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October 12 and 13, 2012 Program includes Carl Maria von Weber's Bassoon Concerto in F, Op. 75 and Andante and Rondo Ungarese, Op.35; Menachem Zur's Tuba Concerto; Serge Rachmaninoff's Vocalise; and Richard Strauss's Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64.
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the richard b. fisher center
for the performing arts at bard college
AMERICAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAOctober 12–13, 2012
About The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College
The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, an environment for world-class artistic presentation in the Hudson Valley, was designed by Frank Gehry and opened in2003. Risk-taking performances and provocative programs take place in the 800-seatSosnoff Theater, a proscenium-arch space, and in the 220-seat Theater Two, which features a flexible seating configuration. The Center is home to Bard College’s DanceProgram and Theater and Performance Program, and host to two annual summer festi-vals: SummerScape, which offers opera, dance, theater, operetta, film, and cabaret; andthe Bard Music Festival, which celebrated its 23rd year in August with “Saint-Saëns andHis World.” The 2013 festival will be devoted to Igor Stravinsky, with a special weekendfocusing on the works of Duke Ellington.
The Center bears the name of the late Richard B. Fisher, the former chair of Bard College’sBoard of Trustees. This magnificent building is a tribute to his vision and leadership.
The outstanding arts events that take place here would not be possible without the contributions made by the Friends of the Fisher Center. We are grateful for their supportand welcome all donations.
The 2012 fall season at the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts is madepossible in part through grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and theNew York State Council on the Arts, as well as through the generous support of theBoard of The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College, theBoard of the Bard Music Festival, and the Friends of the Fisher Center.
The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College
Chair Jeanne Donovan FisherPresident Leon Botstein
presents
American Symphony Orchestra Leon Botstein, Music Director
Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826)Bassoon Concerto, Op. 75 (1811; rev. 1822)
Allegro ma non troppo Adagio Rondo–Allegro
David Nagy, bassoon
Serge Rachmaninoff (1873–1943)
Vocalise, Op. 34, No. 14 (1912; rev. 1915)Péter Blága, tuba
Carl Maria von WeberAndante and Rondo Ungarese, Op. 35 (1809; rev. 1813)David Nagy, bassoon
Menachem Zur (1942– )Tuba Concerto (1992; rev. 2008)Péter Blága, tuba
Intermission
Richard Strauss (1864–1949)Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64 (1911–15)
Sosnoff TheaterFriday, October 12 and Saturday, October 13 at 8 pmPreconcert talk at 7 pm by Peter Laki
Running time for this evening’s concert is approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes,with one 20 minute intermission.
The use of recording equipment or the taking of photographs during the performance is strictly prohibited.
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Notes on the Program
Carl Maria von WeberBorn in Eutin, near Lübeck, Germany, on November 18, 1786
Died in London on June 5, 1826
Bassoon Concerto in F Major, Op. 75, composed 1811 (rev. 1822)
Andante and Rondo Ungarese, Op. 35, composed 1809 (rev. 1813)
Carl Maria von Weber is best known in the orchestral repertory today for the overturesto his operas Der Freischütz, Euryanthe, and Oberon. In these and less familiar composi-tions, his masterful use of orchestral colors helped to usher in a new Romantic sensibil-ity. The three most famous operas date from the 1820s, shortly before Weber’s death atage 39, when he was at the height of his powers and fame. The previous decade had seenthe gradual ascent of his reputation after a low point in February 1810, when Weber wasarrested for embezzlement. (The charges were later dropped.) The 23-year-old composersought to turn his life around and began to keep a diary to document his activities. Hewas prodigiously talented as a composer, pianist, conductor, and critic, bringing to mindMozart, to whom he was related by marriage. He achieved considerable success in 1811
with a Clarinet Concertino he wrote for the celebrated virtuoso Heinrich Bärmann, whichled to requests for other concertos. As Weber explained in a letter:
The whole orchestra has been the very devil about demanding concertosfrom me. … I have orders for two Clarinet Concertos (of which one in F minoris almost ready), two large arias, a Cello Concerto for Legrand, a BassoonConcerto. You see I’m not doing at all badly, and very probably I will spend thesummer here [in Munich], where I am earning so much that I’ve somethingleft over after all expenses.
He wrote the Bassoon Concerto later that year for Georg Friedrich Brandt, soloist in theMunich Court orchestra. The first movement, in sonata form, features a brilliant openingtheme that yields to a more lyrical second one. The brief slow movement features thebassoon in an operatic guise, complete with a vocal cadenza, before the piece concludeswith a lively rondo finale. The work was published in a slightly revised version in 1822 asWeber’s First Bassoon Concerto, although in fact no second one was to follow. The clos-est thing—indeed, what might be thought of as a concerto missing its first movement—is the Andante and Rondo Ungarese. Weber originally composed that piece for viola andorchestra in 1809 and revised it four years later. The viola original was written for hisbrother and the bassoon version for Brandt, who premiered the piece in February 1813.Weber noted in his diary: “He blew the new Hungarian piece very well and to greatapplause; it all went well and made a great effect.”
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Serge RachmaninoffBorn in Semyonovo, Russia, on April 1, 1873
Died in Beverly Hills, California, on March 28, 1943
Vocalise, Op. 34, No. 14, composed 1912 (rev. 1915)
Composers often rue the day they wrote what was originally considered a trifling piece,but became something so popular that it drew public attention away from more sub-stantial works. Beethoven resented how the success of his early Septet overshadowedmuch greater compositions; Saint-Saëns encountered a similar problem with “The Swan”from The Carnival of the Animals, Sibelius with his Valse triste, and Prokofiev with hismarch from The Love for Three Oranges.
Serge Rachmaninoff was twice so confounded: audiences constantly demanded that heplay his Prelude in C-sharp Minor (1892), which he had written as a teenager, and later oneof his songs became equally popular. In 1912 he composed a set of 14 songs, Op. 34. The lastof them, revised during the summer of 1915, is a wordless vocalise. The singer that he hadin mind, soprano Antonina Nezhdanova (1873–1950), lamented not having a text, to whichthe composer responded: “What need is there of words when you will be able to conveyeverything better and more expressively than anyone could with words by your voice andinterpretation?” Rachmaninoff orchestrated the piece, originally written for voice andpiano, the following year in versions with and without voice. Others would later arrangethe famous work for nearly every imaginable instrument.
Menachem ZurBorn in Israel in 1942
Tuba Concerto, composed 1992 (rev. 2008)
Israeli-born composer Menachem Zur has composed more than 100 works, includingchamber, vocal, symphonic, and electronic music, and an opera. He is a graduate of theJerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, and studied in the United States at MannesCollege of Music, Sarah Lawrence College, and Columbia University, where he earned aD.M.A. in 1976. He was awarded the ACUM (Israeli ASCAP) prize in 2001 for life achieve-ment, twice received the Prime Minister’s prize for composition, and won a GuggenheimFellowship in 1981. His orchestral works have received numerous performances by theIsrael Philharmonic Orchestra and the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, and most of hispieces have been published in the United States and Israel. He is a professor emeritus atthe Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance and has also taught at Queens College,CUNY, and New York University. From 1992 to 1994 and 2000 to 2003 he served as thechairperson of the Israel League of Composers.
