CONCERT RESCHEDULED
This concert (originally scheduled for September 2 – 4, 2022), has been rescheduled for May 19 – 21, 2023. Existing ticketholders can find information about their new performance details by logging in to their dallassymphony.org accounts.

Questions? Please contact our Guest Services team at customerservice@dalsym.com or 214.849.4376.

JOSHUA GERSEN conducts

Director Steven Spielberg’s heartwarming masterpiece is one of the brightest stars in motion picture history. Filled with unparalleled magic and imagination, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial follows the moving story of a lost little alien who befriends a 10-year-old boy named Elliott. Experience all the mystery and fun of their unforgettable adventure in the beloved movie that captivated audiences around the world, complete with John Williams’ Academy Award®-winning score performed live by a full symphony orchestra in sync to the film projected on a huge HD screen!

©A.M.P.A.S.®

MORTON H. MEYERSON SYMPHONY CENTER
2301 Flora St.
Dallas, TX 75201

Joshua Gersen

Conductor

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FABIO LUISI conducts
HERBERT LIPPERT tenor
AUDREY LUNA soprano
ANTHONY ROTH COSTANZO countertenor

SEAN MICHAEL PLUMB baritone
DALLAS SYMPHONY CHORUS
DALLAS SYMPHONY CHILDREN’S CHORUS

ORFF Catulli Carmina
ORFF Carmina Burana

Arguably, the most iconic choral work of the 20th century, Carmina Burana’s unforgettable opening, “O Fortuna,” has become a pop culture phenomenon. Based on medieval German poetry, Carmina Burana has it all: rhythmic and brooding choruses, lusty drinking songs, ballads cursing fickle lovers and gleaming paeans to love. Catulli Carmina brings all of the boldness and audacious storytelling its more famous sibling piece is know for to complete a program that will thrill and delight. Many may not have heard the Catulli Carmina, one of the two sequels Orff wrote to Carmina Burana, but, in a rare pairing, you will get to hear them both together as Orff intended with our four critically acclaimed soloists, the Dallas Symphony Chorus, the Dallas Symphony Children’s Chorus and the DSO.

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Music Director Fabio Luisi! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm Thursday, Friday and Saturday and at 2:00pm on Sunday.

PLEASE NOTE:  Carmina Burana addresses adult themes and contains some adult language.


“Soprano Audrey Luna is perhaps best known for singing stratospheric soprano roles in Thomas Adès’s operas The Tempest and The Exterminating Angel. Her ability to move instantly from the bottom of her range to the top while maintaining sweetness of sound served her well here. Her movements In trutina mentis dubia and Dulcissime were close to perfect.”

Timothy Robson, Backtrack, August 2018

MORTON H. MEYERSON SYMPHONY CENTER
2301 Flora St.
Dallas, TX 75201

FABIO LUISI MUSIC DIRECTOR LOUISE W. & EDMUND J. KAHN MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

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Herbert Lippert

Herbert Lippert

Tenor

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Audrey Luna

Audrey Luna

Soprano

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Anthony Roth Costanzo

Countertenor

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Sean Michael Plumb

Sean Michael Plumb

Baritone

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Dallas Symphony Chorus

Chorus

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Dallas Symphony Children’s Chorus

Chorus

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Program Notes

By René Spencer Saller

If you are alive today, chances are you have been exposed to the influence of Orff. Don’t recognize the name? Doesn’t matter. You probably had a grade-school music teacher who did. Maybe you lucked out and got to attend an elementary school with a collection of Orff instruments, specially chosen percussion instruments tuned to sound harmonious even in (especially in!) untrained hands, and maybe you learned about pitch and meter by playing Orff-prescribed games and using your body in motion to express these abstractions, as my public grade-school classmates and I did, in an inner-ring suburb of St. Louis in the 1970s.

But even if you never took a music class, you can surely hum the main hook to Orff’s “O Fortuna,” from his iconic Carmina Burana, whose ubiquity in the popular culture is, as Alex Ross memorably quipped, “proof that it contains no diabolical message, indeed that it contains no message whatsoever.” Orff’s music might not have a message, but it is an undeniably effective vehicle. His musical language—relentless rhythms, hammered-home melodies, crude harmonies—helped the Nazis sell their poison, and the same music helped sell laundry detergent a generation later.

