Soundings Magazine September 28-30, 2018

Page 1

PHOTO: BRANDON MARSHALL

THE MAGAZINE OF THE COLORADO SYMPHONY Volume 16 • Number 1


Learn about senior living at Wind Crest.

Request your NEW brochure from the premier retirement community in the Denver area. Get the facts about our vibrant lifestyle, stylish apartment homes, expert health care, and so much more! There’s no risk in learning more! Call 1-800-989-8403 to order your brochure and hear about Prospect Crossing, our newest residence building opening in 2019!

Highlands Ranch

12906278

WindCrestRetirement.com Wind Crest, Inc., a nonprofit organization, is solely responsible for fulfilling financial responsibilities to residents under the contract. Wind Crest is within the network of communities developed and managed by Erickson Living.ÂŽ


Michael Amini is just one of the many prestigious designer names in home furnishings you will find at The Showroom. There’s also the very best from Bernhardt, Chateaux d’Ax, Whitmore Sherrill, and Lexington to name a few. These complete designer collections are showcased through exquisitely crafted galleries making it the ultimate destination for style-conscious homeowners, designers, builders and architects alike. Join us at The Showroom and elevate your home with the most exclusive, curated inventory in the Mountain West.

DENVER’S ULTIMATE HOME SHOPPING EXPERIENCE.

TheShowroom.com

5445 North Bannock Street (Near I-25 & 58th), Denver, CO


THE MAGAZINE OF THE COLORADO SYMPHONY Volume 16 • Number 1 CONTENTS

6 Welcome 8

Sponsor Spotlight

10

Colorado Symphony Musicians

12 Colorado Symphony Board of Trustees 13

Colorado Symphony Staff

16

Striking a Chord

23

Community Support

COMING SOON

A once in a generation performance: Britten’s War Requiem NOV 2-4

4

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


INNOVATION PIONEERING

INNOVATIVE LEGAL SERVICES IN TUNE WITH YOUR NEEDS

We applaud the Colorado Symphony Orchestra for 40 years of creating extraordinary musical experiences Liz Sharrer, Chair 303.295.8000 lsharrer@hollandhart.com 555 17th Street, Suite 3200 Denver, Colorado 80202 www.hollandhart.com

D E N V E R

CHAMBER SERIES ST. LAWRENCE STRING QUARTET AND INON BARNATAN, PIANO WED, SEPTEMBER 12, 2018

Proud Supporter of the Arts

CELEBRATING 65 YEARS TAFELMUSIK WED, MARCH 6, 2019 TETZLAFF-TETZLAFF-VOGT TRIO TUE, APRIL 30, 2019

WILLIAM HAGEN, VIOLIN AND ORION WEISS, PIANO MON, OCTOBER 1, 2018

EMERSON STRING QUARTET WED, MAY 15, 2019

CALIDORE STRING QUARTET WED, NOVEMBER 7, 2018

PIANO SERIES

MARK PADMORE, TENOR AND PAUL LEWIS, PIANO WED, JANUARY 16, 2019

friendsofchambermusic.com

ANNA POLONSKY AND ORION WEISS WED, DECEMBER 5, 2018

SO MANY WAYS TO ATTEND

• • • •

7 concert Chamber Series 3 concert Piano Series “Pick Your Own” Series Single tickets

To purchase tickets: 303-871- 7720 | newmantix.com Newman Center for the Performing Arts Concerts begin at 7:30 PM

SIR ANDRÁS SCHIFF WED, FEBRUARY 20, 2019 PIOTR ANDERSZEWSKI WED, APRIL 10, 2019

303-871-7720 newmantix.com


Welcome home! All of us at the Colorado Symphony are thrilled to be back with you in Boettcher Concert Hall, bringing another season of the best symphonic music to the heart of downtown Denver. Over the past year, I’ve gotten to know many of you as we celebrated my first season as Music Director with performances featuring such living legends as Yo-Yo Ma and Renée Fleming. We’re looking forward to sharing even more amazing experiences with you throughout the coming season. On a personal note, over the summer, my wife Angela and I purchased a beautiful home here in town, making us official Coloradans. We’ve absolutely loved immersing ourselves in this community, and continue to enjoy all the excitement and beauty the Front Range has to offer. For my second season at the Colorado Symphony, we’re delighted to present a slate of incredibly diverse works across many musical genres, all performed by a host of worldclass musicians. Itzhak Perlman, Leslie Odom, Jr., Pictures at an Exhibition, Home Alone in concert – it’s a season we’re proud to present and excited for you to experience. We kick off with a world premiere by our principal timpanist William Hill and Rachmaninoff’s Second Symphony, a romantic tour de force that will launch the season in grand style. Later in September, we present one of my favorite programs of the season: a jazz-inflected trio of symphonic works by Duke Ellington, George Gershwin, and John Adams. Our greatest undertaking this fall will be a once-in-a-generation performance of Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, one of the great masterpieces of the 20th century, featuring two orchestras, three vocal soloists, the Colorado Symphony Chorus, and the Colorado Children’s Chorale. We’re presenting the War Requiem both to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I and to celebrate the brave men and women who have served in our armed forces. Taking place the weekend before Veterans Day, this will be a deeply moving and memorable performance you won’t want to miss. We’ve got a spectacular season ahead with a more diverse array of offerings than ever before, and we can’t wait to welcome you to Boettcher all season long to enjoy the best music Colorado has to offer. Warmly,

Brett Mitchell Music Director, Colorado Symphony 6

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

PHOTO: ROGER MASTROIANNI

WELCOM E


127

ORIENTAL RUGS & FINE ART

RUG WASHING & REPAIR SERVICES C E L E B R AT I N G YEARS IN DENVER

• • • • •

Asian Fine Art & Antiques Rugs, Both Contemporary & Antique A r c h e o l o g i c a l Tr e a s u r e s R e n o w n e d E x p e r t i s e i n R u g R e s t o r a t i o n N a t u r a l H a n d R u g Wa s h i n g S e r v i c e s

CELEBRATING YEARS IN DENVER

Gallery - 693 East Speer Boulevard, Denver Rug Washing & Repair - 970 North Cherokee Street, Denver www.SARKISIAN.com - .303-733-2623 SARKISIAN COM

693 East Speer Blvd ~ 303.733.2623


PHOTO: UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO

SPONSO R SPOTL IG H T

T

he University of Colorado is proud to support the Colorado Symphony, which shares our commitment and passion for outstanding music. Since 1876, CU has celebrated and supported the world-class talent that has graced the stages of our university and beyond. As Colorado’s higher education leader, CU fosters a community of students and musicians who pursue creativity, innovation, and excellence through music. Our accomplished faculty perform regularly with renowned orchestras, compose pieces for national ensembles and produce scholarly works about music for leading publications. They are committed to the growth and wonder that music provides, and to sharing its gifts with the world. CU’s longstanding devotion to fine music and music education makes it a natural partner with The Colorado Symphony, one of the leading orchestras in the United States. We offer highly regarded music programs at our campuses in Boulder, Colorado Springs, and Denver, and we are committed to advancing music and the performing arts in communities large and small. Together with the Colorado Symphony, we’ll cultivate the next generation of musicians through education, outreach, and programming, while exposing larger and more diverse audiences to the transformative power of music.

8

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


QUALITY IN LIFE. YOU’VE EARNED IT. Independent Living Assisted Living • Memory Care • Skilled Nursing Care Visit our website to learn more or call:

844.354.8877

|

www.BalfourCare.com

Fall cleaning? It’s the new trend. SATIFACTION

Clean as new, that’s the Coit commitment to you. • Wood Flooring • Natural Stone • Carpet & Rugs

• Upholstery • Tile & Grout • Air Ducts

303-922-9212

• Window Treatments • Concrete

100% GUARANTEE


LOCK + LAND

COLORADO SYMPHO NY

BRETT MITCHELL

CHRISTOPHER DRAGON ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR

MUSIC DIRECTOR

DUAIN WOLFE CHORUS DIRECTOR

The Bill Gossard Music Director Chair

VIOLIN

Yumi Hwang-Williams Concertmaster Claude Sim Associate Concertmaster Yi Zhao Assistant Concertmaster Paul Primus Principal Second Allegra Wermuth Assistant Principal Second Alessandra Jennings Flanagan Fixed 3rd Chair/Second Larisa Fesmire Thomas Hanulik Wyn Hart John Hilton Anne-Marie Hoffman Myroslava Ivanchenko-Bartels Dorian Kincaid Karen Kinzie Mark Lamprey Susan Paik Miroslaw Pastusiak Erik Peterson + Megan Prokes * Robert Stoyanov Delcho Tenev Amy Tyson Bradley Watson Tena White Wenting Yuan

VIOLA

Basil Vendryes Principal Catherine Beeson Assistant Principal Mary Cowell Fixed 3rd Chair Marsha Holmes Leah Kovach Helen McDermott Summer Rhodes * Kelly Shanafelt Phillip Stevens

CELLO

Judith McIntyre Galecki Acting Principal Seth Biagini* Susan Rockey Bowles Jennifer Choi Danielle Guideri Thomas Heinrich Margaret Hoeppner Matthew Switzer

BASS

Steve Metcalf Principal Nicholas Recuber Assistant Principal John Arnesen Susan Cahill+ James Carroll Jeremy Kincaid Owen Levine

FLUTE

Brook Ferguson Principal Catherine Peterson 2nd/Assistant Principal Julie Duncan Thornton

PICCOLO

Julie Duncan Thornton

OBOE

Peter Cooper Principal

The Irene & David Abosch Principal Oboe Chair

Nicholas Tisherman 2nd/Assistant Principal Jason Lichtenwalter

ENGLISH HORN Jason Lichtenwalter

CLARINET

Jason Shafer Principal Abby Raymond 2nd/Assistant Principal Andrew Stevens

E-FLAT CLARINET Abby Raymond

BASS CLARINET Andrew Stevens

BASSOON

Chad Cognata Principal Tristan Rennie 2nd/Assistant Principal Roger Soren

CONTRABASSOON Roger Soren

HORN

Michael Thornton Principal Carolyn Kunicki Kolio Plachkov 3rd/Associate Principal Matthew Eckenhoff Patrick Hodge Assistant

TRUMPET

Justin Bartels Principal Philip Hembree 2nd/Assistant Principal Patrick Tillery Associate Principal

TROMBONE

John Sipher Principal Paul Naslund 2nd/Associate Principal Gregory Harper

BASS TROMBONE Gregory Harper

TUBA

Stephen Dombrowski Principal

HARP

Courtney Hershey Bress Principal

TIMPANI

William Hill Principal Steve Hearn Assistant Principal

PERCUSSION John Kinzie Principal

Chair Endowed by a Friend of The Colorado Symphony

Steve Hearn Michael Van Wirt

ORCHESTRA LIBRARIAN Joanne Goble Principal

* = One year replacement + = On leave

10

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


PEPSI DEC 6 – 9 CENTER DisneyOnIce.com


BOARD OF TRU STEES HONORARY TRUSTEES OFFICERS Jerome H. Kern CEO & Chair of the Board of Trustees Susan Bowles Secretary & Ex-officio Trustee James D. Butler Treasurer & Trustee

TRUSTEES Anthony T. Accetta Dr. Paula P. Bernstein Susan Cahill* Young Cho Zachary D. Detra, Esq. Stephanie Donner Sandy Elliott Alessandra Flanagan* David Hackl Amy Harmon Diane S. Hill, Ph.D. Margaret Hoeppner* Yumi-Hwang-Williams* Kathleen Johnson, Esq John Kinzie* Leah Kovach* Richard D. Krugman, MD Richard Kylberg Bill Myers

Governor John Hickenlooper Mayor Michael B. Hancock Christopher J. Ott, M.D.

