pageturn.onstagepublications.com · That’s just the month of the season, and I assure you, the...
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Dear Friends,
Welcome back! It is wonderful to be sharing music with you again in this new season. Last season was a milestone year for the KSO, from Candide all the way to Beethoven’s Ninth, with plenty of highlights and happy memories in between—and we are continually striving to be bolder and better for you, our audience.
Our 2019-20 Masterworks and Chamber Classics Series continues our commitment to fostering community through collaboration in the concert hall. We will partner with the Knoxville Choral Society, Nief-Norf, and the Knoxville Museum of Art on projects ranging from Handel’s Messiah to a world premiere commission, celebrate Beethoven’s 250th year, and welcome soloists both from across the nation and right within our own ranks. In March, we will travel to Washington, D.C. to perform at the Kennedy Center as one of only four organizations featured in SHIFT: A Festival of American Orchestras.
But we start things off with a trip to the moon and beyond, in recognition of the 50th anniversary of the Moon Landing. Our Masterworks opener is a journey into of unknown worlds, both external and internal, starting in earthly nature with Strauss’s Blue Danube Waltzes and ending floating past Neptune into the great unknown. We are overjoyed to have our performances of The Planets accompanied by stunning images from Adrian Wyard. We will also hear Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds in Us, a piece honoring her father, who was a Vietnam veteran. We are honored to be joined by poet, active duty U.S. Air Force member, Knoxvillian and editor of War, Literature & the Arts, Captain Sean Purio, who will recite the poem that inspired Mazzoli's music, James Tate’s The Lost Pilot.
Our Chamber Classics season premiere features three incredible local artists, starting with composer Dosia McKay, whose Unveiling begins a program about memory and transformation. Then, KSO Principal Second Violin Edward Pulgar and Principal Viola Katy Gawne will dazzle with Mozart’s distinctive Sinfonia concertante, followed by the always satisfying Serenade in C by Tchaikovsky.
That’s just the first month of the season, and I assure you, the best is yet to come. Thank you for being here!
Sincerely,
Aram Demirjian
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WELCOME FROM OUR MUSIC DIRECTOR
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Knoxville Symphony OrchestraAram Demirjian, Music Director Natalie L. Haslam Music Director Chair
James Fellenbaum, Resident Conductor and Youth Orchestra Music Director Sande MacMorran, Music Director Emeritus, Youth Orchestra AssociationMark Zelmanovich, Concertmaster Emeritus
VIOLIN IWilliam Shaub, Concertmaster*
Clayton Family ChairGordon Tsai,
Associate Concertmaster* Joseph A. Fielden Family Chair
Sean K. Claire*I-Pei Lin*Ikuko Koizumi*Sarah RingerMary Ann Fee Fennell, PrincipalJeffrey BrannenMary PulgarBing Kuang FangDaniel Zellars
VIOLIN IIEdward Pulgar, Principal*
Gleb Mamantov ChairRachel Loseke*Ruth Bacon*§Zofia Glashauser*Audrey Pride* Elizabeth FarrJulie SwensonPeter AguilarStacy Taylor
VIOLAKathryn Gawne, Principal*Eunsoon Lee-Corliss
Assistant Principal*Jennifer Bloch*Bill Pierce*Hillary HerndonMegan TiptonAlicia KeenerKristina Zeinstra
CELLOAndy Bryenton, Principal*Theodore I. Kartal*Ildar Khuziakhmetov*
Mary and Joe Sullivan ChairStacy M. Nickell*Bruce WilhiteD. Scot WilliamsAlice StuartDonald Grohman
BASSSteve Benne, Principal*Steve Clark*Dan ThompsonHerb HallYan Peng
FLUTEHannah Hammel, Principal*
Karen Keys & Keith Walburn Bryan Chair
Jill Bartine*Cynthia M. D’Andrea
PICCOLOCynthia M. D’Andrea
OBOEClaire Chenette, Principal* Deniz Yayman*Elizabeth Telling
ENGLISH HORNElizabeth Telling
CLARINETGary Sperl, Principal* Mark Tucker,*
Traver Family Chair Victor Chavez
BASS CLARINETVictor Chavez
BASSOONAaron Apaza, Principal*Jessica Findley YangCora Nappo
CONTRABASSOONCora Nappo
FRENCH HORNJeffery Whaley, Principal*Sean DonovanBrooke Ten Napel Kelsey Bentley
TRUMPETPhillip Chase Hawkins,
Principal*Brian WinegardnerShawn White
TROMBONESamuel Chen, Principal*Josh WalkerBrad McDougall
BASS TROMBONEBrad McDougall
TUBASande MacMorran, Principal
TIMPANIBob Adamcik, Principal*Michael Combs,
Associate Principal*
PERCUSSIONBob Adamcik, Co-Principal*Clark Harrell, Co-Principal Andrew AdzimaJay Oberfeitinger
HARPCindy Hicks, Principal*
KEYBOARDEmi Kagawa, Principal*
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONSJon Agazzi *
PERSONNEL MANAGER/LIBRARIANMark Tucker
* Member of Knoxville Symphony Chamber Orchestra
§ Leave of Absence
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MUSICIAN ROSTER
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The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra is flourishing under the transformative leadership of music director Aram Demirjian. Through bold programming, innovative collaborations and Aram’s dynamic presence both on stage and in the community, the KSO has attained new artistic heights, sustained significant ticket revenue increases and received national recognition for its achievements over the 3 years of his tenure.
The 2019-20 KSO season extends and intensifies Aram’s commitment to fostering community through collaboration in the concert hall. Local partnerships include performances with the Knoxville Choral Society, contemporary ensemble Nief-Norf, Street Beatz Studios and Go! Contemporary Dance Works, plus sought-after guest artists including Natasha Paremski, Bella Hristova and Grammy©-nominated violinist Philippe Quint. Quint will perform the world premiere of Michael Schachter’s Violin Concerto: Cycle of Life, a joint commission of the KSO and the Knoxville Museum of Art. Aram and the KSO continue to champion American music with works by Barber, Bernstein, James P. Johnson, Florence Price and George Walker, plus living composers Avner Dorman, Jennifer Higdon, Missy Mazzoli, Jessie Montgomery and Dosia McKay. Further highlights include Handel’s Messiah, Mahler’s First Symphony, Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony and a yearlong celebration of Beethoven’s 250th anniversary. Most notably, the KSO will perform in Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts as one of only four organizations featured at SHIFT: A Festival of American Orchestras. Aram will conduct a program highlighting Knoxville’s artistic history called “Knoxville: Artists at Home,” featuring soprano Julia Bullock, poets RB Morris and RheaSunshine and a brass ensemble from University of Tennessee.
Aram has appeared with the nation’s top orchestras and maintains a close relationship with The Philadelphia Orchestra, with which he appears three times in the 2019-20 season. He also makes subscription debuts with the Tucson Symphony, Portland Symphony and the Orlando Philharmonic. Other recent engagements include the Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Omaha, San Antonio and St. Louis symphonies, the Minnesota and Sarasota orchestras, and the Louisiana Philharmonic.
Aram is involved in a substantial breadth of education and community initiatives with the goal of ensuring that everyone, regardless of age, background or circumstance, has access to great symphonic music. A gifted public speaker, he is a passionate and vocal advocate for the arts, and he regularly addresses to community and business organizations advocating for arts non-profits and arts education in our society.
Aram is the winner of the 2019 Career Assistance Award from the Solti Foundation U.S. and the 2011 Robert J. Harth Conducting Prize from the Aspen Music Festival, and he has appeared in masterclasses with renowned conductors Bernard Haitink and Kurt Masur. Aram holds a joint Bachelor of Arts in Music and Government from Harvard University and a Master of Music in Orchestral Conducting from New England Conservatory.
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MEET THE MUSIC DIRECTOR
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Merchant and Gould Concertmaster SeriesWilliam Shaub and Friends: Brandenburg and Beyond
October 9 & 10 at 7:00 P.M.Knoxville Museum of Art
News Sentinel Pops SeriesSuper Diamond: The Ultimate Neil Diamond Tribute
October 11 at 8:00 P.M.Tennessee Theatre
Moxley Carmichael Masterworks SeriesGrieg Piano Concerto
October 17 & 18 at 7:30 P.M. Tennessee Theatre
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COMING EVENTS
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Latecomers will be seated during the first convenient pause in the performance. The use of recording devices and/or cameras is strictly forbidden. Please remember to turn off all
electronic devices and refrain from text messaging during the concert. Programs and artists subject to change.
Aram Demirjian, conductorWomen of the Knoxville Choral Society
OPENING NIGHT: THE PLANETS
Thursday, September 19 & Friday, September 20, 20197:30 p.m.Tennessee Theatre
Sponsored by
JohnStaffordSmith The Star-Spangled Banner (1750-1836) (arr. Walter Damrosch)
Johann Strauss, Jr. On the Beautiful Blue Danube, (1825-1899) Waltzes, Opus 314 (1867)
Missy Mazzoli These Worlds in Us (b. 1980) (for full orchestra) (2006)
Claude Debussy Clair de Lune, (1862-1918) from Suite bergamasque (1890) (orch. Stokowski)
INTERMISSION
Gustav Holst The Planets, Suite for Large Orchestra, (1874-1934) Opus 32 (1916) I. Mars, the Bringer of War. Allegro II. Venus, the Bringer of Peace. Adagio III. Mercury, the Winged Messenger. Vivace IV. Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity. Allegro giocoso V. Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age. Adagio VI. Uranus, the Magician. Allegro VII. Neptune, the Mystic. Andante
Women of the Knoxville Choral Society
This concert will be broadcast on WUOT 91.9 FM on Tuesday, October 8, 2019, at 8:00 p.m.This concert will be rebroadcast on Monday, July 6, 2020, at 8:00 p.m.
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Knoxville Choral SocietySince 1951, the Knoxville Choral Society has brought some of the world’s greatest choral music to East Tennessee and is dedicated to performing traditional and contemporary choral music at the highest level. The fully auditioned membership performs a yearly concert series, collaborates with other Knoxville arts organizations, and works to promote choral singing and music education throughout the area.
Under the direction of conductor and artistic director John R. Orr, the membership of the KCS has grown to more than 145 of the best singers in the greater Knoxville area. The
Knoxville Choral Society's regular concert season includes major choral works and other concerts featuring varied styles of choral literature performed by the Masterworks Chorus and the Knoxville Chamber Chorale, a chamber ensemble selected from the membership. The KCS sings regularly with the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra in the Clayton Holiday Concerts and performs major choral works on the KSO Masterworks series. For more information about the Knoxville Choral Society and its current season, please visit www.knoxvillechoralsociety.org.