If not quite a one-hit wonder, Orff remains a somewhat enigmatic, even polarizing figure. He completed Carmina Catulli in 1943, two years after receiving the commission and about six years after his breakthrough work, Carmina Burana. Carmina Catulli received its premiere during World War II. With Trionfo di Afrodite, from 1953, the three works form a conceptual trilogy, but the two later installments never took off like their predecessor and are virtually unknown today. But whether acknowledged or not, Orff’s influence can be heard in the driving rhythms of John Adams, the hypnotic ostinatos of Glass and Cage. There’s a reason that generations of listeners have found his music so compelling, and it has little to do with politics or anything that cerebral: Orff made music that speaks to the body and to the subconscious.

Although Orff had loved the classics since childhood, he was 35 years old when he first encountered Catullus’s Odi et Amo (c. 85), while on holiday at Lake Garda, in northern Italy. He saw a postcard with the poem on it and instantly heard it as music in his head. When he returned to Germany, he bought an edition of Catullus poems and chose 10 to set for mixed choir, which he then edited in a two-volume set titled Catulli Carmina, in 1931 and 1932, respectively.

When his Carmina Burana grew increasingly popular, theater directors requested more musical material to fill out their programs, so Orff revised the score, adding and deleting certain poems and surrounding them with a “framing” story, which places the drama within a drama, enhancing the artificiality of the narrative. The new version of Catulli Carmina—which he now called ludi scaenici, or a scenic cantata, and no longer a collection of songs for mixed choir—premiered on November 6, 1943, at the Leipzig Opera.

A Closer Listen

The cantata contains three parts: a prelude, a central section made up of Catullus poems, and a short postlude that repeats the main ideas of the prelude. Orff scored it for a full mixed choir, soprano and tenor soloists (portraying Lesbia and Catullus, respectively), and an entirely percussive orchestra, thought to be inspired by Stravinsky’s Les noces: four pianos, four timpani, castanets, maracas, antique cymbal, tam-tam, lithophone, metallophone, two glockenspiels, xylophone, tenor xylophone, and more. The orchestra plays only in the prelude and postlude; in the play-within-the-play, the soloists are accompanied only by the chorus, which also functions as a traditional Greek chorus.

Orff uses Catullus poems for the bulk of the text, but he wrote the prelude, the framing device that turns the selected poems into a play within a play. The plot, such as it is, involves a group of exuberant young horndogs who, in the prelude, describe what they want to do to one another in pornographic detail, if not quite in grammatical Latin. Then a chorus of elderly crabasses propose a lecture in the form of dramatized Catullus poems, all designed to prove conclusively that love is for losers and nothing lasts. The young folk agree to listen attentively.

The internal play begins with the entrance of Catullus, accompanied by the chorus singing Odi et amo (“I hate and I love”). When his beloved Lesbia appears, he sings Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus (“let us live, my Lesbia, and love”). Eventually, though, Lesbia proves untrue by dancing in front of a tavern, loitering on corners, and engaging in other activities for which Catullus tries to slut-shame her. Conflicted, he sleeps outside her front door and dreams of their reconciliation. Meanwhile, the real-life Lesbia sings him a lullaby while he sleeps (Dormi, dormi, dormi ancora—note that it’s in Italian, not Latin, a sign that she’s a modern lady). But Catullus wakes with a jolt when he hears the bass voice, and he experiences an epiphany: his friend Caelius, to whom he has often confided, is Lesbia’s secret lover—cuckolded by his best pal!

After much anguished back and forth with the pleading Lesbia, Catullus decides that her actions have ruined him and he can neither love nor hate her now. The score boasts several memorable passages, including some bel canto soprano numbers worthy of Delibes. Then, in one of the best punch lines in the history of the cantata form, Orff subverts the entire spectacle by showing, in the postlude, that the production was a waste of time. No longer willing to endure the sour old dudes and their strange diatribes, the young people blithely resume hooking up.

After the successful premiere of his scenic cantata Carmina Burana, Orff issued the following instructions to his music publisher:

“Everything I have written to date, and which you have, unfortunately, printed, can be destroyed. With Carmina Burana, my collected works begin.”

