table of contents | april 17 – may 5, 2015

Transcription

table of contents | april 17 – may 5, 2015
5
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
TABLE OF CONTENTS | APRIL 17 – MAY 5, 2015
BPO Board of Trustees/BPO Foundation Board of Directors 11
BPO Musician Roster
15
Glenn Miller Orchestra
19
Concert Sponsor: RBC Wealth Management
April 17 & 18
Dr. Seuss Meets the BPO!
23
Na Zdrowie Poland!
25
The Music of Michael Jackson
33
Bond and Beyond: 50 Years of 007
39
Carnival of the Animals
43
Side-By-Side
45
BPO Kids Series
April 19
M&T Bank Classics Series
April 24 & 25
Concert Sponsor: Eric Mower & Associates
Guest Artist Sponsor: Anthony Baldi & Associates
May 1
BPO Pops Series
May 2
BlueCross BlueShield Day at BPO Kids Series
May 3
with the Buffalo Academy for Visual and Performing Arts
May 5
Corporate Sponsorships
Meet a Musician
Annual Fund
Spotlight on Sponsor
Patron Information
CONTACT
BPO Administrative Offices
BPO Administrative Fax Line
Box Office
Box Office Fax Line
47
48
51
58-59
61
VoIP phone service powered by
(716) 885-0331
(716) 885-9372
(716) 885-5000
(716) 885-5064
Development Office
(716) 885-0331 Ext. 420
Subscription Sales Office
(716) 885-9371
Group Sales Office
(716) 885-5001
Kleinhans Music Hall
(716) 883-3560
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra | 499 Franklin Street, Buffalo, NY 14202
www.bpo.org | [email protected]
Kleinhan's Music Hall | 3 Symphony Circle, Buffalo, NY 14201
www.kleinhansbuffalo.org
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MESSAGE FROM BOARD CHAIR
Dear Patrons,
As the Buffalo Philharmonic’s 2014-15 season comes
to a close, it’s natural to reflect on the past year. Many
good things have happened at your BPO.
This season we saw leading artists like Renee Fleming,
Celtic Thunder, and Alan Parsons perform with the
orchestra. We became only the fourth orchestra
to perform Bartok’s “Bluebeard’s Castle” using sets
designed by glass artist Dale Chihuly. We presented
in-depth explorations of the works of Rachmaninoff,
Beethoven and Charles Ives. The works of Florent
Schmitt challenged both orchestra and audience, and
were recorded for release on Naxos, to bring greater
Photo: Dylan Buyskes, Onion Studio, Inc.
attention to this long-overlooked composer. Thousands
of children attended a BPO Kids concert with their families or experienced a
Music for Youth concert with their classes.
It was also a season of collaborations. The BPO worked with the Irish Classical
Theater Company to bring you Moliere’s “Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme” with
Strauss’ incidental music. We partnered with Shea’s and Neglia Ballet Artists to
present “The Nutcracker,” and collaborated with Road Less Traveled Productions
to present Beethoven’s Complete Incidental Music to “Egmont” with a narrator.
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery worked with us on our Know the Score and BPO
Kids series. The Burchfield Penney Art Gallery, Buffalo and Erie County Public
Library system, and University at Buffalo joined us in exploring the works of
Charles Ives.
We are deeply appreciative of the support of our collaborators, and of our
audience. Together, we’ve been able to not just survive, but thrive and make a
positive contribution to the classical music field. In the coming weeks, you’ll be
hearing a lot about some of the great things that are in store for the future of the
BPO. We hope you will continue on this journey with us.
Sincerely,
Louis P. Ciminelli
Chair, Buffalo Philharmonic Society Inc.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
SOCIETY, INC. | Board of Trustees
OFFICERS
Louis P. Ciminelli, Chair
Dennis Black, Vice Chair-Chair Elect
Angelo Fatta, Vice Chair
Randall Odza, Secretary
Stephen Swift, Treasurer
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Cindy Abbott Letro
Monte Hoffman †
LIFE MEMBERS
Martin Anderson
Martha Hyde
Ida Christie
Karen Arrison
Martha Malkiewicz
Anthony J. Colucci, Jr.
Douglas Bean
Matthew Phillips
G. Wayne Hawk
James Beardi
Wilfred Larson
Anthony Cassetta
Gary Schober
Roger Simon
Janz Castelo †
Robert Skerker
John N. Walsh, III
Arthur Cryer
Timothy Smith †
Robert G. Weber
Peter Eliopoulos
Scott Stenclik
Warren E. Emblidge Jr.
Gary Szakmary
JoAnn Falletta*
Nicole Tzetzo
Music Director
John Fleischman*
Erie County Music
Educators Association
Edwin Polokoff
Michal Wadsworth
John Yurtchuk
Daniel Hart*
Executive Director
Robbie Hausmann †
*ex-officio
† musician representatives
BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
FOUNDATION | Board of Directors
Louis P. Ciminelli
Chair
Todd M. Scherrer
Treasurer
Martin Anderson
Jeremy Briggs Beck
Mark T. Branden
Michael Munschauer
Bob Skerker
Michael Wurst
John J. Zak
Secretary
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JOANN FALLETTA, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Angelo and Carol Fatta Endowed Chair
JoAnn Falletta is internationally celebrated as a vibrant ambassador for
music, an inspiring artistic leader, and a champion of American symphonic
music. An effervescent and exuberant figure on the podium, she has been
praised by The Washington Post as having “Toscanini’s tight control over
ensemble, Walter’s affectionate balancing of inner voices, Stokowski’s gutsy
showmanship, and a controlled frenzy worthy of Bernstein.” Acclaimed by
The New York Times as “one of the finest conductors of her generation”,
she serves as the Music Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and
the Virginia Symphony Orchestra and Principal Guest Conductor of the
Brevard Music Center.
Ms. Falletta is invited to guest conduct many of the world’s finest symphony
orchestras. Her upcoming guest conducting highlights include debuts in Belgrade (Serbia),
Shenzhen China, Sweden, and a European tour with the Stuttgart Orchestra. Recent appearances
include return engagements with the Warsaw, Detroit, Phoenix, Krakow, Puerto Rico and Hawaii
Symphony Orchestras and debuts with the Gothenburg Symphony, Stuttgart Philharmonic,
Belgrade Philharmonic, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s at Carnegie Hall, and a 13 city US tour with the
Irish Chamber Orchestra and soloist James Galway.
Falletta is the recipient of many of the most prestigious conducting awards including the Seaver/
National Endowment for the Arts Conductors Award, the coveted Stokowski Competition, and
the Toscanini, Ditson and Bruno Walter Awards for conducting, as well as the American Symphony
Orchestra League’s prestigious John S. Edwards Award. She is an ardent champion of music of
our time, introducing over 500 works by American composers, including more than 110 world
premieres. Hailing her as a “leading force for the music of our time”, she has been honored with
twelve ASCAP awards. Ms. Falletta serves as a Member of the National Council on the Arts.
Under her direction, the Buffalo Philharmonic is continuing its trajectory as one of the most
recorded orchestras in America. During the 2013 – 14 season, Naxos released four new BPO CDs,
Gliere’s Symphony No. 3, Tyberg’s Symphony No. 2, Duke Ellington’s Black, Brown, and Beige,
and Gershwin’s Concerto in F, Rhapsody in Blue, Strike up the Band and Promenade. In 2014-15,
Naxos plans to release two new BPO discs of the music of Bela Bartók and Florent Schmitt. The
BPO released “Nordic Masters” and “Built for Buffalo” on its own Beau Fleuve label. Performance
highlights include Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle with Dale Chihuly glass installations, a Charles Ives
multimedia concert/ exploration, a fully staged Moliere Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme with the Irish
Classical Theatre and Rachmaninoff and Beethoven Festivals.
Since stepping up to the podium as Music Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra in the
fall of 1999, Maestro Falletta has been credited with bringing the Philharmonic to a new level of
national and international prominence. Under her direction, the Buffalo Philharmonic has become
one of the leading orchestras for the Naxos label, earning a double Grammy Award in 2009 for
their recording with soprano Hila Plitmann of John Corigliano’s “Mr. Tambourine Man,” and six
Grammy nominations. This season, the BPO will once again be featured on national broadcasts of
NPR’s Performance Today and SymphonyCast, and international broadcasts through the European
Broadcasting Union.
In addition to her current posts with the Buffalo Philharmonic, the Virginia Symphony and the Brevard
Music Center, Ms. Falletta has held the positions of artistic advisor to the Honolulu Symphony, music
director of the Long Beach Symphony Orchestra, associate conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony
Orchestra, Principal Guest Conductor of the Phoenix Symphony, and music director of the Denver
Chamber Orchestra, the Queens Philharmonic and the Women’s Philharmonic. From 2011 – 2014
she served as Principal Conductor of the Ulster Orchestra in Northern Ireland where she made her
debut at London’s prestigious Proms with the orchestra in 2011 and also has made five recordings
for Naxos including music of Gustav Holst, Irish composer Ernest John Moeran and American
composer John Knowles Paine.
Ms. Falletta received her undergraduate degree from the Mannes College of Music in New York and
her master’s and doctorate degrees from The Juilliard School.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
STEFAN SANDERS, ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR
Montante Family Endowed Chair
Stefan Sanders is an imaginative conductor, devoted educator and
ardent champion of many types of music. He has collaborated with
an array of distinguished artists such as violinist Gil Shaham, Fred
Childs from public radio’s Performance Today, country sensation
The Texas Tenors and the esteemed Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati
Cano, to name a few. Guest conducting engagements in the U.S and
abroad include the San Antonio Symphony, Naples Philharmonic,
Austin Symphony Orchestra, Symphoria (Syracuse, NY), Bohuslav
Martinu Philharmonic (CZ), Austin Lyric Opera, Corpus Christi
Opera and the Round Top International Festival Institute.
Past positions have included Music Director and Conductor for the Round Rock
Symphony (TX) where he attracted much praise for innovative programming, new
venues and collaborations with local arts organizations, attracting broader audiences
and redefining the orchestra’s role in its community, Assistant Conductor for the Austin
Symphony Orchestra, Music Director of the University Orchestra at the University of
Texas at Austin and Apprentice Conductor for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
Prior to a career as a conductor, Sanders was an internationally renowned trombonist,
having performed as a soloist in the United States, Asia and Europe. His performance of
Eric Ewazen’s Concerto for Bass Trombone and Orchestra, with the Czech Philharmonic,
can be heard on the Albany Records label. Sanders was a member of the Buffalo
Philharmonic’s trombone section for seven seasons and has performed with several
orchestras including the New York Philharmonic, Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Seattle
Opera’s 2001 production of Wagner’s Ring Cycle and the Florida Orchestra. Mr.
Sanders was also invited by Sir Elton John to play in the orchestra for his Radio City
Music Hall concerts in 2004 recorded for the Bravo Television Network.
Beginning formal conducting studies at the University of Texas at Austin, Mr. Sanders
continued his studies as a fellow at the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen
under the tutelage of maestros Robert Spano, Larry Rachleff and Hugh Wolff. He is a
graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and the Juilliard School.
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HISTORY OF THE BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA
As Buffalo’s cultural ambassador, the Grammy Award-winning Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
under Music Director JoAnn Falletta presents more than 120 Classics, Pops, Rock, Family and
Youth concerts each year.
After the rise and fall of several forerunners, the BPO was founded in 1935, performing most
often at the Elmwood Music Hall, which was located at Elmwood Ave. and Virginia St., and
demolished in 1938 as its permanent home, Kleinhans Music Hall, was constructed. During
the Great Depression, the orchestra was initially supported by funds from the Works Progress
Administration and the Emergency Relief Bureau. Over the decades, the orchestra has matured
in stature under outstanding conductors including William Steinberg, Josef Krips, Lukas Foss,
Michael Tilson Thomas, Maximiano Valdes, Semyon Bychkov and Julius Rudel. The orchestra
has welcomed many distinguished guest performers, such as Isaac Stern, Aaron Copland, Van
Cliburn, Igor Stravinsky, Renee Fleming and Yo-Yo Ma.
During the tenure of JoAnn Falletta, who has served as music director since 1998, the BPO has
rekindled its history of radio broadcasts and recordings, including the release of 32 new CDs.
The BPO’s Naxos recording of composer John Corigliano’s “Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems
of Bob Dylan,” won two Grammys. Their recordings are heard on classical radio worldwide.
HISTORY OF KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
Since 1940, the orchestra’s home has been Kleinhans Music Hall, which enjoys an international
reputation as one of the finest concert halls in the world due to its superb acoustics.