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Zur composed the Concerto for Tuba and Orchestra in 1992; it was premiered in Romaniaunder the baton of Dorel Pascu-Radulescu, with soloist Shmuel Adi Heshko, the tuba playerof the Israeli Philharmonic, for whom the piece was written and dedicated. The composerhas provided the following program note:
The Concerto consists of three contrasting parts (fast-slow-fast) that are playedconsecutively. Out of over one hundred of my works, this concerto comes clos-est in style to neoclassical musical language. The novelty in this compositioncan be recognized in the harmonic vocabulary, which toys with the tonality of A minor in an ironic manner, presenting the asymmetric nature of the tonal-ity alongside its symmetrical counterpart. In other words, the piece is not “in” A minor, but “on and about” A minor. In addition to this harmonic novelty, thereis a contrast that relates to the domain of color. Through the tradition of classi-cal music we have become accustomed to the convention that the main tune orleading part is played in a high register, while the underlying accompanimentexists in a low register. The Tuba Concerto challenges this convention.Interchanging the roles of “high,” “middle,” and “low” creates a certain tension.This tension between the different registers contains an additional facet, aseven within the instruments of the lower registers themselves the tuba soundsdeeper, and further distanced from the listener’s ear. This characteristic of thetuba can be attributed to its smooth and velvety timbre, which does not containany roughness of white noise, in contrast to the sound of the double bass orbassoon, unless the player deliberately plays it in a loud manner, employingsounds that shake the brass, effectively causing the tuba to vibrate, therebyresulting in a “hoarse” tone. The sensation of distance and velvety smoothnessis part of our natural acoustic world when we hear the tuba. Our perception ofthe instrument as remote, although unequivocally positioned at the front of thestage, is an additional source of tension and contrast.
Each of my works relies on extensive, creative laboratory research (both acousticand psycho-acoustic), which examines the relationship between differentaspects of the piece (melody-harmony-color-register-orchestration-texture),and their trajectory on the domain of time-tempo. In its original version (1992)I wished for the listeners to grow familiar with the effect of the phenomena ofdistance as they gradually outgrow this effect. For the Israeli premiere of theConcerto in 2008 with the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra conducted by LeonBotstein, I made some changes in the orchestration. The hope is that by dou-bling some solo sections with various instruments and timbres, the listener’sear will refrain from adjusting to the distant sound of the large instrument,thereby accentuating the sense of contrast and drama inherent in this “dimen-sion of proximity versus the dimension of distance,” which becomes apparentwhen the soloist plays solo.
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Richard StraussBorn in Munich on June 11, 1864
Died in Garmisch-Partenkirchen on September 8, 1949
Eine Alpensinfonie (An Alpine Symphony), Op. 64, composed 1911–15
They were friends and rivals, Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler, each promoting andperforming the work of the other, meeting with some frequency, and maintaining alively correspondence. But tensions always lurked as fundamental aesthetic differencesexisted between them. One of Mahler’s most famous quotes—“My time will come”—iseven more revealing in context; the rest of the statement is “when his [Strauss’s] is past.”
Strauss, who was four years Mahler’s junior, was deeply shaken when his friend died in1911 at the age of 50—“Mahler’s death has affected me greatly,” he wrote. It was shortlyafterward that Strauss took up a composition begun much earlier and that might ulti-mately be viewed as a tribute to Mahler’s spirit. Eine Alpensinfonie would turn out to bethe last of Strauss’s tone poems. He had written his first, Macbeth, in 1888 and followedit with Don Juan (1888–89); Tod und Verklärung (Death and Transfiguration, 1888–89); TillEulenspiegels lustige Streiche (Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks, 1894–95); Also sprachZarathustra (1896); Don Quixote (1897); Ein Heldenleben (A Hero’s Life, 1897–98); and alarge one he labeled a symphony: Symphonia domestica (Domestic Symphony, 1902–03).For the next decade Strauss concentrated on opera, composing Salome (1905), Elektra(1909), and Der Rosenkavalier (1911). Eine Alpensinfonie marked his return to instrumentalmusic after a nearly decade, as he wrote one last tone poem that brought together phi-losophy and nature, as Mahler had done in so many of his symphonies.
Strauss had toyed for decades with the idea of a nature symphony based on a boyhoodexperience of a mountain hike that he had made with some friends. The group got lostand was caught in a terrible storm. In a letter to his parents he mentioned a piece that“would begin with a sunrise in Switzerland.” Some sketches from around the turn of thecentury point toward a work in two movements with the title Tragedy of an Artist. Hereturned to the project 10 years later, this time for a four-movement work called The Alps.The idea, as musicologist Charles Youmans has observed, was to follow “an artist’s evolv-ing perception of nature to the stage at which it could be used as a liberation from meta-physics.” Then Strauss heard of Mahler’s death. He noted in his diary:
The death of this aspiring, idealistic, energetic artist is a grave loss. . . . As aJew, Mahler was still able to find exaltation in Christianity. As an old man thehero Wagner returned to it under the influence of Schopenhauer. It isabsolutely clear to me that the only way the German nation can regain itsvitality is by liberating itself from Christianity. . . . I shall call my alpine sym-phony “The Antichrist” for it has: moral regeneration through one’s ownefforts, liberation through work, adoration of eternal, magnificent Nature.
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Most of the composition of Eine Alpensinfonie took place in 1914 at Strauss’s home inGarmisch and the work was completed in February 1915. By this time he had dropped the“Antichrist” title drawn from Nietzsche (who had earlier inspired Also sprachZarathustra), although he retained the idea of surmounting religion and all metaphysicsthrough the adoration of nature. Strauss conducted the premiere, to mixed reviews, onOctober 28, 1915, in Berlin with the Dresden Hofkapelle Orchestra.
The vast one-movement composition, which contains some of Strauss’s most vivid tone-painting, calls for an enormous orchestra and lasts longer than any of his other orches-tral works. Strauss cast the piece in 22 continuous sections to which he gave titles.“Night” opens with a unison B-flat chord and a descending scale against which isintoned an ominous brass chorale theme; this leads to “Sunrise.” The main body of thework now begins with the vigorous theme of “The Ascent,” which features hunting hornssounded in the distance. “Entry into the Forest” offers some repose and magical orches-tration reminiscent of Wagner’s “Forest Murmurs,” coupled with Mahlerian bird calls.Water sounds make an appearance in “Wandering beside the Brook” and then become atorrent with “At the Waterfall.” “Apparition” refers to a legendary Alp sprite and continueswith “On the Flowering Meadows.”
“The Alpine Pasture” opens with cowbells, such as Mahler had used in his Sixth andSeventh symphonies, as well as with yodeling effects. The climbers now get lost in“Through Thicket and Brush on Wrong Paths” before emerging at the magnificent “Onthe Glacier.” The following “Dangerous Moments” depicts the perils as they get higherand reach “On the Summit.” The destination has been achieved and there is now “TheVision,” “The Mists Rise,” “The Sun Gradually Darkens,” “Elegy,” and “Calm Before theStorm.” “Thunderstorm,” prominently featuring wind and thunder machines, breaks themood to provide a violent climax. The climbers begin their “Descent” and themes heardon the way up pass in rather quick review on the way down. The final three sections aremore nostalgic: “Sunset,” “Conclusion,” and “Night,” bringing us back to the music withwhich the entire symphonic poem began.
—Christopher H. Gibbs, James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Music, Bard College
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Who’s Who
Leon Botstein ConductorThis season, Leon Botstein celebrates his 20th anniversaryas Music Director and Principal Conductor of the AmericanSymphony Orchestra. He is co-artistic director of theacclaimed SummerScape and Bard Music Festivals, whichtake place at the Richard B. Fisher Center for the PerformingArts, designed by Frank Gehry for Bard College. He is alsoConductor Laureate of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra,where he served as Music Director from 2003–2011. He hasbeen president of Bard College in New York since 1975.
Upcoming guest engagements include the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Hawaii Symphony,and Taipei Symphony. Botstein may also be heard on numerous recordings, includingoperas by Strauss, Dukas, and Chausson, as well as works of Shostakovich, Dohnányi,Liszt, Bruckner, Bartók, Hartmann, Reger, Glière, Szymanowski, Brahms, Copland, Sessions,Perle, and Rands. Many of his live performances with the American Symphony Orchestraare now available for download on the Internet.
Botstein is highly regarded as a music historian. He is the editor of The Musical Quarterlyand the author of numerous articles and books. Last year he gave the prestigious TannerLectures in Berkeley, California. For his contributions to music he has received the awardof the American Academy of Arts and Letters and Harvard University’s prestigiousCentennial Award, as well as the Cross of Honor, First Class, from the government ofAustria. In 2009 he received Carnegie Foundation’s Academic Leadership Award, and in2011 was inducted into the American Philosophical Society. He is also the 2012 recipientof the Leonard Bernstein Award for the Elevation of Music in Society.
