie Salomon
Wilbert and Genevieve Schauer Foundation
Martin Schreiber
Lois and Stephen Schreiter
Donald and Judith Schultz
Phil Schumacher and Pauline Beck Mark and Deborah Schwallie
Bob and Sally Schwarz
Fred and Ruth Schwertfeger
Lt. Cmdr. Ronald D. and Carol R. Scott
Susan Skudlarczyk
Barbara and Everett Smith
Joan Spector
Bonnie L. Steindorf
Ann Stevens
Ian and Ellen Szczygielski
David Taggart and Terry Burko
Rebecca and Robert Tenges
Dean and Katherine Thome
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Tidey
Drs. Steven and Denise Trinkl
Constance U’Ren
James Van Ess
Ruth A. Way
Henry J. Wellner and James Cook
Robert and Barbara Whealon
A. James White
Robert and Lana Wiese
Mr. and Mrs. James Wigdale
Linda and Dan Wilhelms
Ron and Alice Winkler
Prati and Norm Wojtal
Daryl and Bonnie Wunrow
Gertrude and Richard Zauner
BRAVO
Britt Blackwelder
Elizabeth and Robert Draper
Ashley Brinkman
Matt and Victoria Haas
Dan and Krista Hettinger
Tina Itson
Kaleigh N. Kozak
Jacob Magnusson
Molly Mingey
TJ and Kelsey Molinari
Esteé Tanel O’Connor and Walter Zoller
Jessica and Paul Pihart
Monica D. Reida
Sarah E. Rieger
Monica Rynders
Russell and Emily Sagmoen
Michael Schaner
Allison Schnier
Brian Schwellinger
Megan Sorenson
CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra truly values the generosity of musicloving patrons in the concert hall and throughout the community. We especially thank our Corporate and Foundation contributors for investing their time and support to this treasure. We gratefully acknowledge contributions from:
$1,000,000 and above United Performing Arts Fund
$250,000 and above Argosy Foundation
The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
$100,000 and above Herzfeld Foundation Rockwell Automation
$50,000 and above
Greater Milwaukee Foundation Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Fund
Johnson Controls Melitta S. and Joan M. Pick
Charitable Trust Milwaukee County Arts Fund (CAMPAC)
U.S. Department of Homeland Security $25,000 and above
Anonymous Bader Philanthropies, Inc.
Chase Family Foundation
Greater Milwaukee Foundation Gertrude Elser and John Edward Schroeder Fund
Helen and Jeanette Oberndorfer Fund
Norman and Lucy Cohn Family Fund
Guardian Fine Art Services
Krause Family Foundation
Old National Bank
R.D. and Linda Peters Foundation
Schoenleber Foundation, Inc.
U.S. Bank
Wisconsin Department of Tourism
$15,000 and above
A.O. Smith Foundation, Inc.
Bert L. & Patricia S. Steigleder
Charitable Trust
Gladys E. Gores Charitable Foundation
Kahler Slater
Komatsu Mining Corp Foundation Marietta Investment Partners
WEC Energy Group
Wisconsin Arts Board
$10,000 and above
BMO Harris Bank
Brewers Community Foundation
CD Smith Construction Services
The Cudahy Foundation
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
David C. Scott Foundation
William A. and Mar y M Bonfield, Jr. Fund
Ellsworth Corporation
Godfrey & Kahn, S.C.
Jane Bradley Pettit Foundation
Northwestern Mutual Ralph Evinrude Foundation
Rite Hite Holding Corporation
William and Janice Godfrey Family Foundation
Yabuki Family Foundation
$5,000 and above ANON Charitable Trust
CornerStone One Ernst & Young, LLC
FIS Global Gene and Ruth Posner Foundation, Inc. General Mills Foundation
GRAEF
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Roxy and Bud Heyse Fund/Journal Fund
Julian Family Foundation
MGIC Investment Corporation
Milwaukee Arts Board
Milwaukee Development Corporation Northern Trust
Quarles & Brady, LLP Schwartz Foundation Silver Rock Consulting Staff Electric
$2,500 and above
Brico Fund
Charles D. Ortgiesen Foundation
Dean Family Foundation
Enterprise Holdings
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
David Wells Household ELM II Fund
Margaret Heminway Wells Fund
Green Bay Packers Foundation
Hamparian Family Foundation
Richard G. Jacobus Family Foundation
Theodore W. Batterman Family Foundation
$1,000 and above
Anthony Petullo Foundation, Inc.
