FABIO LUISI conducts
INON BARNATAN piano
DALLAS SYMPHONY CHORUS – ANTHONY BLAKE CLARK chorus director
LAUREN SNOUFFER soprano
KIMBERLY JAMES mezzo-soprano
KEY’MON MURRAH countertenor
PAUL APPLEBY tenor

ANGÉLICA NEGRÓN For everything you keep losing (World Premiere)
GERSHWIN Rhapsody in Blue
GOULD Latin-American Symphonette

Headlining this all-American program is Rhapsody in Blue, which Gershwin described as a sort of “musical kaleidoscope of America.” Inon Barnatan “fine music-making wedded to astounding technique” (The Washington Post) stars in this beloved American classic, an effervescent mix of jazz and classical music. The composer himself was at the keyboard at the premiere, and the audience went wild with enthusiasm, propelling this concerto to iconic status. Angélica Negrón’s gripping work for orchestra, chorus and four soloists is an elegy for lost sounds and incorporates birdsong, whale calls, sounds of forests and oceans.


for everything you keep losing Program Notes

Text from the following poets:
Roque Raquel Salas Rivera
Ricardo Alberto Maldonado
Nicole Delgado
Amanda Hernández


PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening.

Former Composer-in-Residence Angélica Negrón will write an expansive work for orchestra, chorus and four vocalists in honor of the orchestra’s 125th anniversary.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

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

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

Read More
Angélica Negrón, DSO Composer-In-Residence

Angélica Negrón

Composer

Read More

Anthony Blake Clark

Chorus Director

Jean D. Wilson Chair

Read More

Inon Barnatan

Piano

Read More

Dallas Symphony Chorus

Chorus

Read More

Lauren Snouffer

Soprano

Read More

Kimberly Gratland James

Mezzo-Soprano

Read More

Key’mon Murrah

Countertenor

Read More

Paul Appleby

Tenor

Read More

MARIN ALSOP conducts
KAREN SLACK soprano

R. STRAUSS Don Juan
KATHRYN BOSTIC Drag (World Premiere) Lorene Cary, Libretto
BRAHMS Symphony No. 2

Celebrated conductor Marin Alsop leads the DSO in the tale of the notorious libertine, Don Juan. Beginning with Don’s theme — the rising thunder of horns — to sensuous love music of exquisite beauty; to the eerie, shuddering gestures of the iconic lover’s demise, Don Juan requires a virtuoso orchestra, especially horns. The graphic music scandalized the audience at the premiere but established young Strauss’s genius. Kathryn Bostic, award-winning composer of film, TV and Broadway music — whose accolades include being the first female African American score composer to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences — pays homage to Gladys Bentley, blues singer of the Harlem Renaissance.

Tickets start at $33 (including fees).

Program Notes

DRAG
KATHRYN BOSTIC
PERFORMANCE HISTORY
THIS IS THE WORLD PREMIERE.

It’s barely an exaggeration to say that Bostic’s life in music began at birth. Her mother, a classically trained musician, was giving a piano lesson when she went into labor with the future composer and vocalist. Thanks to her music-loving parents and brother, she was exposed to a rich array of influences — everyone from Ravel to William Grant Still, from Aretha Franklin to Milton Nascimento. Bostic took up piano at age three and started improvising original songs a few years later. She went on to study music at Tufts and the New England Conservatory. After graduation she sang at jazz clubs and festivals, supplementing these solo gigs with high-profile session work for international artists such as David Byrne, Nas and Ryuichi Sakamoto.

When she wasn’t performing, Bostic was busy establishing herself as a film, television and stage composer, producing eclectic, thought-provoking scores for documentaries devoted to the authors Toni Morrison and Amy Tan, as well as entertainer Rita Moreno. She also collaborated with the late playwright August Wilson on a handful of well-received projects.