Chorus 1:Soprano 1: Tina Collins, Jenny Lowe,
Rebekah Ownby, Rachael Suggs, Leslie Wallace
Soprano 2: Jennifer Duncan-Morin, Madelyn Mills, Birute Mockiene, Holly North, Kathryn Paden, Elizabeth Partridge
Alto: Friederike Bostelmann, Jennifer Green, Heather Maroni, Stacy Mattheiss, Andrea Mullins, Holly Shanklin
Chorus 2:Soprano 1: Angie France,
Ashton Gallagher, Jamie Kelly, Amanda McMahon, Marissa Myers, Anne Young
Soprano 2: Sarah Davis, Jere Doherty, Julia Lawson, Hyunju Lee, Charlotte Wilson
Alto: Molly Corley, Jordan Graham, Jenny Harshbarger, Nancy Middlemas, Terryl Oliver, Anne Siddell
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FEATURED PERFORMERS
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Notes on the Program by Ken Meltzer
On the Beautiful Blue Danube, Waltzes, Opus 314 (1867)
Johann Strauss, Jr. was born in Vienna, Austria, on October 25, 1825, and died there on June 3, 1899. The firstperformance of The Blue Danube took place in Vienna in February of 1867, in a concert by the Vienna Men’s Choral Society. The Blue Danube is scored for piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, twoclarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, trombone, tuba, timpani, bass drum, snare drum, triangle, harp, and strings. Approximate performance time is nine minutes.
Duration: 9 minutes
Johann Strauss, Jr. composed his immortal On the Beautiful Blue Danube for the 1867 carnival season. The work received its premiere in a February concert by the Vienna Men’s Choral Society. That performance of The Blue Danube included a text by the Society’s official poet, Josef Weyl, who attempted to make light of the Austrians’ defeat by the Prussians the previous year: “Viennese, be glad! Oho, why so?” The words clearly detracted from the audience’s ability to appreciate Strauss’s incomparable score, and those in attendance offered only a lukewarm response.
Strauss was afraid that the Waltz “was not sufficiently catchy.” However, The Blue Danube was reintroduced a few months later in Paris, this time shorn of its problematic verse. The reaction was overwhelming, and The Blue Danube quickly became one of the most beloved waltz compositions.
These Worlds in Us (for full orchestra) (2006)
Missy Mazzoli was born in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, on October 27, 1980. The firstperformanceofThese Worlds in Us took place in New Haven, Connecticut on March 1, 2006, by the Yale Philharmonia. Thefirstprofessionalperformancetookplace in Minneapolis, Minnesota on December 1, 2006, with the Minnesota Orchestra, conducted by Osmo Vänskä. These Worlds in Us is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, twobassoons, four horns, two trumpets, two trombones, tuba, two melodicas (or synthesizers), bass drum, snare drum, vibraphone, hi-hat, suspended cymbal, and strings.
Duration: 9 minutes
Reading: Captain Sean Purio
The title These Worlds In Us comes from James Tate’s poem The Lost Pilot, a meditation on his father’s death in World War II:
(excerpt) My head cocked towards the sky, I cannot get off the ground, and you, passing over again,
fast, perfect and unwilling to tell me that you are doing well, or that it was a mistake
that placed you in that world, and me in this; or that misfortune placed these worlds in us.
This piece is dedicated to my father, who was a soldier during the Vietnam War. In talking to him it occurred to me that, as we grow older, we accumulate worlds of intense memory within us, and that grief is often not far from joy. I like the idea that music can reflect painful and blissful sentiments in a single note or gesture,
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NOTES ON THE PROGRAM
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and sought to create a sound palette that I hope is at once completely new and strangely familiar to the listener. The theme of this work, a mournful line first played by the violins, collapses into glissandos almost immediately after it appears, giving the impression that the piece has been submerged under water or played on a turntable that is grinding to a halt. The melodicas (mouth organs) played by the percussionists in the opening and final gestures mimic the wheeze of a broken accordion, lending a particular vulnerability to the bookends of the work. The rhythmic structures and cyclical nature of the piece are inspired by the unique tension and logic of Balinese music, and the march-like figures in the percussion bring to mind the militaristic inspiration for the work as well as the relentless energy of electronica drum beats.
— Missy Mazzoli
http://www.musicsalesclassical.com/composer/work/45740
Clair de Lune, from Suite bergamasque (1890) (orch. Stokowski)
Claude Debussy was born in St. Germaine-en-Laye, France, on August 22, 1862, and died in Paris, France, on March 25, 1918. The Stokowski orchestration of Clair de Lune is scored for four flutes,oboe, English horn, two clarinets, two bassoons, French horn, two trumpets, glockenspiel, harp, and strings.
Duration: 5 minutes
The legendary conductor Leopold Stokowski (1882-1977) made numerous orchestral transcriptions of works by other composers, most notably Johann Sebastian Bach. But a particular favorite of Stokowski’s was his arrangement of Claude Debussy’s Clair de lune, part of the French composer’s early collection of solo piano pieces, the Suite bergamasque (1890).
Stokowski frequently programmed his transcription of Clair de lune in concert. He also made several recordings, including one with the Philadelphia Orchestra intended for the Walt Disney animated film Fantasia (1940) that was cut, due to time considerations.
When Arnold Schoenberg first heard Stokowski’s lovely orchestration of Clair de lune, he “thought it was an original of Debussy.”
The Planets, Suite for Large Orchestra, Opus 32 (1916)
Gustav Holst was born in Cheltenham, England, on September 21, 1874, and died in London, England, on May 25, 1934. The first performance of The Planets took place at Queen’s Hall in London on September 29, 1918, with Adrian Boult conducting the New Queen’s Hall Orchestra. The Planets is scored for hiddenfemalechorus(finalmovement),two piccolos, four flutes, bass flute,three oboes, bass oboe, English horn, three clarinets, bass clarinet, three bassoons, contrabassoon, six horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tenor tuba, bass tuba, timpani (two players), glockenspiel, chimes, xylophone, tam-tam, snare drum, triangle, tambourine, cymbals, suspended cymbal, bass drum, two harps, celesta, organ, and strings.
Duration: 51 minutes
Gustav Holst once observed: “As a rule I only study things that suggest music to me.” And it was Holst’s lifelong interest in astrology that provided the inspiration for his most popular orchestral work, The Planets. Holst characterized his orchestral work as “a series of mood pictures” in which the movements—each representing a planet of the solar system—“acted as foils to one another.” The various movements were not arranged in accordance with the order of the planets in the solar system, but rather, in such a manner as to achieve optimal musical contrast and effect.
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NOTES ON THE PROGRAM
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Although Holst completed The Planets toward the close of 1916, the onset of the First World War precluded a concert performance of the work. In the summer of 1918, Holst prepared to depart England to aid the war effort. As a special farewell gift, Henry Balfour Gardiner arranged for a private concert premiere of The Planets at Queen’s Hall in London on September 29, 1918. Holst chose the young Adrian Boult—later Sir Adrian—to conduct the first performance, which proved to be a great success.
The first public performance of The Planets took place on February 27, 1919, again with Boult conducting at Queen’s Hall (although Venus and Neptune were not played on that occasion). The Planets soon received numerous performances in England, Europe, and throughout the world. Along with Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations, The Planets, a thrilling sonic adventure, remains one of the most popular large-scale British orchestral works.
I. Mars, the Bringer of War. Allegro—While many believed that Holst created the opening movement as a memorial to the horrors of World War I, the composer insisted that “I had the whole of Mars fixed in my mind before” the August 4, 1914 Declaration. The movement begins softly, but ominously, with an incessant rhythm introduced by the timpani and col legno (“with the wood”; i.e., the string instruments play with the wood, rather than the horsehair portion of the bows) strings, and interjections by woodwind and brass. The music proceeds to a furious climax. Several brief episodes follow, all maintaining a relentless momentum to the shattering final bars.
II. Venus, the Bringer of Peace. Adagio—Venus offers blissful contrast to the violent opening movement. The solo horn’s ascending phrase is answered by a descending woodwind figure. A solo violin introduces the central Andante episode. A varied reprise of the opening Adagio concludes Venus.
III. Mercury, the Winged Messenger. Vivace—The third movement is a scherzo that exhibits a charm and grace reminiscent of Felix Mendelssohn’s Octet for Strings and Incidental
Music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. A 6/8 figure is deftly transferred from instrument to instrument. A middle section features lovely solo appearances by the violin, oboe, flute, and celeste. The return of the opening section (with a nod to its predecessor) concludes Mercury.
IV. Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity. Allegro giocoso—Jupiter is the movement that most clearly reflects Holst’s love of British folk music. It opens with a flurry of activity in the violins and a bold orchestral statement. Several melodies follow, the most notable being an eloquent theme, marked Andante maestoso (Moderately slow, majestic), introduced by the strings and horns. This melody was later used as the basis for a patriotic hymn, “I Vow to Thee, My Country.” The bustle of the opening reappears for the jubilant finish.
V. Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age. Adagio— The hypnotic opening features the flutes, bass flute, and harps. Over the repeated tread of pizzicato cellos and basses, the trombones introduce a somber march. The music builds to a powerful climax, featuring the repeated tolling of the bells. A reprise of the opening finally yields to a serene conclusion.
VI. Uranus, the Magician. Allegro—The trumpets and trombones, followed by the tubas and timpani, intone a four-note motif that returns throughout the movement. The bassoons then offer a puckish staccato figure, soon taken by the remainder of the orchestra. A solo bassoon and pizzicato cellos introduce a new theme, followed by a broader melody in the horns and strings. A prominent recapitulation of the four-note motif leads to a martial passage. A ffff climax is followed by an eerie postlude.
VII. Neptune, the Mystic. Andante—The composer directs that in the finale: “(t)he Orchestra is to play sempre pp throughout.” Various repeating figures, couched in orchestration of the utmost delicacy, masterfully evoke a sense of timelessness. A six-part wordless female chorus enters in the latter part of Neptune. The Planets concludes with the chorus’s final measure, repeated “until the sound is lost in the distance.”
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NOTES ON THE PROGRAM
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Sheena McCallSponsored by
Latecomers will be seated during the first convenient pause in the performance. The use of recording devices and/or cameras is strictly forbidden. Please remember to turn off all
electronic devices and refrain from text messaging during the concert. Programs and artists subject to change.
Aram Demirjian, conductorEdward Pulgar, violinKathryn Gawne, viola
Sunday, September 29, 2019, 2:30 p.m.Bijou Theatre
MOZART & TCHAIKOVSKY
Dosia McKay Unveiling, for String Orchestra (2010) (b. 1971)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Violin, Viola and (1756-1791) OrchestrainE-flatMajor,K.364(1779) I. Allegro maestoso II. Andante III. Presto
Edward Pulgar, violinKaty Gawne, viola
INTERMISSION
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky String Quartet No. 1 in D Major, (1840-1893) Opus 11 (1871) (orch. Theofanidis) I. Moderato e simplice II. Andante cantabile III. Scherzo. Allegro non tanto e con fuoco IV. Finale. Allegro giusto
This concert will be broadcast on WUOT 91.9 FM on Tuesday, October 22, 2019, at 8:00 p.m.This concert will be rebroadcast on Monday, July 13, 2020, at 8:00 p.m.