Kleinhans Music Hall was built thanks to the generosity and vision of Edward and Mary
Seaton Kleinhans and the stewardship of their charitable dreams by the Community
Foundation for Greater Buffalo, and the support of the federal government. The Community
Foundation was bequeathed the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Kleinhans, who made their fortune
from the clothing store that bore their name, and who died within three months of each
other in 1934. The Public Works Administration, an agency of the New Deal, provided
crucial funding that made it possible to complete the hall.
The Kleinhans, who were music lovers, specified their money was to be used “to erect a
suitable music hall…for the use, enjoyment and benefit of the people of the City of Buffalo.”
The BPO performed at Kleinhans Music Hall’s official opening on Oct. 12, 1940, under the
baton of Franco Autori.
Kleinhans Music Hall was designed by the Finnish father-and-son team of Eliel and Eero
Saarinen, along with architects F.J. and W.A Kidd. Kleinhans is known for its combination of
graceful structural beauty and extraordinary acoustics. Eliel Saarinen’s aim was to create “an
architectural atmosphere…so as to tune the performers and the public alike into a proper
mood of performance and receptiveness, respectively.” In 1989, the hall was designated a
National Historic Landmark, the highest designation of significance a site or structure can
receive.
Kleinhans is owned by the City of Buffalo but run by a separate 501(c)(3) non-profit
corporation. Its Board of Directors is: Chris Brown, chair; Mary Ann Kresse; Cindy Abbott
Letro, Karen Arrison, Bob Skerker; Wayne Wisbaum, chair emeritus; Byron Brown, Mayor
of the City of Buffalo; David Rivera, Niagara District Councilmember, City of Buffalo; and
Stephen Stepniak, of the City of Buffalo Department of Public Works.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
JOANN FALLETTA, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Angelo and Carol Fatta Endowed Chair
STEFAN SANDERS, ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR
Montante Family Endowed Chair
FIRST VIOLIN
Amy Glidden
assoc. concertmaster
Louis P. Ciminelli Family Foundation
Chair
BASS
Daniel Pendley
principal
Garman Family Foundation
Endowed Chair
TRUMPET
Alex Jokipii
principal
Geoffrey Hardcastle
Philip Christner
Ansgarius Aylward
Brett Shurtliffe
Marylouise Nanna
Douglas Cone
Deborah Greitzer
Frances Kaye
Diana Sachs
Alan Ross
Melanie Haas
Andrea Blanchard-Cone
Loren Silvertrust
Megan Prokes
Michael Nigrin
John Haas
Makoto Michii
Edmond Gnekow
Jonathan Borden
Jonathan Lombardo2
FLUTE
Jeffrey Dee
asst. concertmaster
SECOND VIOLIN
Antoine Lefebvre
principal
Jacqueline Galluzzo
assoc. principal
Richard Kay
Jeffrey Jones
Frances Morgante
Donald McCrorey
Robert Prokes
Amy Licata
Dmitry Gerikh
Diane Melillo
Shieh-Jian Tsai
VIOLA
Valerie Heywood
principal
Natalie Piskorsky
assoc. principal
Matthew Phillips
Kate Holzemer
Janz Castelo
Ning-ning Jin
Zachary Collins
CELLO
Roman Mekinulov
principal
Jane D. Baird Endowed Chair
Feng Hew
assoc. principal
Nancy Anderson
Monte Hoffman1
Robert Hausmann
David Schmude
Amelie Fradette
assoc. principal
Christine Lynn Bailey
principal
Linda Greene
Natalie Debikey Scanio
PICCOLO
Natalie Debikey Scanio
OBOE
Joseph Peters*
Brian Greene*
Anna Mattix
ENGLISH HORN
Anna Mattix
CLARINET
John Fullam
principal
Patti DiLutis
Salvatore Andolina
E-FLAT CLARINET
Patti DiLutis
BASS CLARINET
& SAXOPHONE
Salvatore Andolina
BASSOON
Glenn Einschlag
TROMBONE
principal
Timothy Smith
BASS TROMBONE
TUBA
Don Harry
principal
TIMPANI
Matthew Bassett
principal
Dinesh Joseph
asst. principal
PERCUSSION
Mark Hodges
principal
Dinesh Joseph
HARP
Suzanne Thomas
principal
MUSIC LIBRARY
Patricia Kimball
principal librarian
Travis Hendra
associate librarian
STAGE MANAGERS
Richard George
Master Property Person
IATSE local 10
principal
Maxwell Pipinich
Martha Malkiewicz
Charles Gill
Assistant Property Person
IATSE local 10
CONTRABASSOON
Martha Malkiewicz
FRENCH HORN
Jacek Muzyk
principal
Kay Koessler Endowed Chair
Daniel Kerdelewicz
assoc. principal
Daniel Sweeley
Jay Matthews
Duane Saetveit
Chair dedicated to the memory
of Maer Bunis
2
Chair dedicated to the memory
of Scott Parkinson
*
= Temporary Appointment
1
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Friday, April 17, 2015 at 10:30 AM
Saturday, April 18, 2015 at 8:00 PM
BPO POPS
THE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA
Nick Hilscher, conductor and vocalist
Natalie Angst, vocalist
The Moonlight Serenaders
Moonlight Serenade
Cherokee
Tuxedo Junction
Now I Know
A String Of Pearls
Get Me to the Church On Time
Just Imagine
Little Brown Jug
Begin The Beguine
Long Ago and Far Away
September in the Rain
Chattanooga Choo Choo
Poinciana
The American Patrol
INTERMISSION
Over There
I've Got you Under My Skin
Pennsylvania 6-5000
I Know Why
Love Me or Leave Me
Summertime
(I've Got a Gal in) Kalamazoo
In The Mood
Moonlight Serenade
Concert Sponsor
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
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GLENN MILLER & THE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA
Glenn Miller was born on March 1, 1904,
in Clarinda, Iowa. The first Glenn Miller
Orchestra, formed in 1937, was a financial
failure. In March 1938, he launched
his second band, and unlike the first
band, it became an enormous success,
with multiple hit records and huge box
office sales. In 1941, Glenn Miller and his
Orchestra had more hit records in one year,
including “A String of Pearls,” than anybody in the history of the recording industry.
Although other songs had sold over a million record copies, Miller’s 1941 recording
of “Chattanooga Choo Choo” received the first Gold Record ever awarded.
Back in the days of the big band era of the forties, any dance band worth its salt
had a distinctive theme song. The theme of Glenn Miller and his Orchestra was the
beautiful “Moonlight Serenade,” and it is still the signature tune of the Glenn Miller
Orchestra. Miller originally wrote the music of the song as an exercise for a course
in arranging. He composed it long before he organized his band, when he was a
trombonist and arranger with Ray Noble’s band. Today, it is considered a pop music
standard.
At the height of its popularity, Miller disbanded his musical organization in 1942 to
volunteer for the army. He then organized the famous Glenn Miller Army Air Force
Band. On December 15, 1944, Major Glenn Miller took off in a single engine plane
from England – against his better judgment – to precede his band to France, never to
be seen again. The army declared him dead one year later.
Due to popular demand, the Miller Estate authorized the formation of the present
Glenn Miller Orchestra in 1956. They have been on the road longer and more
continuously than any other Big Band. They cover over a 100,000 miles a year,
working most every night for 48 weeks out of every 52: nearly 300 playing dates,
performing for more than a half million people annually.
The “Road Book” carried by the Glenn Miller Orchestra contains more than 300
charts, many of them out of the original library. The complete library totals over
1,700 compositions including all of the original charts from both the civilian band
and the Army Air Force Band. It features contributions from many fine arrangers
including Bill Finegan, Jerry Gray, Billy May, Mort Lindsay, Deane Kinkaide, Joe Cribari,
and Dave Wolpe.
The Glenn Miller Orchestra has always been very musical, disciplined, and visually
entertaining. And it has its own distinctive “sound.” That sound is created by the
clarinet holding the melodic line, doubled or coupled with the tenor sax playing the
same notes; and the harmonies produced by three other saxophones, while growling
trombones and wailing trumpets add their oo-ahs.
It is now more than 75 years since Glenn Miller first succeeded with the Orchestra,
which still bears his name. Except for a few years following his disappearance, Glenn’s
orchestra and music have been heard around the world continuously since 1938.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
NICK HILSCHER, CONDUCTOR AND VOCALIST
A native of Atlanta, Georgia, Nick Hilscher began his
professional career in his teens. His early musical influences
were Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Frank Sinatra, Glenn Miller,
and Tommy Dorsey. A piano student of Atlanta’s Harris
Wheeler, Hilscher continued his studies at Samford University
in Birmingham, Alabama. He was awarded runner-up in the
1997 Alabama Collegiate Artists Piano Competition. He
graduated from Samford University in the spring of 2000 with
a degree in piano performance.
In 1998, he became the featured male vocalist with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, and
took a year off from college to work with them. After earning his degree, he returned to
sing with the Glenn Miller Orchestra. His touring has taken him to all fifty states, Canada,
Mexico, Europe, South America, and Japan. He is featured on several albums with the
Glenn Miller Orchestra.
He sang with the Glenn Miller Orchestra until February 2005, when he left to pursue
a solo career. In 2005, he was the featured vocalist for a 100th birthday celebration of
Tommy Dorsey with the Juilliard Jazz Orchestra. He was also the featured vocalist with
the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra on a cruise celebrating Tommy Dorsey’s 100th birthday.
He continued in that role after the cruise and became director after the death of the
legendary Buddy Morrow. His first performance as music director of the Glenn Miller
Orchestra was on January 12, 2012.
NATALIE ANGST, VOCALIST
While growing up in Vacaville, California, Natalie Angst
followed in her sister’s footsteps and started performing
in musical theatre as a toddler. As her artistic passions
developed, she started playing cello at age 5, in addition
to taking acting and modeling classes. Eventually, all of
these talents were recognized through musical theatre
awards, cello performances on CDs, acting jobs in television
commercials and movies, and professional modeling for the
prestigious FORD agency.
As a teenager, her love for classics from the 1930s and 1940s swing era, developed
and grew. As a member of The Honeybee Trio, a vocal group who drew musical
inspiration from The Andrews Sisters, Glenn Miller, and other artists from the World
War II era, she performed professionally throughout the San Francisco Bay Area from
the trio’s beginnings in October 2008 through February 2014. During that time, their
fan base expanded internationally, and they performed with the California Pops
Orchestra and sang the national anthem at a San Francisco Giants home game. In
2013, they were invited to sing at the Glenn Miller Birthplace Society festival held
annually in Clarinda, Iowa. At this festival, The Honeybee Trio first heard the Glenn
Miller Orchestra live, a life-altering experience for all of them...especially Natalie, who
joined the Glenn Miller Orchestra on March 2, 2014.
To learn more about The Honeybee Trio, visit www.honeybeetrio.com
21
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22
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Sunday, April 19, 2015 at 2:30 PM
BPO KIDS
DR. SEUSS MEETS THE BPO!
Stefan Sanders, conductor
Leah Wietig, soprano
Celina Rose Velasquez, child soprano
Thomas Owen, narrator
ROBERT KAPILOW
Green Eggs and Ham
LORENZO PALOMO
The Sneetches
THE SNEETCHES, BY DR. SEUSS
Music by Lorenzo Palomo, Text by Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss)
is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI)
All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI.
421 West 54th Street, New York, NY 10019
P: 212-541-4684 F: 212-397-4684 www.MTIShows.com
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
23
LEAH WIETIG, SOPRANO
A graduate of Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam, Leah
(Schneider) Wietig performed with the Crane Opera Ensemble
in such productions as The Mikado, The Threepenny Opera, and
Orpheus and the Underworld.
In Buffalo, Wietig has performed with O’Connell and Company,
Alleyway Theater, and Opera Sacra. She made her solo debut in
2007 singing with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra in Hansel
and Gretel and has returned to the BPO as a guest soloist for the concert Poulenc to
Puccini and excerpts from Faust at Shea’s Performing Arts Center. She performs on a
regular basis with the BPO as a soloist and narrator for their education program. She has
also performed with the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra singing Bach’s Magnificat.
She teaches private voice lessons at her studio, Main Stage Studios. She also owns
and operates New Buffalo Productions with her husband, Chris. NBP produced Jason
Robert Brown’s musical The Last Five Years and brought Brown to Buffalo to conduct
a youth master class. Wietig has taught for Camp Broadway, The Academy of Theatre
Arts, Arts in Education Institute and most recently, Nardin Academy.
CELINA ROSE VELASQUEZ, CHILD SOPRANO
Celina is a 5th grader at Potters Road Elementary School. She is a
singer, pianist, actor and dancer. Most recently Celina played the
role of Veruca Salt in her school’s production of Willy Wonka Kids.