Péter Blága Tuba Péter Blága was born in Debrecen, Hungary, and began his musical studies on eupho-nium and then on tuba in elementary school. He attended the Zoltán Kodály music highschool in Debrecen, studying with Márta Töroné Tóth, and completed his undergraduatework at the Ferenc Lizst Music Academy in Budapest, where he studied with LászlóSzabó. Blága is currently a graduate performance certificate student at The Bard CollegeConservatory of Music, where he has studied with Alan Baer, principal tubist of the NewYork Philharmonic, and Derek Fenstermacher, principal tubist of New Jersey Symphony.Blága won the first and special prizes in a Hungarian national tuba competition for highschool students in 2006; in 2010, as a freshman at the Liszt Academy, he won secondprize in the International Brass and Percussion Competition in Debrecen, and the follow-ing year took first prize in the same competition. He won the Conservatory ConcertoCompetition at Bard College in 2012. He has received generous support for his studies atBard College from Olivia and László Bitó.
©joanne savio
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David A. Nagy BassoonDavid A. Nagy was born and raised in Hungary and moved to the United States at age 18
to pursue double degrees at The Bard College Conservatory of Music, where he is a BitóScholar. He is currently studying with Patricia Rogers, Mark Goldberg, and Luis Garcia-Renart. Nagy has appeared in concerts on four continents, including solo recitals inHungary, Venezuela, and the United States. He recently gave a marathon performance ofFelix Mendelssohn’s two piano trios with his trio TNT. Other recent concert appearancesinclude the world premiere of Dylan Mattingly’s single-movement concerto for bassoonand chamber ensemble, A Way a Lone a Last a Loved a Long the Riverrun, withContemporaneous, and performances of J. S. Bach’s Flute Partita in A Minor as the prel-ude to Robert Kelly’s play Orpheus. Upcoming performances include a senior recital,Madness at the End, featuring his own arrangements of Debussy’s Sonata for Cello, andan evening of world premieres for solo bassoon written by young composers. He wasnamed a distinguished visitor of Táchira County, Venezuela, while he was a teachingartist at the San Juan de Colòn Music Festival. Nagy was awarded the Kodály Prize in2007 for his excellence in music and academics, and was the recipient of the 2003
“Student of the Year” cup. He is a passionate after-hours translator of literature, and awriter, photographer, and graphic designer. He plays on a 1976 Püchner Model 24, a giftfrom his mother upon his acceptance to the Bard Conservatory.
The American Symphony OrchestraFounded 50 years ago by Leopold Stokowski, the American Symphony Orchestra (ASO) con-tinues its mission to demystify orchestral music and make it accessible and affordable foreveryone. Under music director Leon Botstein, the ASO has kept Stokowski’s mission intact,and has also become a pioneer in what the Wall Street Journal called “a new concept inorchestras,” presenting concerts curated around various themes drawn from the visual arts,literature, politics, and history, and unearthing rarely-performed masterworks for well-deserved revival. These concerts are performed in the Vanguard Series at Carnegie Hall.
The orchestra also performs in the celebrated concert series Classics Declassified at PeterNorton Symphony Space, and is the resident orchestra of the Richard B. Fisher Center forthe Performing Arts at Bard College, where it appears in a winter subscription series aswell as Bard’s annual SummerScape and the Bard Music Festival. In 2010, the AmericanSymphony became the resident orchestra of The Collegiate Chorale, performing regu-larly in the Chorale’s New York concert series. The orchestra has made several tours ofAsia and Europe, and has performed in countless benefits for organizations, includingthe Jerusalem Foundation and PBS. ASO’s award-winning music education program,Music Notes, integrates symphonic music into core humanities classes in high schoolsacross the tristate area.
In addition to many albums released on the Telarc, New World, Bridge, Koch, andVanguard labels, many live performances by the American Symphony are now availablefor digital download. In many cases, these are the only existing recordings of some of therare works that have been rediscovered in ASO performances.
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Violin IErica Kiesewetter,
ConcertmasterYukie HandaEllen PayneDiane BruceRagga PetursdottirPatricia DavisJohn ConnellyAshley HorneElizabeth NielsenYana GoichmanMara MilkisNazig TchakarianSebu SirinianLisa TiptonAlicia EdelbergDavid Steinberg
Violin IISuzanne Gilman, PrincipalWende NamkungSophia KessingerLucy MorgansternKatherine Livolsi-LandauElizabeth KleinmanDorothy StrahlAlexander VselenskyAnn GilletteSarah ZunLisa SteinbergLaura BaldKathryn AldousShinwon Kim
ViolaWilliam Frampton,
PrincipalSally ShumwayRachel Riggs
Crystal GarnerShelley Holland-MoritzAdria BenjaminLouis DayEmily BasnerAh Ling NeuAriel Rudiakov
CelloEugene Moye, PrincipalSarah CarterAnnabelle HoffmanMaureen HynesTatyana MargulisElina LangLanny PaykinAnik Oulianine
BassTony Flynt, PrincipalJack WengerLouis BrunoPeter DonovanLouise KobyRichard OstrovskyWilliam SloatRichard Messbauer
FluteLaura Conwesser,
PrincipalKarla MoeDiva Goodfriend-Koven,
PiccoloSheryl Henze
OboeAlexandra Knoll, PrincipalErin GustafsonMatthew Dine,
English horn
HeckelphoneHarry Searing
ClarinetLaura Flax, PrincipalMarina SturmShari HoffmanLino Gomez, Bass clarinet
BassoonCharles McCracken,
PrincipalMarc GoldbergGilbert Dejean,
ContrabassoonMaureen Strenge
HornZohar Schondorf,
PrincipalDavid SmithChad YarbroughKyle HoytSara Cyrus, AssistantAdam KrauthamerShelagh AbateAaron KornIan Donald
TrumpetCarl Albach, PrincipalJohn DentJason CoveyNathan Botts
TromboneRichard Clark, PrincipalKenneth FinnJeffrey CaswellMark Johansen
The American Symphony OrchestraLeon Botstein, Music Director
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TubaKyle Turner, PrincipalDaniel Peck
TimpaniJonathan Haas, Principal
PercussionKory Grossman, PrincipalJavier DiazCharles DescarfinoMatthew Beaumont
HarpVictoria Drake, PrincipalLynette Wardle
KeyboardElizabeth Wright, Principal
OrganPaolo Bordignon
Offstage HornsDanielle Kuhlmann Leise Anschuetz-Ballou Theresa MacDonnellAlana Vegter
Offstage TrombonesMarc DonatelleDavid Read
Personnel ManagerAnn Yarbrough Guttman
Assistant ConductorZachary Schwartzman
Orchestra LibrarianMarc Cerri
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Stokowski Society Fund for the City of New YorkThe Frank and Lydia Bergen
FoundationThe Booth Ferris FoundationLeon BotsteinJeanne Donovan FisherMichael DorfThe Ann and Gordon Getty
FoundationDanny Goldberg and
Rosemary CarrollThe Faith Golding FoundationChristian A. Johnson Endeavor
FoundationRachel and Shalom KalnickiMary and Sam MillerStuart K. NelsonNew York State Council on the ArtsOpen Society InstituteThe Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels
Foundation, Inc.Felicitas S. ThorneMrs. James P. WarburgMr. and Mrs. Richard WilsonThe Winston Foundation
Sustaining Supporter The Jarvis and Constance Doctorow
FoundationGary GiardinaPeter KennardArthur LeonardMimi LevittDr. Pamela F. MazurJoAnne MeloccaroLynne MeloccaroShirley MuellerBruce SlovinJoseph and Jean SullivanDavid and Sylvia Teitelbaum Fund
Benefactor Level II Miriam BergerConnie ChenPatricia FaberKaren and Mark FinkbeinerIrwin and Maya HoffmanIBM CorporationErica KiesewetterJack KligerMarcia H. MoorRichard and Joanne MrstikMr. and Mrs. David E. Schwab IIDavid and Martha SchwartzPeter SourianIrene Zedlacher
Benefactor Level I Tania AhujaAnonymous (x2)Thomas CassillyIsabelle CazeauxBette CollomRhea Graffman-Cohen,
in honor of Miriam BergerAlan MallachJeanne MalterJames and Andrea NelkinKurt RauschWayne and Dagmar Yaddow
Orchestra Club Level II Harold AllenCarol H. AshCarol K. BaronRuth BaronMatthew and Debra BeatriceDavid C. BeekYvette and Maurice BendahanAdria BenjaminJohn BrautigamRichard CellerRoger ChatfieldBarbara ClapmanDr. Barton CohenMichele ConeElisabeth DerowPaul EhrlichW. J. FenzaMartha FerryVeronica FrankensteinMr. and Mrs. Joseph Lawrence GilmanNathan GrossJames HaydenThomas HaydenDr. and Mrs. Gerald HerskowitzSara HunsickerGeorge HutzlerDonald JulianoRobert KalishDavid KernahanMichael KishbauchIrving KleimanCaral G. KleinSeymour KoenigPeter KrollGerald LaskeySteve LeventisJudd LevyPeter A. Q. LockerStephen J. McAteerAlan McDougallClifford MillerElisabeth MuellerTatsuji Namba
Kenneth NassauThe Maury Newburger FoundationRoger PhillipsAnthony RichterKenneth RockLeonard RosenJanet SegalGeorgi ShimanovskyBruce SmithHarriet Solomon-ShonStanley StangrenAlan StenzlerHazel and Bernard StraussPaul StumpfJon TilleyKenneth WaldLarry WehrJanet WhalenKurt WissbrunLeonard ZablowAlfred ZollerKaren Zorn, Longy School of MusicMyra Zuckerbraun
List current as of August 2, 2012
American Symphony Orchestra PatronsThe American Symphony Orchestra Board of Directors, staff, and artists gratefully acknowledge the following individuals, foundations, corporations, and government agencies for their generosity and vital support.