Diane Nagler Deana M. Perlmutter Erik Peterson* Nick Recuber* Julie Rubsam L.T. Sandvik Brandon L. Thall Mike VanWirt* Joe Verrengia

REMIX ASSOCIATE BOARD Kelly Waltrip, Chair Marilyn Brock Heather Church Nicole Donnelly Allison D’Angiolillo Chelsea Eversmann Caiti Glasgo William Kowalski, Vice Chair Louis Lugo Soley Maria Jennifer Meikle Samantha Nuechterlein Chris Strom Nicholas Tisherman Kip Wallen

EX OFFICIO TRUSTEES Arthur Hodges William Kowalski Brett Mitchell Sara Moore Ginger White

EMERITUS TRUSTEES William K. Coors Mary Rossick Kern John Low Will McFarlane** Dr. Gerald Rainer** Lee Yeingst * Colorado Symphony Musician Trustee ** In Memorium

TICKETS BUY AUTHENTIC! Are you buying your tickets via: ■ ■ ■ ■

coloradosymphony.org the Colorado Symphony Mobile app box office, in person at Boettcher Concert Hall phone at 303.623.7876

Get the best deal and support your symphony! Learn more at coloradosymphony.org/Visit/FAQs

COLORADOSYMPHONY.ORG

12

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


STAF F MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS LEADERSHIP TEAM Jerome H. Kern John Burtness Susan Ellis Coreen Miller Parker Owens Anthony Pierce

Chief Executive Officer & Chair of the Board of Trustees Chief Advancement Officer Chief Administrative Officer Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer Chief Marketing Officer Chief Artistic Officer

ARTISTIC Anthony Pierce Chief Artistic Officer Brett Mitchell Music Director Duain Wolfe Chorus Director, Colorado Symphony Chorus Christopher Dragon Associate Conductor Dave Aeling Production Stage Manager Travis Branam Assistant Conductor, Colorado Symphony Chorus Mary Louise Burke Associate Conductor, Colorado Symphony Chorus Aric Christensen Audio Engineer Joanne Goble Principal Orchestra Librarian Jonathan Groszew Orchestra Personnel Manager Deborah Guess Properties Master Philip Hiester Master Electrician Eric Israelson Chorus Manager Sam Jaehnig Head Carpenter Matt Koveal Manager of Artistic Operations Taylor Martin Assistant Conductor, Colorado Symphony Chorus Mike Pappas New Media Center Julian Pichette Audio Engineer Barbara Porter Assistant Chorus Manager Phillip Strom Artistic Coordinator Izabel Zambrzycki Artistic General Manager

ADVANCEMENT John Burtness Chief Advancement Officer Sean Baker Senior Manager of Corporate Partnerships Caiti Glasgo Director of Major Gifts Emily Spirk Advancement Coordinator David Rosen Advancement Database Coordinator

EDUCATION Shari Myers

Education Coordinator

FINANCE Coreen Miller Ben Boone Annette Brown

Chief Financial Officer Senior Finance Manager Staff Accountant

Parker Owens Stephanie Derybowski Nick Dobreff Kayla Hayes

Chief Marketing Officer Applications Support Manger Manager of Publicity and Community Relations Digital Media Coordinator

SALES & PATRON SERVICES Susan Kelly Director of Sales & Patron Services Gina Bliss Patron Services Associate Amanda Cantu Asst. Manager of Patron Services Jeremy Cuebas Patron Services Associate Molly Epstein Group Sales Associate Rosa Gasdia Patron Services Associate Frederika Gilbert Patron Services Associate Theresa Illich Patron Services Associate Alexis Kittner Patron Services Associate Ian MacIntyre Manager of Patron Services Jonathan Seid Patron Services Associate Rosa Torres Patron Services Associate Rob Warner Lead Patron Services Associate & Concierge

THE SYMPHONY FUND Stephen M. Brett Norman L. Wilson Susan K. Ellis Jerome H. Kern Gregg O. Kvistad Karen H. Long Suzanne Ryan

President Treasurer Secretary

COLORADO SYMPHONY GUILD OFFICERS Sara Moore President Donna Connolly President Elect Jerry Wolfe Recording Secretary Janet Weisheit Treasurer Patty Goward Assistant Treasurer Mary Neidig VP of Fundraising Rose Blaschke VP of Membership Susan Thomas VP of Information Management Linda Rickard Ackerman VP of Music Education Donna Lynch Corresponding Secretary Kathy Swanson Manager CSG Shop Monica Owen CSG Shop Buyer

BOETTCHER CONCERT HALL Denver Performing Arts Complex 1000 14th Street, No. 15 Denver, CO 80202 303.292.5566 :: tickets@coloradosymphony.org

TICKETS 303.623.7876 :: coloradosymphony.org

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

13


SEPTEMBER

Opening Weekend: Rachmaninoff Symphony No. 2 Conducted by Brett Mitchell SEPT 14-16

CLASSICS

COMMUNITY

SEPT 20 THU 7:00 SYMPHONY POPS

Gershwin Concerto in F Conducted by Brett Mitchell

CLASSICS

SEPT 28-30 FRI-SAT 7:30 ■ SUN 1:00

SYMPHONY POPS

Halloween Spooktacular!

FAMILY

HalfNotes

NOVEMBER

Britten War Requiem

CLASSICS

NOV 2-4 FRI-SAT 7:30 ■ SUN 1:00

OCTOBER

A Light in the Void

SPECIAL

FRI 7:30

Rodgers and Hammerstein Celebration

SYMPHONY POPS

SAT 7:30

An Evening with Leslie Odom, Jr.

SPECIAL

OCT 13 SAT 7:30

Schubert Unfinished Symphony OCT 19-21

Time Warp - The Music of The Rocky Horror Show OCT 28 SUN 2:30

SEPT 22 SAT 7:30

OCT 6

WED-THU 7:00 | HalfNotes Presentation licensed by Disney Music Publishing and Buena Vista Concerts, a division of ABC Inc. © All rights reserved. OCT 26-27 FRI-SAT 7:30

Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra: Masters of American Song

OCT 5

MOVIE AT THE SYMPHONY

OCT 24-25

FRI-SAT 7:30 ■ SUN 1:00

Latin Beats: Sonidos de las Américas

Disney in Concert: Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas

FRI-SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 ■

CLASSICS

Lettuce with the Colorado Symphony NOV 10 SAT 7:30

Vienna Boys Choir NOV 11

SPECIAL

SUN 2:30

Bruch Performed by Pinchas Zukerman NOV 16-18

CLASSICS

FRI-SAT 7:30 ■ SUN 1:00

Movie at the Symphony: Home Alone in Concert NOV 23 FRI 7:30

Free Fallin’- A Tribute to the Music of Tom Petty

MOVIE AT THE SYMPHONY

|

HalfNotes

SPECIAL

NOV 24 SAT 7:30 HalfNotes Please join us for family-friendly activities 1 hour before the concert. presenting sponsors

These performances include FULL SCREENING OF THE FEATURE FILM!

also supported by

COLORADOSYMPHONY.ORG


Patton

Egan

K Contemporary Denver

KContemporaryArt.com

|

@KContemporaryArt

Gallery1261.com | @Gallery1261

Daniel Sprick


PHOTO: BRANDON MARSHALL

STO RIES O F NOTE

16

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


PHOTO: BRANDON MARSHALL

Photo above and at left: Music Director Brett Mitchell instructs a masterclass with the Lamont School of Music Students.

Striking a Chord By Nick Dobreff

The cultural impact of the Colorado Symphony extends far beyond the walls of Boettcher Concert Hall. With an annual economic impact of $30 million on the local economy, the Colorado Symphony plays a vital role in elevating Denver’s national reputation while improving the quality of life for current and future generations. However, the greatest impact is felt in classrooms and practice studios across Colorado, where 74% of full-time Colorado Symphony musicians currently serve as music educators or teach private lessons. An additional 19% of Colorado Symphony musicians have previously served as music educators or taught private lessons. “As musicians, we almost have an obligation to teach,” said John Sipher, Principal Trombone and Instructor of Trombone at the University of Northern Colorado. “Because music is an aural tradition, passed down from master to student, teaching is part of the process that also allows us to become masters as well. It’s important that we are able to pass on the knowledge that we’ve gained from our own teachers to the next generation of students and musicians so that the art form can truly live on.” SOUNDINGS

2018/19

17


STO RIES O F NOTE Colorado Symphony musicians are current faculty members at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Colorado State University, Metropolitan State University, Denver School of the Arts, University of Northern Colorado, University of Denver, Colorado Christian University, Legacy High School, and Compass Montessori. Colorado Symphony musicians are also current faculty members for the Colorado College Summer Music Festival and the Music at the Summit Adult Band Institute in Breckenridge. “Colorado Symphony musicians serve as music educators at all levels, and I am proud to be affiliated with an orchestra that places such a high value on education,” said Michael Thornton, Principal Horn and Associate Professor of Horn at the University of Colorado at Boulder. “The robust partnership between the University of Colorado Horn Studio and the Colorado Symphony Horn Section has led to many students performing with our orchestra and becoming gainfully employed in orchestras around the world.” As instructors, the greatest satisfaction comes from students moving on to professional careers in orchestras and ensembles around the world. But in a competitive industry with limited full-time openings, a student’s formative instruction can make all the difference. “I want my students to graduate with the confidence to perform in a broad area of music, from orchestral to freelancing to teaching, while being able to create their own career with the skills to achieve it,” said Courtney Hershey Bress, Principal Harp and Assistant Professor of Harp at Colorado State University and the Affiliate Professor of Harp at Metropolitan State University of Denver. “As a faculty member at the University of Northern Colorado, I feel very fortunate to work one-on-one with each of my students to help them achieve their goals,” added Jason Shafer, Principal Clarinet and Instructor of Clarinet at the University of Northern Colorado. “In addition to guiding their musical development, I also feel that it is a special honor to mentor them in their personal development and in their setting of career goals. Music education provides a unique opportunity to connect with students of all ages on a very deep level and is one of the biggest forces for positive change in many students’ lives and communities.” While achieving career goals necessitates the mastery of technical skills, it is just as important for instructors to foster creativity and imagination in their students. “I have a constant curiosity about all things musical, and try to instill this in every student,” said William Hill, Principal Timpani and Adjunct Faculty at Denver University. 18

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


PHOTO: BRANDON MARSHALL

Principal Bass Steve Metcalf mentors a young musician from the Denver Young Artists Orchestra on stage.

“The more they explore in the musical world the more ideas they will have to draw on for their own creativity.” Research has shown that studying music, especially at a young age, has a far-reaching impact on brain synapse creating, cognitive behavior, and social development. But with limits to Arts Education funding in schools throughout the country, it has become even more vital for musicians to impart knowledge and training to the next generation at every opportunity. “It is important as music educators to not only teach proper technique and musicality for an instrument, but also to educate students on the importance of music in society,” added Hershey Bress. “There is a definite lack of music education in our schools today and I am sometimes the sole source of teaching music to my students. Over 20 years of teaching, my goal has been for my students to be able to perform on the harp, but also to have good knowledge of the instrument and music in general.” Engaging the youth of Colorado has been a consistent goal of the Colorado Symphony for many years as nearly 30,000 children and adults annually attend educational outreach programs, community and youth concerts, and open rehearsals at Boettcher Concert Hall. These programs introduce orchestral music to children of all ages, from as young as one year old through 12th grade. SOUNDINGS

2018/19

19


STO RIES O F NOTE The Very Young Composers program places Colorado Symphony musicians into local public schools, exposing students to the world of musical composition. Students’ finished music has been performed in their schools, as well as onstage in Boettcher Concert Hall. “In this era of tweets and texts, tablets, and turbulence, the arts stand out as something uniquely personal and important, helping children to create something beautiful that they can claim as their own,” said Margaret Hoeppner, Cello and former Cello Instructor at Colorado Women’s College.

PHOTO: BRANDON MARSHALL

Colorado Symphony musicians perform annually alongside the Denver Young Artists Orchestra, one of the leading youth orchestras in the country, which was originally formed by musicians from the then Denver Symphony Orchestra in 1977. In the spirit of that collaborative history, a new strategic alliance has been formed between the two organizations, which will ensure that young musicians in the DYAO have even greater access to and mentorship from the musicians of the Colorado Symphony moving forward.