This past Christmas she played an orphan and sang a solo in Trinity
United Methodist Church’s production of A Time for Christmas.
Celina has sung the National Anthem multiple times including
performing at Batavia Downs Casino and Raceway and Salvatore’s
Italian Gardens. Celina takes dance classes at Dance Spectrum. She also studies piano
and voice with Leah Wietig. She is excited to be making her debut with the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra.
TOM OWEN, NARRATOR
Tom is no stranger to the Buffalo Philharmonic stage. He has been
seen in the productions of “The Music Man” as Mayor Shinn and
in “Kiss Me Kate” as Baptista. He has also narrated “The Carnival
of Animals,” “The Little Engine That Could,” and “Red Robin.” He
is also no stranger to the Buffalo theater scene having performed
on the stages of Artpark, Kavinoky, MusicalFare, Alleyway and
Theatre of Youth. Tom has also performed on stages throughout
the United States. Some of his favorite roles include Captain/
Hennessey, “Dames at Sea;” Innkeeper, “Man of LaMancha;” and Sir Evelyn, “Anything
Goes.” Tom is also a 3 time Artie Award winner as Outstanding Supporting Actor in
a Musical for Charlemagne, “Pippin;” Vincent VanRhine, “Eat TV;” and Caldwell B.
Cladwell, “Urinetown.” Musical revues include: “Closer Than Ever;” “Side by Side by
Sondheim;” “A Grand Night for Singing;” “Cole;” “Starting Here, Starting Now;” and
“The World Goes Round.” Tom will soon be seen on the stage of the Kavinoky Theater
in the musical “She Loves Me.”
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Friday, April 24, 2015 at 10:30 AM
Saturday, April 25, 2015 at 8:00 PM
NA ZDROWIE POLAND!
JoAnn Falletta, conductor
Jacek Muzyk, french horn
Yoonie Han, piano
MIECZYSLAW
Symphonic Prologue to
KARLOWICZ
The White Dove, Op. 6
KRZYSZTOF
Concerto for Horn and
PENDERECKI
Orchestra, “Winterreisse”
Jacek Muzyk, french horn
INTERMISSION
FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN
Concerto No. 1 in E minor for
Piano and Orchestra, Op. 11
I. Allegro maestoso
II. Romanze
III. Rondo
Yoonie Han, piano
Musically Speaking sponsored by
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JACEK MUZYK, FRENCH HORN
Jacek Muzyk, born in Krakow, Poland, began studying
French Horn at age 18 and graduated with a master’s
degree from the Academy of Music in Krakow. Muzyk
earned his second master’s degree at the Mannes
College of Music in New York City under David Jolley.
He continued his education at the Juilliard School of
Music under William Purvis and at Rice University
under William VerMeulen.
Muzyk returned to Poland and worked with top Polish
orchestras, including Sinfonia Varsovia, the National
Philharmonic of Warsaw, Polish Radio Orchestra, and the Krakow Philharmonic.
In 1999, he was nominated Principal Horn for Krystian Zimerman’s Polish Festival
Orchestra, the elite group of Poland’s finest musicians that toured Europe and the
United States with more than 40 performances of Chopin’s concertos. The tour
won numerous accolades, including a Grammy Award.
In 2002, Muzyk moved to the United States, where he played with the Houston
Grand Opera and Dallas Symphony before being appointed Principal Horn with
the Buffalo Philharmonic. He made guest appearances with the Chicago Symphony,
the Houston Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony, Saint Louis Symphony, Saint Paul
Chamber Orchestra and orchestras in the US, Asia, Europe, and South America,
often as soloist.
Muzyk has given masterclasses and recitals throughout all habitable continents. His
solo recordings for the Polish Radio label include Mozart’s Concertos (including
all concertos); Bach Music for French Horn (Cello Suites 1, 2, and 3); and Horn
Constellation (Muzyk plays a duet with his son Michal in one of the selections). After
winning the Associate Principal Horn position with the Houston Symphony and
performing there for a year, Muzyk returned to Buffalo and continues as Principal
Horn for the BPO. He recently earned a doctoral degree from the Academy of
Music in Krakow.
YOONIE HAN, PIANO
Praised for her “flowing tones, poetic phrasing and
heavenly singing melodies” (Cincinnati Enquirer) and
her “musical imagination and feel for complex textures”
(Washington Post), South Korean pianist Yoonie Han
has won top prizes in distinguished international
competitions and the highest accolades for her
performances.
In 2009, she won South Korea’s Gawon Music Award
as the “most brilliant pianist aged 17 to 31 of any
nationality who possesses the most promising potential
for global prominence.” She won first prize in the Washington International Piano
Competition (2011), the Fulbright Concerto Competition (2011), Juilliard’s Gina
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Bachauer International Piano Competition (2008), the Cincinnati World Piano
Competition (2008) and the Kosciuszko Foundation National Chopin Competition
(2005). Following her 2001 grand-prize victory in the Korea National Music
Competition, she was named “most promising young artist” by the Korean Ministry
of Culture.
Having made her solo debut with the Seoul Philharmonic at age 13, Han has
since performed with the Berlin Symphoniker, Helsinki Philharmonic, Houston
Philharmonic, Banff Festival Orchestra and I Pomeriggi Musicali in Milan under such
conductors as Leif Segerstam, Philippe Entremont and Lior Shambadal. She has
played at Alice Tully Hall, Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, Frick Collections,
Berlin Philharmonie, the Salle Cortot in Paris, the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam
and Se-Jong Performing Arts Center in Korea. Her performances have aired on
WQXR-New York, Chicago’s WFMT and NPR’s “Artist Showcase” series.
Han received her bachelor’s degree from the Curtis Institute, studying with Eleanor
Sokoloff, and master’s degree from the Juilliard School as a student of Robert
McDonald. She is pursuing her doctorate at SUNY Stony Brook and studying with
Philippe Entremont. Yoonie Han is a Steinway Artist.
ALEXANDRA PREUCIL, GUEST CONCERTMASTER
Alexandra Preucil was appointed Assistant
Concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra in April
2013 and has been a member of the violin section since
2008. Preucil graduated from the Cleveland Institute
of Music with a bachelor’s degree in music and a minor
in dance. While in school, she held the position of
Assistant Concertmaster with the Akron Symphony
Orchestra and the Canton Symphony Orchestra and was
a member of the Svanito Quartet. Preucil was selected
to be in the Cleveland Institute of Music’s Young Artist
Program, during which time she was concertmaster of
the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra.
Preucil has appeared as soloist and chamber musician with ensembles around
the world. She has performed at summer festivals, including The Mainly Mozart
Festival, The Highlands-Cashiers Chamber Music Festival, The Festival der Zukunft,
The Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival, and Music From Angel Fire.
In addition to performing as a member of the Orchestra, Preucil is active in teaching
and community education programs and serves as Music Artistic Advisor to the
Cleveland Ballet.
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PROGRAM OVERVIEW:
This weekend we pay tribute to Poland’s beautiful musical legacy, and also
celebrate the vibrant Polish community of Buffalo and western New York. Music of
Chopin- the incomparable poet of the piano- is front and center, with the brilliant
pianist Yoonie Han making her Kleinhans debut. We are also proud to feature our
own star, principal hornist Jacek Muzyk, as he performs a concerto by his country’s
greatest living composer, Krzysztof Penderecki. Karlowicz’s haunting Music for the
White Dove will introduce you to another of Poland’s treasured composers. And
I will “give away a surprise”- Yoonie has a special encore prepared in honor of
our Polish-Americans in the audience. She will play the beloved Warsaw Concerto
from the movie Dangerous Moonlight.
Na Zdrowie!
PROGRAM NOTES
Mieczyslaw
Karlowicz
Polish composer
and conductor
born: December 11, 1876,
Wiszniewo, Lithuania
died: February 8, 1909,
Tatra Mountains
Symphonic Prologue to “Bianca de Molena”
“The White Dove”
Allegro non troppo; Lento; Andante
These are the first performances of this work
on the Classics series; duration 11 minutes
Born in Lithuania, Mieczyslaw Karlowicz
began his musical life with violin lessons
at age seven. His formative education
initiated in Germany, and concluded at the
Gorki School in Warsaw. Karlowicz then
returned to Germany where he pursued
advanced instruction at the University of
Berlin, studying violin with Florian Zajic and
composition with Heinrich Urban. During
that time Karlowicz developed an affinity
for the fables and legends in the operas of
Richard Wagner, and for the symbolic tone
poems of Tchaikovsky and Richard Strauss.
At Karlowitz’ tragic death from an accident
on a hiking trip, his orchestral catalog
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featured a set of six evocative tone poems,
including The White Dove, composed in
1900 at age 24.
Inspired by a play by Jozafat Nowinski,
Karlowicz composed a rhapsodic canvas
in symphonic timbres. On the manuscript
score, the composer provided a summary
of the storyline, which also serves as a guide
to the music. Set in Poland in the Middle
Ages, the narrative has been translated for
these performances by BPO hornist Daniel
Kerdelewicz.
“Carlo Carraro, a knight-errant wandering
around the world under an alias of Jan du
Lieu, arrives in the city of Molena in order
to fight for his right to the throne. At the
entrance of the city he hears a charming
song coming from the castle gardens.
Paying no attention to danger, he jumps
over the fence to search for the woman
who is singing. He finds her, and the charm
of her grace arouses great passion in him.
He does not know however that this is
Princess Bianca. The moment he discovers
this, an abyss between them is revealed; as
years ago Carraro had killed her brother
in a duel and now he has arrived to fight
Bianca’s father. His love for Bianca triumphs.
He enlists in the prince’s army and in the
war Carraro himself initiates, effectively
fights himself.
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
“Due to his bravery the battle is won but
when the old prince discovers that his
savior is also the man who killed his son,
the prince curses and rejects Carraro.
Bianca can not bear to be separated from
her beloved knight and is overwhelmed
to know he was the one who killed her
brother. She dies of a broken heart. Carraro
declines his right to the throne, and gives
his fortune away to the indigent. He gives
orders to erect a marble monument of
Bianca with Christ holding a white dove
above her.”
Karlowicz opens the curtain in a grand,
tonal-poetic manner. And while the initial
scene painting looks briefly to Wagner,
the nature of the music reveals a kinship
to the picturesque modes of story ballet
from the late, 19th-century. The curtain
rises with an orchestral flourish, conjuring
the lofty aspirations of Carlo Carraro. In
turn, emotive phrases from the woodwinds
and strings suggest an evolving love motif,
made urgent by resounding brass. But in
deft and subtle turns, the score reveals the
emerging heartache of Princess Bianca and
her father. Deeply cast timbres leave no
doubt as to the coming denouement. For
the closing vignette, celestial shimmers in
the woodwinds and strings, and lamenting
colors in the horns convey the hovering
white dove in pristine A major.
As an aside about the nature and style of
Karlowicz’s settings, a brief digression is
worthy: The artistic heritage of Eastern
Europe has two distinct and very opposite
sides - one marked by sheer joy and
exalted beauty, the other replete with
regret and sorrow, even remorse. The
dichotomy can be found everywhere - in
legends, painting, literature, theater, ballet
and opera. On the lighter side, there are
many national legends and folk tales that
are full of zest and bright energy. But
sometimes the darker side gets prime
time. For example, composer Franz Liszt
described the inscrutable Żal of the Polish
spirit, where even the happiest and most
lovely moments are tempered by a sense
of ‘the inevitable.’
Krzysztof
Penderecki
Polish composer
and conductor
born: November 23, 1933,
Debica, Poland
Horn Concerto “Winterreise”
These are the first performances of this work
on the Classics series; duration 18 minutes
Krzysztof Penderecki is one of the most
renowned composers of our time. He
arrived on the scene just as the avant-garde
began its exciting and controversial trek
through the wild and woolly 1960s. Few
composers were so agile as Penderecki
to appropriate modern modes, manners
and techniques into a personal ‘signature
style’ in the ever-expanding universe of
new music. Over three or four decades, his
scores eventually found an identity in the
domain known as Neo-Romanticism.
With regard to formal training, Penderecki’s
advanced studies on the violin and
composition were completed at the
renowned Krackow Academy, where his
primary teachers in composition were
Artur Malawski and Stanislaw Wiechowicz.
Penderecki later became the director of
the Academy, a position he held for fifteen
years. He also served on the faculty of Yale
University in the mid-1970s. The composer’s
catalog includes more than 30 large, choral
settings on biblical themes and text from the
Latin liturgy, as well as about 50 works for
orchestra, including diverse concertos for
violin, viola, cello, piano, flute and horn. The
latter, featured on this BPO program, was
completed in 2008.