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Donors to the Fisher CenterLeadership SupportEmily H. Fisher and
John AlexanderJeanne Donovan FisherMartin and Toni Sosnoff
FoundationRichard B. Fisher Endowment FundMartin T. and Toni SosnoffRobert W. Wilson
Golden CircleAnonymousThe Barbro Osher Pro Suecia
FoundationFalconwood Foundation, Inc.FMH FoundationLinda Hirshman and
David Forkosh**Jane and Aatos Erkko FoundationThe Marks Family FoundationMillbrook Tribute Garden, Inc.Thendara FoundationIn honor of Oakleigh B. Thorne
from Felicitas S. ThorneTrue Love Productions
Friends of the Fisher CenterProducerFiona Angelini and Jamie WelchArtekArthur F. and Alice E. Adams
FoundationAssociation of Performing Arts
PresentersBioseutica USA, Inc.Carolyn Marks BlackwoodChartwells School and University
Dining ServicesConsulate General of Finland in
New YorkThe Cultural Services of the
French Embassy in the United States
Barbara Ettinger and Sven HusebyThe Ettinger Foundation, Inc.Stefano Ferrari and Lilo ZinglersenAlexander Fisher MFA ’96
Catherine C. Fisher and Gregory A. Murphy
Emily H. Fisher and John Alexander
R. Britton and Melina Fisher
Key Bank FoundationHarvey and Phyllis** LichtensteinThe Maurer Family
Foundation, Inc.Ministry for Foreign Affairs
of FinlandNational Endowment for the Arts
(NEA)New York State Council on the
Arts (NYSCA)Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ottaway Jr.Drs. M. Susan and Irwin RichmanIngrid RockefellerDavid E. Schwab II ’52 and
Ruth Schwartz Schwab ’52
Bethany B. Winham
PatronHelen and Roger AlcalyAmerican-Scandinavian
FoundationMary I. Backlund and Virginia CorsiSandra and A. John Blair IIIAnne Donovan Bodnar and
James L. BodnarStuart Breslow and Anne MillerAnne and Harvey BrownBarbara and Richard DebsElizabeth de LimaTambra DillonDirt Road Realty, LLCInes Elskop and Christopher Scholz Elizabeth W. Ely ’65 and
Jonathan K. GreenburgAlan and Judith FishmanSusan Fowler-GallagherGE FoundationThomas and Bryanne HamillThe Harkness Foundation
for Dance, Inc.John Cage TrustDr. Harriette Kaley ’06
Mr. and Mrs. George A. KellnerRuth Ketay and Rene SchnetzlerLaura KuhnJane and Daniel LindauChris Lipscomb and
Monique SegarraLow Road FoundationStephen Mazoh and Martin KlineNancy A. MarksElizabeth I. McCannW. Patrick McMullan and
Rachel McPherson
Millbrook Vineyards and WineryAlexandra OttawayDavid A. SchulzDenise S. Simon and
Paolo VieiradacunhaAndrew Solomon and John HabichSarah and Howard SolomonDarcy StephensTeo Creative, Inc.Barbara and Donald ToberIlliana van Meeteren and
Terence C. Boylan ’70
Margo and Anthony Viscusi Aida and Albert Wilder
SponsorSarah Botstein and Bryan DoerriesCaplan Family FoundationMichelle R. ClaymanRichard D. CohenMr. and Mrs. Gonzalo de las HerasMichael F. DupreeCarlos Gonzalez and
Katherine StewartEliot D. and Paula K. HawkinsAlan Hilliker and Vivian W. LiuRachel and Dr. Shalom Kalnicki Mr. and Mrs. George A. KellnerGeraldine and
Lawrence LaybourneCynthia Hirsch Levy ’65
Barbara L. and Arthur MichaelsAndrea and Kenneth L. MironMr. and Mrs. Frederick P. PaytonQuality Printing CompanySanta Fe RestaurantCatherine M. and
Jonathan B. SmithTed SnowdonJohn TancockRobert and Melanie WhaleyWilder Consolidated
Enterprises Inc.Rosemary and Noel WerrettBeverley D. Zabriskie
SupporterDidi and David BarrettHarriet Bloch and Evan SakellariosKay Brover and Arthur BennettAlfred M. Buff and Lenore Nemeth Michael BywaterJohn DierdorffAmy K. and David DubinEve Propp Family Foundation
We honor the late Richard B. Fisher for his generosity and leadership in building and supporting thissuperb center that bears his name by offering outstanding arts experiences. We recognize and thankthe following individuals, corporations, and foundations that share Dick’s and our belief in presentingand creating art for the enrichment of society. Ticket sales cover less than 15 percent of our presenta-tion of outstanding art experiences. Help us sustain the Fisher Center and ensure that the perform-ing arts are a part of our lives. We encourage and need you to join our growing list of donors.