HalfNotes preconcert family activities often has an instrument petting zoo where youth can experience the instruments of an orchestra firsthand. 20

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


In addition to the DYAO, Colorado Symphony musicians participate in many other youth-based music programs throughout Colorado including El Sistema Colorado, the Colorado Youth Symphony, and Up Close and Musical. “Educating the next generation of performers and concert goers has always been central to my work,” said Basil Vendryes, Principal Viola and Adjunct Faculty at Denver University. “Working with talented and motivated young people invigorates my own performance and further informs my intentions when I walk on stage. The Colorado Symphony is heavily involved in music education for people of all ages, and I am grateful to be a part of providing great music and culture to our city and community.” Along with their work on stage and in the classroom, 52% of Colorado Symphony musicians currently perform with or lead another ensemble or perform as a soloist throughout the year. That includes performances with the Colorado College Summer Music Festival, the Englewood Arts Series, and the Music at the Summit Adult Band Institute in Breckenridge. Many also perform in local churches and hospitals, sharing joyous music throughout the Front Range. “The collective level of expertise on stage at the Colorado Symphony is staggering, and the orchestra impacts our community on many levels,” said Yumi Hwang-Williams, Concertmaster and Adjunct Faculty at Denver University. “As musicians, we have an inherent need to share our music, and this, in turn, feeds our passion to give music a symbiotic relationship to the city.” “I find teaching an outstanding balance to orchestral playing and I can’t imagine my artistic life if I didn’t teach,” added Peter Cooper, Principal Oboe and Senior Instructor of Oboe at the University of Colorado at Boulder. “If I have a part of helping someone be a creative and imaginative artist and a more thoughtful human being with a concept of how they can add beauty and generosity to the world, I will have done my job.” The Colorado Symphony continues to be an agent of social development in the community by enhancing music appreciation, providing unforgettable entertainment, and using music to touch the depths of the human spirit. But the most meaningful impact will come from connecting with the next generation of musicians who will become the artists, educators, and music enthusiasts of tomorrow.

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

21


Aspen 970.925.8579

Crested Butte 970.349.5023

Denver 303.399.4564

Steamboat Springs 970.879.9222

Telluride 970.728.3359

Vail 970.949.5500

Fotoimagery.com

interior landscapes that delight the senses

thurstonkitchenandbath.com


CLASSICS

2018/19

2018/19 SEASON PRESENTING SPONSORS:

GERSHWIN CONCERTO IN F CONDUCTED BY BRETT MITCHELL COLORADO SYMPHONY BRETT MITCHELL, conductor JOYCE YANG, piano TIMOTHY MCALLISTER, saxophone Friday, September 28, 2018, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, September 29, 2018, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, September 30, 2018, at 1:00 p.m. Boettcher Concert Hall

ELLINGTON Three Black Kings orch. Henderson King of the Magi King Solomon Martin Luther King, Jr. GERSHWIN Concerto in F for Piano and Orchestra Allegro Adagio - Andante con moto Allegro agitato — INTERMISSION —

JOHN ADAMS City Noir The City and Its Double The Song Is for You Boulevard Night

Friday's Concert is Gratefully Dedicated to the Chill Foundation Saturday’s Concert is Gratefully Dedicated to Mr. John F. Estes III and Mrs. Norma Horner

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

PROGRAM 1


CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES BRETT MITCHELL, conductor

PHOTO: ROGER MASTROIANNI

Hailed for presenting engaging, in-depth explorations of thoughtfully curated programs, Brett Mitchell began his tenure as Music Director of the Colorado Symphony in July 2017. Prior to this appointment, he served as the orchestra’s Music Director Designate during the 2016/17 season. He leads the orchestra in ten classical subscription weeks per season as well as a wide variety special programs featuring such guest artists as Renée Fleming, Yo-Yo Ma, and Itzhak Perlman. Mr. Mitchell is also in consistent demand as a guest conductor. Highlights of his 2018-19 season include subscription debuts with the Minnesota Orchestra and Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and return appearances with the orchestras of Cleveland, Dallas, and Indianapolis. Other upcoming and recent guest engagements include the Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee, National, Oregon, and San Antonio symphonies, the Grant Park Festival Orchestra, the Rochester Philharmonic, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Mitchell also regularly collaborates with the world’s leading soloists, including Yo-Yo Ma, Renée Fleming, Rudolf Buchbinder, Kirill Gerstein, James Ehnes, Augustin Hadelich, Leila Josefowicz, and Alisa Weilerstein. From 2013 to 2017, Mr. Mitchell served on the conducting staff of The Cleveland Orchestra. He joined the orchestra as Assistant Conductor in 2013, and was promoted to Associate Conductor in 2015, becoming the first person to hold that title in over three decades and only the fifth in the orchestra’s hundred-year history. In these roles, he led the orchestra in several dozen concerts each season at Severance Hall, Blossom Music Center, and on tour. From 2007 to 2011, Mr. Mitchell led over one hundred performances as Assistant Conductor of the Houston Symphony. He also held Assistant Conductor posts with the Orchestre National de France, where he worked under Kurt Masur from 2006 to 2009, and the Castleton Festival, where he worked under Lorin Maazel in 2009 and 2010. In 2015, Mr. Mitchell completed a highly successful five-year appointment as Music Director of the Saginaw Bay Symphony Orchestra. As an opera conductor, Mr. Mitchell has served as music director of nearly a dozen productions, principally at his former post as Music Director of the Moores Opera Center in Houston, where he led eight productions from 2010 to 2013. His repertoire spans the core works of Mozart (The Marriage of Figaro and The Magic Flute), Verdi (Rigoletto and Falstaff), and Stravinsky (The Rake’s Progress) to contemporary works by Adamo (Little Women), Aldridge (Elmer Gantry), Catán (Il Postino and Salsipuedes), and Hagen (Amelia). As a ballet conductor, Mr. Mitchell most recently led a production of The Nutcracker with the Pennsylvania Ballet in collaboration with The Cleveland Orchestra during the 2016-17 season. In addition to his work with professional orchestras, Mr. Mitchell is also well known for his affinity for working with and mentoring young musicians aspiring to be professional orchestral players. His tenure as Music Director of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra from 2013 to 2017 was highly praised, and included a four-city tour of China in June 2015, marking the orchestra’s PROGRAM 2

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES second international tour and its first to Asia. Mr. Mitchell is regularly invited to work with the highly talented musicians at the Cleveland Institute of Music and the orchestras at this country’s high-level training programs, such as the National Repertory Orchestra, Texas Music Festival, Sarasota Music Festival, and Interlochen Center for the Arts. Born in Seattle in 1979, Mr. Mitchell holds degrees in conducting from the University of Texas at Austin and composition from Western Washington University, which selected him in as its Young Alumnus of the Year in 2014. He also studied at the National Conducting Institute, and was selected by Kurt Masur as a recipient of the inaugural American Friends of the Mendelssohn Foundation Scholarship. Mr. Mitchell was also one of five recipients of the League of American Orchestras’ American Conducting Fellowship from 2007 to 2010. For more information, please visit www.brettmitchellconductor.com

JOYCE YANG, piano Pianist Joyce Yang came to international attention in 2005 when she won the silver medal at the 12th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. The youngest contestant at 19 years old, she also took home the awards for Best Performance of Chamber Music and of a New Work. A Steinway artist, in 2010 she received an Avery Fisher Career Grant. Yang has performed with New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and BBC Philharmonic, among many others, working with such distinguished conductors as James Conlon, Edo de Waart, Manfred Honeck, Lorin Maazel, Leonard Slatkin, and Jaap van Zweden. She has appeared in recital at New York’s Lincoln Center and Metropolitan Museum, Washington’s Kennedy Center, Chicago’s Symphony Hall, and Zurich’s Tonhalle. In the 2017/2018 season, Yang embarks on a series of debuts, collaborations, and premieres. Highlights include her debut with New Zealand Symphony Orchestra under Edo De Waart performing Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 3 in five New Zealand cities, a performance with Albany Symphony at Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. featuring works by Michael Torke (Three Manhattan Bridges, written expressly for Yang and commissioned by Albany Symphony) and Joan Tower (Still/Rapids), a reunion with Baltimore Symphony Orchestra for three performances of Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 3, and her first collaboration with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet on a new work for dancers and solo piano choreographed by Jorma Elo which will receive its world premiere in Aspen this March. Yang will also perform alongside Nashville Symphony Orchestra, Lexington Philharmonic, Eugene Symphony, Santa Rosa Symphony, Rochester Philharmonic, Milwaukee Symphony, Reno Philharmonic, Allentown Symphony, Oklahoma City Philharmonic, Vancouver Symphony, and Asheville Symphony. She will continue her enduring partnership with longtime collaborators Alexander String Quartet with performances of works by Schumann and Brahms in California and New York. Born in Seoul, Korea, in 1986, Yang received her first SOUNDINGS

2018/19

PROGRAM 3


CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES piano lesson from her aunt at age four. In 1997 she moved to the United States to study in the pre-college division of The Juilliard School. After winning The Philadelphia Orchestra’s Greenfield Student Competition, she performed Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto with that orchestra at just twelve years old. Yang appears in the film In the Heart of Music, a documentary about the 2005 Cliburn Competition. www.PianistJoyceYang.com www.facebook.com/PianistJoyceYang

TIMOTHY MCALLISTER, saxophone Timothy McAllister is one of today’s premier wind soloists, a member of the renowned PRISM Quartet, and a champion of contemporary music credited with more than forty recordings and two hundred premières of new compositions by eminent and emerging composers worldwide. McAllister has appeared with more than forty of the world’s most prestigious orchestras and ensembles in over twenty countries, and he has the distinction of being only the second saxophone soloist to appear in the 120-year history of the BBC London Proms concerts. He is featured on two GRAMMY® Award-winning recordings of the music of John Adams and Gavin Bryars on Nonesuch and ECM, respectively, and also appears on the AUR, Albany, Berlin Philharmonic Recordings, Centaur, Deutsche Grammophon, Equilibrium, Innova, Naxos, New Focus, New Dynamic, Parma, Soundset, Stradivarius, Summit, and XAS/Naxos labels. A revered teacher of his instrument, McAllister is Professor of Saxophone at the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance, following renowned American saxophone pedagogues Larry Teal and, his mentor, Donald Sinta. For complete information, see: www.timothymcallister.com