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Edward Pulgar, violinA violinist and conductor trained by the National Youth Orchestra System of Venezuela (currently known as “El Sistema”), Edward Pulgar was born in Caracas and began his musical studies at age eight in solfège, percussion and violin. At thirteen years old, he won his first violin competition at the Juan Bautista Plaza V National Violin Competition in Venezuela. He continued his studies in violin and orchestral conducting first in Maracaibo and then in Caracas, at the Simon Bolivar Conservatory of El Sistema and the Latin-American Violin Academy under the guidance of the eminent Venezuelan pedagogue, José Francisco del Castillo. Later, he obtained scholarships to study violin in the U.S., and consequently earned an Artist Diploma and a Master Degree in Music Performance from Duquesne University and Michigan State University, respectively.
Since 2009, Mr. Pulgar has been Principal Second Violin of the Knoxville Symphony and Chamber Orchestras, and a member of the Knoxville Symphony’s Principal String Quartet, appearing throughout East Tennessee in recitals, concerts and radio and television appearances. Prior to becoming Principal Second Violin of the Knoxville Symphony, Mr. Pulgar has also held principal positions with Symphonic Orchestras in the U.S. and South America, such as Wheeling Symphony, Altoona Symphony, Duquesne Symphony, Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, Zulia Symphony Orchestra, among others. He has also appeared as guest soloist with the Knoxville Chamber Orchestra, Duquesne University Contemporary Ensemble (performing David Stock’s “The Philosopher’s Stone” with the composer at the podium), Zulia Symphony, Delta Amacuro Symphony, Falcon Symphony, and others.
As an educator, Mr. Pulgar is a driving force in the creation and development of the newly-emerging string program and more specifically, violin program, at Carson-Newman University. The numbers in his violin studio have quadrupled in recent years and his students are performing in regional orchestras and festivals across the U.S. He has also served as an adjudicator and guest clinician with youth orchestras and colleges in East Tennessee.
He is married to violinist, Mary Pulgar, and a proud parent of two daughters, Ana and Claudia. He actively continues to pursue solo and chamber music in the U.S. and Latin America along with guest appearances as a conductor.
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FEATURED PERFORMERS
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Kathryn Gawne, violaKathryn Gawne joined the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra as principal violist in 2001 at the age of 22. Prior to moving to Tennessee, Kathryn made her home in the Chicago area. Kathryn started playing the violin in 4th grade as part of a public school music program. Her first teachers, Art Montzka and Ann Montzka-Smelser, made a tremendous impact on her
life and she is forever grateful for their loving guidance, limitless patience, and willingness to share their passion for music with their students. She received her Bachelor's degree in violin performance and Master’s degree in viola performance from Northern Illinois University where she was a scholarship student of Mathias Tacke and Richard Young of the Vermeer Quartet. Lewis Rosove was an important orchestral mentor to Kathryn. Kathryn has completed extensive teacher training in the Suzuki violin and viola methods. In 2000 she was awarded a Shinichi Suzuki Teacher Training Scholarship from the American Suzuki Institute to further her training. Outside of music, Kathryn’s interests include sewing, designing children’s clothing, smocking and embroidery, and exploring the park behind her house. She lives in Knoxville with her husband Tim and daughters Alice and Louisa Jane. Kathryn would like to thank her Knoxville Symphony family for all their love and support.
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FEATURED PERFORMERS
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Notes on the Program by Ken Meltzer
Unveiling, for String Orchestra (2010)
Dosia McKay was born in Gdańsk,Poland, in 1971. The first performanceof Unveiling took place at Christ and St. Stephen’s Church in New York City, in June, 2011, with Max Lifchitz conducting North/South Consonance.
Duration: 8 minutes
“Unveiling” written for string orchestra is an exploration of layers of sounds. Beginning with one solitary note, new aural strata gradually unfold in which multiple layers of counterpoint constantly shift, weave, and intersect until the tension is finally broken in an unveiling of a tender and fleeting soundscape. The closing section is a reversal of the opening in which the layers of sound gradually recede until only the opening solitary note remains. In this work I return to my Polish heritage and the listener is likely to hear echoes of string writing of such composers as Grażyna Bacewicz, Romuald Twardowski, or Henryk Górecki. Because Polish people seem to be born with the nostalgia gene, here I give voice to unquenched longing and deep brooding.
—Dosia McKay
http://www.dosiamckay.com/music/unveiling.shtml
Sinfonia concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra in E-flatMajor,K.364(1779)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria, on January 27, 1756, and died in Vienna, Austria, on December 5, 1791. In addition to the solo violin and viola, the Sinfonia concertante is scored for two oboes, two horns, and strings.
Duration: 30 minutes
Mozart composed his Sinfonia concertante, K. 364, in 1779, during his final years in Salzburg. It was a difficult time for the young Mozart. He had just returned from a two-year tour of Mannheim and Paris. During his travels, Mozart attempted, unsuccessfully, to secure a new position that would allow him to fulfill his desire to leave his native city.
The composer’s mother, Anna Maria, accompanied Mozart on the trip. On July 3, 1778, while in Paris, Anna Maria Mozart died, at the age of 57. In a letter to his friend, Abbé Bullinger, Mozart revealed:
Her life flickered out like a candle. Three days before her death she made her confession, partook of the Sacrament and received Extreme Unction. During the last three days, however, she was constantly delirious, and today at twenty-one minutes past five o’clock the death agony began and she lost all sensation and consciousness. I pressed her hand and spoke to her—but she did not see me, she did not hear me, and all feeling was gone. She lay thus until she expired five hours later at twenty-one minutes past ten.
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NOTES ON THE PROGRAM
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A Sinfonia concertante juxtaposes a group of solo instruments with the accompanying orchestra. Here, the solo instruments are a violin and viola. The orchestra comprises pairs of oboes and horns, and strings. In addition to his prowess as a keyboard virtuoso, Mozart was an accomplished string player. No documentation exists as to the specific circumstances that prompted Mozart to write his Sinfonia concertante. But Mozart rarely composed music of this ambitious scope without some specific concert in mind. Whether Mozart himself ever gave concert performances of either of the solo parts in this sublime work remains a matter of tantalizing speculation.
The work is in three movements. The first (Allegro maestoso) opens with a grand orchestral introduction. The soloists intone an extended E-flat, followed by a lovely descending phrase. A wealth of thematic material follows—sometimes introduced by one of the soloists, more often in dialogue. The development section is frequently tinged with melancholy. Following the recapitulation of the central themes, the soloists play Mozart’s fully-transcribed cadenza. The ensemble’s vigorous coda concludes the opening movement. Some commentators have argued that the slow-tempo second movement (Andante)—one of Mozart’s most beautiful and tragic—is a musical expression of the composer’s grief over his mother’s death. The violins sing the somber, principal theme. Soon, the solo violin and viola present their own versions of the melody. The remainder of the movement is in the spirit of an operatic duet, with the soloists often engaging in hushed dialogue. The first violins immediately present the vivacious central theme of this rondo finale (Presto). The melody returns throughout, alternating with episodes that relate to the principal theme. The vibrant mood continues to the closing fanfare, capped by a trio of forte chords.
String Quartet No. 1 in D Major, Opus 11 (1871) (orch. Theofanidis)
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Kamsko-Votkinsk, Russia, on May 7, 1840, and died in St. Petersburg, Russia, on November6,1893.Thefirstperformanceof the String Quartet No. 1 took place at the Nobles’ Club in Moscow, Russia, on March 28, 1871. The Theofanidis orchestration is scored for flute, oboe,B-flat clarinet, bassoon, two horns,timpani, and strings.
Duration: 28 minutes
In 1871 Tchaikovsky was a financially struggling composer and professor at the Moscow Conservatory. The Conservatory’s director, Nikolai Rubinstein, suggested that Tchaikovsky sponsor a concert featuring his own compositions. An orchestral concert was beyond Tchaikovsky’s financial means, and he decided instead to program a series of works for smaller performing forces. In order to create a concert program of appropriate length, Tchaikovsky composed a new work, his First String Quartet (first and second violins, viola, and cello) in D Major. Tchaikovsky began the Quartet in February of 1871, completing it in time for the March 28 concert, held at the Nobles’ Club in Moscow. The concert proved to be an artistic and financial success. Tchaikovsky was particularly gratified that among the members of the large audience that attended was the celebrated Russian novelist, Ivan Turgenev.
Tchaikovsky, once observed that all his compositions fell into two categories: “One, those written on my own initiative, through sudden inclination, and urgent inner necessity. Two, those inspired by external means, such as the request of a friend, or publisher, or commission. I hasten to explain that, as shown by experience, the value of a work does
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not depend upon which category it belongs to.” Tchaikovsky, ever the craftsman and professional, seized upon the opportunity of his impending March, 1871 concert to create a rich and beautiful work, teeming with the glowing instrumental sonorities and unforgettable melodies that are trademarks of his genius. And in the case of the second movement Andante cantabile, Tchaikovsky produced one of concert music’s most beloved pieces.
This concert features an orchestration of the String Quartet by American composer Christopher Theofanidis (b. 1967), commissioned by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. Mr. Theofanidis provides the following comments:
I have always been a great admirer of Tchaikovsky’s music and his brilliant orchestration, and so it was a real pleasure for me to explore this string quartet and his style of orchestration more generally. I studied many of his great works to understand certain “Tchaikovskyisms,” and I also studied works written in close proximity to the quartet to understand hallmarks of that earlier style.
A transcription of this nature presents certain challenges, not the least of which is that this small orchestra was not a medium that Tchaikovsky himself worked in. The chord voicings and doublings he commonly used with a larger orchestra were a little harder to extrapolate from this ensemble. One clue for me, however, turned out to be Tchaikovsky’s love of Mozart. Although Tchaikovsky didn’t entirely respect the classical sound when he arranged Mozart’s music in his Suite No. 4 (Mozartiana), there are enough clues to show what Tchaikovsky loved in that clean sound world, and that was an important key for me. I think this early string quartet does translate quite well into a symphonic form, and I was so delighted to be involved.
