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PREMIER SPONSOR: VOLUME 9

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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Page 1: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

PREMIER SPONSOR:

V O L U M E 9

Page 2: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

2

Play bocce ball, attend a lively concerto or relax with friends over lunch in our Fireside Grille. It’s all up to you. With worry-free advantages

such as not-for-profit ownership, a local board of directors, and CCAC accreditation, Marquette truly is the place to be.

8140 Township Line Rd. | Indianapolis, IN 46260 phone (317) 875-9700 | www.marque� eseniorliving.org

To learn more, call, visit our website or stop by our community.

Find your PLACE

698887

Play bocce ball, attend a lively concerto or relax with friends over lunch in our Fireside Grille. It’s all up to you. With worry-free advantages

such as not-for-profit ownership, a local board of directors, and CCAC accreditation, Marquette truly is the place to be.

8140 Township Line Rd. | Indianapolis, IN 46260 phone (317) 875-9700 | www.marque� eseniorliving.org

To learn more, call, visit our website or stop by our community.

Find your PLACE

698887

Play bocce ball, attend a lively concerto or relax with friends over lunch in our Fireside Grille. It’s all up to you. With worry-free advantages

such as not-for-profit ownership, a local board of directors, and CCAC accreditation, Marquette truly is the place to be.

8140 Township Line Rd. | Indianapolis, IN 46260 phone (317) 875-9700 | www.marque� eseniorliving.org

To learn more, call, visit our website or stop by our community.

Find your PLACE

698887

Page 3: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

3

We’re all citizens. Just like you.Whether she’s playing guitar or making sure computer programs are in sync, Julie knows the audience wants excellence. That’s no small challenge when your audience is 400,000 customers in and around Indianapolis. People depend on Julie, and others like her, for the water that brews coffee and fi lls dog dishes. So every day she makes sure her performance is the best it can be, because Julie doesn’t just work for Citizens Energy Group. She lives here too.

MUSICIAN. TECHIE.

CITIZEN. EMPLOYEE.

Visit IndyCitizens.com to learn more.

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Concerts15 June 17, 18, 201624 June 24, 25, 201628 July 2–4, 201634 July 8, 9, 201644 July 15, 16, 201650 July 22, 23, 201654 July 29–31 201660 August 5, 6, 201664 August 12, 13, 201666 August 19, 20, 201668 August 26, 27, 201672 September 1, 2, 201674 September 3, 4, 2016

Featured Articles78 ISO Musicians Around Town79 Arts in Indy

Departments7 Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Information 11 ISO Profile

Support81 Endowment84 Lynn Society86 Annual Fund90 Tribute Gifts 91 Why We Give92 Corporate Sponsors

Artists13 Scott Hoke18 Tito Muñoz19 Jon Kimura Parker25 Brent Havens25 Michael Runyan26 Brody Dolyniuk30 Alfred Savia30 Zach De Pue31 Murray Cox35 David Danzmayr37 Caroline Goulding46 Vince Lee51 Jack Everly52 Michael Cavanaugh55 The Temptations57 The Four Tops61 Waterloo65 Classical Mystery Tour67 Toto69 Who’s Bad73 Super Diamond75 The Company Men

The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra9 Musicians of the ISO10 Board of Directors20 Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue Program Notes40 All Mozart Program Notes80 FORTE Leadership Committee93 Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra Association94 Administration

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie 2016THE PROGRAM BOOK

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WELCOME

Gary GinstlingChief Executive Officer

Dear ISO patrons, supporters and friends,

On behalf of the ISO board, musicians, staff, ushers and volunteers, I’d like to welcome you to the 35th season of Marsh Symphony on the Prairie—Indiana’s most beloved outdoor musical tradition.

Since 1982, the Marsh Symphony on the Prairie series has grown considerably—from eight concerts total in the first year, to 28 concerts this summer. This series has become the only outdoor music festival of its kind in the state.