PROGRAM 4

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES EDWARD KENNEDY “DUKE” ELLINGTON (1899-1974): Three Black Kings Orchestrated by Luther Henderson (1919-2003) “Duke” Ellington was born April 29, 1899 in Washington, D.C., and died May 24, 1974 in New York City. Three Black Kings was composed in 1973 and premiered in August 1976 at ArtPark in Buffalo, New York by the Alvin Ailey Dance Company. The score calls for three flutes (third doubling piccolo), two oboes, English horn, two clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, drum kit, harp, piano, and strings. Duration is about 19 minutes. Marin Alsop was on the podium when the piece was last performed by the orchestra on September 18 and 19, 1998. Edward Kennedy (“Duke”) Ellington performed in jazz and ragtime bands in his native Washington, D.C. as a teenager. (He acquired his nickname from, he said, a friend “who liked to dress well.... I think he felt that in order for me to be eligible for his companionship I should have a title. So he named me Duke.” It perfectly suited Ellington’s fastidious manner and regal personality, and remained with him for the rest of his life.) In 1923, Ellington moved to New York, where he played in and composed for a small combo before founding the big band that he led for the next half century. Four years later he and the band were booked into Harlem’s Cotton Club, the city’s best-known and swankiest club offering black entertainment to wellhealed white customers, beginning a five-year run that established Ellington’s legendary status in American music. The success of his Mood Indigo in 1930, Ellington’s first hit record, brought him world-wide fame, which led to appearances in Hollywood films, tours across America and Europe, and more than 200 recordings. In the mid-1940s, he began writing large-scale compositions in jazz style for his own band and for concert orchestra, including a series of suites, music for film and stage, and, in his last decade, sacred works. For his contributions to the world’s musical life, Ellington received literally hundreds of awards (their listing occupies thirteen pages in his autobiography, Music Is My Mistress), including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, honorary degrees from Columbia, Brown, Howard, Yale and eleven other colleges and universities, and membership in the National Institute of Arts and Letters. His total creative catalog contains some 2,000 items: songs, short instrumental pieces, incidental music, musicals, ballets, scores for six films, two dozen suites for jazz and symphony orchestras (one of which is an adaptation of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker), and many sacred works for voices and instruments. He was working on an opera at the time of his death. “The impact of Duke Ellington,” wrote Frank Tirro in Jazz: A History, “is not easily measured, for in his long and prolific career he set standards in so many areas: as a composer, harmonic innovator, ensemble leader, recording artist, arranger, patron of aspiring jazz musicians, and spokesman for black Americans and black American culture.” In an article in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, André Hodier assessed that “‘Duke’ Ellington is generally recognized as the most important composer in jazz history.” Ellington began composing Three Black Kings in 1973 as a ballet for the Dance Theatre of Harlem, but had not finished the work at the time of his death the following year. He and his son, Mercer, discussed Three Black Kings frequently, however, and Mercer was able to complete the score; Luther Henderson, one of the Ellington band’s arrangers, did the orchestration. The premiere was given as by the Alvin Ailey Dance Company at ArtPark in Buffalo, New York in August 1976. The three kings that Ellington evoked in his music reflect both his deep spirituality and his interest in the civil rights movement: King of the Magi (Belthazaar, associated with the Nativity); King Solomon; and Martin Luther King, Jr. SOUNDINGS

2018/19

PROGRAM 5


CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES GEORGE GERSHWIN (1898-1937): Concerto in F for Piano and Orchestra George Gershwin was born September 26, 1898 in Brooklyn, New York, and died July 11, 1937 in Hollywood, California. He composed the Concerto in F in 1925, and was the soloist in the premiere on December 3rd at New York’s Carnegie Hall; Walter Damrosch conducted the New York Symphony. The score calls for piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, English horn, two clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion and strings. Duration is about 32 minutes. The orchestra last performed the Concerto on April 15-17, 2016, with Jeffrey Kahane in the dual role of conductor and soloist. Walter Damrosch, conductor of the New York Symphony and one of this country’s most prominent musical figures for the half-century before World War II, was among the Aeolian Hall audience when George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue exploded above the musical world on February 12, 1924. He recognized Gershwin’s genius (and, no doubt, the opportunity for wide publicity), and approached him a short time later with a proposal for another large-scale work. A concerto for piano was agreed upon, and Gershwin was awarded a commission from the New York Symphony to compose the piece, and also to be the soloist at its premiere and a half dozen subsequent concerts. The story that Gershwin then rushed out and bought a reference book explaining what a concerto is probably is apocryphal. He did, however, study the scores of some concertos of earlier masters to discover how they had handled the problems of structure and instrumental balance. He made the first extensive sketches for the work while in London during May 1925. By July, back home, he was able to play for his friends large fragments of the evolving work, tentatively entitled “New York Concerto.” The first movement was completed by the end of that month, the second and third by September, and the orchestration carried out in October and November, by which time the title had become simply Concerto in F. He gave the premiere with Damrosch the following month in Carnegie Hall. Gershwin provided a short analysis of the Concerto for the New York Tribune: “The first movement employs a Charleston rhythm. It is quick and pulsating, representing the young, enthusiastic spirit of American life. It begins with a rhythmic motif given out by the kettledrums, supported by other percussion instruments and with a Charleston motif introduced by bassoon, horns, clarinets and violas. The principal theme is announced by the bassoon. Later, a second theme is introduced by the piano. The second movement has a poetic, nocturnal atmosphere that has come to be referred to as the American blues, but in a purer form than that in which they are usually treated. The final movement is an orgy of rhythms, starting violently and keeping the same pace throughout.” Though Gershwin based his Concerto loosely on classical formal models, its structure is episodic in nature. His words above do not mention several other melodies that appear in the first and second movements, nor the return of some of those themes in the finale as a means of unifying the work’s overall structure.

 PROGRAM 6

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES JOHN ADAMS (B. 1947): City Noir John Adams was born February 15, 1947 in Worcester, Massachusetts. City Noir was composed in 2009 and premiered on October 8, 2009 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel with Timothy McAllister as soloist. The work is scored for piccolo, three flutes (third also doubling piccolo), three oboes, English horn, three clarinets (third also doubling bass clarinet), bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, saxophone, six horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, jazz drummer, piano, celesta, two harps and strings. Duration is about 35 minutes. This is the first performance of the piece by the orchestra. John Adams is one of today’s most acclaimed composers. Audiences have responded enthusiastically to his music, and he enjoys a success not seen by an American composer since the zenith of Aaron Copland’s career: a recent survey of major orchestras conducted by the League of American Orchestras found John Adams to be the most frequently performed living American composer; he received the University of Louisville’s distinguished Grawemeyer Award in 1995 for his Violin Concerto; in 1997, he was the focus of the New York Philharmonic’s Composer Week, elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and named “Composer of the Year” by Musical America magazine; he has been made a Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture; in 1999, Nonesuch released The John Adams Earbox, a critically acclaimed ten-CD collection of his work; in 2003, he received the Pulitzer Prize for On the Transmigration of Souls, written for the New York Philharmonic in commemoration of the first anniversary of the World Trade Center attacks, and was also recognized by New York’s Lincoln Center with a two-month retrospective of his work titled “John Adams: An American Master,” the most extensive festival devoted to a living composer ever mounted at Lincoln Center; from 2003 to 2007, Adams held the Richard and Barbara Debs Composer’s Chair at Carnegie Hall; in 2004, he was awarded the Centennial Medal of Harvard University’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences “for contributions to society” and became the first-ever recipient of the Nemmers Prize in Music Composition, which included residencies and teaching at Northwestern University; he was a 2009 recipient of the NEA Opera Award; he has been granted honorary doctorates from the Royal Academy of Music (London), Juilliard School and Cambridge, Harvard, Yale and Northwestern universities, honorary membership in Phi Beta Kappa, and the California Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts. Adams wrote that City Noir “is a symphony inspired by the peculiar ambience and mood of Los Angeles ‘noir’ films, especially those produced in the late 1940s and early 1950s. City Noir was first suggested by my reading Kevin Starr’s brilliantly imagined, multi-volume cultural and social history of California. In the ‘Black Dahlia’ chapter of his Embattled Dreams volume, Starr chronicles the tenor and milieu of the late 1940s and early 1950s as it was expressed in the sensational journalism of the era and in the dark, eerie chiaroscuro of the Hollywood films that have come to define the period sensibility for us: ‘… the underside of home-front and post-war Los Angeles stood revealed. Still, for all its shoddiness, the City of Angels possessed a certain sassy, savvy energy. It was, among other things, a Front Page kind of town where life was lived by many on the edge, and that made for good copy and good film noir.’ “The music of City Noir is in the form of a thirty-minute symphony. The first movement, The City and Its Double, opens with a brief, powerful ‘wide screen’ panorama that gives way to a murmuring dialogue between double bass pizzicato and scurrying figures in the woodwinds

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

PROGRAM 7


CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES and keyboards. After a broad and lyrical melodic passage in the strings, the original scorrevole [flowing, gliding] movement returns, charged with increasingly insistent impulse and building up steam until it peaks with a full-throttle orchestral tutti. A sudden stasis ushers in the second movement. “The Song Is for You takes its time assembling itself. Gradually a melodic profile in the solo alto sax emerges from the surrounding pools of chromatically tinted sonorities. Eventually the song finds full bloom in the voice of the solo trombone. Once spent of its fuel, the movement returns to the quiet opening music, ending with pensive solos by the principal horn and viola. “Boulevard Night is a study in cinematic colors, sometimes, as in the moody ‘Chinatown’ trumpet solo near the beginning, it is languorous and nocturnal; sometimes, as in the jerky, stop-start coughing engine music in the staccato strings, it is animal and pulsing; and other times, as in the slinky, sinuous saxophone theme that keeps coming back, each time with an extra layer of stage makeup, it is in-your-face brash and uncouth.” ©2018 Dr. Richard E. Rodda

S TAY

#ColoradoSymphony

SOCIAL

#MusicElevated Make the most of your Colorado Symphony experience by connecting with us on social media. Find backstage features, concert announcements, musician updates, and special discounts! @coloradosymphony @coloradosymphony @CO_Symphony

COLORADOSYMPHONY.ORG

PROGRAM 8

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G


CO M M U N I T Y SU P P O RT

YOU MAKE THE MUSIC HAPPEN. The extraordinary musical experiences that your Colorado Symphony creates depend on generous gifts from donors like you. There are many ways to support your Colorado Symphony, from the Annual Fund to the Symphony Ball, Brett Mitchell Society, Women of Note, and many more. We are pleased to recognize these generous gifts; thank you for making the music happen through your individual, corporate, and foundation support. PLATINUM CHAIRMAN’S SOCIETY

($50,000+)

GOLD CHAIRMAN’S SOCIETY

($25,000+)

This list includes gifts made to the Colorado Symphony from July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018. If you have any questions or concerns regarding a donor listing, please contact the Advancement Department directly at 303.308.2464. Thank you for your support!

AMG National Trust Bank The Anschutz Foundation Argonaut Wine & Liquor Mr. Mark Carleton Keith and Kathie Finger The Fries Foundation Ms. Amy C. Harmon IAC Corporation Kenneth King Foundation Lloyd J. King & Eleanor R. King Foundation Liberty Global, Inc Liberty Media Corporation LionTree Advisors, LLC Jane Costain and Gary Moore Schmitt Music Company George L. Shields Foundation, Inc. United Airlines The Virginia Hill Foundation Lee and Doris Yeingst

DIAMOND CHAIRMAN SOCIETY

CHAIRMAN’S SOCIETY

($10,000+)

ENDOWMENTS The following members of the Symphony family have established special funds to perpetuate the work of the Colorado Symphony for future generations. These endowed funds are gifts from individuals who have loved, believed in, and supported the orchestra. To these individuals, the Colorado Symphony extends endless gratitude. The Charles S. Sterne Conductor’s Podium The Bill Gossard Music Director Chair The Irene and David Abosch Oboe Chair The Friend of the Colorado Symphony Principal Percussion Chair The Dave and Pam Duke Families Guest Artist and Guest Conductor Fund

ANNUAL FUND DONOR LIST

($100,000+)

Anonymous Arrow Electronics, Inc. Avenir Foundation, Inc. Bonfils-Stanton Foundation Tom and Noël Congdon Mary Rossick Kern and Jerome H. Kern Esther R. Liss Living Trust Scientific and Cultural Facilities District Sterne-Elder Memorial Fund

Anonymous The Butler Family Fund Colorado Symphony Guild, Inc. Dresner Foundation Malone Family Foundation

Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Accetta Col. Philip Beaver and Mrs. Kim Beaver Ed and Laurie Bock Linda Shoemaker and Stephen Brett Florence R. and Ralph L. Burgess Trust Ralph L. and Florence R. Burgess Trust Sharon and James Butler Jim and Janice Campbell Merle C. Chambers Helen Murray Charitable Trust