Your devoted annotator had the good fortune
to meet maestro Penderecki some years
ago at the Warsaw Autumn Festival. He was
altogether gracious and deeply serious about
the greater mission of music as a means of
personal expression in our vastly complicated
world. For local reference, the Buffalo
Philharmonic was the first major orchestra
to record Penderecki’s music with the 1968
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Nonesuch release of De Natura Sonoris and
Capriccio, conducted by Lukas Foss.
Penderecki’s Horn Concerto carries a cryptic
caption: “Winterreise” (Winter Journey), the
very famous title of the great song cycle by
Franz Schubert. Given the immense celebrity
of Schubert’s masterwork, Penderecki surely
knew that such a title would require an
explanation. But like Brahms, Mahler and
many others, he declines to acknowledge
the doubtless connection. In any case, the
answer derives from the music itself, scored
as a flowing, rhapsodic narrative. Indeed, an
itinerary is at hand, marked Passacaglia (an
ancient Spanish dance from the Baroque
Age, followed by variations). We note that
Penderecki’s use of the ancient term is
unusual here, in that a particular, main theme
is not possible to define in the conventional
sense. It seems that, serving as metaphor,
the term Passacaglia reflects a continuing
evolution rather than specific variations.
The tour begins with hazy, distant timbres
from the orchestra. Natural, open intervals
in the horns convey a primitive ambiance
before the solo horn enters in the ‘Helden
horn’ style (heroic horn calls, made famous
by Wagner and Richard Strauss). The nuance
of the music may remind some listeners of
another well-known travelog from Wagner’s
Ring cycle, i.e. the ‘Rhine Journey’ which
recalls both the soaring Valkyries on high
and Sigfried’s horn signals on terra firma.
Apart from those reference points,
Penderecki offers an adventurous journey for
the solo horn, with brief show-case cadenzas
along the way. The concerto is ‘throughcomposed’ in one continuous movement.
Our soloist is the BPO’s principal hornist,
Jacek Muzyk, who remarks:
“Penderecki’s Horn Concerto is written to
highlight virtually every possible character
and technique of the French horn. In
addition to many lyrical moments, he also
features three or four brief cadenzas. One
of them calls for the technique known as
“multiphonics,” in which a player produces
one note while ‘singing’ or vocalizing another
pitch at the same time. The acoustics of the
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horn react in such a way that the two tones
mix and generate additional tones, known as
‘combination tones’. The result is a remarkable
chord of several notes, all harmonically
related and all sounded at once.”
Frédéric Chopin
Polish-French composer
and pianist
born: March 1, 1810,
near Warsaw;
died: October 17, 1849,
Paris
Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11
Allegro maestoso
Romance: Larghetto
Rondo: Vivace
First Classics performance: December
13, 1938, with pianist Rosina Lhevinne,
conducted by Franco Autori; most recent
performance: October 5, 2003, with pianist
Horacio Gutiérrez, conducted by JoAnn
Falletta; duration 35 minutes
Born near Warsaw of a Polish mother and a
French father, Chopin’s exceptional gift was
spotted very early on. However, his family and
teachers decided that the young genius would
not be exploited in the manner of the child
Mozart, to whom he was often compared. Yet
all of Warsaw understood that its enfant chérie
would one day depart for the artistic capitals
of Europe. Frédéric also knew it would not be
enough to reach out as a keyboard virtuoso
- he would also be expected to present
new music by his own hand, like Mozart and
Beethoven before him. Thus he scored and
premiered two piano concertos during 182930, his final year at home. Written at the age of
nineteen, they would be the only concertos to
emerge from his lyrical pen. (A curious detail,
as in the case of Beethoven’s first two piano
concertos: the numbering of the concertos
was inverted because they were published in
reverse order.)
But with regard to the real purpose behind
the new concertos, cherchez la femme:
Chopin had fallen hopelessly in love with
a beautiful and gifted young soprano,
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Constantia Gladowska, a fellow student at the
Warsaw Conservatory. In letters to his friends
the composer admitted that the concertos
were scored as secret valentines for his
desiderata - as he had yet to find the courage
to present himself to her in person. He wrote:
“Perhaps to my own misfortune I have already
found my ideal, whom I worship faithfully
and sincerely. Six months have elapsed, and
I haven’t yet exchanged a syllable with her
of whom I dream every night - she who was
doubly in mind when I composed the second
movement.”
Despite all this most historians infer that Chopin
never returned to the concerto form because
he found his preferred style in works for solo
piano - the Nocturnes, Ballades, Mazurkas,
Waltzes, etc. But given the composer’s Byronic
disposition, Chopin most likely never returned
to the concerto form just as he never returned
to his beloved Poland - and as he could never
return to his beloved Constantia. The pair
eventually became friends, although, with
her feet on the ground, the young debutante
married a Warsaw businessman not long after.
But until his untimely death, Frederic kept her
letters hidden among his personal effects.
Bundled in a small packet, they were found
neatly tied with a ribbon, in his own hand titled
- ‘My Sorrow.’
Although Opus 11 begins with an upper-case
Romantic theme, its harmonic and rhythmic
structures are essentially classical. A long
orchestral introduction offers a traditional
scheme until the solo piano enters and begins
to cast a mystic spell - the wordless poetry of
Frédéric Chopin.
After completing the work, Frédéric wrote to
a friend: “My concerto is finished and I feel like
a novice, just as I felt before I knew anything of
the keyboard. It is far too original, and I shall
end up by not being able to learn it myself.”
About the central Romance, the composer
added:
“In a calm and melancholy manner, the music
reflects the impression one receives when the
eye rests on a beloved landscape that calls up
in one’s soul beautiful memories - for instance
on a fine moonlit spring night. I have written
for violins with mutes as an accompaniment to
it. I wonder if that will have a good effect. Well,
time will show.”
Given the lyricism of this music and Chopin’s
own commentary, it is impossible to avoid
reference to the elegant Nocturnes,
composed in his Paris years under the inspired
gaze of another yet another woman, the
French authoress George Sand.
Marked Vivace, the final Rondo is charged with
the energy of a spirited dance, and fanciful
virtuosity is required from the soloist at every
turn. It should also be noted that Chopin’s
own keyboard style was often reviewed to
be exceedingly refined and light in touch,
accounting in part for the feather-weight
ambiance which pervades the orchestral
writing.
program notes by Edward Yadzinski
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Friday, May 1, 2015 at 8:00 PM
THE MUSIC OF MICHAEL JACKSON
Martin Herman, conductor
James Delisco, lead singer
Felicia Barton, singer
Kelli Reisen, singer
Justin Avery, keyboards
Eldon Sully, guitar
Bob Habib, drums
Wes Smith, bass
PROGRAM TO BE ANNOUNCED FROM THE STAGE
Concert Sponsor
Guest Artist Sponsor
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
MARTIN HERMAN, CONDUCTOR
Martin Herman has appeared as guest conductor with
symphony orchestras in North America, Europe, Australia,
and Canada. His most recent engagements include
the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Ft. Worth Symphony
Orchestra with Windborne’s “Music of the Rolling Stones”
and “Music of the Eagles.” He recently guest-conducted
Das Sinfonie Orchester Berlin at the Berlin Philharmonie
Kammermusiksaal and continues as music director
and arranger for “Classical Mystery Tour” in recent
performances with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in
the Sydney Opera House, Seattle Symphony, Detroit
Symphony, North Carolina Symphony, Long Beach Symphony, Vancouver Symphony,
San Diego Symphony, and Florida Orchestra. Herman also served as music director and
conductor with Downtown Opera in Long Beach, California, conducting premieres of
new operas in the U.S. and the Czech Republic. In the fall of 2009, he was conductor
and music director at LaMaMa Theatre in New York City where he led performances
of his one-act opera, “The Doctor,” based on Chekhov short stories. He has served as
assistant conductor with the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players and conductor
of the Berkeley Young Musicians Program Orchestra and U.C. Berkeley Summer
Orchestra. Additionally, Herman has conducted several orchestra crossover projects
in Amsterdam and Berlin.
Herman studied conducting and composition at Duke University, University of
Pennsylvania, and University of California, Berkeley and spent two years in Paris, France
on a Fulbright Grant and U.C. Berkeley Ladd Prix de Paris where he worked as conductor
and composer with the “New American Music in Europe” and “American Music Week”
festivals. He has received recognition for his work in the promotion of international
cultural exchange from the Trust for Mutual Understanding, New York City.
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JAMES DELISCO, LEAD SINGER
James Delisco recently returned to Windborne’s ‘Music
of Michael Jackson’ symphonic tour across the U.S.,
Canada, and Asia, headlining as the late ‘King of Pop’
Michael Jackson. Delisco, a 5-octave countertenor who
sings most of MJ’s songs in their original key, also takes
on the moves of MJ with his own flair.
Delisco is a guest entertainer on Celebrity Cruise
lines, Royal Caribbean and others. His one-man show,
“Legends of Music,” takes the audience on a journey of
great music by such artists as Stevie Wonder, Michael
Jackson, and Sammy Davis Jr. He is currently recording an EP, with a website launch
and single release later this year.
His debut at the Las Vegas Hilton launched a run of Vegas performances. He made
his reality television debut on E! Network’s 2005 series “The Entertainer,” hosted
by Wayne Newton. Delisco won the title of “The Entertainer,” competing with nine
other contestants from a pool of over 25,000.
As an international entertainer and producer, Delisco orchestrated his ninemember band FunkyDeep in Macau, which still performs at the Venetian Macau
Resort in the Bellini Lounge. He also produced Delisco & FunkyDeep in Singapore
in the summer of 2010 and Macao, China in the fall of 2008 and 2009.
Formerly a principal in the Broadway hit “Aida” in the role of Mereb, Delisco
also starred on Broadway in 1997 in “Smokey Joe’s Cafe.” He was featured in the
Broadway hit musical “Ragtime” in 1998. In 2009, he completed the U.S. national
tour with “Jesus Christ Superstar,” as Judas Iscariot.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Saturday, May 2, 2015 at 8:00 PM
BPO POPS
BOND AND BEYOND: 50 YEARS OF 007
Michael Krajewski, conductor
Debbie Gravitte, soprano
JOHN BARRY/Jeff Tyzik The James Bond Theme
JOHN BARRY/Wendell Smith Theme from From Russia with Love
JOHN BARRY/Nic Raine Theme from You Only Live Twice
JOHN BARRY/Nic Raine On Her Majesty's Secret Service/
A View to a Kill
JOHN BARRY/Wendell Smith Theme from Diamonds Are Forever
Debbie Gravitte, soprano
DAVID ARNOLD/Don Black Theme from The World is
Not Enough
Debbie Gravitte, soprano
JAMES STEPHENSON Concerto for Cell Phone
DAVID ARNOLD/ Suite from Casino Royale and
Gregory Prechel Quantum of Solace
JOHN BARRY/Tim Berens Suite from Goldfinger
Debbie Gravitte, soprano
INTERMISSION
SLOAN & BARRI/ "Secret Agent Man"
Gregory Prechel Debbie Gravitte, soprano
QUINCY JONES/Tim Berens "Soul Bossa Nova"
(Theme from Austin Powers)
STEPHEN SONDHEIM/ "Sooner or Later" from Dick Tracy
Gregory Prechel Debbie Gravitte, soprano
HENRY MANCINI "Inspector Clouseau Theme"
from The Pink Panther
THOMAS NEWMAN/ Suite from Skyfall
Gregory Prechel
ADKINS & EPWORTH/ Theme from Skyfall
Wendell Smith Debbie Gravitte, soprano
JOHN BARRY/Jeff Tyzik The Best of Bond
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
39
MICHAEL KRAJEWSKI, CONDUCTOR
Known for his entertaining programs and humor,
Michael Krajewski is Music Director of The Philly Pops
and Principal Pops Conductor of the Houston, Atlanta
and Jacksonville Symphonies.
He has guest-conducted the Buffalo, Cleveland and
Philadelphia Orchestras; the Boston and Cincinnati
Pops; the Baltimore, Detroit, Seattle, Pittsburgh and
National Symphonies, and numerous other orchestras
across the United States. In Canada, he has led Ottawa’s
National Arts Centre Orchestra, the Toronto Symphony
Orchestra, Calgary Philharmonic, and the Winnipeg Symphony. Other international
appearances include performances with Ireland’s Ulster Orchestra, the Hong Kong
Philharmonic, Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra, the Iceland Symphony Orchestra
and Spain’s Bilbao Symphony Orchestra.