Camille A. Lonstorf Trust
Clare M. Peters Charitable Trust
Ellis Family Charitable Fund
Foley & Lardner LLP
Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Bechthold Family Fund
Cottrell Balding Fund
Del Chambers Fund
Eleanor N. Wilson Fund
George and Christine Sosnovsky Fund
Henry C., Eva M., Robert H. and Jack J. Gillo Charitable Fund
Irene Edelstein Memorial Fund
Mildred L. Roehr & Herbert W. Roehr Fund
Joan and Fred Brengel
Family Foundation, Inc.
Usinger Foundation
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 63
Corporate and Foundation/Matching Gifts/Golden Note Partner/ The Marquee Circle/Tributes
$500 and above
Anonymous
Albert J. & Flora H. Ellinger Foundation
AmazonSmile Foundation
Bell Foundation Delta Dental Greater Milwaukee Foundation
Carrie Taylor & Nettie Taylor Robinson Memorial Fund
Nancy E. Hack Fund
Robert C. Archer Designated Fund
MATCHING GIFTS
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following corporations and foundations who match their employees’ contributions to the Annual Fund.
Abbott Laboratories
Aurora Health Care
BMO Harris Bank
Bucyrus Foundation, Inc.
Dominion Foundation
Eaton Corporation
Fiduciary Partners
GE Foundation
Google Intel Foundation
Johnson Controls Foundation Kohl’s Corp.
Northwestern Mutual Reader’s Digest Foundation
Rexnord Foundation Matching Gift Program
Thrivent Financial U.S. Bank
United Way of Greater Atlanta United Way of Metropolitan Chicago Wisconsin Energy Corporation
GOLDEN NOTE PARTNERS
The MSO gratefully acknowledges the following organizations for their gifts of product or services:
88Nine Radio Milwaukee Becker Design
Belle Fiori – Official Event Florist of the MSO
Burke Chocolates
The Capital Grille Central Standard Craft Distillery Coakley Bros. Co.
Colectivo Coffee
Downer Avenue Wine & Spirits Encore Playbills
Exceptional Events
Godfrey & Kahn, S.C. Kohler Co.
Marcus Hotels & Resorts
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Ogletree Deakins
Saint Kate – The Arts Hotel –Official Hotel of the MSO Sojourner Family Peace Center
Steinway Piano Gallery of Milwaukee Studio Gear – Official Event Partner of the MSO
Wisconsin Public Radio WMSE
THE MARQUEE CIRCLE
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra proudly partners with the following members of the 2022.23 Marquee Circle. We thank these generous partners of our annual corporate subscription program for their charitable contributions and for connecting their corporate communities with the MSO
Bruce J. Loder, Branch Manager & Associates of Stifel of Mequon, WI Ellsworth Corporation
Hupy and Abraham, S.C. Port Washington State Bank
TRIBUTES
In memory of Mary Ann Abrahamson
Suzanne and Roger Chernik
In memory Dorothy Aring Mary and James Connelly Scott Coonen and Anitamarie Zingale Mr. and Mrs. Richard Frank Molly Fritz Lff Foundation Lee and Susie Jennings Daniel Petry Michael and Jeanne Schmitz Vera Wilson
In memory of Stan Bluestone Stephen and Frances Richman
In memory of David A. Blumberg David and Sherry Blumberg Lucy Cooper Naomi and Reuben Eisenstein Gary Engle Kelsi Gard Raul Gomez Mark Lukoff Richard and Mary Lux Jay and Barbara Miller Suzanne Millett Drs. Alan and Carol Pohl Howard and Judy Tolkan David Weissman and Miriam Schechter Norma Zehner
Margaret Zickuhr
In memory of Dr. Charles Brindis Calvin Bruce
In honor of Ellen Checota’s 80th birthday
Donna and Donald Baumgartner Jodi Peck and Les Weil
In memory of Wayne Cook Greg and Julie Bradisse
Art and Rena Thomas Bumgardner James Collier and Bette Jean Vanderburg
Anne DeLeo
Anne DeLeo and Patrick Curley Jim and Marlene Gauger
Mary Ann Goodman
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hauer Dave and Debbie Holmes Richard Kruse
David Kuehn
Tom and Judy Kurtin Ms. Clare Leslie
Ms. Lynn M. Lucius and Mr. Richard Taylor
Patricia Marek