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Patricia FalkHarvey and Mary FreemanMartha Jane FleischmanAlicia Forster-WestlakeHelena and Christopher GibbsAlberta Gilbridge-WonderlinGilberte Vansintejan Glaser and
William A. GlaserMims and Burton GoldNan and David GreenwoodAlexander Grey and David CabreraDr. Eva B. GrieppRosemary and Graham HansonDavid S. HartJanet and William HartRupert and Yanina HopeLars Hedstrom and Barry JuddHedstrom and Judd, Inc.Mel and Phyllis HeikoDarren HenaultDr. Joan Hoffman and
Syd SilvermanMartin HolubDr. Barbara KennerBelinda and Stephen KayeHarold KleinKevin KloseSeymour and Harriet KoenigRose and Josh KoplovitzDanielle Korwin and
Anthony DiGuiseppeJames KraftElissa Kramer and Jay H. NewmanRamone LascanoMr. and Mrs. David LondonerMarilyn J. MarinaccioBarbara and Arthur MichaelsAndrea and Kenneth C. MironMargrit and Albrecht PichlerMelanie and Phillipe RadleyRhinebeck Department StoreJohn and Claire ReidTed Ruthizer and Jane DenkensohnBarbara and Dick SchreiberWilliam SiegfriedTed SnowdenEileen SottileH. Peter Stern and
Helen Drutt EnglishAllan and Ronnie StreichlerPeter SullivanElisabeth F. Turnauer-DerowJames H. and Maris Van AlenCornelius R. VerhoestSeymour WeingartenIrene Zedlacher
FriendJamie AlbrightDr. and Mrs. Morton AltermanAnonymousJoshua J. AronsonKathleen AugustineJohn J. Austrian ’91 and
Laura M. Austrian
Sybil BaldwinJack L. BarnettTheodore BartwinkAlvin and Arlene BeckerJessica BeckerHoward and Mary BellRichard L. BensonDrs. Daniel Berkenblit and
Phillipine Meister-BerkenblitFrederick BerlinerKurshed BhumgaraMarge and Ed BlaineSandra and Dr. A. John Blair IIIJeffrey and Ellyn BursteinJeanne and Homer ByingtonProf. Mary Ellen Caponegro ’78
MaryAnn and Thomas CaseDaniel Chu and Lenore SchiffMr. and Mrs. John CioffiColgate-Palmolive CompanyRichard CollensJean T. CookDr. Bruce Cuttler and
Joanne E. Cuttler ’99
C. Douglas and Leslie DienelJohn DobkinJoan and Walcott DunhamAbby H. and John B. DuxDavid Ebony and Bruce MundtElizabeth ElliottPatricia FalkMilly and Arnold FeinsilberArthur FenaroliDr. Marta P. FlaumRaimond FlynnEdward ForlieAllan FreedmanMary and Harvey FreemanEdward FriedmanFrances and Rao GaddipatiMarvin and Maxine GilbertNigel GillahLaurie GilmoreMr. and Mrs. Floyd GlinertDebby and Fred GlynnJudy R. and Arthur** GoldI. Bruce GordonStanley L. GordonFayal Greene and David J. SharpeAlice and Bob GreenwoodSheryl GriffithGilbert and Mary HalesDavid A. HarrisElise and Carl HartmanSue HartshornJames HaydenDorothy and Leo HellermanDelmar D. HendricksJan Hopkins and
Richard TrachtmanSky Pape and Alan HoughtonNeil IsabelleMark R. JoelsonJohn E. Johnson
Eleanor C. KaneLinda L. KaumeyerMr. and Mrs. John W. KellyMartha Klein and David HurvitzRobert J. KurillaJames LackRobert la PorteHelena LeeEric and Amala LevineGerald F. LewisSara F. Luther and John J. NeumaierJohn P. MackenzieCharles S. MaierHerbert MayoDr. Naomi MendelsohnEdie Michelson and
Sumner MilenderJanet C. MillsDavid T. MintzRoy MosesDoris MossJoanne and Richard MrstikMartha NickelsJill ObrigDouglas Okerson and
William WilliamsElizabeth J. and Sevgin OktayRobert M. OsborneGary S. PatrikDebra Pemstein and Dean VallasDavid Pozorski and Anna RomanskiSusan PriceKenneth S. RecuGeorge and Gail Hunt ReekeSusan RegisDr. Siri von ReisDrs. M. Susan and Irwin RichmanPeter and Linda RubensteinHeinz and Klara SauerMr. and Mrs. Edward T. ScottJames E. ScottDr. Alan M. SilbertElizabeth A. SimonPeter SipperleyDr. Sanford B. SternliebDr. Michael A. StillmanFrancis E. Storer Jr.Mark SuttonTaconic Foundation, Inc.Janeth L. ThoronTiffany & Co.Mr. Randy J. TryonJoan E. WebermanRobert WeissWendy and Michael WestermanWilliams Lumber and
Home CentersAlbert L. YarashusMike and Kathy ZdebRena Zurofsky
16
Donors to the Bard Music FestivalEvents in this year’s Bard MusicFestival were underwritten in partby special gifts fromHelen and Roger AlcalyBettina Baruch Foundation Michelle R. ClaymanJeanne Donovan FisherMimi LevittThe Mrs. Mortimer Levitt
Endowment Fund for thePerforming Arts
James H. Ottaway Jr.Denise S. Simon and
Paulo VieiradacunhaFelicitas S. ThorneFestival Underwriters
James H. Ottaway Jr.Opening Concert
Mimi LevittPreconcert TalksGuest ArtistsFilms
Furthermore: A Program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund, Inc.
Festival Book
Helen and Roger AlcalyFestival BookFestival Program
Margo and Anthony ViscusiGuest Artists
Joanna M. MigdalPanel Discussions
Paula and Eliot HawkinsChristina A. Mohr and
Matthew GuerreiroBetween the Concerts Supper
National Endowment for the Arts(NEA)
New York State Council on the Arts(NYSCA)
Friends of the Bard Music FestivalLeadership SupportMimi LevittThe Mortimer Levitt FoundationMr. and Mrs. James H. Ottaway Jr.Bettina Baruch FoundationDenise S. Simon and
Paulo Vieiradacunha
Golden CircleJeanne Donovan FisherThe Andrew W. Mellon FoundationJane W. Nuhn Charitable Trust
Felicitas S. ThorneMillie and Robert Wise
BenefactorHelen and Roger AlcalyAmerican-Scandinavian
FoundationThe Ann and Gordon Getty
FoundationArtekBanco Santander S.A.Barclays Bank Leonie F. BatkinMichelle R. ClaymanConsulate General of Finland
in New YorkJoan K. DavidsonMr. and Mrs. Gonzalo de las HerasElizabeth W. Ely ’65 and
Jonathan K. Greenburg FMH Foundation Eliot D. and Paula K. HawkinsLinda Hirshman and
David Forkosh**Anne E. Impellizzeri The J. M. Kaplan Fund, Inc.Susan and Roger KennedyBarbara KennerEdna and Gary LachmundAmy and Thomas O. MaggsMarstrand FoundationMinistry for Foreign Affairs
of FinlandThe Mrs. Mortimer Levitt
Endowment Fund for thePerforming Arts
National Endowment for the Arts(NEA)
New York State Council on the Arts(NYSCA)
Jim and Talila O’HigginsDimitri B. and Rania PapadimitriouPeter Kenner Family Fund of the
Jewish Communal Fund Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, Inc.Dr. Gabrielle Reem** and
Dr. Herbert J. KaydenDrs. M. Susan and Irwin RichmanDavid E. Schwab II ’52 and
Ruth Schwartz Schwab ’52
H. Peter Stern and Helen Drutt English
Dr. Sanford SternliebAllan and Ronnie StreichlerMerida Welles and
William “Chip” Holman The Wise Family Charitable
Foundation Elaine and James Wolfensohn
PatronABC Foundation Constance Abrams and Ann VerberEdwin L. Artzt and
Marieluise Hessel
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald AtkinsKathleen and Roland Augustine Elizabeth Phillips Bellin ’00 and
Marco M. S. Bellin Dr. Miriam Roskin Berger ’56
Helen ’48 and Robert Bernstein Helen and Robert Bernstein
Philanthropic Fund of theJewish Communal Fund
Anne Donovan Bodnar and James L. Bodnar
Sarah Botstein and Bryan DoerriesLydia Chapin Constance and David C. Clapp J. T. ComptonJane Cottrell and Richard KortrightArnold J. ’44 and Seena** DavisBarbara and Richard DebsMichael Del Giudice and
Jaynne KeyesRt. Rev. Herbert A. and
Mary Donovan Amy Knoblauch Dubin and
David DubinRobert C. Edmonds ’68