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

23


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Young and Carolyn Cho The Clinton Family Fund CoBiz Financial Ms. Sherri Colgan Davis Graham & Stubbs, LLP DaVita Mr. Bob and Mrs. Lindsay Deibel Discovery Communications Mr. and Mrs. Herb Donner Mr. Adam and Mrs. Stephanie Donner Ernst & Young, LLP Mr. John F. Estes III and Mrs. Norma Horner Mr. Keegan Gerhard Thomas J. and Shirley C. Gibson Mr. Paul E. Goodspeed and Ms. Mary Poole Stephen and Margaret Hagood Diane S. Hill and Kevin E. Somerville Kenneth and Myra Monfort Charitable Fund KPMG, LLP Dr. Richard and Mrs. Mary Krugman LiveNation Bryant Martin Miller Family Foundation Drs. Sarah and Harold Nelson Northern Trust Dr. Christopher Ott and Mr. Jeremy Simons Lt. Col. and Mrs. Robert W. Riegel Raymond and Suzanne Satter Sherman & Howard Anna and John J. Sie Foundation University of Denver VAL-U-ADS of Colorado, Inc Verizon Wireless Mr. and Mrs. Seth Weisberg Alan and Judy Wigod Dr. Jack Wilson The Nancy S. & Earl L. Wright Foundation

SILVER CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE

($5,000+)

Anonymous (3) A.J. Markley Trust AEG Live Applejack Wine & Spirits Eugene & Florence Armstrong Family Foundation Baker & Hostetler, LLP Bank of America Ken and Zoe Barley Bob and Cynthia Benson Dr. and Mrs. David Campbell Mr. Willis Carpenter Cliff Foundation Colorado Rockies Baseball Club Donna and Ted Connolly Ms. Stephanie Copeland Drs. Richard J. and Jan Marie Crawford CU Foundation Karen and William Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Richard Deane

24

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Delta Dental Plan of Colorado Denver International Airport Driscoll Foundation FirstBank Fran and Mike Fisher Robert S. Graham Tom Haller and Kim Patmore Haselden Construction LLC Jennifer Heglin Lorraine and Harley Higbie Fund KUSA 9NEWS | TEGNA Foundation Donald and Margery Langmuir Adam Moore | LIV Sotheby’s International Realty Mabel Y. Hughes Charitable Trust Marjorie MacLachlan Macy’s Dr. Jon Masoudi and Dr. Marsha Tharakan Virginia and Bill McGehee Coreen and Mike Miller Ms. Lori Mitchell Robert and Carol Murphy Ms. Mary Neidig Frank Y. Parce Mr. Craig Ponzio Prologis PwC Republic National Distributing Company Dr. Susan B. Rifkin Sig Rosenfeld Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Sanders The Schramm Foundation Robert E. Schueller and Patricia Schueller Rob and Jane Scofield Scientific & Cultural Collaborative David and Susan Seitz Ms. Barbara Servis Harvey and Maureen Solomon Eric Sondermann and Tracy Dunning Steele Creek The Ilse Steinbach Revocable Trust Ms. Judith Z. Steinberg Stonebridge Companies The Estate of Jim Taylor Tender Belly Mr. Frank Trainer U.S. Bank Foundation Volunteers of America Sam Wagonfeld and Sally Allen Ms. Tina Walls Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC Malcolm and Donna Wheeler Michael and Sandra Wilson Dr. Martin Yussman Mr. and Ms. Michael A. Zoellner

CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE

Anonymous (2) Charles and Joan Albi Michael Altenberg and Libby Bortz Sue Anschutz-Rodgers

($2,000+)


classical | explore

Thoughtfully curated classical music to captivate the soul.

Enrich your life here.

NEW SEASON. NEW MUSIC.

FEEL THE SOUND! 2018-2019 SEASON Who Kidnapped the Conductor? Oct 13 Boundless Brass & Organ Nov 9-10 The Brass of Christmas Past Dec 15-16 Rhapsody in Brass Jan 12

Denver Brass: En Fuego! Echoes of the Emerald Isles Celtic Fusion Let Freedom Ring!

Feb 9-10 Mar 9-10 Mar 15-17 May 19

TICKETS ON SALE NOW 303-832-HORN(4676) denverbrass.org 303-871-7720 newmantix.com/denverbrass Buy early and save! Discounts for youth, seniors and ďŹ rst time listeners!

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

25


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Robert P. Austin Mr. Hartman Axley Margaret and Larry Ballonoff Addie and Bob Barkley Ms. Catherine Bess Mr. Ronald Bibby J. Fern Black Jude Blum Ms. Barbara Bohlman Roger and Susan Bowles Margaret C. Bozarth Mr. Scott Brockett Mr. Willard and Mrs. Peg Brown Nathan B. & Florence R. Burt Foundation John and Carol Burtness Dr. Bonnie W. Camp Ms. Martha Chamberlin Professor Gerald Chapman Dr. Helena L. Chum Ms. Isabelle Clark John L. Coil Colorado State University Community First Foundation Bill and Nancy Cook Jim and Julie Copenhaver Mr. Edward B. Cordes Polly Cordes

Colorado Symphony Guild Shop Please enjoy a

10% DISCOUNT on your total purchase by presenting this coupon in our gift shop in Gallery One. (Excludes CDs, select books and sale items) Valid for the 2018-19 season only

All purchases support the Colorado Symphony The shop is entirely staffed by CSG volunteers

www.coloradosymphonyguild.org

26

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Anne M. Culver Lou Tate Dafoe Mr. Robert and Mrs. Lenore Damrauer The Denver Post Community Foundation Zach and Joy Detra Mark and Katherine Dickson Dr. Stephen Dilts Drs. Ellen and Anthony Elias BeneFactor/Randall Carter Fine Arts Foundation Mr. Keith Fisher Four Seasons Hotel Denver Mr. Brian Freeman Mr. Roger Freeman Mr. Robert Friedlander Deborah and Theodore Gaensbauer Mrs. Sally S. Gart Ms. Donna S. Gerich Mr. and Mrs. George C. Gibson Mr. Jason Golden Mr. Peter and Mrs. Rhondda Grant The Friedlander Family - Great Lakes Marine Denver Celeste and Jack Grynberg Sally Haas Dr. and Mrs. Karl Hammermeister Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Harry Mr. Philip Hiester and Ms. Deborah Reshotko Bill and Donna Hoberecht Mr. Glen and Mrs. Penny Holguin Elizabeth and Steve Holtze Renate and Joseph Hull The Humphreys Foundation Thomas J. Jirak and Susan Graber Edeltraud Johnson Richard and Mary Anne Johnston Donald and Henny Kaufmann Mr. Matthew R. Keeney Joe and Francine Kelso Rob and Kathy Klugman Donna C. Kornfeld Mr. George Kruger The Estate of Gloria S. Kubel Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kugeler Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Landis Sandy and Evan Lasky Warren and Nancy Lawrence Don Leach Leopold Brothers Judge and Mrs. John P. Leopold Mrs. Ann C. Levy Robert and Patricia Lisensky M. Catherine and James R. Look Mrs. Jeri Loser John and Merry Low Mr. Greg and Mrs. Julie Lucas Mr. Roger Lynch Evi and Evan Makovsky Ms. Joan Manley Stephen McConahey Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Neil McLagan Sharon L. Menard


Open Space 2018-19 SEASON HIGHLIGHTS • SEP 29—A Tribute to John Williams

• FEB 9—Mahler Symphony No. 4

• OCT 13 & 14— Infinite Space with Holst’s The Planets & video

• MAR 2—Elgar Cello Concerto & Beethoven Symphony No. 4

• NOV 4—Violinist Midori plays Sibelius

• MAR 23—Pixar in Concert

• NOV 23-25—The Nutcracker Ballet

• APR 27—Peter Boyer’s Ellis Island: The Dream of America with actors & video

• JAN 19 & 20— Pianist Garrick Ohlsson plays Rachmaninoff

• MAY 4—The Music of David Bowie

PERFORMANCES AT MACKY, BOULDER & PINNACLE PAC, DENVER

A Symphony of Care

Ticket start at $15; Students $5!

www.BoulderPhil.org

303.449.1343

Professional experiences, diverse opportunities for collaboration and dedicated instruction from renowned performers, composers and scholars await you at the University of Colorado Boulder College of Music.

Extraordinary care orchestrated for each patient and family. Because time is precious, and every day counts.

Discover what’s here at colorado.edu/music

720.482.1988 agape-healthcare.com SOUNDINGS

2018/19

27


COMMU N I T Y SU PPORT Ms. Anne Mills Ms. Anne B. Mills Brett and Angela Mitchell Henry B. Mohr Ms. Diane Nagler Judie and Ron Neel Ben and Pattie Nelson Elizabeth and Heather Neva Mr. Timothy W. Nicholas Ms. Sheila O’Brien Dr. Bonnie M. Orkow, Ph.D. Mr. David Parce Sue and Edwin Peiker Bonnie C. Perkins Dr. Peter S. Quintero Richard Replin and Elissa Stein Myra and Robert Rich Ms. Margaret Roath Robertson Family Foundation Terri and Jay Rolls Mr. Richard Roman Elyse Tipton and Paul Ruttum Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Saunders Mr. Clayton Saylor Dave Schmitz Henry R. Schmoll Sam and Marty Sloven Phoebe Anne Smedley William F. Smith and Shirley A. Scott Mr. Adam Sohn SOL Bras & Sleepwear Ms. Kathy Spuhler Mr. Gordon W. Stenger Vicki and Harry Sterling Mrs. Beatrice Taplin Ms. Erin Trapp Ms. June Travis Mr. and Mrs. Howard Turetzky Dr. and Mrs. Ed Van Bramer Richard E. Wagner Mr. andMrs. Douglas Ward Mr. Larned Waterman, Jr. and Mr. Paul S. Mesard Mr. James Williams Drs. Richard and Jean Williams Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan F. Zeschin

SYMPHONY CONCERTMASTER

Anonymous (3) Mr. Todd and Mrs. Sarah Alijani Altour Travel Nancy Ball Ms. Nan L. Barnett Barolo Grill Richard & Linda Bateman Ms. Barbara Berryman John and Sandy Blue Mr. Aryeh B. Bourkoff Cole Brannick

28

($1,000+)

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

George and Beth Brinkworth Ms. Patricia Butler Alice Silver and Tom Byrnes Douglas and Constance Cain Keith and Lindsay Campbell Dr. and Mrs. James G. Chandler David and Joan Clark Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Sheila M. Cleworth Ms. Shirley Hamilton and Ms. G. Brooks Clouser Catherine Cole Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cox Ms. Marilyn M. Davis Denver Museum Of Nature & Science Mrs. Mary Donlon Mr. Carl and Mrs. Nancy Eklund Evan D. Ela-Collins Cockrel & Cole, P.C. Ms. Susan Ellis Mr. James W. Espy Clark and Martha Ewald Fackler Legacy Gift Jim and Jo Ferguson Eileen & Paul Finkel Mrs. Mary Lou Flater Ms. Jayne Ford Frederick G. Fish Foundation Joan M. French Mr. and Mrs. John E. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Greg Fulton Dr. and Mrs. John H. Gale Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gallagher Ms. Jillian Gibbs Dr. Burton and Mrs. Lee Golub Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Company Hugh and Nancy Grove Ms. Misty Haisfield Mr. James Hanegan Melody Harris The Havercroft Family Foundation Hayes Family Foundation Mr. Nick Hazen Ms. JC Heinen Ann Herron Margaret Hoeppner Mrs. Eileen Honnen-McDonald Ruth and George Hopfenbeck M. J. Hopkins Mr. Joshua N. Hunt Michael E. Huotari and Jill R. Stewart Dr. and Mrs. David E. Hutchison Yumi Hwang-Williams IBM International Foundation Intrinsic Well Being Med Spa Mrs. Eleanor L. Isbill Mr. and Mrs. Bradley James Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Jenkins Mr. Douglas C. Jones Robert W. Karow Dr. Richard and Mrs. Carla Kem Mr. Allen Kemp Dr. Peter Kennealey and Dr. Colleen Murphy