Mr. Ehud Moscovitz and Ms. Shelley London
Susan Mrnik
Daniel Petry
Al Schefsky
Bernice Smaida
Kathy Stokebrand Spore & Keith Spore Winifred and Arthur Thrall Jennifer, Gabe, Susie & Lisa Vulpas
In memory of Russ Dagon
Joanne Bauer
Mary Bell
Paulette Berkich
Michael & Catherine Borschel Dr. and Mrs. Squat Botley
Terry Burko and David Taggart Chris and Katie Callen
Donald Chappie
Steve Cohen
Stephen Colburn Eric and Lynn Delzer
Beth Giacobassi
Phillip Harvey Lee and Barbara Jacobi Ms. Mary Jirovec Hal and Jean Kacanek Joe Kutchera
Paul Mehlenbeck
Hannah Pearson Michael Poytinger
Kyle Pyne
Beth Rees Ms. Helen Reich
Roger B. Ruggeri and Andrea K. Wagoner
Dean and Martha Sayles
Robert Schultz
Gary and Jan Small Karen P. Smith and Donald Haack Gwen Tushaus
Mark Ulmer
Linda Unkefer
Shawn Verdoni
Anne de Vroome Kamerling
Gary Wagner
Carl Welle Michael Welsh
Lynn and Roger White Mr. and Mrs. Steve Whitney
In memory of James DeLeeuw Bob and Barbara Whealon
In honor of Neil Dinesen on his 90th birthday Mr. James M. Green
In memory of Lois Ehlert Patricia and Richard Ehlert
In memory of Anne Fitzgerald Michael and Jeanne Schmitz Mrs. James Urdan Bob and Barbara Whealon
In memory of Matt Flaig Trinidad Torres
In memory of Florence and Glen Fraser Lisa Gilvary
64 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Tributes
In memory of Charles Gorham Michael Schmitz Bob and Barbara Whealon
In honor of Alyce Katayama Steven and Buffy Duback
In memory of Janie Klug Bob and Barbara Whealon
In memory of Nancy and Arthur Laskin Joan J. Hardy
In memory of Dr. Keith Austin Larson
Austin Larson Rev. Curtis A. Larson Suzanne Zinsel
In memory of Susan Loris
Anonymous
Terry Burko and David Taggart
Mark and Susan Cohen
James and Charmaine LaBelle
Kathleen and Charles Marn Nellie Martens Murphy
Daniel Petry
Kathryn and ZJ Reinardy Susi and Dick Stoll
The Tomashek Family Mrs. James Urdan
In memory of Susan Loris from the MSO League Past Presidents Mark and Susan Cohen
Mary Connelly
Judy Christl
Anne DeLeo & Patrick Curl Eileen Dubner
Marta Haas
Jean Holmburg
Barbara Hunt
JoAnne Krause
Kathryn and Zachary-John Reinardy Maggie Stoeffel
The Tomashek Family Linda Tojek Linda and Lynn Unkefer Mrs. James Urdan
In honor and gratitude for the leadership of Peter Mahler, Andy Nunemaker, David Uihlein, Julia A. Uihlein Mrs. James Urdan
In honor of Robert Meldman Drs. Alan and Carol Pohl
In memory of Michael McCabe
Sharon Adams
Fred and Kay Austermann
Gary Balcerzak and Thomas Ewing George and Patricia Barger
Carolyn Bellin
James and Helen Benton
Joyce and Carl Budde
Elizabeth Ladu Carrier
John Cefalu
Sharon Chudy
Charles and Stephanie Cruse
Anne Davis
Sandra Degeorge
Beth and Ted Durant
Dr. and Mrs. Brenton Field Bill and Kari Foote
Sharon Gardner
James and Jenny Gettel Joseph Grafwallner
Susan Gramling
Kathyrn Hall
Mrs. and Mrs. Michael Hauer
Betsy Head
Donald and Marian Heinz
Jeffrey and Susan Heyen
Christine Hill
Jacquelyn Holland
Ms. Sally D. Holt
Dave and Anne Hynek
Cynthia E Jensen
Ms. Anne Kebisek
Dorothy Kerr
Linda Krause
Dr. Michael J. Krco
Mordecai Lee
Mary and Earl Lillydahl
Beth Logan Chuck and Linda Malone
Eric Master
Jeffrey McCabe
Dennis McEvoy
Catherine and Patrick McGinn
Cynthia Michalak
Mary Michalak
Michelle Murphy
Jean Palkert
Ildiko Poliner
David Raday Ellen Redeker and Steven Harvey
Patrick and Noreen Regan
Karol Rehm
Mary Jane Reichart
Lauri Rollings
Mr. Darren Schacht
Carl and Barbara Schwartz James and Mary Jo Sebern Carole and Kevin Shafer
Karen Spinti and James Hempel
John Suchorski
Mike and Barbara Sweeney Gary and Susan Tatsak
Bonnie Thomson Taylor Tinmouth
Marybeth Trampe Robert and Joanne Vandenbusch Elizabeth Vogel Kathy Wagner
William and Christine Walker Diane W. Wirth
Barbara Wollermann
In honor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Musicians Patricia Rieselbach