Ines Elskop and Christopher Scholz John GellerHelena and Christopher Gibbs Kim Z. GoldenAlison GrannucciAlan Hilliker and Vivien W. LiuJane and Robert HottensenFrederic K. and Elena Howard Joan and Julius JacobsonJasper JohnsDrs. Harriette and Gabor** KaleyRachel and Dr. Shalom KalnickiHelene and Mark N. Kaplan Belinda and Stephen KayeMr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Keesee IIIMr. and Mrs. George A. Kellner Klavierhaus, Inc.Seymour and Harriet KoenigAlison and John LankenauGlenda Fowler Law and Alfred LawEric and Amala LevineBarbara** and S Jay LevyCynthia Hirsch Levy ’65
Patti and Murray LiebowitzMartin and Toni Sosnoff
FoundationStephen Mazoh and Martin KlineW. Patrick McMullan and
Rachel McPhersonDr. and Mrs. Arthur MenkenMetropolitan Life Foundation
Matching Gift ProgramAndrea and Kenneth L. MironChristina A. Mohr and
Matthew GuerreiroKen MortensonMartin L. Murray and
Lucy Miller Murray Alexandra Ottaway
17
Eve Propp Barbara B. ReisBlanche and Bruce RubinAndrew Solomon and
John Habich SolomonSarah and Howard Solomon Martin T. and Toni Sosnoff Edwin A. SteinbergStewart’s ShopsAllan and Ronnie StreichlerElizabeth Farran Tozer and
W. James Tozer Jr.Tozer Family Fund of the New York
Community TrustIlliana van MeeterenOlivia van Melle CampRosemary and Noel WerrettAida and Albert WilderIrene ZedlacherWilliam C. Zifchak and
Margaret Evans
SponsorAnonymousRoland AugustineAna AzevedoMargaret and Alec BancroftEva Thal Belefont ’49
Everett and Karen CookPhillip S. Cooke Blythe Danner ’65
Dasein FoundationDavid G. Whitcomb FoundationWillem F. De Vogel and
Marion Davidson Roberto De AzevedoJohn A. DierdorffCornelia Z. and Timothy Eland Timothy and Cornelia Eland Fund
of the Fidelity Charitable GiftFund
Shepard and Jane Ellenberg Ellenberg Asset Management
Corp. Phyllis FederField-Bay FoundationFrancis Finlay and Olivia J. FussellLaura FlaxMartha Jane FleischmanDeborah and Thomas Flexner Donald C. FresneLaura GeneroCarlos Gonzalez and
Katherine Stewart Samuel L. Gordon Jr. and
Marylou TapallaMr. and Mrs. Jay M. GwynneMarjorie HartNancy and David HathawayMartin Holub and Karen Kidder**Lucas Hoogduin and
Adriana OnstwedderElizabeth D. and Robert HottensenPamela HowardJohn R. and Joyce Hupper
I.B.M. Matching Grants Program Susan JonasEdith Hamilton KeanFernanda Kellogg and
Kirk HenckelsClara F. and David J. LondonerMarstrand FoundationElizabeth I. McCannJames and Purcell Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. PaytonEllen and Eric PetersenJohn and Claire ReidDr. Siri von ReisAlfred J. and Deirdre RossDr. Paul H. Schwartz and
Lisa Barnes-SchwartzJames and Sara SheldonDavid and Sarah StackEdwin SteinbergArt and Jeannette TaylorBarbara and Donald ToberRichard C. Strain and Eva Van RijnArete and William** Warren Jack and Jill WertheimRobert and Melanie WhaleyMaureen A. Whiteman and
Lawrence J. ZlatkinSerena H. WhitridgeJulia and Nigel WiddowsonPeter and Maria WirthMarina van Zuylen
SupporterMunir and Susan Abu-HaidarBarbara J. AgrenJames Akerberg and
Larry SimmonsSaga M. AmbegaokarLeora and Peter ArmstrongIrene and Jack BanningDidi and David Barrett Karen H. Bechtel Dr. Susan Krysiewicz and
Thomas Bell Carole and Gary Beller Mr. and Mrs. Andy BellinBeth and Jerry BierbaumMr. and Mrs. David Bova Mr. and Mrs. William B. BrannanKay Brover and Arthur Bennett Madge BriggsDan F. and Nancy BrownKate Buckley and Tony Pell Phyllis Busell and James KostellPeter Caldwell and Jane Waters Miriam and Philip CarrollHugo M. J. Cassier and
Sarah ButtrickDavid ClainFrederick and Jan CohenMr. and Mrs. Kevin ConcaghSeth Dubin and Barbara FieldEma DunchJoan and Wolcott DunhamRuth Eng
Gail and John EylerHarold FarbermanIngrid and Gerald FieldsEmily Rutgers Fuller Michael H. GarretyJoseph W. and Joyce GeebJohn GellerDonald Gellert and Elaine Koss Mims and Burton Gold Victoria and Max GoodwinJanine M. GordonRichard GottliebMary and Kingdon Gould Jr. Nan and David GreenwoodMortimer and Penelope C. HallSally S. HamiltonJuliet HeyerSusan Hoehn and Allan BahrsWilliam HolmanDalya InhaberJay JollyKaren Bechtel Foundation of the
Advisor Charitable Gift FundRobert E. KausErica KiesewetterCharles and Katharine KingKaren KloppDr. and Mrs. Vincent KohRobert J. KurillaLowell H. and Sandra A. LambDebra I. and Jonathan LanmanWayne LawsonE. Deane and Judith S. LeonardBrent Lewis ’09
Walter LippincottLynn Favrot Nolan Family FundJeanette MacDonald and
Charles MorganJohn P. MackenziePhilip and Tracey MactaggartCharles S. MaierClaire and Chris MannMarilyn MarinaccioElizabeth B. MavroleonMia McCully ’07
Charles MelcherArthur and Barbara L. MichaelsSamuel C. MillerJohn E. Morrison IVMr. and Mrs. Alfred MudgeBernadette Murray and
Randy FertelKamilla and Donald NajdekAnna Neverova ’07
Jay H. Newman and Elissa KramerMr. and Mrs. William T. NolanMarta E. NottebohmElizabeth J. and Sergin OktayDr. Bernhard Fabricius and
Sylvia OwenLouis ParkerDavid B. and Jane L. ParshallSusan Heath and Rodney PatersonRuth Plager
18
John and Claire ReidBarbara ReisEmma Richter ’09
Susan F. RogersRosalie Rossi, Ph.D.John RoyallAndrew and Ellen SantandraDr. Gloria SchaferDagni and Martin SenzelDenise and Lawrence ShapiroDr. Scott and Alexis SmallNadine Bertin StearnsMim and Leonard SteinMary and Stephen StinsonMila TewellCarole TindallJohn Tuke and Leslie FarhangiDr. Elisabeth F. Turnauer-DerowAlan and Christine Vickery ’75
Monica WamboldTaki and Donald WiseJohn and Mary Young
FriendRev. Albert R. AhlstromLorraine D. AlexanderArthur A. AndersonAnonymousZelda Aronstein and
Norman EisnerArtscope, Inc.John K. AylingPhebe and George BantaJames M. BartonMr. and Mrs. Francis D. BartonSaida BaxtRegina and David BeckmanDr. Howard BellinRichard L. BensonDr. Marge and Edward BlaineClara BotsteinEric and Irene BrocksDavid and Jeannette T. BrownMr. and Mrs. John C. D. BrunoAlfred M. Buff and Lenore NemethMichael CaolaPamela Chow and Ted SmithRobert and Isobel ClarkDonald CooneyJoan CostaMillicent O. McKinley CoxLinda and Richard DainesMary E. DavisDana and Brian DunnAbby and John DuxPeter EdelmanPeter Elebash and Jane RobinsonJim and Laurie Niles ErwinPatricia FalkArthur L. FenaroliDavid and Tracy FinnLuisa E. FlynnPatricia and John ForelleMary Ann FreeSamantha Free
Stephen and Jane GarmeyAnne C. GillisAlysha Glenn ’09
Dr. Joel and Ellen GoldinStanley L. GordonSandra Graznow and Jim KearnsThurston GreeneAndrea Gross GuidoBen-Ali and Mimi HagginDavid A. HarrisSy HeldermanSharon and David HendlerCarol HenkenNancy H. HenzeGary HermanMartin HolubDavid Hurvitz and Martha KleinRocco G. IlardiDr. and Mrs. Gerald ImberRod and Caroline KeatingPatricia H. KeeseeMr. and Mrs. John W. KellyJoan Kend Diana Niles KingIrving and Rhonda E. KleimanThea KlirosSharon Daniel KroegerJeffrey LangProf. Edward C. LauferWayne LawsonBeth LedyLeon and Fern LernerLaurence and Michael LevinGerald F. LewisRuthie and Lincoln LymanM Group, LLCJohn P. MacKenzieHermes Mallea and Carey MaloneyAnnette S. and Paul N. MarcusHarvey MarekThe McGraw-Hill Companies