Bostic’s recent concert music includes the 2022 Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra commission As I Please for full orchestra; Portrait of a Peaceful

Warrior for brass choir, timpani and percussion, commissioned by Chicago Sinfonietta in 2020; and Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am for woodwinds, strings, percussion and piano, commissioned by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra in 2020. Bostic, who holds an honorary doctorate in music from Tufts, is the first female African-American member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She served as vice president of the Alliance for Women Film Composers from 2016–18. Among her many honors are the Sundance Institute Time Warner Fellowship, the BMI Conducting Fellowship and the award for best music in film by the African American Film Critics Association.

THE COMPOSER SPEAKS

DRAG is a symphonic tone poem collaboration between myself, soprano Karen Slack and librettist Lorene Cary. Slack reached out to me a few years ago to see if I’d be interested in creating the score for a story she wanted to develop about the celebrated and infamous Harlem Renaissance entertainer Gladys Bentley. In her heyday, Gladys was the talk and toast of the town and rose to fame in the gay Black Harlem speakeasy scene, where her raunchy lyrics and virtuosic flashy piano playing had crowds in attendance from near and far. Her signature white top hat and tails and her choice of men’s clothing further affirmed her lesbian lifestyle, and she was unabashedly forthright in living her life on her own terms at a time when this choice was extremely dangerous and life threatening. Once the McCarthy era hit and prohibition was repealed, her fame and work dwindled. She was forced to subdue her lifestyle and rebuke her sexuality, claiming to have found herself anew, and declared ‘I am woman again.’ Her overall story is so compelling not necessarily because of her talent or the controversy her life reflected, but because of her self-embrace and autonomy in being authentic irrespective of the societal, racial and gender struggles she had to deal with. Her talent was too big a force to conform and confine, and for me this provided a very inspiring and thought-provoking canvas to create a musical narrative.

“I wrote the score to convey the complexities of her life onstage as well as her ‘internal stage’ where she sought to be understood and accepted by her mother. The score highlights her bravado and confidence, and as the piece unfolds, we are given a glimpse of the pain and sorrow she faced in judgment from her mother and others. This is the conflicted self-portrayal she carried until her untimely death at 52.

“The dynamic vocal presence of Karen Slack performing as Gladys Bentley provides this narrative with the orchestral largess it requires as well as the intimacy for the more delicate moments with just voice and piano. Overall, the score is to elevate Bentley’s swagger as well as the more fragile moments of her catharsis. This is reflected in the social playfulness, self-awareness and double entendre of Lorene Cary’s wonderful libretto. In this sonic storytelling we are given a revealing portrait of the phenomenal Gladys Bentley.” —Kathryn Bostic

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Marin Alsop

Conductor

Read More

Karen Slack

Soprano

Read More

Kathryn Bostic

Composer

Read More

SHIRA SAMUELS-SHRAGG conducts
GREGORY RADEN clarinet

BEETHOVEN Leonore Overture No. 3
JON CZINER Clarinet Concerto (World Premiere)
MONI JASMINE GUO “the sound of where i came from” 乡音 (World Premiere) (Toulmin Commission)
MOZART Symphony No. 40 in G minor

One of Mozart’s three remarkable final symphonies — his “Triple Crown” — the 40th speaks in his most personal voice. This utterance of extreme urgency is full of agitation with only a slim respite in the exquisite, spiritual slow movement. Nearly 250 years after its completion, it still has a profound emotional impact on audiences. DSO’s Principal Clarinet Gregory Raden gives the world premiere of Dallas-based composer Jon Cziner’s concerto. Shira Samuels-Shragg also leads the world premiere of a new work by Moni (Jasmine) Guo, a film and contemporary concert composer and classical pianist. It’s part of a 30-orchestra consortium performing works commissioned by the Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program for women composers.

Tickets start at $39 (including fees).

Due to a family emergency, Music Director Fabio Luisi is unable to conduct the Dallas Symphony Orchestra in performances on November 20, 21 and 22. Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg will lead the concerts this weekend. The program is unchanged. We appreciate your understanding.