—Christopher Theofanidis
https://www.theofanidismusic.com/works/program/chamber-symphony-1.html
The Quartet is in four movements. The first (Moderato e simplice) opens with a pulsating figure that has inspired a nickname occasionally applied to the Quartet, “Accordion.” The opening movement adheres to traditional sonata form (with the introduction, development, and recapitulation of central thematic material), capped by the ebullient final bars. The slow-tempo second movement (Andante cantabile) is based upon the folk song, Sidel Vanya (“Vanya sat on a sofa and smoked a pipe of tobacco”). Tchaikovsky heard and transcribed the song two years earlier, while visiting his sister in the Ukraine. Over time, Tchaikovsky’s unforgettable setting of this melody became the subject of countless transcriptions for different kinds of performing forces. And while Tchaikovsky ultimately became frustrated at what he viewed as the Andante cantabile’s disproportionate recognition and popularity, the music was also the source of one of his most satisfying moments. Tchaikovsky recalled that during an 1876 performance: “Perhaps I was never so flattered in my life, nor was my pride as a composer so stirred, as when Lev Tolstoy, sitting beside me listening to the Andante from my First Quartet, dissolved in tears.” The Quartet’s third movement is a vibrant Scherzo (Allegro non tanto e con fuoco). The work concludes with a brilliant Finale (Allegro giusto), as with the opening movement, in sonata form.
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The Knoxville Symphony Society, Inc.Operating the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra and the Knoxville Symphony Youth Orchestra Association.
Mrs. Robert Lawrence Ashe*Mrs. Howard H. Baker, Jr.*Mr. Wallace W. Baumann*Dr. Edward J. Boling*Mrs. Betsey Bush*
Mr. Joseph P. CongletonMr. James A. Dick*Dr. John H. Dougherty, Sr.Mr. Ross N. Faires*Mrs. W. N. Garrett*
Dr. G. Turner Howard*Mr. James R. MartinMrs. E. Jay MoungerMr. Richard E. RayMr. James F. Smith, Jr.
Dr. William T. SnyderMr. David M. Traver*Mr. Harry Wiersema*Mr. H. D. Wynn*Mr. Lindsay Young*
Honorary Directors
*deceased
The Knoxville Symphony Society 100 S. Gay Street, Suite 302 • Knoxville, TN 37902 • P.O. Box 360 • Knoxville, TN 37901-0360
Phone – 865/291-3310 • FAX – 865/546-3766 • Mon – Fri 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. • www.knoxvillesymphony.com
OfficersandExecutiveCommittee,2018-2019President .............................................................................................................................Mr. Bill RileyPresident-Elect .....................................................................................................Mr. John Winemiller Past President .............................................................................................................Mr. Russ Watkins Vice President – Artistic Affairs ..................................................................................Mrs. Bette BryanVice President – Development .....................................................................................Mr. Jay McBrideVice President – Education ................................................................................................Mr. Rick FoxVice President – Government Relations ......................................................... Mr. G. Mark MamantovVice President – Marketing ........................................................................................Mr. Jeffrey H. LeeVice President – Nominating ................................................................................ Mrs. Cynthia MoxleyVice President – Planned Giving ..................................................................................Ms. Jenny HinesChairman of KSO Endowment Foundation ................................................................Mr. Herb SangerTreasurer ...................................................................................................................Mr. David ColquittSecretary ........................................................................................................................ Mr. Jim Brogan
Mr. Peter AclyMrs. Patricia BibleMrs. Gordon J. ChalmersMr. Christian CortsMrs. Ruth FieldenAdrian M. JayMr. Raja Jubran
Mr. Chris KinneyMrs. William G. LaingMr. Jon LawlerMr. Jay McBrideMs. Sheena McCallMr. Dave MillerMrs. Phyllis Y. Nichols
Mrs. Becky PaylorMs. Sharon J. Miller PryseMs. Suzanne T. SchriverMr. Rick StoneMrs. Harold B. StoneMr. Timothy W. WilliamsDr. L. Anthony Wise, Jr.
Board of Directors
Rachel Ford, Executive DirectorJon Agazzi, Director of OperationsMorgan Fleming, Data CoordinatorMary Sue Greiner, Director of DevelopmentJennifer Barnett Harrell, Director of Education
& Community PartnershipsChristy Harris, Box Office ManagerKathy Hart, Youth Orchestra ManagerNathan McGhee, Customer Service
Representative/Admininstrative Assistant
Amber Mullins, Development ManagerAlana Dellatan Seaton, Music TherapistNed Smethers, Director of FinanceAbby Strickland, Director of CommunicationsMark Tucker, Orchestra Personnel
Manager/LibrarianEileen Weber, Education and Community
Partnerships Assistant
AdministrativeStaff
President, Knoxville Symphony League ............................................................ Ms. Elizabeth OffringaCo-President-Elects, Knoxville Symphony League ...................Elizabeth Offringa and Linda HaynesPast President, Knoxville Symphony League ....................................................Mrs. Elizabeth Koester
Mrs. Jenny BoydMr. James L. ClaytonDr. Frank B. Gray
Mrs. James A. Haslam IIMr. Jon Lawler
Members-at-Large
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THE KNOXVILLE SYMPHONY SOCIETY
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Executive Committee, 2019-2020President .................................................................................................................... Elizabeth OffringaCo-President-Elects .....................................................................Elizabeth Offringa and Linda HaynesExecutive Vice President ............................................................................................ Elizabeth KoesterTreasurer ......................................................................................................................... Linda RoystonAssistant Treasurer ...........................................................................................................Carlene WelchRecording Secretary ................................................................................................... Charlotte WaldenAssistant Recording Secretary .....................................................................................Adrienne LamonParliamentary Advisor .......................................................................................................Cynthia SowaVice President, Communications ................................................................................... Becky Benedict Vice President, Education ..................................................................................................... Fran DunnVice President, Hospitality ...................................................................................................... Edie VolkVice President, Membership ............................................................................................ Margie CaricoVice President, Public Relations ....................................................................................Audrey DuncanVice President, Season Tickets ...........................................................................................Susan YannoVice President, Ways & Means ........................................................................................... Evelyn ShawMerit Board Advisor .........................................................................................................Harriet HodgeChairman, Nominating Committee.............................................................................. Barbara Furlong
Becky BenedictCathy Briscoe-GravesAngelyn CampbellCarol Ann CliftSharon Wright CottrellJan CrawfordGenetta Dittrich-Pugh
Deborah EmeryBarbara FurlongLovina HalkoChris HambyAnn HitchCarol JacobsAdrienne LamonLaurie Macnair
Francis McLeanCindy NelsonLin S. OglesbyAnne PrimmJulia ShiflettRobin SmithDiana Zeltner
Board of Directors (in addition to the Executive Committee members)
Jonelda BlalockJanet BowerMartha BreazealeMary BresenhamJanice BrittMary Lynn BrownBette BryanCaroline BucknerSandra ButlerWillene Chalmers
Ruth CoughlinLoretta CrowderCharleene EdwardsDebby FoxYellie GreebeLinda HaynesDoris HenningHarriet HodgeDeborah KinnardElizabeth Koester
Sharon LaingCarolyn LawrenceLee LeyCarolyn MontgomeryStacy MoodyRosalind MoseleyBecky PaylorAngela PughJoyce SimmsGail Smith
Theresa StoneJanet VailJane VenableEdie VolkRhonda WebsterNancy WeigelKatherine WestSusan Yanno
Merit Board
*Martha S. Baker (Mrs. Martin R.) 1955*Virginia Nicely (Mrs. Park) 1960*Martha Holt (Mrs. Andrew D.) 1962*Lib Hart (Mrs. John P.)*Happy Booker (Mrs. W. Edward) 1967*Mary Alice Turney (Mrs. M. Frank) 1969*Ruby Walton (Mrs. Clifford L., Jr.) 1976*Jane Ann Nielsen (Mrs. Alvin H.) 1978*Nancy Tanner (Mrs. James T.) 1978Martha Weaver (Mrs. Marvin J.) 1980Janet L. Testerman 1981*Roberta K. Dorr (Mrs. David C.) 1982*Eve Seale (Mrs. James Pearson) 1992Jacqueline Newman (Mrs. James A.) 1993*Sondra Nanney (Mrs. Rex) 1994Bette Bryan (Mrs. Richard B.) 1995Nancy B. Bosson (Mrs. Brian S.) 1996
Sandra Butler (Mrs. John L.) 1997Joyce Simms (Mrs. William A.) 1998Diane Vettori (Mrs. Frank A.) 1999 Sharon Laing (Mrs. William G.) 2000*Mary W. Harper (Mrs. Horace L.,
Jr.) 2001Loretta Crowder (Mrs. Mike) 2002Janet Vail (Mrs. Warren H.) 2003Teresa Scott 2004Evelyn Miller (Mrs. James D.) 2005Judith Foltz (Mrs. Michael) 2006*Hannah McDaniel (Mrs. Walter) 2007Jane Venable (Mrs. Frank) 2008*Arlene Key (Mrs. William) 2009Rose Moseley (Mrs. Harry) 2010Willene Chalmers (Mrs. Gordon) 2011Harriet Hodge (Mrs. Fred) 2012
Mary Bresenham (Mrs. Elton P.) 2013Elizabeth Koester (Mrs. Rudy) 2014Linda Haynes (Mrs. John) 2015Stacy Moody (Mrs. Todd) 2016Angela Pugh (Mrs. W. James, Jr.) 2017Linda Royston (Mrs. Len) 2018Edie Volk (Mrs. Gil) 2019
KSL Award of Merit*Holly Overton (Mrs. E.E.) 1999*Eve Seale (Mrs. James Pearson) 2006Nancy Weigel (Mrs. Kreis) 2007*Sondra Nanney (Mrs. Rex) 2009*Renee Anderson (Mrs. Stewart) 2015Loretta Crowder (Mrs. Mike) 2018Joyce Simms (Mrs. William) 2019
Honorary Directors, 1955-2020
*deceased
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THE KNOXVILLE SYMPHONY LEAGUE
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With the appreciation of the KSO Board of Directors, the Conductor’s Circle is open to individuals who make donations of $5,000 or more annually to the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra. Members of the Circle are preeminent contributors who ensure the KSO’s tradition of artistic and educational excellence.
Conductor’s Circle members will be invited to attend an exclusive dinner in the spring featuring a special performance by members of the KSO. Members will also receive concierge drink service at intermission during Masterworks concerts, complimentary parking at all POPS series concerts, and invitations to receptions, rehearsals and special events.
We wish to acknowledge and thank those Conductor’s Circle members who help ensure excellence for all of the KSO’s artistic and community engagement endeavors. We are very grateful for their leadership.
Mr. Peter Acly and Ms. Ellen RobinsonMr. and Mrs. Steve W. Bailey
Mrs. Jo BlalockMr. and Mrs. Randy BoydMr. and Mrs. Jim Brogan
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. BryanMrs. Willene ChalmersMr. James L. Clayton
Mr. and Mrs. David ColquittCharles Daily
Aram and Caraline DemirjianMr. and Mrs. David Dugger
Ms. Sandra P. EmondMrs. Mardel FehrenbachMr. and Mrs. Joe Fielden
Rachel and Terry FordMrs. Ellen Fowler, Rotary Club of KnoxvilleMr. Richard T. Fox and Mr. Ralph Cianelli
Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. GrayMs. Garnet Eve HallockLynne and Charlie Harr
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Haslam IIGovernor and Mrs. William E. Haslam
Judith HectorMrs. G. Turner Howard, Jr.