Matching Gift ProgramMarcus Mello ’04
Dr. Naomi MendelsohnPhilip MessingMillbrook Real Estate, LLCDeborah D. MontgomeryKelly Morgan Doris MossDebbie Ann and
Christopher MorleySusan and Robert MurphyNancy R. NewhouseHugh and Marilyn NissensonHarold J. and Helen C. NoahDouglas Okerson and
William WilliamsJames OlanderMarilyn and Peter OswaldGary S. PatrikSarah Payden ’09
Peter and Sally V. PettusLucas Pipes ’08
Dr. Alice R. Pisciotto
Eleanor PollakDavid Pozorski and Anna RomanskiD. Miles PriceStanley A. Reichel ’65 and
Elaine ReichelDr. Naomi F. Rothfield ’50 and
Lawrence RothfieldHarriet and Bernard SadowAntonia SalvatoSheila SandersDr. Thomas B. SandersHeinz and Klara SauerMolly SchaeferFrederick W. Schwerin Jr.Mary ScottDanny P. Shanahan and
Janet E. Stetson ’81
Muriel SimmonsBetsy Covington SmithJ. Kevin SmithPolly and LeRoy SwindellJessica and Peter TcherepnineGladys R. ThomasJaneth L. ThoronCynthia M. Tripp ’01
Leigh Beery and Jonathan Tunick ’58
Laurie TuzoRonald VanVoorhiesAndrea A. WaltonJohn WaldesJacqueline E. WarrenPeter WarwickRenee K. Weiss ’51
Barbara Jean WeyantAnne WhiteheadVictoria and Conrad WicherMr. and Mrs. John WinklerAmy WoodsRobert and Lynda YoumansMarvin Zelman
Major support for the Fisher Center’s programshas been provided by:Arthur F. and Alice E. Adams
FoundationHelen and Roger Alcaly The Andrew W. Mellon FoundationFiona Angelini and Jamie WelchThe Ann & Gordon Getty
FoundationAnonymousArtekBettina Baruch FoundationBioseutica USA, Inc.Carolyn Marks Blackwood and
Gregory QuinnChartwells School and University
Dining ServicesMichelle R. ClaymanThe Cultural Services of the French
Embassy of the United States
19
Joan K. DavidsonMr. and Mrs. Gonzalo de las HerasJohn A. DierdorffElizabeth W. Ely ’65 and
Jonathan K. GreenburgEstate of Richard B. FisherBarbara Ettinger and Sven HusebyThe Ettinger Foundation, Inc.Stefano Ferrari and Lilo ZinglersenAlexander D. Fisher MFA ’96
Catherine C. Fisher and Gregory A. Murphy
Emily H. Fisher and John AlexanderJeanne Donovan FisherR. Britton and Melina FisherFMH FoundationEliot D. and Paula K. HawkinsLinda Hirshman and
David Forkosh**HSBC Philanthropic ProgramsAnne E. ImpellizzeriJane and Aatos Erkko FoundationJane’s Ice CreamJane W. Nuhn Charitable TrustThe J. M. Kaplan Fund, Inc.Belinda and Stephen KayeSusan and Roger KennedyBarbara KennerMimi Levitt Chris Lipscomb and
Monique SegarraAmy and Thomas O. MaggsMansakenning LLCThe Marks Family FoundationMarstrand FoundationMartin and Toni Sosnoff FoundationThe Maurer Family Foundation, Inc.Joanna M. MigdalThe Millbrook Tribute GardenMillbrook Vineyards & WineryThe Mortimer Levitt Foundation Inc.Mrs. Mortimer Levitt Endowment
Fund for the Performing ArtsNational Endowment for the Arts
American Masterpieces: DanceNational Endowment for the Arts
(NEA)New England Foundation for the
Arts (NEFA)New York State Council on the Arts
(NYSCA)Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ottaway Jr.Dimitri B. and Rania PapadimitriouPeter Kenner Family Fund of the
Jewish Communal FundDr. Gabrielle H. Reem** and
Dr. Herbert J. KaydenDr. Siri von ReisRichard B. Fisher Endowment FundDrs. M. Susan and Irwin RichmanIngrid Rockefeller
David E. Schwab II ’52 and Ruth Schwartz Schwab ’52
The Schwab Charitable FundDenise S. Simon and
Paulo VieiradacunhaMartin T. and Toni SosnoffH. Peter Stern and
Helen Drutt EnglishDr. Sanford SternliebAllan and Ronnie StreichlerThendara FoundationFelicitas S. ThorneTrue Love ProductionsMargo and Anthony ViscusiBethany B. WinhamMillie and Robert WiseThe Wise Family Charitable
Foundation**deceasedAll lists current as of September 13, 2012
Boards and Administration
Bard CollegeBoard of TrusteesDavid E. Schwab II ’52, Chair
EmeritusCharles P. Stevenson Jr., ChairEmily H. Fisher, Vice ChairElizabeth Ely ’65, SecretaryStanley A. Reichel ’65, Treasurer
Fiona AngeliniRoland J. AugustineLeon Botstein+ , President of the
CollegeDavid C. ClappMarcelle Clements ’69*Melinda N. Donovan+Asher B. Edelman ’61
Robert S. Epstein ’63
Barbara S. Grossman ’73*Sally HambrechtGeorge F. Hamel Jr.Marieluise HesselMatina S. Horner+Charles S. Johnson III ’70
Mark N. KaplanGeorge A. KellnerMurray LiebowitzMarc S. LipschultzPeter H. Maguire ’88
James H. Ottaway Jr., Life TrusteeMartin PeretzStewart Resnick, Life TrusteeRoger N. Scotland ’93*The Rt. Rev. Mark S. Sisk, Honorary
TrusteeMartin T. Sosnoff Susan WeberPatricia Ross Weis ’52
+ ex officio* alumni/ae trustee
Senior AdministrationLeon Botstein, PresidentDimitri B. Papadimitriou, Executive
Vice PresidentMichèle D. Dominy, Vice President
and Dean of the CollegeMary Backlund, Vice President for
Student Affairs and Director ofAdmission
Norton Batkin, Vice President andDean of Graduate Studies
Jonathan Becker, Vice President andDean for International Affairsand Civic Engagement
James Brudvig, Vice President forAdministration
John Franzino, Vice President forFinance
Susan H. Gillespie, Vice President forSpecial Global Initiatives
20
Max Kenner ’01, Vice President forInstitutional Initiatives
Robert Martin, Vice President forAcademic Affairs and Director ofThe Bard College Conservatory ofMusic
Debra Pemstein, Vice President forDevelopment and Alumni/aeAffairs
The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing ArtsAdvisory BoardJeanne Donovan Fisher, ChairCarolyn Marks BlackwoodLeon Botstein+Stefano FerrariHarvey LichtensteinRobert Martin+Dimitri B. Papadimitriou+Martin T. SosnoffToni SosnoffFelicitas S. Thorne
AdministrationDebra Pemstein, Vice President for
Development and Alumni/aeAffairs
Bob Bursey, Senior ProducerGideon Lester, Director, Theater and
Dance ProgrammingMark Primoff, Director of
CommunicationsSusana Meyer, Producer,
SummerScape OperaMary Smith, Director of PublicationsGinger Shore, Consultant to
PublicationsEleanor Davis, Media and Marketing
ManagerJoanna Szu, Marketing AssociateBonnie Kate Anthony, Assistant
Production ManagerPaul LaBarbera, Sound and Video
EngineerStephen Dean, Stage Operations
ManagerVincent Roca, Technical DirectorMark Crittenden, Facilities ManagerJeannie Schneider, Business
ManagerAndrea Gross, Community Relations
ManagerPatrick King ’12, House ManagerCarley Gooley ’12, Assistant House
ManagerRoisin Taylor ’13, Assistant House
ManagerNicholas Reilingh, Box Office
ManagerCaitlyn DeRosa, Assistant Box Office
ManagerRay Stegner, Building Operations
Manager
Doug Pitcher, Building OperationsCoordinator
Daniel DeFrancis, Staff AssistantRobyn Charter, Staff Assistant
The Bard Music FestivalBoard of DirectorsDenise S. Simon, ChairRoger AlcalyLeon Botstein+Michelle R. ClaymanRobert C. Edmonds ’68
Jeanne Donovan FisherChristopher H. Gibbs+Paula K. HawkinsSusan Petersen KennedyBarbara KennerGary LachmundMimi LevittThomas O. MaggsRobert Martin+Kenneth L. MironChristina A. MohrJames H. Ottaway Jr.Siri von ReisFelicitas S. ThorneE. Lisk Wyckoff Jr.