First performed by the Oper Frankfurt on June 8, 1937, Orff’s Carmina Burana is based on a collection of poems by a motley assortment of itinerant monks, scholars, and other speakers of Latin, the lingua franca of the medieval age. Old French and Middle-High

German, along with macaronic hybrids, add linguistic variety to these stubbornly secular, often bawdy verses, which touch on the corruption of the clergy, the benefits of intoxication, the sorrow of love, the glories of nature, and the pitiless wheel of fortune that determines our destinies. The original manuscript dates to the early 13th century. Lost for centuries before being rediscovered at a Benedictine abbey near Munich, the score was first published in 1847.

With the help of Michel Hofmann, his fellow classics enthusiast, Orff selected two dozen poems from the collection and set them to music. “It’s not sophisticated, not intellectual,” he wrote, “There is a spiritual power behind my work, and that’s why it is accepted throughout the world.”

Orff In and Out of Time

Another way to understand Orff’s work is by understanding Orff, who was both a product of his culture and also something of an aberration.

Born in Munich, which was then part of imperial Wilhelmine Germany, Orff was brought up in a Bavarian military family, in a culture that understood itself to be the natural extension of both Athens and Rome, an aspirational lineage connecting the not-yet-unified Germany with the Golden Age of the Greco-Roman empire. Even as a young composer in post-WWI Germany, Orff, who studied at the Munich Academy of Music from 1912–14, was a devoted antiquarian. Although he set the occasional text by a contemporary or near-contemporary, such as the unapologetically leftist German playwright and poet Bertolt Brecht, or by canonical German poets such as Heinrich Heine and Friederich Hölderlin, Orff increasingly preferred engaging with centuries-old Latin and Archaic Greek texts by Catullus and Sappho, the primary sources for Carmina catullus and Trionfo, respectively. For his musical enjoyment he preferred poring over the scores of J.S. Bach, Monteverdi, and other early composers of choral music. And although his parents were devout Roman Catholics, Orff lost his religion fairly early and chose not to have his own daughter baptized.

Like most of his non-Jewish colleagues, Orff remained in Germany during the rise of the Third Reich, although he never went so far as to join the Nazi Party. He was drafted into the German Army in August 1917 but was quickly incapacitated in a trench collapse and spent months recovering from his serious injuries. When he was healthy again, he began to work in various administrative capacities for opera houses while studying music and dance and developing his pedagogical theory, which he called Schulwerk. Although he associated with a leader of the Resistance who was later executed, he distanced himself from politics, mostly by keeping to himself and making the kind of art that wasn’t likely to endanger himself or his family. He wasn’t notably brave, and he was no doubt relieved when the Nazis put him on a list of approved composers they called the Gottbegnadeten (Those Graced by God, or Those with God-Given Talent—which would no doubt be more impressive as a title if Nazis hadn’t bestowed it).

Though not technically a Nazi, Orff was a member of the Reichsmusikkammer, a requirement for all active musicians in the Third Reich. And despite any reservations he might have expressed privately, he did agree to compose new music for A Midsummer

Night’s Dream to replace Mendelssohn’s classic score, which the authorities had banned on account of the composer’s Jewish ancestry—never mind that Mendelssohn had been a devout Lutheran since childhood. And never mind that one of Orff’s Catholic grandparents was a former Jew turned Catholic. The Nazis weren’t ideologically consistent, and they didn’t need to be. As with any genocidal regime, approval was granted or denied according to the whims of the powerful.

After completing his denazification process in 1946, Orff was rated “Grey C, acceptable,” a designation intended for Germans who were “compromised by their actions during the Nazi period but not subscribers to Nazi doctrine.” He married four times and was thrice divorced. His only child, Godela Orff, was born in 1921, to his first wife, the singer Alice Solscher. Although the couple separated about six months after Godela’s birth and divorced in 1927, Orff assumed primary custody of his daughter when her mother moved to Australia in 1930. Orff’s relationship with Godela was often rocky, with periods of estrangement, but they reconciled about a decade before his death, at age 86, from cancer. His tombstone, which is located in the Andechs monastery, bears the Latin inscription Summus Finis (the Ultimate End), a quotation from the end of his final work, De temporum fine comoedia.