He conducted the video “Silver Screen Serenade” with violinist Jenny Oaks Baker
that aired worldwide on BYU Broadcasting. He led the Houston Symphony on
two holiday albums: Glad Tidings and Christmas Festival. Michael will return to the
BPO in fall to conduct his original Sounds of Simon & Garfunkel program which
has been well-received across North America. Other collaborative programs have
included such artists as flutist James Galway, mezzo Marilyn Horne, and pop artists
Jason Alexander, Roberta Flack, Judy Collins, Art Garfunkel, Wynonna Judd, Ben
Folds, Doc Severinsen, Patti Austin, Ann Hampton Callaway, The Chieftains, Pink
Martini, Classical Mystery Tour, and The Midtown Men.
Krajewski earned degrees from Wayne State University in Detroit and the
University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, and furthered his training
at the Pierre Monteux Domaine School for Conductors. He was a Dorati Fellowship
Conductor with the Detroit Symphony and later served as that orchestra’s assistant
conductor. He was resident conductor of the Florida Symphony and was music
director of the Modesto Symphony Orchestra for eleven years. He lives in Orlando,
Florida with his wife Darcy.
DEBBIE GRAVITTE, SOPRANO
Debbie Gravitte has had a varied career, taking her from
the Broadway stage to the symphony hall and points
between. She won the Tony Award for Best Featured
Actress in a Musical for “Jerome Robbins’ Broadway,”
along with a Drama Desk Award Nomination and the
New York Showstopper Award. After making her
Broadway debut in the original cast of “They’re Playing
Our Song,” she went on to appear in “Perfectly Frank,”
“Blues In The Night,” “Ain’t Broadway Grand,” “Zorba,”
“Chicago,” and “Les Miserables.” She has appeared in the
Encores series productions of “The Boys From Syracuse,”
“Tenderloin,” and “Carnival” at New York’s City Center.
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
She has sung with numerous orchestras, including The Cleveland Orchestra, Boston
Pops, National Symphony (with Marvin Hamlish), and Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Utah,
St. Louis, Houston and San Diego Symphonies. Overseas, she has sung with the
London, Aalborg, Gotesborg, Jerusalem and Birmingham Symphonies; Stockholm
and Munich Philharmonics; and Symphonica of Brazil.
On television, she co-starred on the CBS series “Trial And Error” and NBC’S “Pursuit
Of Happiness,” and starred in several specials for PBS, including “Live From The
Kennedy Center,” “Boston Pops Celebrate Bernstein,” “Rodgers & Hart for Great
Performances,” and Ira Gershwin’s 100th Birthday Celebration from London’s Royal
Albert Hall and Carnegie Hall.
She recently finished her latest CD, “Defying Gravity.” Other recordings include
“Calamity Jane,” “Unsung Sondheim,” “Lucky Stiff,” “Miss Spectacular,” “Broadway
Christmas,” “Miss Spectacular,” “Tenderloin,” and “Zorba.”
She debuted with the New York City Ballet singing in Peter Martin’s “Thou Swell”
at Lincoln Center. She appeared with Bette Midler in the Universal film, “Isn’t She
Great?” and can be heard in Disney’s “The Little Mermaid.” Debbie is a proud and
tired mother of three beautiful children.
41
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Sunday, May 3, 2015 at 2:30 PM
CARNIVAL OF THE ANIMALS
DAY AT BPO
Stefan Sanders, conductor
Claudia Hoca, piano
Matthew Prohaska, piano
TBA, narrator
STRAVINSKY
Dance of the Firebird from
The Firebird Suite (1919 revision)
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV/Finck The Flight of the Bumble Bee
ROSSINI
Overture to William Tell
GROFÉ
On the Trail from Grand Canyon Suite
SAINT-SAËNS
Carnival of the Animals Narration by Peter Schickele
I. Introduction and Royal March
of the Lion
II. Hens and Roosters
III. Horses of the Tartary
(Fleet Animals)
IV.Tortoises
V. The Elephant
IV.Kangaroos
VII.Aquarium
VIII. People With Long Ears
IX. The Cuckoo in the Depths
of the Forest
X.Aviary
XI.Pianists
XII.Fossils
XIII. The Swan
XIV.Finale
Claudia Hoca, piano
Matthew Prohaska, piano
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
43
CLAUDIA HOCA, PIANO
Claudia Hoca is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of
Music in Philadelphia, where her teachers included
Eleanor Sokoloff and Mieczyslaw Horszowski. She has
a Master’s Degree from the State University of New
York at Buffalo, where she studied with Leo Smit. A
Fulbright grant enabled her to return to her native
Austria, where she pursued advanced studies under
Bruno Seidlhofer.
Hoca is the recipient of numerous awards, including
top prizes in the Chopin Young Pianist Competition
and the Washington International Bach Competition. While still a teenager, she
appeared with the Boston Pops under Arthur Fiedler, the Philadelphia Orchestra,
and the New York Philharmonic in a Young People’s Concert, broadcast live on
network television. She has played over 20 different concertos with the Buffalo
Philharmonic under conductors Semyon Bychkov, Christopher Keene, Kazuyoshi
Akiyama, Hermann Michael, Carlos Kalmar, and Maximiano Valdes, among others.
She has appeared in recital in the United States and abroad, and is much sought
after as a chamber music collaborator.
Her recordings include a premiere recording of the piano music of Leo Smit
on the Spectrum label and two collaborations with Philharmonia Virtuosi of
New York under the direction of Richard Kapp: Swiss composer Frank Martin’s
Petite Symphonie Concertante and Poulenc’s Aubade, issued as an unedited live
performance, both available on the Essay label.
She is often seen on the Kleinhans stage as orchestral pianist with the BPO and
has for the past four summers been the orchestral pianist of the Chautauqua
Symphony Orchestra.
MATTHEW PROHASKA, PIANO
Matthew Prohaska was born in Buffalo, New York, and
started his piano studies at age 6. In high school, he
performed in ensembles as both a trumpet player
and a pianist, and also held a part-time job as a vocal
accompanist. However, he did not start serious piano
study until meeting his current teacher, Claudia Hoca,
in the summer of 2012. Matthew was a winner of
the University of Rochester Concerto Competition,
and performed Prokofiev’s First Piano Concerto with
the UR Symphony Orchestra in April. He has also
participated in workshops with Father Sean Duggan
and Phyllis East. Matthew plans to return to the University of Rochester in the fall
to continue his studies in chemical engineering and music.
44
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Tuesday, May 5, 2015 at 7:00 PM
BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
SIDE-BY-SIDE WITH
THE BUFFALO ACADEMY FOR
VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Stefan Sanders, conductor
DUKAS
The Sorcerer's Apprentice
JOHN WILLIAMS
Harry's Wonderous World from
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
HUMPERDINCK
Hansel and Gretel
Prelude
Witch's Ride
Sandman's Song
Evening Prayer
Dream Pantomime
Patrons are asked to turn off all cell phones, pagers and signal watches.
The use of cameras and recording devices is strictly prohibited.
45
You’re in good company
Join these businesses that support the BPO
$100,000 +
$50,000 - $99,999
$20,000 - $49,999
$10,000 - $19,999
$5,000 - $9,999
$1,000 - $4,999
Accounting Group of Western New York
AXA Network
Bonadio Group
Buffalo Dental
Computer Task Group
Copper Bee Designs
Curbell Medical
e3communications
Ferguson Electric
Fox Run Orchard Park
Landmark Wealth Management
Lawley Insurance
McGard Insurance
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Reid Group
West Herr Auto Group
Now is the time to invest in Buffalo.
Now is the time to invest in the BPO.
Please contact
Wendy Diina, Associate Director of Development
(716) 242-7826 | [email protected]
47
MEET A MUSICIAN: MAKOTO MICHII
Music has taken Makoto Michii from Hokkaido to Buffalo,
but it was hardly a straight line.
The longtime BPO bassist began his career with Japan
Philharmonic in Tokyo and was headhunted by Yomiuri
Nippon Symphony Orchestra upon its 1963 inception.
He performed with the noted Sogetsu New Direction
contemporary music ensemble in Japan before winning
a Fulbright Fellowship to perform with the University at
Buffalo’s Center for Creative Performing Arts under Lukas
Foss, who was also the BPO’s music director at the time.
While in the United States, Michii was awarded the
Koussevitzky Fellowship by Boston Symphony’s Summer Festival, and spent a summer
performing in Tanglewood. He was honored with the Henry Cabot Prize, and was
invited to join the Boston Symphony’s bass section. As he readied for his move
to Boston, though, he ran into a snag. Due to his status as a Fulbright Scholar, he
was unable to obtain permanent residency, which was required to accept the job.
More trouble lay ahead: he received a letter warning that he could be deported.
Foss assisted him with smoothing out his status, and a year and a half after the BSO’s
offer, Michii joined the Buffalo Philharmonic and has been a dedicated member of
the orchestra ever since.
Offstage, Michii enjoys golf, downhill skiing, and reading Japanese novels in Japanese.
He enjoys Buffalo for its four seasons, friendly people, and reasonable cost of living.
Its proximity to international attractions such as Niagara Falls and Toronto allowed
him to see visiting friends and family from Japan often. For nearly 40 years, he has
also worked as a certified piano technician after learning the craft at the Chautauqua
Institute. A mentor of his suggested finding a sideline to provide stable income
during a financially troubled time for the orchestra, and Michii chose this line of work
because he is mechanically gifted and because of its relation to music. He has found
it to be beneficial to his performance career.
“Through learning and doing the piano technology, I became a better musician for
the reason that I grasp music more in totality. Piano as an instrument represents all
the parts of symphony music. So I look at music in totality and then perform my
part accordingly. Eventually, I came to know how important it is to know the ‘focused
sound’ of each instrument of orchestra to convey the beauty of music to the audience,”
Michii said.
After more than 45 years with the orchestra, Michii still hopes to perform more
works by Chopin, his favorite composer. He has especially enjoyed working with the
various luminaries who have served as guest conductors of the BPO during his tenure,
including Leonard Bernstein and Leopold Stokowski. His wife, Takako, is active in the
Friends of the BPO and can be seen volunteering at many concerts and events. They
have two grown sons, both engineers, and one grandchild.
His advice to aspiring musicians is very simple.
“Becoming a professional musician is not a matter of choice. If you have doubt
whether or not, then do not even attempt. This is what great Leonard Bernstein said.
I believe in it.”
48
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
SPONSOR A MUSICIAN
Guest concertmaster
Sponsored by Clement and
Karen Arrison
Ansgarius Aylward,
assistant concertmaster
Sponsored Anonymously
Marylouise Nanna, first violin
Sponsored by El and
Shell Schneiderman
Douglas Cone, first violin
Sponsored by Bradford Lewis, Ph.D.
Diana Sachs, first violin
Sponsored by Gordon and
Gretchen Gross
Alan Ross, first violin
Sponsored by Anthony J. and
Carmela M. Colucci
Loren Silvertrust, first violin
Sponsored by Mr. and
Mrs. George F. Phillips, Jr.
Megan Prokes, first violin
Sponsored in honor of Dr. Doreen
Rao by Sue Fay & Carl
Antoine Lefebvre,
principal second violin
Sponsored by Dorothy Westhafer
Jacqueline Galluzzo,
associate principal second violin
Sponsored by Sandra and
Dennis McCarthy
Richard Kay, second violin
Sponsored by Joyce L. Wilson
Natalie Piskorsky,
associate principal viola
Sponsored by Dr. Patricia and
*Burt Notarius
Matthew Phillips, viola
Sponsored by Mr. and
Mrs. George G. Herbert
Kate Holzemer, viola
Sponsored by Ms. Cindy Abbott
Letro and Mr. Francis M. Letro
Janz Castelo, viola
Sponsored by Anthony J. and
Barbara Cassetta
Feng Hew,
associate principal cello
Sponsored by Kenneth Schmieder,
in loving memory of Nancy L. Julian
Monte Hoffman, cello
Sponsored by Mr. and
Mrs. Robert B. Skerker
Valerie Heywood,
principal viola
Sponsored by Harriet B. Stewart* and
Marie A. Marshall
Glenn Einschlag, bassoon
Sponsored by Dr. and
Mrs. Friedrich J. Albrecht
Martha Malkiewicz,
bassoon/contrabassoon
Sponsored by Frances L. Morrison
Duane Saetveit, french horn
Sponsored by Cheryl and
John Howe
Jay Matthews, french horn
Sponsored by Philip H. Hubbell, in
loving memory of Jayne T. Hubbell
Alex Jokipii, principal trumpet
Sponsored by Nancy L. Dowdell
Jeffrey Dee, bass trombone
Sponsored by Jim and
Michal Wadsworth
Amelie Fradette, cello
Sponsored by Ms. Cindy Abbott
Letro and Mr. Francis M. Letro
Brett Shurtliffe,
associate principal bass
Sponsored by Mr. Bruce C. Baird and
Mrs. Susan O’Connor-Baird
Christine Lynn Bailey,
principal flute
Sponsored by Joyce L. Wilson
Sponsored by Nancy L. Dowdell
David Schmude, cello
Diane Melillo, second violin
Shieh-Jian Tsai, second violin
Salvatore Andolina,
clarinet/saxophone
Timothy Smith, trombone
Sponsored by Sally and
Donald Dussing
Makoto Michii, bass
Sponsored by Jack & Ellen Koessler
Sponsored by Dennis P. Quinn
Robert Hausmann, cello
Jeffrey Jones, second violin
Sponsored by Mr. and
Mrs. George G. Herbert
Patti DiLutis, clarinet
Sponsored by Arthur W. and
Elaine I. Cryer
Sponsored by Edward N. Giannino, Jr.