James and Karin Mote Chris Murata Mr. and Mrs. Bill Myers Anne and David Necker Mr. and Mrs. W. Peterson Nelson Mr. Zack Neumeyer Derek Newcom Dr. Richard and Mrs. Florence O’Day OfficeScapes Ed and Jean Onderko Ms. Sue Pawlik Kerry Pearlman Al and Ursula Powell Mr. Bennett L. Price Mr. & Mrs. James Proffitt Mr. Nick Recuber The Renee and Martin Gross Family Foundation Mr. Eli Reshotko and Mrs. Adina Reshotko Steven and Joan Ringel Ayliffe and Fred Ris Mr. Daniel L. Ritchie Dr. Gregory Robbins Eleanor Roberts Ms. Susan D. Rodger Sallie and John Ruhnka Jim and Doreen Ryan Suzanne Barber Ryan Saunders Construction, Inc. Amanda Sawyer Mr. Loren Schillinger

Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Kern Mishele Kieffer Kinder Morgan Foundation Mr. Michael Biere John and Alicia Kinnamon Don Kirkpatrick Mr. Richard Koseff Phyllis and James Kurtz-Phelan Mr. Gregg Kvistad Mr. John LeBel Minnie B. Lindsey Mr. and Mrs. Alan Lipner Dr. Leonard Loudis Cathleen Lynch John Mamuscia Jean L. Marshall Mr. and Mrs. John S. Martin Mr. Trent and Mrs. Nicole Martinet Dr. Jody Mathie and Mr. John F. Hoffman Mr. David McCleod Dr. and Mrs. John G. McFee Ms. Robin McGehee Katherine McMurray Robert Meade Ms. Janet Melson The Janet Melson Charitable Gift Fund Gene and Dee Milstein Mr. Robert R. Montgomery Janet Mordecai Mr. Chuck and Mrs. Becky Morris

25

Celebrating our

TH

Anniversary Season

Icons in Sound: The Rachmaninoff Vespers

The Eleventh Hour: Anerio Requiem

A Marian Christmas: Maiden and Mother

September 28, 29, 30

November 2, 3, 4

December 14, 16, 21, 22

For tickets, visit www.stmartinschamberchoir.org or call 303-298-1970 SOUNDINGS

2018/19

29


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Ruth Schoening Mrs. Nancy Schulein Elizabeth Scully Jon Gamm and Kathleen Sgamma Shanahan’s Steakhouse Ms. Carole Shaw Mr. and Mrs. George Shaw Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Shultz Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Silverman Singer Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sisk Billie Smith Billie Busby and Sidney Smith Hanspeter Spuhler Mr. Kevin Stephenson Mr. & Mrs. Terry J. Stevinson Mrs. Marcia D. Strickland Helena and Allan Striker Superfly Events Lou and Katherine Svoboda Mr. Lloyd Sweet Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Tashiro Judy and Rob Tate Tipton Family Foundation Ms. Sheila Trader Kyle and Bev Turner Mrs. Anne Waite Sam Walker Mr. Tim and Mrs. Lisa Walsh Mrs. Mary Washington Dr. and Mrs. Warren Washington Peter Weiser Mr. and Mrs. Jim White Lauren Whitney Henry E. Wurst Family Foundation

SYMPHONY MUSICIAN

($500+)

Anonymous (6) DeAnn Anderson Dr. Irv Arenberg Bruce Avery James Bailey The James and Alvina Bartos Balog Foundation Mr. Edward Bartholic Nancy Battan Dr. and Mrs. Henry J. Beckwitt Anne and Henry Beer Mr. Douglas Bell Ms. Mariette Bell Claire Benson Mr. David Bentley Marie and Howard Blaney Blue Moon Brewing Company – RiNo Ms. Soley M. Bogadottir Laura Borbely Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Boyle Mark and Therese Brady Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Brauchli Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bronesky

30

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Ms. Barbara Brown Brooke Brown Mr. John Bruno Sandy and Rogene Buchholz Mrs. Elizabeth S. Budd Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bushman Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Butz Rusty and Ellen Campos Mr. Marc Camron and Ms. Victoria Camron Mr. and Mrs. Tod Cavey Cherry Creek Shopping Center Dr. David and Mrs. Delores Claassen Ms. Toni H. Cohig Mr. John A. Coppola Frances S. Corsello Kerry and Walter Cote Dr. James W. Craft Ray and Kathleen Cravy Curtis Hotel Hille L. Dais Yuko D'Ambrosia Mr. Scott M. Davis Dobbins Foundation Margaret Dong The Dowling Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Drew Gary and Kathryn Dudley Louise and Robert Dudley Dr. and Mrs. Michael P. Earnest Max and Carol Ehrlich Mr. Edward and Mrs. Judith Elgethun Lucy and Dan Ellerhorst Barbara Neal and Edward E. Ellis Mr. Bayard Ewing Mrs. Carla Ewing Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ewing Mr. Stuart Fehr Dr. & Mrs. Richard Fieman Ms. Elizabeth Fischer and Mr. D. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Flannery Ms. Allison Foster Ms. Kirsten D. Franz Dr. Lauren Fraser and Ms. Rebecca Coughlin Joann Freedman Ms. JoAnne Friedman Mr. David F. Fritz Virginia E. & Robert K. Fuller Todd Gander and Terry Hsu-Gander Marvin and Shirley Gang Lester and Joan Garrison Caleb and Sidney Gates General Electric Foundation Marshall and Jenifer Gile The Gilman Family Foundation Monica Glickman and Craig Carver Tamara Golden and Tim Worrall Mr. and Mrs. James B. Grange Ms. Andrea J. Grant Ms. Carolyn Grant Mr. and Mrs. Ed Greene Dennis and Eileen Griffin


PROUD SUPPORTER OF THE COLORADO SYMPHONY

970.401.0304 SOLEY@KENTWOOD.COM SOLEYMARIA.COM

A

LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED MORTUARY

Attentive & Honest Serving All Faiths Available Statewide 24/7 Pre-plan Savings Veterans Benefits On-Site Crematory Global performance. World-class entertainment. You have to be here. cupresents.org · 303-492-8008

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

31


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Mr. and Mrs. Peter Griffiths Mr. Mark Grueskin Ms. Mariellen Guerra Michael and Frances Gundzik Ms. Julia Gwaltney Mr. and Mrs. Alvin W. Haggerty Scott G. Halford Charles and Linda Hamlin M.R. Hammond Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hancock Mr. Billy Harris and Ms. Linda Purcell Mrs. Joan Hazen Dr. Raymond Henkel Owen and Deborah Herman Cathey A. Herren Mr. and Mrs. J.B. Hewetson Mr. and Mrs. James Hidahl Mrs. Patricia C. Higgins Dr. Stephen Hindes Ms. Sally Hopper Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hucks, Jr. Ms. Jane A. Hultin Robert and Betty Huzjak Karen Hyde Mr. Jon Isenhart Codey James Jax Fish House & Oyster Bar Jay’s Valet Mrs. Jill Johnke Marvin and Carole Johnson Mr. Eric E. Johnson Mrs. Kathleen Johnson and Mr. Stephen Vierling Dr. and Mrs. Everette G. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Judd Maria Jump Betsy Herrick and Milt Kahn Ms. Susan Kelly Ms. Judy H. Kessenich Mark Kessler Ms. Soraya Khalje Vivek Khemka Kirkland Museum Of Fine & Decorative Art The Kitchen Mistress Mel and Roberta Klein Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Kleinsteiber Mr. Briggs and Ms. Kostyashkina Sylvia J. Kreider Stuart & Janet Kritzer Family Foundation Ms. Emma Kucharski John W. Kure and Cheryl L. Solich Ms. Nancy Lambertson Steve and Pat Larson Penny and Dick Leather David C. Leger Mr. Owen Levine Mr. Paul V. LoNigro Patty Lorie Ms. Marian Lyons Ms. Antoinette MacAluso

32

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Mrs. Jean Macferran Mr. Stephen and Ms. Mara Marks Mr. Bruce William Martin Mr. Chet K. Hampson and Ms. Susan Martin William J. Martinez & Judith C. Shlay Myron McClellan and Lawrence Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Robert McClelland Dr. Jerrald McCollum Mr. and Mrs. Timothy McCutcheon Michael E. McGoldrick Ms. Karen M. McGrath Carla E. McKennett McNeil Designer Portraits Ms. Carla McWilliams Mr. and Mrs. Harold ‘Bud’ Meadows Mr. Steve Metcalf Mr. Stephen Mill Jay and Lois Miller The Moe Family Charitable Fund Mr. David Mosteller Jason Murphy Mrs. Cynthia F. Nagel Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Newberry Mr. and Mrs. Alan F. Nies Larry O’Donnell and Kermit Cain Ray O’Loughlin and Jamie Henderson Mary and Art Otten Mr. Gary and Mrs. Joyce Pashel Charles Patterson Mr. Anthony Pierce Mr. Cason and Rachel Pierce Russ Poole Mr. David Porter Ed Post Mr. Garrod S. Post Mr. and Mrs. H.W. Praetorius QEP Resources, Inc. Ms. Haley C. Reidy Al Richards Nancy and Gene Richards Ms. Sabina Rizzo Charles P. Rogers MD Mr. Bernie Rogoff and Ms. Jean Greenberg Anthony C. and Patricia J. Romeo Mr. Albert Ross Ms. Julie B. Rubsam Dr. Joanne Rudoff Ms. Carol L. Rust Sage Hospitality James and Carol Salbenblatt Mrs. Coleen Sanders Cynthia L. and Paul D. Schauer Ms. Elizabeth Schlosser David Schmidt Ms. Mary Ann Schultz Elizabeth Scully Mr. David Seeland Ms. Carla L. Seeliger Betty and Maurice Serotta Edward Shaoul Barbara L. Sharp


Sen. Nan Spencer St. Julien Hotel & Spa Mr. Thomas R. Stephens Philip Stoffel and Tricia Hughey Julie and John Strain Arthur and Stephanie Strasburger Mr. and Ms. Steve Straub Dr. Darwin Strickland Mr. Steve Swalm Mr. and Mrs. William E. Sweet, III Table To Tavern Mr. and Mrs. John Tabor Carol and Cedric Tarr Mr. Frank Thomson Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Tillery Mr. Aaron Torres David Tourtelot and Nikki Headlee Mr. Ted Trimpa Dick and Pat Tucker Mr. and Mrs. William A. Tuthill, III Albin Ulle Ms. Heather Van Dusen Robert J. Varga Jr. Normie and Paul VoillequĂŠ Mr. David Wagner John and Kristine Wallack Mr. Kip Wallen Mr. Jason & Mrs. Kelly Waltrip Carley J. Warren Ms. Hanna Warren

Mr. and Mrs. Tor Westgaard Ms. Rosemary Williamson David Wilson Jordan Wright Dr. and Mrs. Roy R. Wright Dick and Lorie Young Mr. and Mrs. Ken Ziebarth Susan Zohn John Zuckert

While we are only able to list a portion of our 2017-18 donors, we acknowledge and thank all of our donors and patrons who contributed this past season, no matter the amount. Every dollar and donor count!

MATCHING DONATIONS Thank you to the companies who match current and retired employee contributions to the Colorado Symphony and to our donors who apply for these matching gifts. Please check with your Human Resources Department to see if your contribution can double through the generosity of your company. To contact the Advancement Department directly, please call Sean Baker at 303.534.0757.

exploring mars Pushing space exploration further with one of NASA’s Mars rover engineers.

Dec 13 at 7:30 pm

Images: NASA-JPL-Caltech

Tickets from $34 / $18 kids Subscriptions also available newmancenter.du.edu 303-871-7720 Newman Center box office 2344 E Iliff Ave

Kobie Boykins nasa engineer

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

33


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT WOMEN OF NOTE DONOR LIST The following are members of the Colorado Symphony’s Women of Note (WON) for the 18/19 Season as of June 30th, 2018. Every year, funds raised through Women of Note membership dues help to offset the salary cost of one distinguished female Colorado Symphony musician. WON members receive exclusive benefits and event invitations throughout the season. To join or renew your Women of Note membership please contact Caiti Glasgo at 303.308.2475.