Where else can you gather your entire family, pack your own picnic and enjoy everything from Gershwin and Mozart to the playlists of John Williams, ABBA, The Beatles and Neil Diamond, performed by one of the country’s leading orchestras? Where else can you experience a live symphony performing patriotic favorites with a full complement of cannons and fireworks? And this year—where else can you see the music of Billy Joel, The Temptations, The Four Tops and Toto, up close and personal?

In addition to Marsh Symphony on the Prairie, the ISO has a very active summer throughout central Indiana, including:

• The ISO’s Fifth Third Lunch Break Series at the Hilbert Circle Theatre on June 16, June 23, June 30, July 7, July 14 and July 21. Simply grab your lunch and head to the theatre for a 30–40 minute performance of symphonic favorites. Tickets are only $5.

• The ISO’s free Symphony in Park Series at Garfield Park on June 22 and Ellenberger Park on July 13. Patrons are welcome to bring their own picnics.

• The Silk Road Ensemble with Yo-Yo Ma at the Hilbert Circle Theatre on August 15 (The ISO does not perform at this concert). We are pleased to showcase the Silk Road Ensemble and Yo-Yo Ma as they redefine classical music for 21st century audiences.

All of these concerts would not be possible without the generous support of companies, supporters, and patrons, like you. Thank you to Marsh Supermarkets, the title sponsor of Marsh Symphony on the Prairie, and all of the corporations and individuals listed in this program book.

Additionally, if you are a part of the service groups we are honoring this summer—educators, scouts, first responders, nurses, and military service men and women—we congratulate you. Thank you for your commitment and service to us all. Your work and dedication makes our community stronger!

Enjoy the performance tonight and we hope to see you at a number of the ISO concerts this summer!

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LIKE WHAT YOU’RE HEARING ON THE PRAIRIE? COME SEE THE ISO AT THE HILBERT CIRCLE THEATRE!

IF YOU LIKE: THE ISO SUGGESTS:

GERSHWIN’S RHAPSODY IN BLUE BEETHOVEN’S “EROICA” AND ADAMS’ SAXOPHONE CONCERTO

FEBRUARY 17 & 18, 2017

>>>>>> The jazzy sounds of Rhapsody in Blue can also be heard in John Adams’ Saxophone

Concerto, performed by saxophonist Tim McAllister along with the ISO.

Enjoy patriotic favorites of George M. Cohan, John Philip Sousa, Irving Berlin and more!

STAR SPANGLED SYMPHONY AN AMERICAN CELEBRATIONMAY 12 & 13, 2017

>>>>>>

Music Director Krzysztof Urbański conducts

world of both composers and their rivalry including an ISO Commission and

world premiere, Mozart and Salieri, composed and performed by pianist Dejan Lazić.

ALL MOZARTMOZART & SALIERI

APRIL 28, 2017

>>>>>>

John Williams’ epic score performed live to picture by the ISO.

MOVIE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMSINDIANA JONES: RAIDERS OF THE

LOST ARK: FILM + ORCHESTRANOVEMBER 18 & 19, 2016

>>>>>>

Single tickets on sale Monday, August 8 at 10am. Enjoy FEEdom no ticket fees from August 8-12.

To view the entire 2016-2017 season or to purchase tickets, visit IndianapolisSymphony.org, or call 317.639.4300.

Page 7: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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MARSH SYMPHONY ON THE PRAIRIE INFORMATION

Arrival: Gates open two hours prior to all concerts for picnicking. On July 2, 3 and 4, gates open at 4:30 p.m. Gates open at 5: 00 p.m. on July 31.

What to Bring: Patrons may bring lawn chairs, blankets, food and alcoholic beverages. Food vendors are on site at all concerts. Beer and wine are available for sale at all concerts. No pets, grills, fireworks, tiki torches, large tables, large umbrellas, tents, canopys or sparklers will be permitted. Smoking is permitted in a designated area only.

Tables: Tables accommodate up to 10 people and are $70 in addition to the admission price. Table pricing for Premium concerts (July 2, 3, 4, 29, 30, 31 and August 12, 13) is $90. Call 317.639.4300 or visit IndianapolisSymphony.org for reservations. A limited number of tables will be available for sale at the gate for most concerts.