Matthew Bassett, timpani
Sponsored by Bonnie and
Nick Hopkins
Dinesh Joseph, percussion
Sponsored by Lynne Marie Finn, on
behalf of Superior Group
*deceased
Sponsored by The Hicks Fund
Sponsored by Michael and
Roberta Joseph
Anna Mattix, oboe/english horn
Sponsored by Bonnie and
Nick Hopkins
John Fullam, principal clarinet
Sponsored by Roberta and
Michael Joseph
To learn more about the Sponsor a Musician program, please contact Jesselyn Zailac
at (716) 242-7899 or [email protected].
49
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
ANNUAL FUND
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra gratefully acknowledges contributions, grants and sponsorships received from the
following individuals, corporations and foundations who gave $500 and above. While the thousands upon thousands
of donors whose gifts ranged from $1 to $499 are too numerous to list here, we gratefully acknowledge those additional
individuals, groups, companies and foundations who give to us so generously.
Millonzi Society
$150,000+
Anonymous
The Cameron and Jane Baird
Foundation
Louis P. Ciminelli Family
Foundation
Carol & Angelo Fatta
The John R. Oishei
Foundation
$50,000-$149,999
Clement & Karen Arrison
Brent D. Baird
The Cullen Foundation
Mulroy Family Foundation
John & Carolyn Yurtchuk
$25,000-$49,999
Mr. and Mrs. Brian D. Baird
Mr. Bruce C. Baird and
Mrs. Susan O’Connor-Baird
The Baird Foundation
Mrs. Catherine M. Beltz
Robert J. & Martha B. Fierle
Foundation
Grigg Lewis Foundation, Inc.
Roberta & Michael Joseph
Montgomery Family
Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. George F. Phillips, Jr.
Maestro’s Circle
$10,000-$24,999
Anonymous (1)
Ms. Cindy Abbott Letro
and Mr. Francis M. Letro
Sue Fay Allen & Carl Klingenschmitt
Mr. Charles Balbach
The Reverend and Mrs. Peter Bridgford
Britton Trust
Buffalo Bills, Inc.
Anthony J. & Barbara Cassetta
The Robert & Patricia Colby Foundation
Arthur W. & Elaine Cryer
Jennifer Dowdell and Nancy Dowdell
Sally & Don Dussing
Bob & Doris Drago
Members, Erie County Music
Educators Association
Ms. JoAnn Falletta
& Mr. Robert Alemany
Mr.* and Mrs. Peter B. Flickinger
The Foundation
for Jewish Philanthropies
Patricia & William Frederick
Dick & Pat* Garman
George & Bodil Gellman
Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation
Daniel & Barbara Hart
Carlos and Elizabeth Heath Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. George G. Herbert
Bonnie & Nick Hopkins
John & Cheryl Howe
Mr. Philip H. Hubbell,
In memory of Jayne T. Hubbell
Martha & Tom Hyde
The Seymour H. Knox
Foundation, Inc.
John W. Koessler, III
Kenneth A. & Gretchen P. Krackow
W. & J. Larson Family Foundation
Bradford Lewis, Ph.D.
Marie A. Marshall
In Memory of Harriet B. Stewart
Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Montante, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Reginald B. Newman, II
NOCO Foundation, Inc.
Donald F. & Barbara L. Newman
Family Foundation
The Vincent and Harriet
Palisano Foundation
J. Warren Perry and
Charles Donald Perry Memorial Fund
Frederick S. & Phyllis W. Pierce
Family Fund
El & Shell Schneiderman
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Skerker
Joyce L. Wilson
Concertmaster Circle
$5,000-$9,999
Anonymous (1)
Mrs. Vanda Albera
Dr. and Mrs. Fred Albrecht
Martin G. & Linda Anderson
Joan & Peter Andrews
Family Foundation
Andy T. Anselmo
Ansie Baird
Albert J. and Toni Baratto
James and Linda Beardi
James M. Beardsley & Ellen M. Gibson
Better Buffalo Fund at the
Community Foundation for
Greater Buffalo
Mr. & Mrs. Hazard K. Campbell
Mrs. Ann Cohn
Anthony J. and Carmela M. Colucci
Peter & Maria Eliopoulos
Mr. & Mrs. Warren E. Emblidge, Jr.
Neil and Doris Farmelo
Lynne Marie Finn
William & Marjorie* Gardner
Sarah Goodyear
Gordon and Gretchen Gross
Charles J. Hahn* & Joy Rogers
The Hahn Family Foundation
Mr. Thomas J. Hanifin
Barbara W. Henderson
The Hicks Fund
Monte Hoffman & Niscah Koessler
David and Lucinda Hohn
Mrs. L. Nelson Hopkins, Jr.
John J. and Maureen O. Hurley
Drs. Clement and Margot Ip
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Kadet
Ms. Ellen Koessler
John W. & Mary M.
Koessler Foundation
Mrs. Mary M. Koessler
The Linton Foundation
Sandra and Dennis McCarthy
Frances L. Morrison
Nangee Morrison
Dr. and Mrs. George H. Nancollas
Dr. Patricia & Burt* Notarius
Daniel C. Oliverio
The Ralph F. Peo Fund at the CFGB
Dennis Quinn
David & Joan Rogers
Ms. Catherine F. Schweitzer
Scott R. & Rachel C. Stenclik
Edwin F. Stohrer, Jr.
Steve and Nicole Swift
Carolyn & Joe Voelkl
Lorinda McAndrew Voelkle Foundation
Nellie B. Warner Endowment Fund
Irv & Elaine Weinstein
Dorothy Westhafer
51
Encore Circle
$2,500-$4,999
Anonymous (1)
Gary and Marjorie Abelson
Doug and Ellen Bean
Dennis & Leilani Black
Mark Chason and Mariana
Botero-Chason
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. DePaolo
Judith Clarke & Alan Dozoretz
R. Irene Dwigans
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Easton
Paul Erisman
Marion S. Fay
Peter and Ilene Fleischmann
Joseph & Anna Gartner Foundation
Edward N. Giannino, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Gioia
Dr. Samuel Goodloe, Jr.
Ms. Constance A. Greco
Dr. Elisabeth Zausmer
and Dr. Angel A. Gutierrez
Edwin P. Hart
Mr. & Mrs. G. Wayne Hawk
Dave & Katie Hayes
Mr. and Mrs.* Robert Irwin
Dr. Robert & Hana Jacobi
Bruce and Gail Johnstone
Joy Family Foundation
Dwight King & Leslie Duggleby
Douglas G. & Nancy Kirkpatrick
James & Leslie Kramer
Charles & Judith Manzella
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Mathias II
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Newman
New York Council for the Humanities
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford M. Nobel
Don and Jane Ogilvie
Richard & Karen Penfold
Nancy and Louis* Reif
Mr. & Mrs. John Reinhold
Frances M. Rew
Deborah Henning and Thomas Rolle
Nancy L Julian* and
Mr. Kenneth Schmieder
Ms. Anne Schneider &
Mr. Ronald L. Frank
Joseph & Carole Sedita
Drs. Robert & Maxine Seller
Lowell and Ellen Shaw
Deetta & Frank Silvestro
Joan & Roger Simon
Drs. Stephen and Monica Spaulding
James and Karen Stephenson
Barry Swartz
Jim & Connie Tanous
Nicole and Nicholas Tzetzo
Vogt Family Foundation
Jim and Michal Wadsworth
Ted & Ingrid Wetherbee
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Wetter
C. Richard and Joyce T. Zobel
52
Principal’s Circle
$1,750-$2,499
Joanne and Frank Collins Charitable
Foundation
Dr. Elizabeth Conant and Ms. Camille Cox
Anonymous (1)
Ellen Todd Cooper
Drs. Kevin and Elizabeth Barlog
Marilyn R. Cornelius
Cole & Nancy Bergan
Nancy A. Cunningham
William & Ida Christie Fund for Music Roger and Roberta Dayer
Elizabeth G. Clark
Juan and Sylvia De Rosas
Amy L. Clifton & Theodore B.K. Walsh Dr. and Mrs. David C. Dean
Emerging Leaders in the Arts Buffalo
James and Mary Frances Derby
William Freyd & Diana Carlson
Tim and Lois DiCarlo
Friends of the BPO
Duane and Nancy Dipirro
Drs. James Grunebaum &
Joan M. Doerr
Penelope Prentice
Ellen & Victor Doyno
Michele O. Heffernan
Robert Joel Drago
& John J. Cordes
George T. Driscoll, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Hinds, III
Drs. Philip Dvoretsky & Linda Ludwig
Dr. & Mrs. Curtis F. Holmes
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Easton
Professor Joseph Kelly, Esq.
Jeanne C. Eaton
C.F. and A.F. Kurtz
Dr. Edward G. Eberl
Norma Jean Lamb
The Honorable and Mrs. Leo J. Fallon
Earle I. Mack Foundation
Dr. Robert Fenstermaker
Margaret V. Manzella Trust
Ferguson Electric Foundation
Randy & Diana Martinusek
Mr. Kim A. Ferullo
Anne Moot
Joyce E. Fink
Emmett & Carol Murphy
George Byron Fisher
Irene E. Norton
Thomas and Grace Flanagan
Mr. and Mrs. Randall M. Odza
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Fleming
Tom & Lois Pause
William and Beth Fleming
Henry and Patty Porter
Mrs. Burt P. Flickinger, Jr.
Ms. Georgeann W. Redman
Rose H. and Leonard H. Frank
Denise & Ron Rezabek
Community Endowment Fund
Dr. Annie Schapiro
Laurence & Eileen Franz
Gary & Barbara Schober
Mr. and Mrs. David Fried
Nancy B. Thomas
Mr. Richard L. Friend
Mrs. Mary W. Wickett
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Giambra
Mr. and Mrs. K. Wiedenhaupt
Joe and Lynne Giroux
Marjorie Girth
Dr. and Mrs. Louis Goldberg
Bravo Circle
Susan Graham & Jon Kucera
$1,000-$1,749
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Greene
Anonymous (2)
Mr. Gary B. Greenfield
Dr. George N. Abraham
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Guenther
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Ackerman
Ken & Gladys Hardcastle
Kenneth & Maura Africano
Van & Dianne Harwood
Rita Argen Auerbach
Philip M. & Marion Henderson
Ronald E. and Mary L. Banks
Mr. and Mrs. Sherlock A. Herrick, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Bannon
George M. Hillenbrand, II
Steve Earnhart and Jennifer Barbee
Richard & Lynn Hirsch
Dave & Wendy Barth
Luella Johnson
Dr. David B. Bender
Craig & Deborah Johnston
Anne Bonte
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen T. Joyce
James A. Brophy and Fraser B. Drew*
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Kahn
Gary and Willow Brost
William P. Keefer
Elaine & Mel Brothman
Kathleen Keenan-Takagi
Dorothy J. Brown
Michael & Marilee Keller
Dr. and Mrs. John L. Butsch
Milton Kicklighter
Buffalo Bills Youth Foundation
The Herbert & Ella Knight
Drs. Douglas R. and Barbara B. Bunker
Family Charitable Fund
The Reverends Sarah Buxton-Smith and Carol & John Kociela
Stephen J.S. Smith
Ken & Paula Koessler
Margaret C. Callanan
Dr. Bernard Kolber
Rudolph and Ann Casarsa
Bob & Liz Kolken
Barbara & Jerry Castiglia
Robert J. and Mary Ann Kresse
Katherine Kubala
Mr. & Mrs. James L. Cecchini
Risé & Kevin Kulick
Richard & Elisabeth Cheney
Drs. Jeffrey Lackner &
Nan & Will Clarkson
Ann Marie Carosella
Mrs. Ruth Cohan
Michael & Stephanie Laipple
Joan & Michael Cohen
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
Dr. and Mrs. William D. Lawrence
Dr. and Mrs. Louis Lazar
Susan B. Lee
Mrs. Kalista Lehrer
Jordan & Holly Levy
Stewart & Faye Levy
Gerald and Jody Lippes
Howard & Lorna Lippes
Jack & Inez Lippes
Anne and Alan Lockwood
Madison Community Foundation
Judy Marine
Jim & Kathy Marshall
Elsie P. & Lucius B. McCowan
Private Charitable Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon E. Merritt
Martin E. Messinger
Enrico & Marisa Mihich
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Mitchell
Ms. Sally J. Moehlau
Donna & Leo Nalbach
Michael & Janette Neumeister
Franklin & Colleen Nice
Dr. & Mrs. James P. Nolan
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick O’Brien
Alphonso & Marcia O’Neil-White
Judith Parkinson
Robert J. Patterson
Reverend Diane & Craig Phinney
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Polokoff
Paul J. Polokoff
Susan Potter
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Pyrak
Ms. Elaine Ragusa
Marilyn L. Reeves
Corinne & Victor Rice Foundation
Mary Anne Rokitka
Maureen W. & Dr. Richard J. Saab
Anne Saldanha M.D.