Founding Members

Marin Alsop Paula Bernstein Terry Biddinger Erna Butler Eileen Honnen-McDonald Sandy Lasky Mary Rossick Kern

2017/18 Donors

Nancy Accetta Adelaide Barkley Ms. Catherine Bess Alice Silver Donna Connolly Ms. Anne M. Culver Mrs. Mary Lou H. Flater Deborah Gaensbauer Ms. Monica Glickman Elizabeth Holtze Mrs. Eileen Honnen-McDonald Yumi Hwang-Williams Montjoy Kugeler Sandy Lasky Ann Levy Nira Lipner Mrs. Carolyn Longmire Jeri Loser Merry Low Julie Lucas Ms. Janet Mordecai Karin Mote Ms. Christie Murata Carol Murphy Ms. Mary Neidig Ms. Sheila O’Brien Ursula Powell Ms. Barbara Servis Ms. Patricia Somerville Ms. Kathy Spuhler Mary Washington Rivka Weisberg

34

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

BRETT MITCHELL SOCIETY The following are members of the Colorado Symphony’s Brett Mitchell Society (BMS) for the 18/19 Season as of June 30th, 2018. BMS members are highly engaged benefactors who share the Colorado Symphony passion for artistic excellence and innovation and who support the Symphony through their subscriptions and annual donations. The Colorado Symphony is grateful for the continued support of these individuals. To join or renew your Brett Mitchell Society membership please contact Caiti Glasgo at 303.308.2475. Anonymous (3) Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Accetta Michael Altenberg and Libby Bortz Margaret and Larry Ballonoff Ken and Zoe Barley Col. Philip Beaver and Mrs. Kim Beaver J. Fern Black John and Carol Burtness Dr. Bonnie W. Camp Mr. Willis Carpenter Professor Gerald Chapman Young and Carolyn Cho Ms. Sherri Colgan Tom and Noël Congdon Donna and Ted Connolly Bill and Nancy Cook Drs. Richard J. and Jan Marie Crawford Karen and William Curtis Lou Tate Dafoe Drs. Ellen and Anthony Elias Mr. John F. Estes III and Mrs. Norma Horner Keith and Kathie Finger Fran and Mike Fisher Deborah and Theodore Gaensbauer Ms. Donna S. Gerich Thomas J. and Shirley C. Gibson Mr. Paul E. Goodspeed and Ms. Mary Poole Robert S. Graham Stephen and Margaret Hagood Dr. and Mrs. Karl Hammermeister Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Harry Jennifer Heglin Diane S. Hill and Kevin E. Somerville Bill and Donna Hoberecht Elizabeth and Steve Holtze Richard and Mary Anne Johnston Donald and Henny Kaufmann Joe and Francine Kelso Mary Rossick Kern and Jerome H. Kern Rob and Kathy Klugman Mr. George Kruger Dr. Richard and Mrs. Mary Krugman Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Landis Donald and Margery Langmuir


Judge and Mrs. John P. Leopold Marjorie MacLachlan Evi and Evan Makovsky Sharon L. Menard Coreen and Mike Miller Ms. Anne Mills Brett and Angela Mitchell Ms. Mary Neidig Frank Y. Parce Sue and Edwin Peiker Myra and Robert Rich Lt. Col. and Mrs. Robert W. Riegel Dr. Susan B. Rifkin Mr. Richard Roman Sig Rosenfeld Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Sanders Raymond and Suzanne Satter Henry R. Schmoll Robert E. Schueller and Patricia Schueller David and Susan Seitz William F. Smith and Shirley A. Scott Harvey and Maureen Solomon Vicki and Harry Sterling Dr. and Mrs. Ed Van Bramer Richard E. Wagner Mr. Larned Waterman, Jr. and Mr. Paul S. Mesard Alan and Judy Wigod Mr. James Williams Dr. Jack Wilson Michael and Sandra Wilson

EDUCATION DONOR LIST Through our Musicurious program, your Colorado Symphony reaches thousands of young people within and well outside the Denver metro area, from month’s-old through high school and beyond. We always work to extend and increase our outreach and could not possibly do it without your support. Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Accetta Ms. Valerie Antonioli Mr. Chase Barton Mr. Ronald Bibby Emanouil Bontchev Ms. Linda M. Buell Nathan B. & Florence R. Burt Foundation Prof. Elizabeth C. Childs Jim and Julie Copenhaver Kerry and Walter Cote Ursula Davis Ms. Marcia DeBell Darlene Deichert The Denver Post Community Foundation Ms. Loralee Dischner Anita Donnelly Dresner Foundation Michael Eller

Mrs. Jane H. Engle Ms. Anne C. Fendrich Fine Arts Foundation Joan M. French The Fries Foundation Stephen and Elizabeth Gannon Ms. Marilyn Gary Alan G. and Sally R. Gass Mr. Jason Golden Stacie Goldin Kent I. and Fredrika S. Groff Ms. Regina A. Hackley Ms. Sarah Halverstadt Ms. Kaaren Hardy Diana Haskell Ms. Joyce Hofer Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Hofer Mrs. Isabella W. Horsky Mr. William Hurlbut Mr. Jon Isenhart Betsy Herrick and Milt Kahn Ms. Miriam Kapner Kinder Morgan Foundation Sylvia J. Kreider Ms. Nancy Lambertson Mr. & Mrs. Dan K. Levin Liberty Global, Inc. Mr. Jason Lichtenwalter Mr. Brian Lucas Ms. Donna Ludwig Ms. Jane Macgregor Malone Family Foundation Mr. Chet K. Hampson and Ms. Susan Martin Chris Marye Ms. Lisa M. Metzler Mr. and Mrs. Adam Morris Mr. Andrew Morton Ms. Elizabeth Nelms Ms. Katie O’Brian Ms. Jennifer Olson Barbara J. Pierpoint Ralph L. and Florence R. Burgess Trust Ms. Beverly Robin Mr. and Mrs. Brian Rose Ms. Perla Sanchez Ms. Jane Schroll Scientific & Cultural Collaborative Sherilee Selby Ms. Cheri Seupaul Singer Family Foundation John and Kathleen Sloan Ms. Lois Thornton U.S. Bank Foundation Verizon Wireless Ms. Jane Wingle The Nancy S. & Earl L. Wright Foundation Bob and Kathy Zachman

SOUNDINGS

2018/19

35


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT BALL SPONSOR LIST RhapsodyRock was themed to celebrate Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, the official theme for United Airlines, our 2018 Margaret Phipps Award Recipient. The Merger and special guest Natasha Paremski performed with your Colorado Symphony in a concert evening that helped raise over $1 million to sustain Symphony programs. Through table sales, donations, sponsorships, and real-time donations supporting operational and educational programming including Very Young Composers, the Colorado Symphony Ball 2018 was a great success. Visit coloradosymphony.org/Tickets/Special-Events to learn more on how you can support the next ball, April 6, 2019!

Presenting Sponsor

Arrow Electronics, Inc.

($75,000+)

Virtuoso

($50,000+)

Maestro

($25,000+)

Malone Family Foundation

AMG National Trust Bank Anonymous Mr. Mark Carleton Keith and Kathie Finger IAC Corporation Mary Rossick Kern and Jerome H. Kern Liberty Global, Inc. Liberty Media Corporation LionTree Advisors, LLC The Fries Foundation The Anschutz Foundation

Encore

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Accetta Ms. Amy C. Harmon KPMG LLP Sherman & Howard Linda Shoemaker and Stephen Brett Tina Walls, Erin Trapp, and Friends

Concertmaster

($15,000+)

($10,000+)

CoBiz Financial Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP Discovery Communications Ernst & Young, LLP Diane S. Hill and Kevin E. Somerville Dr. Christopher Ott and Mr. Jeremy Simons University of Denver

36

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Principal

($5,000+)

Rock Level

($1,000+)

Bach Level

($500+)

Donations & Auction GIK

($500+)

AEG Live Baker & Hostetler, L.L.P. Bank of America Young and Carolyn Cho Colorado Rockies Baseball Club Ms. Stephanie Copeland CU Foundation Delta Dental Plan of Colorado Denver International Airport BeneFactor/Randall Carter FirstBank Haselden Construction LLC Dr. Richard and Mrs. Mary Krugman KUSA 9NEWS | TEGNA Foundation Adam Moore | LIV Sotheby’sInternational Realty Bryant Martin PwC Eric Sondermann and Tracy Dunning Steele Creek Stonebridge Companies Tender Belly Volunteers of America Ms. Isabelle Clark Colorado State University Mr. Roger Freeman Mr. Roger Lynch Ms. Diane Nagler Mr. Adam Sohn Ms. Erin Trapp Ms. June Travis

John and Carol Burtness Jim and Julie Copenhaver Mr. Brian Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Ed Greene Ms. JC Heinen Mr. Matthew R. Keeney Sandy and Evan Lasky Mr. John LeBel Mr. David Mosteller OfficeScapes Rob and Jane Scofield

AEG Live Altour Travel Arrow Electronics, Inc. Barolo Grill Blue Moon Brewing Co. - Rino Mr. Aryeh B. Bourkoff Roger and Susan Bowles Brooke Brown Sharon and James Butler Merle C. Chambers Cherry Creek Shopping Center Cleo Parker Robinson Dance


ALWAYS YOU. DISCOVER A NEW SIDE OF EVERY STORY WITH BROADWAY AND THEATRE COMPANY

THE

SEP 7 – OCT 14, 2018 STAGE THEATRE

WIFE

SPACE THEATRE

A

CHRISTMAS

CAROL

OCT 23 – 28, 2018 BUELL THEATRE

SEP 25 – OCT 13, 2018

SEP 21 – OCT 21, 2018

BUELL THEATRE

The company of A Christmas Carol. Photo by Adams VisCom.

OKLAHOMA!

CONSTANT

NOV 21 – DEC 24, 2018 STAGE THEATRE

NOV 3, 2018 – APR 28, 2019 GARNER GALLERIA THEATRE

ANNA

KARENINA NOV 13 – 25, 2018

JAN 25 – FEB 24, 2019 STAGE THEATRE

BUELL THEATRE

DENVERCENTER.ORG BROADWAY SEASON SPONSORS

THEATRE COMPANY SEASON SPONSORS

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Mr. Edward B. Cordes Polly Cordes Denver Museum Of Nature and Science Zach and Joy Detra Mr. Carl and Mrs. Nancy Eklund Ms. Jayne Ford Mr. Keegan Gerhard Mr. James Hanegan Melody Harris Mr. Joshua N. Hunt Karen Hyde Intrinsic Well Being Med Spa Codey James Jax Fish House & Oyster Bar Vivek Khemka Kirkland Museum Of Fine & Decorative Art The Kitchen Mistress Rob and Kathy Klugman Mr. Gregg Kvistad Leopold Brothers LiveNation Dr. Leonard Loudis Mr. Greg and Mrs. Julie Lucas Cathleen Lynch Mr. Trent and Mrs. Nicole Martinet Coreen and Mike Miller Jason Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Bill Myers Mr. Zack Neumeyer Al Richards Mr. Daniel L. Ritchie Ms. Sabina Rizzo Robertson Family Foundation Sage Hospitality Mrs. Coleen Sanders Elizabeth Scully Shanahan’s Steakhouse Edward Shaoul Mr. Adam Sohn St. Julien Hotel & Spa Ms. Judith Z. Steinberg Mr. Kevin Stephenson Superfly Events Table To Tavern United Airlines Mr. David Wagner Sam Walker David Wilson John Zuckert

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS The following gifts were made to the Colorado Symphony in memory of a family member, friend, or supporter of the Symphony. These tributes hold an honored place with the Colorado Symphony and we are pleased to recognize them. 38