A Closer Listen

Orff’s score bears a lengthy Latin subtitle, which, in translation, reads: “Profane songs to be sung by soloists and chorus with an accompaniment of instruments and magic tableaux.” By turns crude and celestial, the songs reflect Orff’s passion for the plainchant of the Middle Ages and early Renaissance. As anyone who has ever sung it will attest, some of it amounts to vocal-cord torture. The aria Olem lacus colueram, for instance, is sung almost entirely in falsetto, straining the poor solo tenor’s voice to the breaking point—which makes sense when you remember that the lines are sung from the perspective of a roasting swan. A wildly erotic passage in “Cours d’amour” forces the soprano soloist to reach beyond the upper limits of her range, creating an exquisite tension.

“In all my work,” Orff wrote, “my final concern is not with musical but with spiritual exposition.” This claim might seem at odds with the visceral, almost orgiastic sonic thrust of Carmina Burana, but Orff, like the medieval poets who inspired him, knew that the spiritual and the profane are spokes of the same cosmic wheel.

COLONEL JIM R. KEENE conducts
LIEUTENANT COLONEL DOMINGOS ROBINSON conducts
CONCERT BAND & SOLDIERS’ CHORUS

The Army Field Band will perform the “Soundtrack of the American Soldier,” a tribute to the stories of our military as told by Hollywood. Audience members will enjoy exciting movie music from some of the greatest films of our generation, from “Saving Private Ryan” to “The Great Escape.” When filmmakers highlight the service of our soldiers, they bring real-life heroes into the heart of our popular culture and share their sacrifice with all Americans.

Colonel Jim R. Keene

Colonel Jim R. Keene

Commander, The United States Army Field Band

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Lieutenant Colonel Domingos Robinson

Lieutenant Colonel Domingos Robinson

Deputy Commander, The United States Army Field Band

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U.S. Army Field Band & Soldiers' Chorus

Concert Band & Soldiers’ Chorus

U.S. Army Field Band

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The Dallas Symphony presents four-time Grammy® winner esperanza spalding in a stunning one-night-only performance in Annette Strauss Square. Join us under the stars and city lights of the Arts District for an unforgettable night of musical exploration.

VENUE

ANNETTE STRAUSS SQUARE
2403 Flora St
Dallas, TX 75201

Please note: This concert does not feature the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.

COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOL
Your safety, and the safety of our musicians, guest artists and staff continue to be our top priorities. We are currently requiring proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 48 hours of your performance date, and masks are required at all times in the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, regardless of vaccination status. For more information on our enhanced safety protocols, please visit here.

esperanza spalding

Vocalist, Composer, Bass, Piano

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FABIO LUISI conducts

FRANZ VON SUPPÉ Overture to Light Cavalry     
JOHANN STRAUSS JR. Pizzicato Polka      
COPLAND “Hoe-Down” from Rodeo
KEVIN DAY Lightspeed: Fanfare for Orchestra 
ROSSINI Overture to Guillaume Tell [William Tell]
ELGAR Military March No. 1 in D major from Pomp and Circumstance

SAINT-SAËNS “Bacchanale” from Samson and Delilah
JESSIE MONTGOMERY Strum 
BERNSTEIN Overture to Candide
JOHANN STRAUSS JR. Thunder and Lightning Polka    
STRAUSS Radetzky March

Fabio Luisi and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra perform a selection of well-known classics at the historic Music Hall at Fair Park for a free community concert.

This is a general admission event – no advance reserved seating. We will reserve seats for attendees who purchase the pre-show dining option in the Music Hall’s Crystal Terrace restaurant so that they may enjoy their pre-show meal without concern about occupying their seats.  Please visit this page for details.

VENUE

MUSIC HALL AT FAIR PARK
909 1st Ave
Dallas, TX 75210

CLEAR BAG POLICY
Only clear plastic, vinyl, or PVC bags will be accepted in the venue (max size 12″x6″). Small clutch bags must be approximately the size of a hand (max size 4.5″x6.5″).