Artistic DirectorsLeon BotsteinChristopher H. GibbsRobert Martin
Executive DirectorIrene Zedlacher
Associate DirectorRaissa St. Pierre ’87
Scholar in Residence 2013
Tamara Levitz
Program Committee 2012
Byron AdamsLeon BotsteinChristopher H. GibbsRobert MartinJann PaslerRichard WilsonIrene Zedlacher
Director of ChorusesJames Bagwell
Vocal Casting ConsultantSusana Meyer
The American SymphonyOrchestraBoard of DirectorsDanny Goldberg, ChairThurmond Smithgall, Vice-ChairDimitri B. Papadimitriou, Treasurer
Miriam BergerJoel I. Berson, Esq.**Michael DorfRachel Kalnicki
Jack KligerJan KrukowskiShirley A. Mueller, Esq.Eileen RhulenL. Stan Stokowski**Felicitas S. Thorne
AdministrationLynne Meloccaro, Executive DirectorOliver Inteeworn, General ManagerBrian J. Heck, Director of MarketingSebastian Danila, Library ManagerMarielle Métivier, Operations
ManagerKatrina Herfort, Ticketing Services
CoordinatorJennifer Luzzo, Development
ManagerMarc Cerri, Orchestra LibrarianAnn Yarbrough Guttman, Orchestra
Personnel ManagerBen Oatmen, Production AssistantJames Bagwell, Principal Guest
ConductorGeoffrey McDonald, Assistant
ConductorZachary Schwartzman, Assistant
ConductorRichard Wilson, Composer-In-
ResidenceLeszek M. Wojcik, Concert Archival
Recording
** honorary
New Albion Records andThe Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts
present
Vocal Quartet I: Friday, November 9 at 8 pmVocal Quartet II: Saturday, November 10 at 8 pmTwo different programs from Musical America’s 2012 Composer of the Year
Sosnoff Theater$15, 25, 35, 45
MEREDITH MONK
&VOCAL ENSEMBLE
22
About Bard College
Founded in 1860, Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, is an independent, nonsectarian, residential, coeducational college offering a four-year B.A. program in the liberal arts and sciences and a five-year B.A./ B.S. degree in economics and finance. The BardCollege Conservatory of Music offers a five-year program in which students pursue a dualdegree—a B.Music and a B.A. in a field other than music—and offers an M.Music in vocalarts and in conducting. Bard also bestows an M.Music degree at Longy School of Music ofBard College in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Bard and its affiliated institutions also grant thefollowing degrees: A.A. at Bard High School Early College, a public school with campuses inNew York City (Manhattan and Queens) and Newark, New Jersey; A.A. and B.A. at BardCollege at Simon’s Rock: The Early College, in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, and throughthe Bard Prison Initiative at five correctional institutions in New York State; M.A. in curator-ial studies, M.S. in economic theory and policy, and M.S. in environmental policy and in climate science and policy at the Annandale campus; M.F.A. and M.A.T. at multiple cam-puses; M.B.A. in sustainability in New York City; and M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. in the decorativearts, design history, and material culture at the Bard Graduate Center in Manhattan.Internationally, Bard confers dual B.A. degrees at the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences, St.Petersburg State University, Russia (Smolny College), and American University of CentralAsia in Kyrgyzstan; and dual B.A. and M.A.T. degrees at Al-Quds University in the West Bank.
Bard offers nearly 50 academic programs in four divisions. Total enrollment for Bard Collegeand its affiliates is approximately 5,000 students. The undergraduate college has an enroll-ment of more than 1,900 and a student-to-faculty ratio of 10:1. For more information aboutBard College, visit www.bard.edu.
© 2012 Bard College. All rights reserved. Cover Scott BarrowInside back cover © Peter Aaron ’68/EstoPage 21 Bohdan Hilash, Meredith Monk, Allison Sniffin, Katie Geissinger. © 2012 Musée du Louvre / Olivier Ouadah
Enclosed is my check made payable to Bard College in the amount of $
Please designate my gift toward: q Fisher Center Council q Bard Music Festival Council q Where it is needed most
Please charge my: q AmEx q Discover q MasterCard q Visa in the amount of $
Credit card account number Expiration date
Name as it appears on card (please print clearly)
Address
City State Zip code
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BECOME A FRIEND OF THE FISHER CENTER TODAY!
Since opening in 2003, The Richard B.Fisher Center for the Performing Arts
at Bard College has transformed cultural life in the Hudson Valley with
world-class programming. Our continued success relies heavily on individuals such as you. Become aFriend of the Fisher Center today.
Friends of the Fisher Center membership is designed to give
individual donors the opportunity to support their favorite programs
through the Fisher Center Council or Bard Music Festival Council. As aFriend of the Fisher Center, you will
enjoy a behind-the-scenes look atFisher Center presentations and
receive invitations to special eventsand services throughout the year.
Friend ($100–349)• Advance notice of programming• Free tour of the Fisher Center• Listing in the program
($5 of donation is not tax deductible)
Supporter ($350–749) All of the above, plus:• Invitation for you and a guest to a season preview event• Invitations to opening night receptions with the artists• Invitation for you and a guest to a select dress rehearsal
($5 of donation is not tax deductible)
Sponsor ($750–1,499) All of the above, plus:• Copy of the Bard Music Festival book• Invitation for you and a guest to a backstage technical
demonstration ($40 of donation is not tax deductible)
Patron ($1,500–4,999) All of the above, plus:• Opportunity to buy tickets before sales open to
the general public• Exclusive telephone line for Patron Priority handling
of ticket orders• Invitation for you and a guest to a pre-performance
dinner at a Hudson River Valley home($150 of donation is not tax deductible)
Producer/Benefactor ($5,000+) All of the above, plus:• Seat naming opportunity• Invitations to special events scheduled throughout the year• Opportunity to underwrite events
($230 of donation is not tax deductible)
Please return your donation to:
Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts
Bard CollegePO Box 5000
Annandale-on-Hudson NY12504-5000
fishercenter.bard.edu/support
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845-758-7900 | fishercenter.bard.eduBe the first in line for news of upcoming events, discounts, and specialoffers. Join the Fisher Center's e-newsletter at fishercenter.bard.edu.
Conservatory SundaysConcerts performed by the talented students of The Bard College Conservatory of Music, with faculty and special guests
OCTOBER 14: Faculty/student chamber music
OCTOBER 21: Conservatory Orchestra, conducted by Leon Botstein
OCTOBER 28: Music Alive! (new music presented by artisticdirectors Joan Tower and Blair McMillen)
DECEMBER 9: Conservatory Orchestra, with guest conductor Marcelo Lehninger (MFA ’07)
All concerts are at 3 pm.
Meredith Monk & Vocal EnsembleProduced by New Albion RecordsFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9: Vocal Quartet ISATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10: Vocal Quartet IITwo different programs from Musical America’s 2012
Composer of the YearAll concerts are at 8 pm.
John Cage: On & Off the Air!Commissioned by the Fisher Center and produced by the John Cage TrustSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17 AT 8 PM
American Symphony OrchestraConducted by Leon Botstein, music directorWorks by Harold Farberman and Anton BrucknerFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22 AND SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23
All concerts are at 8 pm and feature a preconcert talk at 7 pm.
Recommended