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

In memory of Gene Amole’s KVOD given by: Mr. R. Glesner and Mrs. B. Schwarm Glesner In memory of Nan Barnett given by: Carol Jordan In memory of Jeanette R. Bibby given by: Mr. Ronald Bibby In memory of Edward Bolle given by: Chin K. Tan In memory of Aurthur Boss given by: Mr. and Mrs. David J. Harguth In memory of Blair Chotzinoff, Jerry Endsley, Ken Harper and Harry T. Safstrom given by: Mr. Chet K. Hampson and Ms. Susan Martin In memory of Thomas and James Coberly given by: Mrs. Ruth Coberly In memory of Leland Dong given by: Mrs. Margaret M. Dong In memory of Peter Drobeck given by: Mr. & Mrs. James and Kathy Robinson In memory of Sidney H. Edwards given by: Mrs. Bryna Edwards In memory of Dr. Constantine John Falliers given by: Penny and Dick Leather John and Merry Low In memory of Bill and Carol Gossard given by: Mr. and Mrs. Steve Wynkoop In memory of Manny Greenberg given by: Ellie Greenberg & Family Ms. Susan Stark In memory of Stephen Close Hagan, who loved the music that the Colorado Symphony brought to his life. Given by: Mr. John A. Coppola Stacie Goldin Patricia E. Hagen Louis and Sherry Hannen Susan Holt Mr. Roger Tate In memory of H. Michael Hayes given by: Hayes Family Foundation In memory of Harley G. Higbie, Jr. given by: Mr. and Mrs. Martin Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Brewster B. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Mackintosh Brown Mrs. Mimi Chenoweth Ms. Geraldine Cohen Denver Investments Dick and Sigrid Freese Caleb and Sidney Gates Mr. Peter and Mrs. Rhondda Grant Ms. Mary T. Hoagland Ruth and George Hopfenbeck Ms. Katherine Kurtz



CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Mr. and Mrs. David Lansdowne Mr. and Mrs. Neil Peck Mrs. Marcia D. Strickland Ms. Marjorie S. Tweedy Wednesday Music Party Mr. and Mrs. Tor Westgaard In memory of Fred Hoeppner given by: Mr. Edward and Mrs. Judith Elgethun Mrs. Margaret Hoeppner In memory of Gloria Kubel given by: Ms. Claudia Deasy Ms. Ruth H. Epstein Ms. Marjorie E. Kathmann Ms. Barbara Servis In memory of Samuel Lancaster given by: Mr. Keith F. Corrette

Mr. and Mrs. Robert and Joan Bell Mr. Robert Birdsong Roger and Susan Bowles Jennifer Heglin Dr. and Mrs. David E. Hutchison Bill, Suzanne, and Meghan Farrell David and Debra Flitter Dr. Richard and Mrs. Mary Krugman Mr. Frederick Mimmack John and Merry Low Dr. and Mrs. Morris H. Susman Dick and Pat Tucker In memory of Erwin I. Rogoff, “Country Before Self” given by: Mr. Bernie Rogoff and Ms. Jean Greenberg In memory of Frances and Eugen Schaefer given by: Cynthia L. and Paul D. Schauer

In memory of Mary Langehough given by: Ms. Tawney S. Willett

In memory of Robert Schulein and Blair Chotzinhoff given by: Mrs. Nancy Schulein

In memory of Marie Lindvall given by: Anonymous

In memory of Dr. Roberta Shaklee given by: Mr. Edward Hurry

In memory of Jack London given by: Marie and Howard Blaney

In memory of Dale and Myrna Shreve given by: Mr. Eric Shreve

In memory of William McGehee given by: Mr. Scott M. Davis Mr. Peter and Mrs. Rhondda Grant Sarah C. Hite Dr. and Mrs. David E. Hutchison Mr. & Mrs. B. Bryan Jones, III

In memory of Betty Sonnenberg given by: Sylvia J. Kreider

In memory of William & Virginia McGehee given by: Ms. Marilyn M. Davis Ms. Robin McGehee Mr. Lloyd W. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wohlgenant In memory of Anna Meyer given by: Eric Sondermann and Tracy Dunning In loving memory of my wife, Beverly Pfeifle given by: Mr. David Pfeifle In memory of Gerald Porter given by: Mr. James G. Kennedy Mr. Ed Bezjak Dr. and Mrs. Bolko von Roedern Mr. and Mrs. Roger Johnson Mr. and Ms. Kenneth A. Zimmerman Ms. Barbara Porter In memory of Sarah Porter and Richard (Dick) McKennett given by: Carla E. McKennett In memory of Herman D. Post given by: Dr. Robin D. Post In memory of Dr. W. Gerald Rainer given by: Anonymous

40

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

In memory of Barbara Stair given by: Ms. Dana Ceuca In memory of Lee and Margaret Tipton given by: Tipton Family Foundation In memory of Donald Trovinger given by: Ms. Susan White Mr. Richard Newton In memory of Jane Harper Wagner given by: Wall, Smith, Bateman Inc. In memory of Terry C. Weverstad given by: Ms. Surilda J. Hudson In memory of Zelda K. Witkind given by: Mr. Richard Morris In memory of Randy Wren given by: Ms. Ann Cearley

IN HONOR GIFTS The following gifts were made to the Colorado Symphony in honor of a family member, friend, or special occasion. These tributes hold an honored place with the Colorado Symphony and we are pleased to recognize them. In honor of Carolyn and Charles Blatt given by: Ms. Ellen Blatt


In honor of Steve Brett & Linda Shoemaker for all they do in the community given by: Anna and John J. Sie Foundation In honor of Michael and Elizabeth Brittan given by: Dr. Judy Blaine In honor of Bill & Jo Calhoun given by: Ms. Molly Calhoun In honor of Willis Carpenter given by: Ms. Marian Lyons In honor of Mary Claire and Jim Brothers given by: Ms. Jane A. Hultin In honor of Stephanie and Adam Donner given by: Denver Public Schools Denver Public Schools Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Herb Donner In honor of Susan & Herbert Donner’s 50th Anniversary given by: Mr. Adam and Mrs. Stephanie Donner In honor of Joyce Elliot given by: Ms. Elizabeth Fischer and Mr. D. Elliott In honor of Hanna Farris given by: Sherilee Selby In honor of Keith and Kathy Finger given by: Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan F. Zeschin In honor of my mother, Louise Pennington, who gave me a music education, which has profoundly influenced who I am today. Given by: Ms. Jillian Gibbs In honor of Jan Gieskieng given by: Ms. Linda McGoff In honor of the matrimony of Margaret Shugrue and David Hackl given by: Mr. and Mrs. John Couzens In honor of retired CSO musician, Chet Hampson given by: Mr. Chet K. Hampson and Ms. Susan Martin In honor of Amy Harmon given by: Mr. Todd and Mrs. Sarah Alijani In honor of Bill Hill given by: Ms. Elizabeth Nelms In honor of Diane Hill given by: Charles and Gretchen Lobitz Mr. and Mrs. Seth Weisberg In honor of Jerry and Mary Kern given by: Yumi Hwang-Williams Mr. Greg and Mrs. Julie Lucas In honor of Jerry Kern’s 80th Birthday given by: Mr. Bruce Wald In honor of Keith Kirby given by: Ms. Sara Alt In honor of Ann Kslazek given by: Anonymous

In honor of Andrew Litton given by: Mr. Paul Primus In honor of Sachiko Nakahira given by: T.R. Reid & Peggy McMahon In honor of Samantha Nuechterlein given by: Mr. Rich & Ms. Pamela Boden In honor of Frank Parce given by: Mr. David Parce In honor of Frank Parce’s 80th Birthday given by: Frank Y. Parce Eleanor Roberts In honor of Nancy Polk given by: Ms. Marje Adelstein In honor of Barbara Porter given by: Dr. and Mrs. Bolko von Roedern In honor of Julie Rubsam given by: Driscoll Foundation Mollie Leone In honor of Kevin Seno given by: Shelby Carne In honor of James Thomas given by: Liesl Thomas In honor of Jennifer Vendryes given by: Ms. Mariellen Guerra In honor of Kristine and John Wallack given by: Richard Falb and Gail Skaggs In honor of the people at Western Oncology Hematology given by: Frank Y. Parce In honor of Darlee Whiting given by: Hayes Family Foundation In honor of Ava Williams given by: Ms. Ruth Williams In honor of Scott Williams’ birthday given by: Daniel Williams In honor of Harold Wippler given by: Mr. & Mrs. Bruce O. Will

THE HORACE TUREMAN SOCIETY Named for the first conductor of the Denver Civic Orchestra, the Horace Tureman Society honors an exceptional group of people who have pledged future support for the Symphony through an estate gift. The Horace Tureman Society recognizes in perpetuity those making estate gifts through wills, living trusts, annuities, IRAs, retirement plans, charitable trusts, life insurance designations, or other legacy giving vehicles. To learn more about including the Colorado legacy in your estate planning please contact Caiti Glasgo at 303.308.2475. SOUNDINGS

2018/19

41


CO MMUN I T Y SUPPO RT Richard and Susan Abernethy The Estate of Nan L. Barnett Mr. Jim Caputo J. Harold Corp Trust Anne M. Culver Ms. Janice G. Eckhardt William G. Fairfield Charitable Trust William G. FairField Ms. Grace L. Freye Ms. Carol K. Gossard* Ms. Jennifer Guess Ms. Donna E. Hamilton Mr. James Harold Cathey A. Herren Mrs. Janice E. Hesser Ms. Blanche B. Hilf Senta G. Holtzmann Ms. Margaret R. Houston Ms. Jane A. Hultin Virginia Ruth Hungerford Mr. and Mrs. Gopal Iyengar Ms. Gloria E. Johnston-McGregor Mrs. Suzanne W. Joshel* The Estate of Gloria S. Kubel* Sandy and Evan Lasky Deanna Rose Leino Frank and Ginny Leitz Mrs. Ann C. Levy Esther R. Liss Living Trust John and Merry Low Sandey Luciano Marjorie MacLachlan Evi and Evan Makovsky The Estate of William McGehee* Mrs. Sue McFarlane

This program is produced for the Colorado Symphony by The Publishing House, Westminster, CO. For advertising information, please call (303) 428-9529 or e-mail sales@pub-house.com ColoradoArtsPubs.com Angie Flachman Johnson, Publisher Tod Cavey, Director of Sales Stacey Krull, Production Manager Sandy Birkey, Graphic Designer Wilbur E. Flachman, President

42

C O L O R A D O SY M P H O N Y.O R G

Willis M. McFarlane* Mr. James Mead and Ms. Carol Svendsen Mr. Morton Ms. Helen M. Murray* Mr. Thomas Murray Ms. Lori Needler* Judie and Ron Neel Judith Nichols Mr. William Oliver Gordon R. and Pam Parker Armeda Plank* Ms. Barbara Powell James R. Pratt Mrs. Lois Rainer Mrs. Lee R. Roberts* Mr. Neil F. Roberts* Mr. Bruce M. Rockwell* Mr. Harvey D. Rothenberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Runice Suzanne Barber Ryan Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Sanders Ms. Elizabeth Schmitz Rob and Jane Scofield Ms. Floy L. Senior The Ilse Steinbach Revocable Trust Mr. and Mrs. James Stookesberry The Estate of Jim Taylor* Mr. Richard Thackrey Mr. and Mrs. James D. Vaughn The Estate Of Samuel Wagonfeld John and Kristine Wallack Ms. Elizabeth P. Wright* The Patricia G. Wunnicke Trust* Ms. Phyllis J. Young * Deceased

BOETTCHER CONCERT HALL owned and operated by the City and County of Denver, Division of Arts & Venues City and County of Denver Michael B. Hancock, Mayor Arts & Venues Denver Kent Rice, Executive Director Denver Performing Arts Complex Mark Heiser, Venue Director Jody Grossman, Booking Manager For information please call (720) 865-4220


The cost of living keeps going up.

The cost of your funeral doesn’t have to. WHY PRE-PLAN YOUR MEMORIAL? Like many things, costs will continue to increase, so locking in now is a wise decision. Yes, perhaps it’s a long way away, but all the more reason to get your plan together now. Contact your local Dignity Memorial provider for the best prices. ®

FUNERAL HOME AND CEMETERY LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT THE GREATER DENVER AREA

OLINGER Mortuaries & Cemeteries > 303-622-5444

DignityColorado.com <



Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.