In honor of Andy Nunemaker with wishes for many happy years in his new home Mrs. James Urdan
In memory of Mary G. Peterson David J. Peterson
In honor of Adrienne Pollack-Sender on her milestone birthday Mrs. James Urdan
In honor of the Prometheus Trio Pat and Allen Rieselbach
In memory of Allen Rieselbach Mr. and Mrs. Anthony w. Asmuth, III Richard and Sara Aster Margery Becker
Richard and Kay Bibler Dr. Philip and the spirit of Beatrice Blank
Bruce and Melissa Block Mark and Sharon Cameli Mary and James Connelly Valeria Downey
Dr. Howard and Eileen Dubner Thomas Florsheim Susan Freeman and Richard Kahn G. Frederic and Elizabeth Friedman
Judith Goetz
Joan J. Hardy
Benedict and Lee Kordus Norm and Judy Lasca Jim and Mary LaVelle Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Lozoff Ann MacIver
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Mandel Frederick Muth Stephen and Frances Richman Michael Schmitz
Michael and Jane Simpson Nicole Teweles
Gile and Linda Tojek
Joan and the Spirit of Jim Urdan, Jennifer, Jon, and Jeff Elizabeth Walcott
In honor of the wedding of Tracy Rogers and Tom Tavolier John and Catherine Crichton
In honor of Bob Schuppel Sarah Cauwels
In honor of Thomas L. Smallwood David and Julia Uihlein
In honor of Tom Varney Stanley Kokotiuk
In honor of Peter Wicklund and Ruby Shemanski Ms. Linda Jenewein
In memory of Anne T. White A. James White
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 65
66 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Your local bank PROUD SUPPORTER OF THE ARTS oldnational.com Old National Bank is honored to support the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. CONNECT WITH US FOR: We are your local southeast Wisconsin bank. Personal Banking Small Business Banking Commercial Banking Wealth Management
MSO Board of Directors
OFFICERS
Susan Martin, Chair
Andy Nunemaker, Immediate Past Chair
David Uihlein, Honorary Co-Chair
Julia Uihlein, Honorary Co-Chair
Alyce Coyne Katayama, Secretary
Patrick Murphy, Treasurer; Chair, Finance Committee
EX OFFICIO DIRECTORS
Ken-David Masur, Music Director, Polly and Bill Van D yke Music Director Chair
Christopher Miller, Immediate Past Chair, Forte
Mark Niehaus, President & Executive Director, Michael and Jeanne Schmitz Chair
Michael J. Schmitz, Chair, Chairman’s Council
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Susan Martin, Chair
Andy Nunemaker, Immediate Past Chair
Douglas M. Hagerman
Eric E. Hobbs
Karen Hung, Chair, Governance Committee
Alyce Coyne Katayama, Secretary
Robert Klieger, Chair, Players’ Council
Patrick Murphy, Treasurer; Chair, Finance Committee
Mark Niehaus, President & Executive Director, Michael and Jeanne Schmitz Chair
Michael J. Schmitz, Chair, Chairman’s Council
Dick Stoll, Chair, Marketing & Advocacy Committee
Haruki Toyama, Chair, Artistic Direction Committee
ELECTED DIRECTORS
Kate Brewer
Jeff Costakos
Jen Dirks
Charlotte Hayslett
Peter Mahler, Chair, Grand Future Committee
Mark Metzendorf, Chair, Advancement Committee
Christian Mitchell
Robert Monnat
Maura Packham, Chair, Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion (EDI) Task Force
Leslie Plamann, Chair, Audit Committee
Jay E. Schwister, Chair, Retirement Plan Committee
Dale R. Smith
Gregory A. Smith
Herb Zien, Chair, Facilities Management Committee
DESIGNATED DIRECTORS
City
Sachin Chheda Pegge Sytkowski Francis Wasielewski
County Fiesha Lynn Bell Chris Layden Garren Randolph
MUSICIAN DIRECTORS
Robert Klieger, Chair, Players’ Council
Ilana Setapen
CHAIRMAN’S COUNCIL
Michael J. Schmitz, Chair Chris Abele
Richard S. Bibler
Charles Boyle
Roberta Caraway M. Judith Christl Mary Connelly Donn Dresselhuys Eileen G. Dubner
Franklyn Esenberg
Marta P. Haas
Jean Holmburg
Barbara Hunt
Leon P. Janssen
Angela G. Johnston Judy Jorgensen James A. Kasch
Lee Walther Kordus
Michael J. Koss
JoAnne Krause
Martin J. Krebs