Premium Parking: For only $25 ($35 on premium nights) per spot, Premium Parking offers a quick commute to your seat and a fast exit after the concert. This lot is accessed from North Drive, located north of the main entrance. To order call the Hilbert Circle Theatre Box Office at 317.639.4300 or at IndianapolisSymphony.org

Roped-off Lawn Seating: Groups of 30 or more can enjoy a private, roped-off lawn area, premium table seating and special savings on tickets and tables. An evening concert at Conner Prairie is ideal for birthday and anniversary parties, corporate functions and family reunions. Contact Joshua Shuck at 317.231.6788 or email [email protected].

Catering and Facility Rental: If you are coming with a large group, let Conner Prairie do the cooking. There are special dining options, including beer and wine, for groups of 10 or more. Pre-order from a variety of boxed meals by noon on the Monday prior to the concert. Or, enjoy your own private affair by renting one of the Conner Prairie’s facilities, and let them plan your evening for you. Search menus at connerprairie.org or call Conner Prairie Catering at 317.214.4495 for details.

First Aid: Contact an usher or go to the main amphitheater gate for immediate assistance.

For Patrons with Disabilities: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie features accessible parking, entrances, restrooms and seating. Individuals with vehicles displaying disabled license plates, hang tags or stickers will be directed to a convenient parking area and offered golf cart assistance to the gate. Due to the high volume of guests at Marsh Symphony on the Prairie, golf cart access will not be available to guests without proper disability identification; however, shuttles with seating will be available in the parking lots to assist guests to the gate.

Weather Alerts: Call the ISO’s weather hotline at 317.758.SOTP for weather and concert cancellation updates. Concert cancellation due to weather is reported via the ISO’s website, Facebook page and twitter feed. “Like” the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra on Facebook and follow @indy_symphony on twitter for up-to-date concert information.

Rain Checks: Rain checks will be distributed should weather conditions exist that results in a program change, reduction in the length of a performance or cancellation of a concert. Rain checks will admit you for lawn seating to any remaining 2016 Marsh Symphony on the Prairie concert. Replacement table seating will be arranged through the Hilbert Circle Theatre Box Office, subject to availability.

Contact the ISO: 317.639.4300 or [email protected].

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First ViolinZachary De Pue, Concertmaster The Ford-West Chair Alexander Kerr, Principal Guest Concertmaster Philip Palermo, Associate Concertmaster Peter Vickery, Assistant Concertmaster The Meditch ChairDean Franke, Assistant Concertmaster The Wilcox ChairBarbara Fisher AgrestiJennifer Greenlee Sherry HongMichelle Kang Vladimir KrakovichCharles Morey

Second ViolinKonstantin Umansky, PrincipalDavid Bartolowits, Associate PrincipalMary Anne Dell’Aquila, Assistant Principal The Taurel Chair The Dick Dennis Fifth Chair* Louise Alexander Patrick Dalton-Holmes Victoria Griswold Hua JinJayna ParkBarbara RadomskiLisa ScottOleg Zukin

ViolaThe Schlegel ChairMike Chen, Acting Principal/ Associate PrincipalBeverly Scott, Assistant Principal Nancy AgresAmy KniffenTerry E. LangdonEva Lieberman Stephanie Tong

Cello Austin Huntington, PrincipalPerry Scott, Associate Principal Chair Anonymously Endowed Sarah Boyer Ingrid Fischer-Bellman The Randall L. Tobias ChairMark Maryanovsky Anne Duthie McCafferty The Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Rudesill Chair

Sé-Doo ParkJian-Wen Tong

ContrabassJu-Fang Liu, PrincipalRobert Goodlett II, Assistant PrincipalNami AkamatsuL. Bennett CrantfordGregory DuganPeter HansenBrian Smith

FluteKaren Evans Moratz, Principal The Sidney and Kathy Taurel ChairRobin PellerRebecca Price Arrensen, Assistant Principal

PiccoloRebecca Price Arrensen The Janet F. and Dr. Richard E. Barb Chair

OboeJennifer Christen, Principal The Frank C. Springer Jr. ChairSharon Possick-LangeRoger Roe, Assistant Principal English Horn Roger Roe The Ann Hampton Hunt Chair