Adrian and Larsen JayMr. and Mrs. Raja JubranMr. and Mrs. Chris KinneyDr. and Mrs. William Laing
Mr. and Mrs. Jon R. LawlerRobert W. Lederer
Dr. Charmaine B. MamantovMr. and Mrs. G. Mark Mamantov
Mr. James R. MartinJay and Marga McBrideMs. Sheena M. McCall
Mr. and Mrs. James F. McDonoughMrs. William J. Mitchell
Ms. Cynthia Moxley and Mr. Alan CarmichaelMrs. Townes Lavidge Osborn
and Lamp FoundationDr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Pryse
Dick and Ann RayJorie Rieves
Mr. and Mrs. Bill RileyMr. and Mrs. Bill Rotmeyer
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Sanger, Jr.Mrs. Susan Seymour
Mr. and Mrs. Tom L. Shaw, Jr.Mr. Rick Stone
Mrs. Theresa H. StoneMrs. Harry W. Stowers, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Sullivan IIIMr. and Mrs. Jim VanderSteeg
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Venable, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Russ WatkinsMr. and Mrs. Tim Williams
Mr. John Winemiller and Mr. R.J. HindeSibyl and Barney Wray
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CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE
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AslanFoundation
The Boyd Family
Jay and Marga McBride
Elizabeth M. Koester
Adrian and Larsen Jay
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SYMPHONY SUPPORTERS
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In Concert with Our Community
The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra is recognized as one of the finest regional orchestras in the United States. For almost 80 years the KSO has performed live symphonic music for audiences of all ages in the Knoxville and the surrounding region. Considered the cornerstone of the Knoxville arts community, the KSO has the distinction of being the oldest continuously performing orchestra in the Southeast.
The KSO strives to achieve superior artistic quality, community engagement and financial stability, and building the endowment ensures the KSO’s quality and stability in perpetuity. We are so pleased to recognize the following endowment donors who are permanently associated with KSO as a tribute to their generous commitments to the endowment.
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Haslam IIendowing the Natalie Leach Haslam chair, held by Aram Demirjian, Music Director
Mr. James L. Clayton endowing the Clayton Family Chair, held by William Shaub, Concertmaster
Mr. Wallace Baumann*Mrs. Bestey Bush*
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Fielden endowing the Joseph A. Fielden Chair, held by Gordon Tsai, Associate Concertmaster
Mr. Tutt S. Bradford* endowing the Zula Bowen Bradford Chair, held by the Principal Keyboard
Mr.* and Mrs. Ross Faires endowing the Glady Faires Guest Artist Fund
Mrs. Gleb Mamantov endowing the Gleb Mamantov Chair, held by Edward Pulgar, Principal Violin II
Ms. Sheena McCallendowing the Young People’s Concerts
Mr. and Mrs.* Joe Sullivan, IIIendowing the Mary and Joe Sullivan Chair, held by Ildar Khuziakhmetov, Cello
Mr.* and Mrs.* David Traverendowing the Mary and Joe Sullivan Chair, held by Mark Tucker, Clarinet
Mr.* and Mrs. Lee Congletonendowing a guest artist for teh Chamber Classics Series
Ms. Karen Keys and Mr. Keith Walburn Bryanendowing the Karen Keys and Keith Walburn Bryan Chair, held by the Principal Flute
Dr. Earl Wehry* Mrs. Marilyn Mandle Dick*
32 knoxville symphony orchestra
KSO ENDOWMENT
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The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following gifts received between August of 2018 to August 2019:
In Memory of Sid Blalock Knoxville Symphony Orchestra
In Memory of Jimmy Brimer Ginna and Bob Mashburn Cynthia Moxley and Alan Carmichael
In Memory of Connie Sue Brown Linda and Len Royston
In Memory of Helen B. (Sis) Howard John and Sandra Butler
In Memory of Ranald B. Claire Mrs. Patti Claire Dr. and Mrs. Rudy Koester
In Memory of Minnie E. David Jonelda and Sid Blalock Knoxville Symphony League Dr. and Mrs. Rudy Koester Tom and Evelyn Shaw
In Memory of Marilyn Mandle Dick Knoxville Symphony League Knoxville Symphony Orchestra
In Memory of Paul Douglas Ewing Mrs. Vergie J. Ewing
In Memory of Louise Gabbard Nancy S. Gnilka
In Memory of Sally Hamilton Bacon Farmer Workman Enginerring & Testing, Inc. The George Casselberry Family Bonnie and William Marret
In Memory of Paul Helton, Sr. Knoxville Symphony League Linda and Len Royston
In Memory of Robin Hill Knoxville Symphony Orchestra
In Memory of Amanda Hunt Dr. and Mrs. Fred Hodge
In Memory of Marty Joyce Linda and Len Royston
In Memory of Juanita Anderson Church Linda and Len Royston
In Memory of Vincent Kanipe Yellie Greebe
In Memory of my loving wife,Joan MacReynolds Dr. Carmen Nappo
In Memory of Mickey Mallonee Cynthia Moxley and Alan Carmichael
In Memory of James L. McClain Elizabeth and Rudy Koester
In Memory of Hannah McDaniel Jeff, Sherry, and Marina Conner
In Memory of Carol Jean Noll Mr. Stanley A. Smith
In Memory of Arthur Seymour Richard and Bette Bryan Cynthia Moxley and Alan Carmichael
In Memory of David Aaron Shaw Adam and Liz Shaw Tom and Evelyn Shaw
In Memory of Billie Stidham Franklin Stidham
In Memory of Mary Sullivan Cynthia Moxley and Alan Carmichael
In Memory of David Traver Lisa Cosse Frank and Anna Gray Katherine Carr Murphy Dr. and Mrs. Rudy Koester Knoxville Symphony Orchestra
In Memory of Anne Weinerman Fay Bailey Carr Suzane Carriere Debra Simon
In Memory Of
knoxvillesymphony.com 33
COMMEMORATIVE GIFTS
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In Honor of Bob Adamcik Dr. and Mrs. William L. Burkhart
In Honor of Erma Prater and Lewis Brewer’s Marriage Judy and Don McLean
In Honor of Mrs. Liz Britt Webb School Class of 2031
In Honor of Ara and Karen Demirjian Lewis Brewer and Erma Prather
In Honor of Aram Demirjian Shirley and Barnett C. Helzberg, Jr.
In Honor of Fran Dunn Eileen Wilson
In Honor of Mary Sue Greiner Carol Akerman
In Honor of Donald Grohman’s 50 years with the KSO Lewis Brewer and Erma Prather
In Honor of Natalie Haslam Capstone Concepts/First Watch
In Honor of Dr. Kauza Kann Lewis Brewer and Emma Prather
In Honor of Knoxville Symphony’s Fine Musicians Anonymous
In Honor of Mr. and Mrs. D.M. Miller Lewis and Erma Brewer
In Honor of Amber and Rayna Mullins Lewis and Erma Brewer
The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following gifts received between August of 2018 to August 2019:
In Honor Of
34 knoxville symphony orchestra
COMMEMORATIVE GIFTS
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The Gift of Music
The Knoxville Symphony Orchestra is truly thankful for your support, which makes a major impact on our service to the East Tennessee region. Along with creating excellent music and performing in the traditional venues, 80% of the KSO’s time is spent not within the concert halls, but out in the community. Our Orchestra performs in school classrooms, libraries, hospitals, city parks, and churches, and reaches more than 200,000 children and adults each year. Since many of these concerts and programs are offered at low or no cost, your financial contribution is essential to support all that we do. The KSO is proud to be the oldest continuously performing orchestra in the Southeast, and a vital component of the cultural tapestry that makes Knoxville such a special and distinctive place in which to live, work, and play.
The KSO gratefully acknowledges the following pledges and gifts received between August 2018 and August 2019.
$100,000 and aboveThe Clayton Family
FoundationMr. and Mrs. James A.
Haslam IIKnoxville Symphony LeagueTennessee Arts CommissionMr. David M. Traver*
$50,000 - $99,999City of Knoxville
$25,000 - $49,999Aslan FoundationMr. and Mrs. Steve W. BaileyMr. and Mrs. David M.
ColquittPilot Flying J Corporation
$15,000 - $24,999Clayton HomesMrs. Sue HowardMr. James R. Martin Regal Thermal Label WarehouseTwin City Dealerships
$10,000 - $14,999Ms. Patricia Bible/KaTomMr. and Mrs. Randy BoydClayton Volvo Mr. James L. Clayton Mr. Roy E. Cockrum Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fielden First Bank
Governor and Mrs. William E. Haslam
Mr. and Mrs. Larsen and Adrian Jay
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Kinney Knoxville Museum of ArtMr. and Mrs. Jay McBrideMerchant & GouldMrs. Ellen R. Mitchell Ms. Cynthia Moxley and
Mr. Alan Carmichael Niswonger FoundationPellissippi State
Community CollegeMr. Joseph W. Sullivan IIIMr. and Mrs. Russ WatkinsMr. and Mrs. Tim Williams
$5,000 - $9,999Bank of AmericaBB&TMrs. Jonelda Blalock Brogan Financial Mr. and Mrs. Richard and
Bette Bryan Mrs. Willene ChalmersAram and Caraline Demirjian David and Janet DuggerMs. Sandra P. EmondMs. Mardel Fehrenbach First Tennessee Bank
and FoundationTerry and Rachel FordMr. Richard T. Fox and
Mr. Ralph Cianelli Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. Gray Ms. Garney Eve Hallock Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harr
Mrs. Judith HectorHome Federal Bank Mr. and Mrs. Raja Jubran Dr. and Mrs. William LiangLamp FoundationMr. and Mrs. Jon R. LawlerMr. Robert W. LedererDr. Charmaine B. MamantovMr. and Mrs. G. Mark
MamantovMr. and Mrs. James F.
McDonough Mercedes-Benz of KnoxvilleMLK Commemorative
Commission of Greater Knoxville
Partners Pinnacle Financial Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. PryseDick and Ann Ray Jorie RievesMr. and Mrs. William and
Alexa Riley Mr. Peter A. Acly and
Ms. Ellen Robinson The Rotary Club of KnoxvilleMr. and Mrs. Bill RotmeyerMr. and Mrs. Herbert S.
Sanger, Jr. Mrs. Susan Seymour Mr. Richard C. StoneMrs. Theresa H. StoneMr. and Mrs. James D.
VanderSteegMr. and Mrs. Frank Venable, Jr. Mr. John Winemiller and
Mr. R.J. HindeSibyl and Barney Wray
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$2,500 - $4,999Aubrey’s Mr. and Mrs. Karop T.