FABIO LUISI MUSIC DIRECTOR LOUISE W. & EDMUND J. KAHN MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

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FABIO LUISI piano
ALEXANDER KERR violin
NATHAN OLSON violin
EUNICE KEEM violin
ANGELA FULLER HEYDE violin
MEREDITH KUFCHAK viola
MATTHEW SINNO viola
EMILY LEVIN harp

CHRISTOPHER ADKINS cello
THEODORE HARVEY cello
KARA KIRKENDOLL WELCH flute
DAVID BUCK flute
STEPHEN AHEARN clarinet
GREGORY RADEN clarinet
ERIN HANNIGAN oboe
TED SOLURI bassoon

DAVID HEYDE horn
BARRY HEARN trombone
CHRIS OLIVER trombone
BRIAN HECHT trombone
DARREN MCHENRY bass trombone
GABRIEL SÁNCHEZ piano
DIMITRI PAPADIMITRIOU guest piano

RAVEL Introduction and Allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet and String Quartet
LILI BOULANGER Two Pieces for Violin and Piano, No. 1 “Nocturne”
POULENC Sextet for piano and wind quintet
BEETHOVEN Three Equali for four Trombones
SCHUMANN Piano Quintet in E-flat Major, Op. 44

With a selection of French and German favorites, this intimate concert experience showcases the brilliance of chamber music. Including a rare, one-of-a-kind performance by our Music Director Fabio Luisi as he joins Concertmaster Alexander Kerr on the other side of the conductor’s podium for Lili Boulanger’s Two Pieces for Violin and Piano, No. 1 “Nocturne”, this concert can’t be missed.


The Dallas Symphony is grateful for the wonderful support of its donors and patrons. For a full list of Donor Appreciation Month opportunities, please visit here.


COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOL
Your safety, and the safety of our musicians, guest artists and staff continue to be our top priorities. We are currently requiring proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 48 hours of your performance date, and masks are required at all times in the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, regardless of vaccination status. For more information on our enhanced safety protocols, please visit here.

FABIO LUISI MUSIC DIRECTOR LOUISE W. & EDMUND J. KAHN MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

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Alexander Kerr_Concertmaster_Violin I_Michael L Rosenberg Chair_Dallas Symphony

Alexander Kerr

Concertmaster

Michael L. Rosenberg Chair

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Nathan Olson_Co-Concertmaster_Violin I_Fanchon & Howard Hallam Chair_Dallas Symphony

Nathan Olson

Co-concertmaster

Fanchon & Howard Hallam Chair

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Eunice Keem_Associate Concertmaster_Violin I_Marcella Poppen Chair_Dallas Symphony

Eunice Keem

Associate Concertmaster

Marcella Poppen Chair

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Angela Fuller Heyde_Principal Violin II_Barbara K & Seymour R Thum Chair_Dallas Symphony Chair

Angela Fuller Heyde

Principal Second Violin

Barbara K. & Seymour R. Thum Chair

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Meredith Kufchak_Principal Viola_Hortense & Lawrence S Pollock Chair_Dallas Symphony

Meredith Kufchak

Principal Viola

Hortense & Lawrence S. Pollock Chair

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Matthew Sinno

Associate Principal Viola

Jean & Marc Gineris Chair

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Emily Levin_Principal Harp_Elsa von Seggern Chair_Dallas Symphony

Emily Levin

Principal Harp

Elsa von Seggern Chair

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Christopher Adkins_Principal Cello_Fannie & Stephen S Kahn Chair_Dallas Symphony

Christopher Adkins

Principal Cello

Fannie & Stephen S. Kahn Chair

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Theodore Harvey_Associate Principal Cello_Holly & Tom Mayer Chair_Dallas Symphony

Theodore Harvey

Associate Principal Cello

Holly & Tom Mayer Chair

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Kara Kirkendoll Welch_Flute_Caroline Rose Hunt Chair_Dallas Symphony

Kara Kirkendoll Welch

Flute

Caroline Rose Hunt Chair

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David Buck_Principal Flute_Joy & Ronald Mankoff Chair_Dallas Symphony

David Buck

Principal Flute

Joy & Ronald Mankoff Chair

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Stephen Ahearn_Clarinet_Dallas Symphony

Stephen Ahearn

Second Clarinet

Courtney & Andrew Nall Chair

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Greg Raden_Principal Clarinet_Mr & Mrs C Thomas May Jr Chair_Dallas Symphony

Gregory Raden

Principal Clarinet

Mr. & Mrs. C. Thomas May, Jr. Chair

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Erin Hannigan_Principal Oboe_Nancy P & John G Penson Chair_Dallas Symphony

Erin Hannigan

Principal Oboe

Nancy P. & John G. Penson Chair

|ON LEAVE|

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Ted Soluri_Principal Bassoon_Irena H Wadel & Robert I Atha Jr Chair_Dallas Symphony