ClarinetDavid A. Bellman, Principal The Robert H. Mohlman ChairCathryn Gross The Huffington ChairSamuel Rothstein, Assistant Principal

Bass ClarinetSamuel Rothstein

BassoonJohn Wetherill, Principal Michael Muszynski Mark Ortwein, Assistant Principal

ContrabassoonMark Ortwein

HornRobert Danforth, Principal The Robert L. Mann and Family Chair Richard Graef, Assistant PrincipalJulie Beckel Yager

Jerry Montgomery The Bakken Family ChairJill Boaz

TrumpetThe W. Brooks and Wanda Y. Fortune Chair Robert Wood Marvin C. Perry II, Acting Principal/ Assistant Principal

TromboneJames Beckel, PrincipalK. Blake Schlabach, Assistant Principal

Bass TromboneJared Rodin, Acting Bass Trombone The Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Test Chair

TubaAnthony Kniffen, Principal

TimpaniJack Brennan, Principal The Thomas N. Akins ChairCraig A. Hetrick, Assistant Principal

PercussionBraham Dembar, PrincipalCraig A. HetrickPedro Fernandez

HarpDiane Evans, Principal The Walter Myers Jr. Chair

Keyboard The Women’s Committee Chair Endowed in honor of Dorothy Munger

PersonnelK. Blake Schlabach, ManagerL. Bennett Crantford, Assistant Manager

LibraryJames Norman, Principal LibrarianLaura Cones, Assistant Principal LibrarianSusan Grymonpré, Assistant Librarian

StageQuentin L. Quinn, ManagerKenneth Bandy, Technician P. Alan Alford, TechnicianSteven A. Martin, Technician

MUSICIANS OF THE INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Krzysztof Urbański, Music Director Jack Everly, Principal Pops Conductor Raymond Leppard, Conductor Laureate Vince Lee, Associate Conductor

*The Fifth Chair in the Second Violin Section is seated using revolving seating. String sections use revolving seating.

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Don AltemeyerSherry AmlungHon. Alex M. Azar IIDeborah Ware BaloghCharlene Barnette*Michael Becher*Barry J. Bentley*Christina Bodurow, Ph.D.*John A. BrattBryan Brenner*Vincent Caponi*Trent CowlesAndrea Cranfill*Gary Ginstling*Peter Howard, Ph.D.Ann Hampton Hunt

Phil KenneyJoseph M. KesslerDavid KleimanMartha D. Lamkin*Sarah LechleiterGreg LoewenScott MartinMorrie MaurerBruce McCawKaren H. MersereauDavid MorganPeter A. Morse Jr.Gerald L. MossMarc NicholsJackie NytesMichael P. O’Neil

Kay PashosAlice K. SchlossCarson ShadowenYvonne H. Shaheen*Christopher SlapakJ. Albert Smith Jr.Mary SoladaMarianne Williams TobiasPete WardDavid WilcoxRalph V. Wilhelm*James C. Zink Sr.Jennifer Zinn

*Executive Committee

John M. Mutz, ChairBob AnkerSen. Dan CoatsStephen E. DeVoeCarolyn S. Hardman

Kay KochGordon E. Mallett, Ph.D.Robert B. McNamaraCharles O’DrobinakHenry C. Ryder

Fred E. SchlegelMartha Anne VarnesDr. Charles H. Webb Jr.Richard D. Wood

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Founded by Ferdinand SchaeFer in 1930Maintained and operated by the indiana SyMphony Society, inc.

OfficersVincent capOni, ChairYVOnne H. sHaHeen, Vice-ChairGarY GinstlinG, Chief Executive Officer cHarlene Barnette, SecretaryMicHael BecHer, Treasurer

BOard Of directOrs

BOard Of trustees

Mission of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra:To inspire, entertain, educate and challenge through innovative programs and

symphonic music performed at the highest artistic level.