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Shira Samuels-Shragg

Assistant Conductor

Marena & Roger Gault Chair

Read More
Greg Raden_Principal Clarinet_Mr & Mrs C Thomas May Jr Chair_Dallas Symphony

Gregory Raden

Principal Clarinet

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

Read More

JUN MÄRKL conducts
JAVIER PERIANES piano

RAVEL Alborada del gracioso (Morning Song of a Jester)
FALLA Noches en los jardines de España (Nights in the Gardens of Spain)
FALLA El sombrero de tres picos (The Three-Cornered Hat), Suite No. 2
RAVEL Rapsodie espagnole

Piano virtuoso Javier Perianes, praised by Gramophone for his “infallible ear for style, atmosphere and colour” returns to perform Nights in the Gardens of Spain, evoking Falla’s beloved Andalusia with its mysterious, fragrant beauty, strumming guitars, flamenco rhythms and dancing melodies. Our rich, Spanish-flavored concert culminates in Rapsodie Espagnole, Ravel’s orchestral masterpiece, showing him as a master of instrumental color. Its four sections are vivid echoes of the sounds and dances of Spain, and its final movement, the sultry “Feria” (“The Fair”), punctuated by castanets, is ablaze in a riot of colors. In between, it’s the zesty suite from The Three-Cornered Hat, replete with sounds of stamping feet, timpani drumming and castanets clicking out infectious rhythms.

Tickets start at $37 (including fees).

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Jun Märkl

Conductor

Read More

Javier Perianes

Piano

Read More

FABIO LUISI conducts

BRUCKNER Symphony No. 9 in D minor (1896, unfinished)

The sweeping sonorities of Bruckner’s epic, final symphonic masterpiece unfold and rise sublimely like spires of a grand cathedral, inspiring awe and transporting you to a world with its own conception of time. A devoutly religious man, the composer’s dedication reads: “To the Lord of Lords, to my dear God, my last work, and I hope that He will grant me enough time to complete it and will generously accept my gift.” With this awe-inspiring symphony, he is already standing on the threshold of eternity.

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

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

Fabio Luisi

Music Director

Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music Directorship

Read More

EDWARD GARDNER conducts
DAVID CHILDS euphonium
DALLAS SYMPHONY CHORUS – ANTHONY BLAKE CLARK chorus director

WALTON Coronation Te Deum, arranged by Palmer
JAMES MACMILLAN Where the Lugar meets the Glaisnock (US Premiere)
HOLST The Planets

Edward Gardner returns to conduct Holst’s most famous score, with the astrological character of each of the celestial bodies. Walton’s regal hymn of praise was commissioned to celebrate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth in 1953 and sung as she made her exit from Westminster Abbey. David Childs, euphonium sensation and brass faculty member of the University of North Texas, solos in the US premiere of a concerto by critically acclaimed Scottish composer James MacMillan, whose music is esteemed “for its rhythmic excitement and powerful emotional communication.” (Boosey & Hawkes)

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Edward Gardner

Conductor

Read More

David Childs

Euphonium

Read More

Dallas Symphony Chorus

Chorus

Read More

Anthony Blake Clark

Chorus Director

Jean D. Wilson Chair

Read More

TABITA BERGLUND conducts
MELISSA WHITE violin

TCHAIKOVSKY Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture
SOPHIA JANI Concerto for Violin and Orchestra (World Premiere)
RACHMANINOFF Symphonic Dances

Romance your Valentine at the DSO with the impassioned music of Tchaikovsky’s timeless tragedy of Romeo and Juliet. Tabita Berglund returns to lead the kaleidoscopic Symphonic Dances by the last of the Russian Romantics, Rachmaninoff. It’s his last, and many believe his greatest, work. Listen for the haunting alto saxophone solo, mysterious tubular bells, evocations of Russian Orthodox chants, a thundering Dies irae and a shadowy, eerie waltz. Sphinx alumna Melissa White is in the solo spotlight for the world premiere of Composer-in-Residence Sophia Jani’s Violin Concerto.