Ted Soluri

Principal Bassoon

Irene H. Wadel & Robert I. Atha, Jr. Chair

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Associate Principal + Acting Principal Horn_Linda VanSickle Chair_Dallas Symphony

David Heyde

Associate Principal Horn

Linda VanSickle Chair

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Gabriel Sanchez_Classical Keyboard_Dallas Symphony

Gabriel Sanchez

Keyboard (Classical)

Jeanne R. Johnson Chair

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Barry Hearn_Principal Trombone_Cece & Ford Lacy Chair_Dallas Symphony

Barry Hearn

Principal Trombone

Cece & Ford Lacy Chair

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Chris Oliver_Associate Principal Trombone_Dallas Symphony

Christopher Oliver

Associate Principal Trombone

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Brian Hecht

Brian Hecht

Utility Trombone

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Darren McHenry_Bass Trombone_Dallas Symphony

Darren Mchenry

Bass Trombone

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Performance Details

This concert is reserved for DSO subscribers.

Due to inclement weather this concert has been postponed and will now take place on Friday, February 25th at 2PM.

This concert is reserved for DSO board members and donors. The audience will be limited to less than 500 people, so this will be a unique opportunity to listen to Brahms’s Symphony No. 2 with a group of fellow DSO board members and supporters.

The Dallas Symphony Orchestra celebrates WRR, Classical 101.1FM’s 100th anniversary at this performance. In addition to enjoying the concert, the station’s listeners are invited to a post-concert reception in the lobby of the Meyerson.

WRR is celebrating a century of service as the first licensed radio station in Texas. While the station’s origins are in public safety for the City of Dallas’ police and fire departments, it continues to serve the community today by providing free, equitable access to classical music and the arts for the residents of North Texas and beyond. The station takes a hyper-local approach to champion the region’s arts organizations and is the radio home for broadcast concerts of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Winds, and others. Though it is owned by the City of Dallas, the station operates as an enterprise and is not funded by taxpayer dollars. In the words of former Dallas Mayor Annette Strauss, the station is “one of the city’s greatest cultural assets.”


The Dallas Symphony is grateful for the wonderful support of its donors and patrons. For a full list of Donor Appreciation Month opportunities, please visit here.


COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOL
Your safety, and the safety of our musicians, guest artists and staff continue to be our top priorities. We are currently requiring proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 48 hours of your performance date, and masks are required at all times in the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, regardless of vaccination status. For more information on our enhanced safety protocols, please visit here.

FABIO LUISI MUSIC DIRECTOR LOUISE W. & EDMUND J. KAHN MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

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WEDNESDAY, 2/9 PERFORMANCE CANCELLED
Unfortunately, the Wednesday, February 9th performance of Pinchas Zukerman & Amanda Forsyth has been cancelled.

Your tickets for the concert may be exchanged or credited to your account for a concert later this season, or they can be refunded by logging into your account or contacting Guest Services at customerservice@dalsym.com or 214.849.4376. 

PINCHAS ZUKERMAN violin
AMANDA FORSYTH cello

VIVALDI Concerto for Violin and Cello in B flat major, RV 547
OFFENBACH Jacqueline’s Tears for Cello & Orchestra
TCHAIKOVSKY Mélodie (4) and Sérénade mélancolique for Violin and Orchestra
HAYDN Symphony No. 83 “La Poule”


The Dallas Symphony is grateful for the wonderful support of its donors and patrons. For a full list of Donor Appreciation Month opportunities, please visit here.


COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOL
Your safety, and the safety of our musicians, guest artists and staff continue to be our top priorities. We are currently requiring proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 48 hours of your performance date, and masks are required at all times in the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, regardless of vaccination status. For more information on our enhanced safety protocols, please visit here.

Pinchas Zukerman

Pinchas Zukerman

Viola, Violin, Conductor

 

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Amanda Forsyth

Amanda Forsyth

Cello

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CONCERT POSTPONED
Unfortunately, due to the continued rapid increase in OMICRON COVID cases in Dallas and its impact on our staff and orchestra, we are postponing this performance.

For any questions regarding your tickets, contact Guest Services at customerservice@dalsym.com or 214.849.4376. 