Vincent Caponi, Chair

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Under the leadership of Krzysztof Urbański, one of the most acclaimed young conductors in the world, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra is dedicated to performing concerts of the highest artistic quality, offering accessible musical experiences for all ages, working collaboratively to create powerful, enriching arts events, and serving its community like never before—inside and outside the concert hall.

A Brief History Under the baton of Ferdinand Schaefer, 60 men and women made their official debut as the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra on Sunday, November 2, 1930, in Caleb Mills Hall in the newly built Shortridge High School. In the decades since this debut concert, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra has emerged as one of America’s top orchestras that attracts the finest musicians, guest conductors and artists from all over the world and presents quality classical, pops, family and holiday programming to hundreds of thousands of people each year. The ISO has received national and international acclaim with its radio broadcasts, tours and recordings and became the first major orchestra with a resident ensemble (Time for Three).

The ISO’s home—the Hilbert Circle TheatreBuilt in 1916, the Circle Theatre in downtown Indianapolis was the first motion picture palace west of New York built especially for the purpose of showing feature-length photoplays. From 1916–1981, the Circle Theatre’s repertoire ranged from world premiere movie features, classical concerts and live stage shows to low-budget motion pictures and short films. The facility was transformed into an orchestra hall on October 12, 1984, when the ISO made its move from Clowes Memorial Hall to downtown Indianapolis. With a significant gift from Steve and Tomisue Hilbert in 1996, the hall was renamed the Hilbert Circle Theatre. In 2013, new seats were installed to create more accessibility and comfort for patrons, courtesy of Lilly Endowment Inc.

Leadership within the ISOMaestro Krzysztof Urbański was appointed as the ISO’s seventh Music Director on October 19, 2010, and has now become a preferred and highly respected conductor among top orchestras in Europe, Asia and the United States. Principal Pops Conductor Jack Everly’s approach to innovative pops programming has garnered acclaim throughout North America, where he continues to serve as the Principal Pops Conductor for four major orchestras, including Indianapolis. Concertmaster Zach De Pue is in his ninth season with the ISO and leads the orchestra in performances and new audience development initiatives. Conductor Laureate Raymond Leppard, who successfully led the ISO for 14 years as Music Director, continues his involvement through appearances on the podium each season.

Marsh Symphony on the PrairieIn June of 1982, The Indianapolis Star concluded its assessment of the ISO’s new outdoor summer series with: “As the final and familiar strains wafted over the surrounding hills, the sky darkened and fireflies danced over the audience—another symphony on the Prairie has ended, but long would be remembered.” That first performance also featured 14-year-old violin prodigy, Joshua Bell. Since then, the Marsh Symphony on the Prairie concert series has grown from eight concerts to what is is today: 27 concerts entertaining more than 100,000 people over 13 weekends. With the talented musicians on stage from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and special guest stars from all musical genres, Marsh Symphony on the Prairie is one of Indiana’s beloved musical events and summertime traditions.

ISO PROFILE

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IN THE

INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

ELLENBERGER PARK7:30PM

GARFIELD PARK7:30PM

BRING YOUR LUNCH, GRAB A SEAT, AND LET THE ISO FEED YOUR SOUL WITH SYMPHONIC FAVORITES.

JUNE 16, JUNE 23, JUNE 30, JULY 7, JULY 14 & JULY 21

Media Sponsor:

BUY TICKETS AT INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG, CALL 317.639.4300, OR BUY AT THE DOOR.

Supported by:

!

W I T H T H E I N D I A N A P O L I S S Y M P H O N Y O R C H E S T R A

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Scott Hoke HOST

Scott Hoke has been the full-time host of Marsh Symphony on the Prairie since 2004. He is a 33-year veteran in broadcasting in the Indianapolis area. On the radio, he was the local host of “Morning Edition” on WFYI 90.1 FM from 2004–2013, and on television, he anchors coverage of the popular “Mecum Muscle Cars & More” auction series on NBC Sports Network.