Composer Notes

Sophia Jani Speaks


PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Tabita Berglund

Conductor

Read More

Melissa White

Violin

Read More

LEONIDAS KAVAKOS conducts
ALEXANDER KERR violin

RAVEL Pavane pour une infante défunte (Pavane for a Dead Princess)
PROKOFIEV Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor
MUSSORGSKY Pictures at an Exhibition, arranged by Ravel

You’re invited to Mussorgsky’s musical “gallery crawl,” where you’ll encounter the titular pictures on exhibit, ten in all, plus “traveling music” in-between. Special highlights include the opening “Promenade,” as you stride into the gallery; the whimsical unhatched baby chicks pecking their way out of their shells; spooky Parisian “Catacombs;” and “The Great Gate of Kiev,” shaking you with the resounding pealing of bells in the grand finale. Artist-in-Residence Leonidas Kavakos takes the podium at this concert and leads our Concertmaster Alexander Kerr in Prokofiev’s Concerto that both sparkles and dances with vibrantly colored passages, ending in a tumultuous flurry of notes.

Tickets start at $33 (including fees).

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with LeAnn Binford! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Leonidas Kavakos, Violin

Leonidas Kavakos

Artist-in-Residence

Read More
Alexander Kerr_Concertmaster_Violin I_Michael L Rosenberg Chair_Dallas Symphony

Alexander Kerr

Concertmaster

Michael L. Rosenberg Chair

Read More

MAURICE COHN conducts
JAN VOGLER cello
CHAD HOOPES violin

BRAHMS Violin and Cello Concerto in A minor, “Double Concerto”
WEILL Symphony No. 2 (DSO Premiere)

What do you do if you’ve had a falling-out with a cherished friend and advisor and want to make amends? Well, if you’re Johannes Brahms and violinist Josef Joachim is your friend, a Double Concerto is the perfect peace offering, expressed in musical language. A give-and-take between violin and cello as they trade phrases and musical gestures, confirming the emotional capital they’ve invested in one another over the decades. Bringing the concerto to life are Chad Hoopes, internationally lauded faculty member of Southern Methodist University, and world-renowned cellist Jan Vogler. Maurice Cohn also leads the first DSO performance of Weill’s Second Symphony, composed in the fraught Post-World-War-I period.

Tickets start at $31 (including fees).

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Maurice Cohn

Maurice Cohn

Conductor

Read More

Chad Hoopes

Violin

Read More
Jan Vogler

Jan Vogler

Cello

Read More

Special Offer! Enjoy 25% OFF your concert ticket price. Use promo code FLASH25 in the top right corner of the page before selecting your seats and score the best seats in the house for less than $100!

DANIELE RUSTIONI conducts
ALEXI KENNEY violin

BARBER Violin Concerto
CASELLA Symphony No. 2 in C minor (DSO Premiere)

Rising star violinist Alexi Kenney and Principal Guest Conductor at the Metropolitan Opera Daniele Rustioni join together for one of the most-performed 20th century masterpieces. From the first note, the violin makes its presence known with soaring, lyrical serenity and, traversing a lush middle movement of somewhat darker hue, plunges into a moto perpetuo (perpetual motion) with wild abandon that calls on all of the soloist’s virtuoso resources. You’ll also be treated to a first-time DSO performance of Casella’s Second Symphony, described by Gramophone as “a turbulent, lusciously opulent outpouring,” reminiscent of Strauss, Mahler and Rimsky-Korsakov.

Tickets start at $31 (including fees).

PERFORMANCE PRELUDES
Join us for a special pre-concert talk with Assistant Conductor Shira Samuels-Shragg! The talks will take place from Horchow Hall starting at 6:30pm each concert evening and 1:00pm on Sunday.

Bundle & Save!

Bundle 3 or more concerts to receive 20% off your purchase and other benefits.

Learn more!

Got 10 or more people?

Gather friends, family, colleague, any group of 10 or more, and save with exclusive discounts and benefits.

Learn more!

Daniele Rustioni

Conductor

Read More

Alexi Kenney

Violin

Read More