BavougianBarbara Winick Bernstein and
Bernard E. Bernstein Mr. Harry E. Blevins, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Steven M.
Brewington Mr. Ashley Capps and
Dr. Maria B. ClarkCapstone Concepts/First
WatchDr. and Mrs. Jeffrey R. CristDalen ProductsMr. and Mrs. Herb DebbanMr. and Mrs. James A.
Everett IIIDr. and Mrs. Howard C.
FilstonMs. Nancy S. GnilkaMr. and Mrs. Ray HandMr. and Mrs. Joe HarrisonMr. and Mrs. Robert HellerMrs. Jenny L. Hines and
Mr. Tom JesterDr. and Mrs. Jeffrey H.
JohnsonDr. and Mrs. Stephen KraussMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey H. LeeDr. and Mrs. E. Jay MoungerDrs. John and Marla PetersonRogers Group Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Barry RummelZane and Teresa ScarlettMrs. Suzanne T. Schriver and
Mr. David RechterMr. James F. Smith, Jr.Mr. William B. Stokely IVMrs. Sarah StowersSunTrust Bank & FoundationUT Federal Credit Union
$1,000 - $2,499Dr. Carol A. AkermanAkima Club, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Neal C. AllenBass, Berry & SimsMr. Samuel E. Beall IIDr. Myrwood C. BesozziDr. and Mrs. Harry L. BishopLarry and Linda BlairBrian and Nancy BossonMr. and Mrs. Jim BroganMr. and Mrs. William L. Bryan
Mrs. Caroline B. BucknerMr. and Mrs. Frederick BuffumDr. William M. BuggMs. Gayle BurnettMr. and Mrs. John L. ButlerDr. Samuel Cheek and
Dr. Lisa DuncanChoiceDATABill and Vicki ChristensenMatt and Stephanie ColemanMrs. Bobbie Y. CongletonMs. Evelyn DavisMr. and Mrs. Ely E. DriverMr. and Mrs. Greg EidamEmersonMs. Kathryn Kinnard FreemanDr. and Mrs. Gerald W. GibsonMr. and Mrs. William D. GreenMary Sue Greiner and
Sam YoungMr. James GrossenMr. and Mrs. John HaynesDr. and Mrs. Don R. HeiserShirley and Barnett C.
Helzberg, Jr.Hickory Construction Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Mark HillRobin M. HillMr. and Mrs. Robert HydzikIMS (Investors Management
Service, Inc.)Dr. and Mrs. Robert IvyJeffrey and Evelyn JohnsonDr. and Mrs. Jeffrey O.
JohnsonWilliam and Sally JohnsonFlorence and Russ JohnstonDr. and Mrs. Rudy KoesterCol. and Mrs. Richard F.
KolasheskiDr. James E. LawlerDr. and Mrs. M. Douglas LeahyMrs. W. Baxter Lee IIIMarguerite Osborn,
Marguerite MacDonald, Andrew MacDonald and Jacqueline Whittemore
Martin and Company Investment Counsel
Mr. and Mrs. Ed MathewsMs. Verna B. McLainMr. William R. McNabbMrs. Alicia H. MeryweatherMr. and Mrs. David MillerMrs. Marylees MillerDr. Patricia Mohr
Mr. and Mrs. Philip MoorDr. and Mrs. Michael MormanDr. Caryn WunderlichDr. and Mrs. Henry S.
Nelson, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Jim A. NicholsNora Roberts Foundation/TheMr. and Mrs. Robert PaylorMrs. and Mr. Claire and
Randy PhillipsMr. and Mrs. Brian PierceMs. Linda PierceRev. Luanne PrevostMr. and Mrs. Trent PrimmMr. and Mrs. W. James
Pugh, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Sunil and
Jo RamaprasadMrs. Mary B. RaysonMr. and Mrs. C.A. Ridge, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. James RobertoEmily and Morton RoseMr. and Mrs. William S.
RukeyserDr. Craig and Sue RylandsSchaad CompaniesJeffrey and Lisa SchlactusMs. Norma K. Scogin and
Ms. Sherry QuirkMr. and Mrs. Tom L. Shaw, Jr.Mrs. Billie ShelbyDr. and Mrs. George B. ShiflettMr. David D. SkidmoreMr. and Mrs. Ned Lee SmethersMrs. Roberta SmokerDr. Alan Solomon and
Mrs. Andrea CartwrightDr. and Mrs. Luis SolteroMr. and Mrs. Marshall StairStowers Machinery
CorporationMrs. Betsy StubblefieldTennessee Valley Authority
(TVA)Titanic Museum Attraction -
Pigeon ForgeMrs. Alice TorbettTurkey Creek Land PartnersTerry and Linda TylerUT-Battelle-ORNLMs. Miriam WankerlMr. and Mrs. Ronald A.
WatkinsDr. and Mrs. Gary Edward
WeedmanMr. John WinbiglerDr. and Mrs. James D. Yates
36 knoxville symphony orchestra
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$500 - $999Mr. Lloyd AdamsJim and Ann AshleyMr. and Mrs. Nicolas and
Diane AzelbornDr. and Dr. Raj and
Gayathri BaljepallyBarberMcMurry architectsDr. and Mrs. Robert L.
Barnes IIIMr. and Mrs. Paul and
Jan BartelMr. William BeardDavid and Lisa BogatyMr. and Mrs. Lewis BrewerDr. Marc BriereDr. Kelly Caldwell-Chor and
Mr. David ChorMr. and Mrs. Kenneth
CampbellMr. and Mrs. Jim CarmonMs. Stacy Taylor and
Mr. Sean K. ClaireMr. George ClarkColdwell Banker,
Wallace&Wallace, RealtorsMr. and Mrs. S.
Michael CollinsCompass International
Resources, Inc.Ms. Marsha CooperMr. and Mrs. Kenneth T. CreedDr. Cynthia CrosbyDr. Mary CushmanMr. and Mrs. Larry C. DannerMr. and Mrs. Charles S.
DudneyMr. and Mrs. Lamar DunnMs. Pamela P. FanslerMr. Thomas Fine and
Dr. Patricia MaffeoMr. and Mrs. Charles A.
FlanaganDrs. George and
Deborah FlanaganMr. Ted L. Flickinger and
Mrs. Julie S. HowardMr. and Mrs. Joel GarberMrs. Donna Geckler SolodDr. and Mrs. Mitchell H.
GoldmanMs. Denise GoughMrs. Pammela GrimmMr. and Mrs. Ross HardingDrs. David and Patricia Harris
Ms. Amy Morris HessMr. and Mrs. Richard and
Deanna HillDr. and Mrs. J. Parks Hitch, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Raymond W.
HoltonHarlan and Tricia HubbsDr. and Mrs. Arnold R.
Hudson, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Joseph E.
JohnsonSang W. and Minji JooHoward and Susan KastnerMr. and Mrs. Gerald KingPhil and Sharron KingDr. and Mrs. John W. Lacey IIISteve LaVieMr. and Mrs. Sidney H. LawThe Honorable and
Mrs. Hugh Banks LewisMichael and Yvonne MarshMrs. Nancy S. MontgomeryMs. Maureen MooreBrig. Gen. and Mrs. James M.
MungenastMr. and Ms. Boyd Brent MyersDr. Carmen J. NappoMrs. Helen NicholsonMs. Elizabeth OffringaDr. Mark Overholt and
Dr. Meredith OverholtSylvia and Jan PetersDr. and Mrs. George PliagasDr. and Mrs. Tim PowersMrs. Marsha M. ReichleMr. and Mrs. Thomas RussellMr. and Mrs. Robert SassDr. and Mrs. Eric SaundersMr. S. W. SchwenterlyMr. and Mrs. Stephen D.
SherlinMrs. Allison L. LesterMr. Stanley A. SmithJohn and Beth SoldanoPatricia A. SorensenDolores and John SoreyDr. Connie SteeleMr. Franklin D. StidhamDr. and Mrs. Gregory L. SwabeMr. and Mrs. Richard G. TaylorMr. and Mrs. Robert L.
ThompsonDr. and Mrs. William A.
Tyler, Jr.Ms. Georgiana F. Vines
Visit KnoxvilleDr. and Mrs. James W. WallMr. and Mrs. James M.
Wells IIIWest Chevrolet Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Marshall WilkinsMr. and Mrs. Joe WilsonDr. Donna Winn and
Dr. J.F. WolfeDr. and Mrs. L. Anthony
Wise, Jr.
$250 - $499Mr. Stewart AndersonDr. and Mrs. Matt and
Alicia ArganoMr. and Mrs. Thomas M.
Ayres, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Richard
BainbridgeMr. and Mrs. Sydney J. BallMr. and Mrs. Kenneth BallienBill and Eleanor BarronMrs. Ellen D. Bebb
and Councilmember Finbarr Saunders
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce BentonDr. and Mrs. Lynn F. BlakeMrs. Linda Gay Blanc and
Mr. Marshall PetersonLaura and Douglas BohnerMr. and Mrs. Kent BostickMs. Janet Smith BowerDr. and Mrs. Leonard A.
BrabsonFred and Susan BrackneyMr. and Mrs. Gerald BrandonMr. and Mrs. Adam BraudeDr. and Mrs. Mahdi BudayrDr. and Mrs. William L.
BurkhartMrs. Betsy CampbellMr. C. Howard CapitoMs. Suzanne R. CarriereBill and Clara CarrollMr. and Mrs. Robert CeoMrs. and Mr. Elizabeth ChanMr. and Mrs. Feng ChenMr. and Mrs. Barry ChristmasMr. and Mrs. Thomas ColeMr. and Mrs. James and
Gisela CondonDrs. Dan and Jane ConradMs. Caroline Cooley
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Ms. Mary CostaMr. and Mrs. Carl
Richard CowanMr. and Mrs. Gary CoxDr. and Mrs. Robert J.
DavermanMs. Sarah M. DavisMr. Ronald DaweDr. Nancy Deatherage and
Mr. Joe DeatherageJack and Frances DixonMrs. Lucy E. DoverJack and Shirley DraperMr. Daniel DrappMr. Theodore DreiserMr. and Mrs. Todd DugganMrs. Frances DunnDarrell and Katalin ElliottDr. and Mrs. Michael B. ElliottMr. and Mrs. Rudolph EscherMrs. Susan P. Evans and
Mrs. Rebecca EvansMr. William L. EversoleMrs. Vergie J. EwingMr. and Mrs. Howard
FarringtonDr. and Mrs. James C. FarrisMr. and Mrs. Norman E.