Saldanha Family Foundation
W. Scott & Kristin Saperston
William F. & Elizabeth Savino
Daniel J. Schmauss
Dr. Gilbert Schulenberg
Betty Schultz
Caren & Stuart Shapiro
Mrs. Brenda K. Shelton
Shuman Family Foundation Inc.
Robert and Dixie Siegel
Drs. George & Sharon Simpson
Juanita & Neville Spring
Gerould R. Stange
Malcolm & Alma Strachan
Marilyn & Irving Sultz
Ms. Carol Sundberg
Gary R. Sutton
Gary and Katharina Szakmary
Joseph R. Takats Foundation
Ivan Tarnopoll
John & Susan Thomas
Terry & Jerry Thomas
Jeffrey Ting
Phyllis Tobin
Judy and Peter Travers
Connie & Jack Walsh
Robert & Elisabeth Wilmers
Wayne & Janet Wisbaum
Women’s Philharmonic Advocacy
Bette J. Brunish
Drs. Douglas & Barbara Bunker
Mr. William D. Burns*
Joseph & Susan Cardamone
Catherine M. Campbell
Jackie Castle
Mr. & Mrs. James Cecchini
Patron Circle
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Chur
Mrs. John Churchill
$750-$999
David Ciesla
Morton & Natalie Abramson
Mrs. Mary Clark
Nancy S. Barrett
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Clark
Tim and Belle Butler
Debby and Gary Cohen
Janet M. Casagrande
Joan & Michael Cohen
Miss Victoria A. Christopher
Columbus McKinnon Corp.
Dr. Sebastian & Marilyn Ciancio
Conax Technologies LLC
Andrea and Don Copley
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Connolly, Jr.
Philip & Marguerite Coppens
Ellen Todd Cooper
Dr. & Mrs. Harold G. Corwin, Jr.
David & Mary Ann Coulson
Michael P. D’Ambrosio
Annette M. Cravens
Miriam and Peter Dow
Teresa Danforth
Rebecca and John Davidson
Stephen & Suzanne Evans
Beverly J. Davies
Dr. & Mrs. Louis Goldberg
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Desha
William & Lucy Grad
Margaret Diamond & Jacob Schactner
Edwin M. Johnston, Jr.
David A. DiCarlo
Charles J. Kaars
Richard and Cornelia Dopkins
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Laping
Dr. John Leddy & Dr. Carmen Alvarez David T. Duff
Marianne G. Dunn
George L. Mayers
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Eardley
John E. Milner
Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Ebel
Gregory Photiadis & Sandra Chelnov
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Efron
Darwin and Ruth Schmitt
Rosemary Elliott
William Kenneth Schmitt Fund
Nitza & Avery Ellis
Edwin and Virginia Sprague
Erie and Niagara Insurance Association
Freddie M. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Falkner
Jeffrey J. Thompson
Michael R. Fiels & Mary T. Ricotta
Dr. & Mrs. Raymond C. Vaughan
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Fisher
Dr. & Mrs. Richard A. Wiesen
John Fleischman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Flickinger
Pierre & Barbara Williot
Rita A. Forman
Mr. & Mrs. James C. Yuhnke
Sergio Fornasiero
Mr. and Mrs. David M. Zebro
Ellen S. Friedland, Ph.D.
and Thomas A. Hays, M.D.
Crescendo
Rose M. Furman
Mrs. Sue S. Gardner
$500-$749
Theodore & Joan Geier
Anonymous (1)
Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas Gentile
Mr. David Alexander
Grand Island Transit Corp.
and Ms. Margaret McDonnell
George Grasser
Steve & Jean Ambroselli
Great Lakes Anesthesiology
Burtram W. & Ellen Anderson
Carol A. Greiner
Rita M. Antolena
Kathryn Karlic & Peter Gross
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Arena
Kenneth W. Gross
John and Amy Bair
Robert & Kathryn Hallborg
Susan Baird
Mrs. Marion P. Hanson
Teo & Jennifer Balbach
Charles* and Virginia Harrington
Bradford H. Banks
Maryanne Harvey
Tom & Judy Beecher
Paul and Suellen Hassett
C. S. Behler
Arlene Haug
Berardi Immigration Law
Barbara R. Hayes
Alice F. Bird
Dr. Ann M. Bisantz & Dr. Albert H. Titus Edward and Karen Healy
Dr. and Mrs. Reid R. Heffner, Jr.
Renate Bob
Mr. and Mrs. R. Bradley Herbert
Mr. & Mrs.* Franklin Bossler
Dr. Theodore Herman &
Mr. and Mrs. Hilary P. Bradford
Ms. Judith Ann Cohen
Brian Parisi Copiers Systems, Inc.
Ms. Marie Olive Hewett
Laura Hurd Brodie
Charles & Janet Hodges
Dorothy J. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Brown
Duncan C. Hollinger
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Wood
Paul M. Wos
Stephen McCabe & Gretchen Wylegala
Cynthia Zane & Stephen Mazurak
Paul Zarembka
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Mr. & Mrs. John G. Horn
Lindsey Humes
Laura Hurd
Ms. Suzanne M. Jacobs
William & Genevieve James
Thomas & Deborah Jasinski
Drs. Richard & Barbara Jurasek
Kathie A. Keller
Marie L. Keller
Kenney, Shelton, Liptak & Nowak LLP
Mr. & Mrs. John Kirwan
Juliet Kline
Robert & Barbara Klocke
Julie Klotzbach & Gary Diamond
James & Mona Kontos
Mr. Charles Korn & Dr. Deborah Raiken
Paul & Marilyn Koukal
Kreher Fund at the Community
Foundation for Greater Buffalo
Ms. Joan Kuhn
Eleanor F. Kurlan
Ted Kuzniarek
Peter T. Lansbury, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Lazarus
Lehigh Construction Group Inc.
J.P. Bullfeathers
Don & Lori Leone
Fern & Joel Levin
Dr. George R. Levine
& Rivona H. Ehrenreich
Liazon
Dorothy M. Lien
Mrs. Celia Linder
Anne & Alan Lockwood
Jerry & Joelle Logue
Robert & Patricia Long
M&T Insurance Agency
Dr. and Mrs. Walter S. Mayo
Peter & Rebecca McCauley
Barbara A. McCulloch
Dr. G. Allen McFarren
Claire Miller McGowan
Raymond* & Louise McGrath
McLain Foundation
Mrs. Anita Kaye Militello
Mrs. Joseph J. Militello
Dr. & Mrs. Donald E. Miller
Joan and Hugh Miller
Dr. & Mrs. Herman S. Mogavero Jr.
Dr. Michael C. Moore
Ms. Sandra G. Morrison
Dr. Robert Moskowitz
Thomas Muka and Juliann Van Woert
Eleanor T. Murray
Michael & Janette Neumeister
Philip Nicolai and Mary Louise Hill
Dr. & Mrs. James P. Nolan
Philip L. Nones
Susan D. Nusbaum
Tim O’Brien Fund at the FJC
Bernie & Linda O’Donnell
Osmose
Ann C. Pappalardo
Laurence J. & Sylvia Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Pawlowski
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Peterson
Dr. and Mrs. John H. Peterson
Mary G. Peterson
Anthony Piccione
The Pierce Family Foundation
Karen L. Podd
J. Forrest Posey
Dr. & Mrs.* Theodore C. Prentice
Joseph & Linda Priselac
Charles and Joanne Privitera
Lauren & Jean Rachlin
Bryna K. Ram
Martha J. Reddout
James & Diane Reschke
Mr. Nelson C. Ribble
Diane Rittling
Dr. & Mrs. Donald W. Robinson
Dianne & Irving Rubin
Maryann Saccomando Freedman
Gordon & Harriet Sacks
Scott & Ardeen Schaefer
Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Schintzius
Mr. and Mrs. C. Jacob Schneider
David Schopp
Gwendolyn R. Schopp
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Schulz
Henry P. and Tricia Semmelhack
Mrs. Leonard Semski
Mr. Eugene M. Setel
Peter Siedlecki and Lynnette N. Mende
Mr. William P. Siegler
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Silvey
Mr. Carlton M. Smith
Kurt & Melissa Spaeth
Rosemarie C. Steeb
Dr. and Mrs. John B. Stevens, III
Mr. & Mrs. David G. Strachan
Dr. and Mrs. Harry A. Sultz
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Symons
Cynthia Swain & Stephen Edge
Mr. Paul Tarantino
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Telford
Sally S. Tiebel
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Tillotson
Guy Tomassi
The Travel Team Inc./
American Express
The Trbovich Family Foundation
Ron and Susan Uba
U-C Coatings Corporation
Mr. & Mrs. Alan Vogt
Vogt Family Foundation
Suzanne J. Voltz
Robert T. Vosteen
Mr. William Vosteen
Peter A. Vukelic
John* & Linda Wadsworth
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Walmsley
R. Thomas Weeks
Jeff & Susie Wellington
Ms. Marlene A. Werner
Dr. & Mrs. Milton M. Weiser
Edwin & Judy Wolf
Dr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Wright
Arden and Julie Wrisley
Gregory and Donna Yungbluth
John & Deanna Zak
Zaxis Architectural, PC
Amy M. Zeckhauser
Mr. & Mrs. George M. Zimmerman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Zinter
Walter M. Zylka, Jr.
Wine & Spirits Guild of America
*deceased
Gift-In-Kind Partners
Ms. Cindy Abbott Letro &
Mr. Francis M. Letro
Antoinette’s Sweets, Inc.
Arlington Place Pictures
Avenue Art & Frame
Clement & Karen Arrison
Bennett Direct, Inc.
Brian Parisi Copiers Systems, Inc.
Buffalo and Erie County Public Library
Buffalo Limousine
Buffalo News
Buffalo Spree Publishing, Inc.
Butterwoods Bakery
The Café at 59 Allen Street, Inc.
City Wine Merchant
Comfort Inn and Suites Downtown
The Copy Store
Cumbo, Inc.
Eber Bros. Wine & Liquor Corp.
Enterprise Car Rental
Paul Ferington
Jaeckle, Fleischmann & Mugel, LLP
The Mansion on Delaware Ave.
McCullagh Coffee
Wendy & Jim Monday
Oliver’s Candies
Oliver’s Restaurant
Christopher Scinta Photography
Premier Wine and Spirits
Shannon Pub
Spirit of Buffalo
Time Warner Cable
Try-It Distributing
Vaspian
Virginia Arts Festival
Wilcro Inc.
WNED
Check out YOUR Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra online!
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B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
PLANNED GIVING
Musical Heritage Society
We are pleased to list the current members herein because they have realized the importance of “the gift
that keeps giving.” Each of these individuals or couples have made provisions for a contribution to the BPO
in their estate plans and while there are many different methods, the most common is by adding the BPO
as a beneficiary in one’s will.