Keith Mardak
James G. Rasche
Stephen E. Richman
Thomas L. Smallwood
Joan Steele Stein
Linda Tojek
Joan R. Urdan
Larry Waters Kathleen A. Wilson
MSO ENDOWMENT & FOUNDATION
TRUSTEES
Bruce Laning, Trustee Chairman, Endowment & Foundation
Amy Croen, Endowment & Foundation
Steven Etzel, Endowment & Foundation
Douglas M. Hagerman, Endowment & Foundation
Bartholomew Reuter, Endowment Foundation
David Uihlein, Foundation
PAST CHAIRMEN
Andy Nunemaker (2014-2020)
Douglas M. Hagerman (2011-2014) Chris Abele (2004-2011)
Judy Jorgensen (2002-2004) Stephen E. Richman (2000-2002) Stanton J. Bluestone* (1998-2000) Allen N. Rieselbach* (1995-1998)
Edwin P. Wiley (1993-1995)
Michael J. Schmitz (1990-1993)
Orren J. Bradley (1988-1990)
Russell W. Britt* (1986-1988)
James H. Keyes (1984-1986)
Richard S. Bibler (1982-1984)
John K. MacIver* (1980-1982)
Donn R. Dresselhuys (1978-1980)
Harrold J. McComas* (1976-1978)
Laflin C. Jones* (1974-1976)
Robert S. Zigman* (1972-1974)
Charles A. Krause* (1970-1972)
Donald B. Abert* (1968-1970)
Erhard H. Buettner* (1966-1968)
Clifford Randall* (1964-1966)
John Ogden* (1962-1964)
Stanley Williams* (1959-1962)
* deceased
MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 67
MSO 2022.23 Administration
EXECUTIVE
Mark Niehaus, President & Executive Director, Michael and Jeanne Schmitz Chair
Bret Dorhout, Vice President of Artistic Planning
Kathryn Reinardy, Vice President of Marketing & Communications
Robin Sasman, Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Rick Snow, Vice President of Facilities & Building Operations
Cynthia Moore, Human Resources, Diversity & Inclusion Manager
Michele Fitzgerald, Executive Assistant & Board Liaison
ADVANCEMENT
Michael Rossetto, Director of Individual Giving
Kate Braun, Grant Writer
Krista Hettinger, Individual Giving Manager
Sam Hushek, Events & Volunteer Manager
William Loder, Senior Individual Giving Manager
Tracy Migon, Development Systems Manager
Lindsey Ruenger, Individual Giving Manager
Emily Santeler, Advancement Operations & Stewardship Manager
Maggie Seer, Institutional Giving Manager
Emma Zei, Advancement Coordinator
EDUCATION & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Rebecca Whitney, Director of Education
Hannah Esch, Senior Education & Engagement Manager
Elise McArdle, Education Coordinator
FINANCE
Jenny Beier, Senior Accountant
Alexa Aldridge, Staff Accountant
MARKETING
Erin Kogler, Director of Communications
Marcella Morrow, Director of Marketing
Adam Cohen, Patron Systems Manager
David Jensen, Marketing & Communications Coordinator
Zachary-John Reinardy, Lead Designer
Kerry Tomaszewski, Communications Manager
BOX OFFICE
Luther Gray, Director of Ticket Operations & Group Sales
Al Bartosik, Box Office Manager
Marie Holtyn, Box Office Supervisor
Robin Doyle, Box Office Assistant
John Hallman, Box Office Assistant
Sean Schueler, Box Office Assistant
OPERATIONS
Françoise Moquin, Director of Orchestra Personnel
Terrell Pierce, Director of Operations
Kayla Aftahi, Operations Coordinator
Constance Aguocha, Assistant Personnel Manager
Paul Beck, Principal Librarian, Anonymous Donor, Principal Librarian Chair
Kelsey Padron, Artistic Coordinator
Paolo Scarabel, Stage Technician & Deck Supervisor
Emily Wacker Schultz, Artist Duty Assistant
Jeremy Tusz, Audio & Video Producer
Tristan Wallace, Technical Manager & Live Audio Supervisor
Christina Williams, Chorus Manager
FACILITIES & EVENT SERVICES
Patrick G. H. Schley, Director of Event Services
Travis Byrd, Facilities Coordinator
Lisa Kilmczak , House Manager
David Kotlewski, House Manager
Zoe Waeltz, Senior House Manager
68 MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
imagination + technology =
possibility
Together, we are expanding human possibility in our communities –helping nurture the next generation of builders, makers and innovators.