FeatherstonMr. and Mrs. Paul W. FisherMichael and Heather FloanMr. and Mrs. Michael FoltzRoger and Deborah FoutsMr. and Mrs. Donald FreemanMr. and Mrs. Paul GellertCommissioner Evelyn GillSarah and Edward GimbelMs. Nancy Moore GosleeDr. John Roy and Brenda GrayMrs. Yellie GreebeMr. and Mrs. Michael GreinerAllan and Gail GrossmanMr. William GrowdonMr. and Mrs. David A. HakeMr. and Mrs. C. Richard
HammondMs. Emily R. HaunMr. James A. HawkDennis and Kathy HaywardBecky and Mike HickmanMr. and Mrs. Richard
HigginbothamMr. and Mrs. John HopkinsMr. and Mrs. Charles
Hoppenrath
Dr. William HortonMr. and Mrs. Gary HowellMr. and Mrs. Richard W. InceRichard and Sheila JacobsteinMs. Patricia P. JobeMrs. Doris KeaslingMr. and Mrs. Paul J. KedrowMr. and Mrs. Robert A. KellMs. Judith H. KelleyDr. and Mrs. David B.
KennamerMr. and Mrs. Ben Kerny, Jr.Myra and Tom KilgoreDr. and Mrs. J. Donald King, Jr.Mr. Gary KlippleMr. and Mrs. Peter LandrumDavid and Robin LawlessJesse and Mallory LehnSteve LuceMr. Dieter Manthey and
Ms. Irene DorfingerMs. Glenna MarkwitzMr. and Mrs. Dave and
Dolores MarsdenMr. and Mrs. A. David MartinCamille and Richard MatlockMr. and Mrs. Ronald MayerMs. Anne MayhewMs. Rena P. McAlisterMs. Sheena M. McCallMrs. and Mr. Jennifer McCuneBob McGillEd and Kathy McGinleyCommissioner
and Councilmember Samuel McKenzie
Mr. James McLaughlinDr. Robert A. McLeanThe Melrose Foundation, Inc.Mr. John David MillerMr. Michael V. MillerMs. Delores MitchellMr. Larry MoellerMr. and Mrs. Kenneth M.
MoffettMs. Anna MooreMr. and Mrs. Brent MooreDr. and Mrs. Howard MooreMr. Ronald B. MooreMr. Scott MooreMr. and Mrs. William E.
MorrowMs. Julie A. MortonMs. Rebecca MosesMr. Frank Munger
Mr. Kevin MurphyMs. Janet MurrayMrs. Mary E. NagelMs. Lynda NewtonMrs. Eleanor Harrison NicholsRev. and Dr. Matt NiemanMs. Jill OverholtDr. and Mrs. Robert M.
OverholtMr. and Mrs. David OwnbyMr. and Mrs. Powell &
Susan PartridgeDr. Nancy Phillips Deatherage
and Mr. Joe DeatherageMr. and Mrs. John PittengerMrs. Judy PoulsonMr. Vladimir ProtopopescuMr. Joe C. RaderMr. and Mrs. Joshua RayMr. William ReeceMr. and Mrs. William ReevesRev. Kay ReynoldsMr. and Mrs. Richard P.
RichardsMs. Emily Ann RickardCouncilmember Lauren RiderCouncilmember Andrew
RobertoRoche DiagnosticsMr. and Mrs. Warren F.
RollinsDr. and Mrs. P.L. RowlettMr. and Mrs. Jim SamplesMr. and Mrs. Eugene
Sanders, Jr.Errol and Rachel ScoginMr. Douglas SelbyMr. and Mrs. Mike SharpKathleen and John ShillingKeat and Theuk SilavongMr. and Mrs. David SkinnerMr. and Mrs. Craig SmithMr. and Mrs. Wayne StaggMr. and Mrs. L. Caesar Stair IIIMrs. Norene StallworthMrs. and Mr. Betsy and
David StarkMr. and Mrs. Kenneth R.
StephensonJohn G. and Nancy P. StewartMrs. Richard StowersDrs. Mary Kay and
William SullivanJoe and Sally SvecMr. Herbert H. Tamer
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Mr. and Mrs. Ben TaylorMs. Donna J. TerzakMr. Harry L. ThomasMrs. and Mr. Neely TonosMr. Rodman Townsend, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Mark TuckerMr. Richard E. TumblinMr. James WagerMr. and Mrs. Wayne WallsMiao WanDr. William Bedford WatersMs. Martha WeeksMr. and Mrs. Ronald J.
WilliamsMr. and Mrs. Kent WilloughbyMr. and Mrs. Michael L. WillsMr. and Mrs. George E.
Wilson IIIDr. and Mrs. John F. WoodsMs. Irene WrightMr. and Mrs. Kelly WrightMr. Liubin XuDr. and Mrs. Don Yager
$100 - $249Drs. J. Davis Allan &
Teri L. HodgesDr. and Mrs. Glenn O. AllgoodMr. and Mrs. John AlpersBruce and Monique AndersonMrs. Barbara ApkingSarah and Benjamin ArcherMr. Don ArnuriusMs. Naomi AsherMr. and Mrs. Dennis AslingerMs. Cindy AtchleyMr. and Mrs. Ronald AubleMr. and Mrs. Jim AutreyDr. Nawras BabanMs. Avis A. BabbMr. and Mrs. Russ and
Erin BagwellMrs. Fay Bailey CarrMr. Charles BaileyMr. Hugh BaileyJohn and Patricia BallMs. Kim BallardMr. Donald BarkmanMr. James BarrettMr. Ralph BattistelliConnie BawcumCharles and Pauline BaynesDr. and Mrs. Marvin R. BeardMichael and Sue BeckleyMike and Brenda Beeler
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen BellDr. and Mrs. James and
Melanie BennettMr. Justin BerryMr. and Mrs. Thomas BiggsMs. Ann BlackwoodMs. Dorothy BlanksMr. and Mrs. Henry
Thomas BolenMr. and Mrs. Ray BondMr. Charles BrakebillMrs. Catherine BraunsteinMs. Catherine I. BrewerLynn and Pat BrewerDr. and Mrs. Ralph BrockettMr. and Mrs. Lawrence
BrothersEd and Maryann BrownMr. and Mrs. Jack BrunnerMr. Joshua BuchananJohn and Sabra BuchheitMr. and Mrs. Lawrence A.
BurkholderMr. Brad BurlingDr. and Mrs. Ralph BurnsMr. George Bushyeager and
Mrs. Cheryl VoorhisFrances and George ButlerShannon ByarsMr. Robert CainMr. and Mrs. Robert R.
CampbellCouncilmember and
Mrs. Mark CampenMs. Sandra A. CardwellMr. and Mrs. Josh CarlonDennis and Debbie CarperMr. Rick CarringerMs. Bonnie K. CasselberryMr. and Mrs. James Q.
ChambersMr. George P. ChandlerMrs. and Dr. Hershing ChangMrs. Brenda ChitwoodYongChun and Sang ChoMrs. Marilyn CiancioloMrs. Patti ClaireMrs. Edward S. Clayton IIIDawn and Kenneth ColemanMr. James K. CollingsMr. and Mrs. Matthew ConserCristian and Adriana ContescuMaurizio Conti and
Pamela SchoenewaldtMs. Barbara CopeMs. Judith Cope
Mr. and Mrs. James M. CorumMrs. Karen CoudenDr. and Mrs. Robert CounceMs. Faye CrawfordMrs. Elaine CrowderDr. and Mrs. William W.
CrowderMr. and Mrs. Michael J. CroyleMr. and Mrs. Barry CummingsMr. Curtis CurleyCharles and Patsy DanielMr. and Mrs. Don DareMrs. Mary L. DaughertyMs. Jolyn DavenportMr. and Mrs. James and
Kendra DavisMs. Kimberly Davis and
Mr. Fred SahmsDrs. Joseph and Jayne
De FioreMr. and Mrs. David DeiblerWill and Vicki DelongMr. and Mrs. Robert M.
DeryckeLynette and Dan DevineRev. and Mrs. George DoeblerMr. and Mrs. David
Peter DuchonDon and Nancy DunningMr. Joseph EatonDr. Takeshi EgamiDr. and Mrs. Curtis ElamMr. and Mrs. Nicholas ElenzMr. and Mrs. Allan R.
EllstromMichael and Deborah EmeryDr. and Mrs. Paul ErwinMr. and Mrs. Bob EubanksMr. Lloyd P. FarrarDr. and Mrs. R. Kent FarrisDr. and Mrs. Robert R. FehrMr. and Mrs. Charles FeigerleMr. Richard FischerEd and Melissa FlanaganMs. Elizabeth B. Ford and
Mr. Mike DriskillMr. Jim FordGreer and Bruce FoxMrs. Maude FoxJeffrey and Michelle FratusDr. and Mrs. John R. FrazierMs. Elizabeth FrinckeMs. Christine FryeMr. and Mrs. Peter GaleMr. Dan GarretteMs. Gloria Gaskin
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Mrs. Amanda S. GibsonMr. and Mrs. Bryce GieslerMr. and Mrs. James
Kelly GiffenDr. James W. Giles and
Ms. Donna J. KraemerMs. Rosemary GilliamMr. Ira R. GladsonMr. and Mrs. Michael M.
GlasmanMr. Charles W. GoanMr. and Mrs. Jonathan
GoldstineMrs. Tricia Gomulinski and
Mr. Curtis GomulinskiMr. and Mrs. Stephen GoudyMr. and Mrs. Michael GrantMr. Rchard GreenMr. and Mrs. Clayton GreeneMr. and Mrs. David E.
GreenwoodMr. and Mrs. Robert GregoryMr. and Mrs. Sam F.
Grigsby, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Chris GroerManfred GroteMs. Paula GrubbsMr. Gong Gu and Ms. Jane XuDrs. Samir and Laila GuindiMs. Gaye Carole GuinterLewis R. HagoodMr. and Mrs. David HalkoMs. Christine HamiltonBecky and Steve HancockMrs. Clara HardinMr. Allie HarmonMr. and Mrs. Elkton Earl
HarringtonMr. and Mrs. Robert
HartenfeldMr. and Mrs. Louis A. HartleyMrs. Edwina P. HarveyMr. and Mrs. Arthur HeidrichMs. Tracy HenderlightMr. and Mrs. Gordon HendrichMs. Doris W. HenningDr. and Mrs. Bruce L.
HenschenMr. Manuel HerzMs. Anna Fox HindsMr. and Mrs. Robert E. HircheDr. and Mrs. Fred W. Hodge, Sr.Heather and Jason HodgeMr. Douglas Hodson
Mr. and Ms. Dan W. HolbrookMr. and Mrs. Christopher
HorwegeJim and Susannah HowardMs. Jill HoylesMrs. and Mr. Heng-Ching
HuangMr. Gordon HughesAmbassador and
Mrs. Joe HulingsMr. Wade HulseyKarla and Gene IngleLee and Martha IngramPam and Ray IrmingerMs. Janice IsheeMr. and Mrs. Richard L. JantzMs. Greta JerniganMr. and Mrs. Dave JohnMr. Mark Johnson and
Mrs. Kate LewallenMr. Tim JohnsonMs. Susan JonelyMr. and Mrs. Mark JordanAndrew and Meryl KaleidaMichael and Lisa KaufmanMr. and Mrs. Matt KayeMr. and Mrs. Frank and
Megan KehrenMs. and Mrs. Vandy KempEd and Mary Ann KenikMs. Rosa KennedyMike and Shirley KervinMrs. and Mr. Jeeyoun KimMs. Carolyn M. KingMr. and Mrs. Lewis KinnardMrs. Vicki KinserMr. and Mrs. John R.