Anonymous (3)
Charlotte C. Acer
Elizabeth & John Angelbeck
Charles Balbach
Jennifer Barbee
Donald M. Behr & Samuel E. Lolinger*
The Reverend and
Mrs. Peter W. Bridgford
James A. Brophy & Fraser B. Drew*
Anthony J. Cassetta
Barbara & Jerry Castiglia
Gerard and Rachel Catalano
Mrs. Ida Christie
Miss Victoria A. Christopher
In honor of JoAnn Falletta and
Donald McCrorey
Dr Sebastian and Mrs Marilyn Ciancio
Louis & Ann Louise Ciminelli
Ms. Elizabeth G. Clark
Mr. & Mrs. William M. Clarkson
Miss Mary E. Clemesha*
Ruth Cohan
Mrs. George Cohn
Dr. Elizabeth Conant
Marilyn R. Cornelius
Dr. Sharon F. Cramer and
Mr. Leslie R. Morris*
In honor of the BPO Viola section
Beverly Davies
Mrs. Roberta Dayer
Mr. Tim DiCarlo
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony N. Diina
Charles* & Nancy Dowdell
Trusts
Anonymous
AJL Fund
Cameron Baird Fund
Benderson BPO Endowment Fund
Virgil A. and Margaret L. Black Memorial Fund
Philip & Joyce Celniker Fund
Mildred Bork Conners & Joseph E.
Conners Fund
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Society Inc. Endowment Fund
Grace Neff Daniels Memorial
Howard F. Gondree Fund
Joan Hetzelt Hanifin Memorial Fund
Sarah & Donald Dussing
Mr. Neil R. Farmelo
Angelo & Carol Fatta
Mrs. Marion Fay
Judith & John* Fisher
Edward N. Giannino, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Byron R. Goldman
Susan J. Grelick
Gordon & Gretchen Gross
Marion Hanson
Margaret W. Henry
Mr. & Mrs. George G. Herbert
Monte & Cheryl* Hoffman
Mrs. L. Nelson Hopkins, Jr.
Mr. Philip H. Hubbell
in memory of Jayne T. Hubbell
Bruce and Gail Johnstone
Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth R. Kahn
Kathleen Keenan-Takagi
The Herbert & Ella Knight
Family Charitable Fund
Norma Jean Lamb
Eric E. & Ruth F. Lansing
Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred J. Larson
Bradford Lewis, PhD
Francie D. & Joel N. Lippman
Marie Marshall
Mr.* & Mrs. J. A. Mattern
Donna & Leo Nalbach
Drs. Howard & Karen Noonan
Robert & Marion North Fund
Mrs. Frederick S. Pierce
Edwin Polokoff
Susan Potter
Dennis Quinn
Virginia Ann Quinn
Evelyn Joyce Ramsdell
Sylvia L. Rosen
John and Susan Rowles
Nancy E. Ryther*
Paul and Gerda Sanio
Kenneth Schmieder,
In memory of Nancy L. Julian
Catherine F. Schweitzer
Roger & Joan Simon
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Skerker
Dennis M. Smolarek
Jane Snowden*
Harriet Stewart*
David D. Stout &
Janet E. Popp Stout
Gerald R. Strauss
Sue W. Strauss
Nancy B. Thomas
Therese M. Vita
Jim and Michal Wadsworth,
as trustees of the Mulroy,
Heath and Colby Foundations
Mrs. Robert Warner*
Mrs. Marjorie W. Watson
Mrs. Dorothy Westhafer
Wayne & Janet Wisbaum
Betty Ann Withrow
Mr.* & Mrs. J. Milton Zeckhauser
D. Bruce and Gail Johnstone Fund at
the CFGB
The Herbert & Ella Knight Family
Charitable Fund
John and Carol Kociela Fund at the CFGB
Janet K. Larkin & John D. Larkin III Fund
Albert H. Laub Bequest
Donald I. MacDavid Charitable Trust
Marie A. Marshall Fund
MPZ Endowment Fund
Benjamin and Lila Obletz
Endowment Fund
Mary Louise Olmsted Fund
Susan Harvey Prentis Fund
Margaret Frank Rofot Charitable Lead Trust
Natalie Kubera Roth Fund
Martin and Barbara Schechtman
Charitable Remainder Unitrust
William Kenneth Schmitt Fund
Dr. & Mrs. Roy E. Seibel Philanthropic Fund
Joseph and Loretta Swart Fund
Nellie B. Warner Endowment Fund
Charlotte Potter Whitcher Trust
*deceased
To ensure your wishes are carried on for the BPO for generations to come,
you may call Guy Tomassi (716) 242-7821 for more information.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra endorses the LEAVE A LEGACY® WESTERN NEW YORK program,
an initiative of the WNY Planned Giving Consortium and a public awareness campaign
of the National Committee on Planned Giving.
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Government
Mark Poloncarz, County Executive
and Erie County Legislature
Betty Jean Grant
Kevin R. Hardwick
Thomas A. Loughran
Edward A. Rath, III
Patrick B. Burke
Ted B. Morton
Lynne M. Dixon
Joseph C. Lorigo
Barbara Miller-Williams
John J. Mills
Peter J. Savage, III
City of Buffalo
National Endowment
for the Humanities
New York State Council
on the Arts
Erie County
National Endowment
for the Arts
New York Council
for the Humanities
Regional Economic
Development Councils
TRIBUTE REGISTRY
You can celebrate a significant occasion, remember a loved one,
commemorate a milestone, or recognize someone special with an
honorary or memorial gift in their name to the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. These gifts were received between
February 10 and March 10, 2015.
In Honor of:
In Memory of:
Ron Luczak
Rich Products Corporation
Joseph Cardina Jr.
Carol Schmidt
Mrs. Helen Reilly
Sam Harlan Schonfeld
Barry Schonfeld
Charles F. Harrington
James M. Beardsley & Ellen M. Gibson
Mr. Ronald Biersbach
Mr. and Mrs. David Birkinbine
Dan & Sue Hornbarger
Nancy L. Julian
Kenneth Schmieder
Dr. Fraser B. Drew
James A. Brophy
George T. Driscoll, Jr.
Ann Duffy Bellows
Mrs. Marianne Sprague
Kerilyn Svea Reisch
Rich and Sandy Bisesi
Michael A. Tritto, Sr.
Mrs. Carol Schuster
Check out YOUR Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra online!
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 Personalized care & medication management
 Access to 24-hour personal care assistance
 Affordable Memory care program
410 Mill Street  Williamsville
716.632.3000  www.park-creek.com
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SPOTLIGHT ON SPONSOR
For the lawyers and staff of Harter Secrest & Emery LLP, a full-service law firm located
in downtown Buffalo, supporting the needs of our region’s exceptional not-for-profit
organizations is woven into the fabric of our law firm culture. From raising funds for international
relief initiatives to tutoring and mentoring children in local schools to advising start-up
companies on Buffalo’s West Side through the Westminster Economic Development Initiative,
we are privileged to share our skills and resources for the benefit of the many communities
that make up Western New York.
Harter Secrest & Emery supports a wide variety of organizations through volunteer service,
fundraising, pro bono legal work and ongoing legal representation. In addition to these efforts,
a number of our attorneys have served as directors for many area not-for-profit organizations,
including the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. We are honored once again this year to partner
with the BPO in enriching the lives of our region’s young people by underwriting the BPO’s
fabulously successful West Side Connection. Thank you, BPO, for the wonder you instill in your
listeners and the passion with which you represent Western New York.
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SPOTLIGHT ON SPONSOR
Eric Mower + Associates is a digitally-integrated independent marketing and public
relations agency. With 250 professionals in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Albany, New York
City; Cincinnati; Charlotte; and Atlanta, EMA delivers strategic insights, digital solutions,
smart creative, and award-winning results to clients. The agency has deep expertise in
several categories including: Healthcare, Financial Services, Energy + Sustainability, Buildings
+ Construction, Marketing to New Moms and Travel + Tourism. EMA ranks #9 in Advertising
Age’s “Best Places to Work.” As a proud supporter and sponsor of the BPO, we hope you
enjoy tonight’s celebration of The Music of Michael Jackson.
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BPO ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
Administration
Nicole Bodemer
Ambrose Price
Executive Director
Jacqueline Henry
John Van Haneghan
Executive Assistant
Susan Hill
Bethany Erhardt
Daniel Hart
Diana Martinusek
Development
Jennifer Barbee
Director of Development
Katie Bates
Crescendo Campaign Coordinator
James Cichocki
Special Events &
Annual Fund Coordinator
Wendy Diina
Associate Director of Development
Financial Accountant
Receptionist/Finance Assistant
Payroll and Accounts
Payable Associate
Marketing
Susan M. Schwartz
Advertising and Promotions
Coordinator
Guy Tomassi
Operations
Graphic Designer Consultant
Program Annotator & Historian
Major and Planned Gifts Officer
Don Nelson
Operations and
Development Assistant
Lisa J. Gallo
Robin Parkinson
Director of Education and Community Engagement
Jeff Dabbelt
Education Manager
Finance
Kevin James
Director of Finance
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Patron Services Representative
Subscription Sales
AndréeRenée Simpson
Ed Yadzinski
Education and
Community
Engagement
Patron Services Representative
Harmony Shulman
Communications Coordinator
Kate Jenkins
Alison Merner
Jesselyn Zailac
Patron Services Representative
Laura Curthoys
Scott Kurchak
Cary Michael Trout
Communications and
Research Coordinator
Patron Services Supervisor
Director of Marketing
and Communications
Barbara A. McCulloch
Manager of Information Resources
Group Sales Coordinator
General Manager
Director of Operations
Jennifer N. Comisso
Patron Services Representative
Christine Kramer
Subscriptions Supervisor
Lawrence Cahee
Debbie Camizzi
Andrew Dickerson
Solomon Dixon
Sarah Mayer
Amanda Paruta
Christopher Simmons
Kleinhans Music
Hall Staff
Chuck Avery
Master Electrician, IATSE local 10
Personnel Manager
Danny Gill
Audience Services Manager
Charlie McDonald
Event Manager
Maggie Shea
Elaine Riek
Brian Seibel
Sales and Patron Services
Michael Giambra
Director of Sales/Patron Services
Adam Cady
Patron & Ticket Services Manager
Katherine LeTeste
Box Office Assistant Manager
Sound Engineer, IATSE local 10
Chief Engineer
Building Services Manager
B U F FA LO P H I LH A R M O N I C O RC H ESTR A
PATRON INFORMATION
Lobby doors open 90 minutes before the concert is scheduled to begin, or
earlier depending on pre-concert activities.
All performances begin promptly at the designated time.
Handicapped Seating And
Assistance
Shuttle Service and BPO
Preferred Restaurants
Patrons requiring special assistance are urged
to contact the Box Office prior to attending
the concert. Handicapped seating is located
on the main floor on the outside aisles from
rows A-CC. Handicapped parking is available.
Please notify the parking attendant upon
arriving of your needs. Hearing Assistance
Devices are available at the coat check. Please
note, there is no elevator to the balcony level.
Shuttle Service from D’Youville College
Cameras, Recording Devices
Photography is permitted in the hall before
and after concerts, but all devices must
be turned off during a concert. It is strictly
forbidden to record or photograph a concert,
as it presents a distraction to the musicians and
other patrons.
Park and ride from D’Youville College
Lot D, 430 West Avenue, for all Saturday
performances. The lot is less than a quarter
of a mile away from Kleinhans and provides a
quick and easy way to get to the hall without
walking. Parking and shuttle service are free of
charge. Shuttles begin at 6:30 PM and end 30
minutes after the conclusion of the concert.
Parking may be available for other concerts.
Please join our email club at bpo.org or call
the Box Office for updated information.
Salvatore’s Symphony Shuttle $10
Kleinhans Music Hall maintains a smoke-free
environment.
Salvatore’s Italian Gardens offers shuttle
service at the rear corner of their parking lot
for just $10. This is a convenient and great
way to avoid any traffic or parking hassles.
Call the reservation hotline at (716) 8855000 and press 4 to reserve your place. Start your evening with a gourmet dinner
at Salvatore’s before the concert, selecting
from a prix fixe “Symphony Menu” for $31.
Call (716) 683-7990 for dinner reservations. Dinner and shuttle sold separately. The
shuttle leaves promptly at 7 PM.
All programs and artists are subject to change
without notice.
Henry’s Restaurant
Late Arrivals
Patrons arriving after the performance has
started will be seated at the discretion of
the House Manager. Seating will not be until
the first suitable break or at intermission. Late
seating may not be in the purchased location.
Sorry, no refunds or exchanges on single ticket
purchases.
Medical /Security
Security staff is available at all times and an EMT
is on site for all concerts and performances.
Please notify an usher or staff member is there
is a medical or security need.
Enjoy dinner at Henry’s on the ground floor
of Kleinhans Music Hall before evening BPO
concerts. For more information or to make
reservations, call (716) 881-4438.
31 Club
On N. Johnson Park and Elmwood Ave. in
Buffalo, offers complimentary shuttle service
for diners to and from Kleinhans on all concert
nights. Call (716)332-3131 for reservations or
more information.
Check out YOUR Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra online!
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