FABIO LUISI conducts
JAMES EHNES violin

SCHUMANN Symphony No. 1, “Spring”
ELGAR Violin Concerto

In 1905, the famed Austrian violinist Fritz Kreisler told the Hereford Times “If you want to know whom I consider to be the greatest living composer, I say without hesitation, Elgar. I wish Elgar would write something for the violin. He could do so, and it would certainly be something effective.” Five years later Elgar delivered Kreisler a concerto by turns grand, brooding and heroic.

Inspired by the pastoral poetry of Adolf Böttger, Schumann’s First Symphony brims with spirited melodies and fanfares to depict “Spring’s Awakening”.


STONEBRIAR COMMUNITY CHURCH
4801 Legendary Drive
Frisco, TX 75034


FABIO LUISI MUSIC DIRECTOR LOUISE W. & EDMUND J. KAHN MUSIC DIRECTORSHIP

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

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James Ehnes

Violin

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JAMES EHNES violin
ALEXANDER KERR violin
MEREDITH KUFCHAK viola
JEFFREY HOOD cello
DAVID BUCK flute
STEPHEN AHEARN clarinet

THEODORE HARVEY cello
NICOLAS TSOLAINOS double bass
GREGORY RADEN clarinet
TED SOLURI bassoon
ALEXANDER KIENLE horn

JAMES NEWTON HOWARD They Have Just Arrived at This New Level
BEETHOVEN Septet in E-flat major

Acclaimed violinist James Ehnes joins members of the DSO for a special chamber concert performance of Beethoven’s innovative Septet in E-flat major and James Newton Howard’s contemporary They Have Just Arrived at This New Level.

One of Beethoven’s most successful and enduring works, Septet in E-flat major utilizes familiar themes from previous well-loved works and uniquely highlights the artistry of the clarinet, resulting in a delicately thrilling serenade.

Award-winning film composer James Newton Howard, known for his prolific work scoring over 100 films over six decades, shows his versatility with They Have Just Arrived at This New Level. Originally written for and premiered by James Ehnes in 2018 at the Seattle Chamber Music Society’s Summer Festival, the continued partnership of Ehnes and Howard will be on full display. Speaking ahead of the premiere to The Seattle Times, Ehnes described the piece as “…quite impressive in how the narrative and the proportion of it feel so right and fit together.”

COVID-19 SAFETY PROTOCOL
Your safety, and the safety of our musicians, guest artists and staff continue to be our top priorities. We are currently requiring proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 48 hours of your performance date, and masks are required at all times in the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, regardless of vaccination status. For more information on our enhanced safety protocols, please visit here.

James Ehnes

Violin

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Alexander Kerr_Concertmaster_Violin I_Michael L Rosenberg Chair_Dallas Symphony

Alexander Kerr

Concertmaster

Michael L. Rosenberg Chair

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Meredith Kufchak_Principal Viola_Hortense & Lawrence S Pollock Chair_Dallas Symphony

Meredith Kufchak

Principal Viola

Hortense & Lawrence S. Pollock Chair

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Jeffrey Hood_Cello_Dallas Symphony

Jeffrey Hood

Cello

Greg & Kim Hext Chair

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David Buck_Principal Flute_Joy & Ronald Mankoff Chair_Dallas Symphony

David Buck

Principal Flute

Joy & Ronald Mankoff Chair

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Stephen Ahearn_Clarinet_Dallas Symphony

Stephen Ahearn

Second Clarinet

Courtney & Andrew Nall Chair

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Theodore Harvey_Associate Principal Cello_Holly & Tom Mayer Chair_Dallas Symphony

Theodore Harvey

Associate Principal Cello

Holly & Tom Mayer Chair

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Nicolas Tsolainos_Principal Bass Anonymously Endowed Chair Dallas Symphony

Nicolas Tsolainos

Principal Bass

Anonymously Endowed Chair

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Greg Raden_Principal Clarinet_Mr & Mrs C Thomas May Jr Chair_Dallas Symphony

Gregory Raden

Principal Clarinet

Mr. & Mrs. C. Thomas May, Jr. Chair

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Ted Soluri_Principal Bassoon_Irena H Wadel & Robert I Atha Jr Chair_Dallas Symphony

Ted Soluri

Principal Bassoon

Irene H. Wadel & Robert I. Atha, Jr. Chair

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Alexander Kienle_Assistant Principal Horn + Utility_Dallas Symphony

Alexander Kienle

Assistant Principal + Utility

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