KirchnerMrs. and Mr. Donna KirklandMr. and Mrs. James Edward
KirklandMr. David Martin and
Ms. Barbara Kistler-MartinMr. Donald H. KleinA. B. Kliefoth, M.D.Mr. and Mrs. Chuck KocalMr. Stephen KoellaDr. and Mrs. Michael KolarikMs. Alison KoprowskiMr. Roy KramerMs. Nicole KrewsonMs. Michelle KwonDr. and Mrs. Geoffrey LaingMr. and Mrs. L. William Larson
Mr. and Mrs. Niles R. LarsonMr. John LawrenceMs. Judith LeeMr. and Mrs. Alfred M.
LegendreMr. and Mrs. Mark LeitsonJerry and Emily LennMarti and Larry LewisMr. and Mrs. James A. LeyMr. and Mrs. Harvey W.
LibermanMr. Douglas LillifieldMr. Jun LinMark and Peggy LittmannDr. Charles LoehrMr. and Mrs. Harold C. LoyDr. Wei LuMs. Rita Nina LundMrs. Gloria Lusk and
Mr. Thomas LuskM&M DevelopmentVickie and Dave MahanMr. and Mrs. Barton
MargoshesFred and Virginia MarshMr. William MartellaMr. Nicolai N. MartovetskyMs. Donna Brehm MatlockDr. Kathleen S. Mavournin
and Dr. Robert RichmondMs. Angel MaxwellAlan and Kathy MaysMrs. Gail S. MaysKeith and Leslie McAmisMr. Frank McClellandMr. George T. McCordMr. and Mrs. Patrick McCoyMs. Victoria McDonaldDr. and Mrs. Robert L.
McFarlandMs. Joanna McFarlaneOwen and Chris McGreeveyMs. Maria McHaleMr. and Mrs. Donald W.
McMullenMr. and Mrs. Sam and Sandy
McNameeMr. and Mrs. Robert MeloyMr. Monty MerchantMs. Simone MetzgerMr. Eric MeyersMr. and Mrs. Arthur C.
Miller, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Mancil MilliganMs. Charlene Mischlich
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Mrs. Herbert MookMrs. Lesley MooreDennis and Shirley MorganMr. and Mrs. Joel V.
Morris, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Gary E. MountJen and Matt MowrerAmber and Josh MullinsCarole and Thomas
MustaleskiMr. and Mrs. Marshall E. MyerDouglas and Helen NanceMr. Robert N. NelsonMr. and Mrs. Scott NewbyEric and Lori NicelyMs. Kathleen NorrisMs. Grier S. NovingerMs. Veronika NowadingMr. Gregory O’FlynnMr. Jim O’SickeyMs. Kathryn PadenMr. Jon ParhamParker Business Consulting
& Accounting, P.C./ Robert N. Parker
Mr. Matthew ParsonsMr. and Mrs. James PeaseDr. and Mrs. F. Neal PeeblesDr. and Mrs. Reuben N.
Pelot, IIIMr. Malcolm PerdueMs. Carol PettitMs. Linda L. PhillipsMs. Sara PhillipsMr. and Mrs. Gary PicouMr. Thomas PinkleyMr. Rikki PleasantsMr. Frederick D. PogueMr. Wilfred PostMr. and Mrs. William PotterDr. and Mrs. Gibbs PrevostMs. Lesley PriceMs. Sarah PruettDr. Lydia M. Pulsipher and
Dr. Conrad M. GoodwinDr. and Mrs. Jeffrey QueenMr. and Mrs. Franz RaetzerGray and Brenda ReavisMike and Sharon ReedDr. and Mrs. R. F. RegesterMrs. Rosemary H. RiedDr. Lee L. RiedingerBill and Lindy RileyMs. Kathy RinacaGerald and Sarah RisdahlDavid and Andrea Rizzi
Ms. Mintha E. RoachLesley and Jeremy RobertsMr. and Mrs. Steven and
Carolyne RobertsAnn Robinson-Craig and
Chris CraigDr. Bill and Bonnie RogersMs. Alison Rosen/
The Cali GroupMr. and Mrs. Bernard
RosenblattMs. Patricia P. RoushMs. Lois Lawrance RussellMr. Matt Buchholz and
Ms. Dallas SaccaMaestro and Mrs. Brian SaleskyMr. Carlo SanchezMs. Yolanda SanchezMr. and Mrs. Jack SanfordMr. and Mrs. William SansomMr. and Mrs. Mark SchaeferDr. Gilya G. SchmidtMr. Terry W. SchultzMs. Carolyn SchwennDr. Nan ScottMr. Robert ScottSuzanne V. Jack and
Tom ScottMatt and Saba SeaverAnn and Bob SeaverMr. and Mrs. Alan SeftonMs. Cynthia A. SerbinMr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
ShannonDr. Debra M. ShaubMr. William ShaubMr. and Mrs. Ronald N.
SherrillMr. Robert ShniderDr. Patricia H. ShockleyMs. Hilary ShreterMs. Dana SiegeleDr. Pamela SiergiejMr. Jack SimpsonMr. and Mrs. Robert SimpsonDr. and Mrs. Andrew SingerMr. Jack SingletonMrs. Amy Jo SmithMr. Brett SmithMr. and Mrs. D. Michael SmithDr. and Mr. Greta SmithMr. and Mrs. Gilbert P. SmithMs. Phyllis SnyderMr. and Mrs. Jack SomainiMr. Gary Sperl
Harvey and Sylvia SproulBeth and Dan StainforthMr. and Mrs. Billy StairMr. and Mrs. Russell StairMr. Aaron StapleMr. and Mrs. Samuel L. SteeleMr. Jeffrey H. StewartDr. and Mrs. Neal StewartMr. Robert StormsMr. and Mrs. David SumnerMr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Swartwout, Jr.Gary and Sharon SwigartAli SwoffordMr. Daniel TaddieDr. and Mrs. Michael TeagueMr. Gary Teper and
Mrs. Cynthia NelsonMr. Charles ThomasMr. and Mrs. Grady W.
Thomas, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Peter and
Michele ThorntonMr. and Mrs. Joseph TomczakMr. Don TownsendMs. Meghan TreeceMr. Luther TrueWilliam and Mary TruexMary Alice TuckerMr. and Mrs. Mark TurnerDr. Thomas UngsUniversity of TN Campus ChestNancy and Aleck Van HookMs. Julia Van ZylMs. Emily VanderwertMs. Jean C. VaughanMr. and Mrs. Jeff VerityMr. and Mrs. Douglas and
Rochelle VeumMr. and Mrs. M. Coppley
VickersChristy and Gary VinesMr. Frank VogtMrs. Linda VopalSalli and Robert WagnerMs. Ann Campbell WallaceMr. and Mrs. Hugh E. WallenLinda and J.V. WallerMrs. and Mr. Su WangMrs. Ann M. WarwickJack and Patricia WatsonFrank and Julienne WeathersWebb School of KnoxvilleMrs. Robert Webb
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Mr. and Mrs. William and Anita Webb
Mr. Charles E. Weber IIMrs. Rhonda G. WebsterMr. and Mrs. Andrew
WereszczakLisa Collins WernerMs. Joan WeserMr. and Mrs. Don WestGeoffrey and Linda WheatleyPat and Alice WhiteDiane and Dan WhiteMr. and Mrs. J. Harvey WhiteMr. R. D. White
Mr. and Mrs. Don WhittedDrs. Michael and
Shelley WietingMr. and Mrs. Jerry WilharmDarryl and Laura WilkensMr. Homer C. WilkinsJohn and JoeAnn WilkinsonMr. and Mrs. Pete WillcoxMr. and Mrs. Al WilliamsMs. Cynthia WilliamsMs. Debra WilliamsMs. Margaret WilliamsMs. Charlotte WilsonMrs. Eileen Wilson
Dr. Shannon WilsonMrs. Eleanor WistromMr. George WoodMs. Paula Henson WrightMr. Anthony Wylie and
Ms. Kathleen RiordanDr. and Dr. Liu XiaobingJerry and Christina YoungMs. Kathy YoungMs. Sallie A. YoungMrs. and Mr. Jin ZhangMs. Amy ZimmermanMr. Ray Zuhr
We thank the members of the Bertha Walburn Clark Society who have provided for the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra in their wills or estate plans. If you would like to join this dedicated group of supporters, please contact KSO Development Director Mary Sue Greiner at (865) 521-2304. If you have already named the KSO in your estate plans, please let us know so that we may thank you at our annual Bertha Walburn Clark Society Celebration.
AnonymousMr. Wallace W. Baumann*Mr. and Mrs. Bernard BernsteinBetty Gay Walden Blanc *Mr. and Mrs. Tutt S. Bradford*Mr. Keith Walburn Bryan and
Ms. Karen KeysMrs. Condon Bush*Dr. Ada Marie Campbell*Mr. James L. ClaytonF. Michael Combs~Mr. Norris Dryer*~Sandra P. EdmondVickie and Rudy* EnnisMr.* and Mrs. Ross N. FairesMr. and Mrs. Charles HarrMr. and Mrs. James A. Haslam IIMary and Dan Holbrook Florence and Russ Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Raja Jubran
Dr. James Lawler Mr. and Mrs. Jon LawlerMr. Sande Macmorran~Dr. Charmaine B. MamantovMr. James R. MartinMs. Sheena McCallMs. Cynthia Moxley and Mr. Alan CarmichaelDr. and Mrs. Alvin Nielsen*Mrs. Sharon Miller PryseBarry and Rebecca RummelMrs. Kay Samuel*Stan SmithGary Sperl~Alice Stewart~Mr.* and Mrs. Harold StoneProf. David L. Sylwester*Mr.* and Mrs.* David M. TraverDr. Earl L. Wehry, Jr.*D. Scot Williams~Mr. John Winbigler
*deceased~KSO Musician
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BERTHA WALBURN CLARK SOCIETY
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5 YearsBrian J. Winegardner, trumpet
20 YearsCheryl S. Dow, bass
Samuel S. Chen, Principal TromboneIldar Khuziakhmetov, cello
25 YearsWayne Jay Oberfeitinger, percussion
50 YearsMary Ann Fee Fennell, violin
Fred Michael Combs, Associate Principal TimpaniWilliam Bruce Wilhite, cello
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