When he’s not on television, radio, or stage, Scott is in demand as a voice-over artist and emcee. He has done narration and commercials for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Roche Diagnostics, Eli Lilly, CBS, ESPN, the NCC, Hal Leonard Publishing, the Indianapolis Indians, Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Papa John’s Pizza, Old National Bank, Beck’s Seeds, Xerox, Rolls-Royce Allison, Christel DeHaan

Foundation, United Way and the U.S. Department of Defense, among others. He has also worked for the Indiana Pacers as pre-game and post-game host and as a sideline reporter on FOX Sports Net. From 1989–1997, Scott was a sports anchor and reporter for WRTV Channel 6.

Scott has appeared on stage with the ISO narrating Casey at the Bat and has performed the PDQ Bach “sports” version of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony several times.

Scott is an avid musician who plays electric and double bass in the jazz quintet, The StoreyTellers. He also plays piano, guitar and played bassoon in high school. Scott and his wife, Kelly, have four children, Shelby, Lynette, Caroline and Kevin.

Group events are great for family gatherings, meetups, company picnics and more!

We'll work directly with your group to guarantee a

memorable night for you and your guests. Groups of 30+ can take advantage of these great

bene�ts and discounted tickets!

• RESERVED LAWN SEATING

• FLEXIBLE PAYMENTS

• WAIVED FEES

Book your group today by calling Joshua Shuck, Group Sales Manager, at 317.231.6788.

GROUPTICKETS

$21!

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Marsh Supermarkets is proud to be the title sponsor of Marsh Symphony on the Prairie presented by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. We are truly honored to have partnered with the renowned Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra for the past 35 years. The arts help improve a community’s quality of life, enriching lives and bringing people together, and Marsh is committed to supporting our local communities.

For 25 years, Marsh has been a fanatic about sourcing from local farmers and companies. Supporting local producers also supports our local economies. After all, we’re in this together.

We hope you enjoy this evening’s performance. Thank you for attending!

Tom O’BoyleChairman of the BoardCEO and PresidentMarsh Supermarkets

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JUNE 17, 18GERSHWIN’S RHAPSODY IN BLUE

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops Conductor

Raymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program OneFriday, June 17, 2016 at 8 p.m.

Saturday, June 18, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

Associate Sponsors

Length of performance is approximately one hour and thirty minutes. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

TITO MUÑOZ, Conductor JOHN KIMURA PARKER, Piano Leonard Bernstein Three Dance Episodes from On the Town(1918-1990) The Great Lover Lonely Town (Pas de deux) Times Square: 1944 George Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue(1898-1937)Orchestrated by Ferde Grofé

INTERMISSION - Twent y M inutes Antonin Dvorák Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, Op. 95 (“From the New World”)(1841-1904) Adagio - Allegro molto Largo Molto vivace Allegro con fuoco

June 17 – Scout Night

Marsh Supermarkets is proud to be the title sponsor of Marsh Symphony on the Prairie presented by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. We are truly honored to have partnered with the renowned Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra for the past 35 years. The arts help improve a community’s quality of life, enriching lives and bringing people together, and Marsh is committed to supporting our local communities.

For 25 years, Marsh has been a fanatic about sourcing from local farmers and companies. Supporting local producers also supports our local economies. After all, we’re in this together.

We hope you enjoy this evening’s performance. Thank you for attending!

Tom O’BoyleChairman of the BoardCEO and PresidentMarsh Supermarkets

Premier Sponsor

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When an orchestra plays, everyone works together to createan experience that’s bigger than its individual parts. At Conner

Prairie, we believe discoveries are sparked the same way.Whether a family investigates artifacts in the newly reimagined

William Conner House, or kids team up to uncover a big outdoor adventure, Conner Prairie is a place where working together

—and playing together—helps dreams come true.

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WHEREVER YOUR TRAVELS MAY TAKE YOU

WE HAVE WHAT YOU NEED!

FASHION MALL COMMONS8487 UNION CHAPEL ROAD

NEXT TO KOHL’S

317-254-4566THE TRAVEL EXPERTS SINCE 1914

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RFID ACCESSORIES

LUGGAGE ID

Page 18: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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TITO MUÑOZ, ConductorJUNE 17,18

In his second season as Music Director of The Phoenix Symphony, Tito Muñoz is increasingly recognized as one of the most gifted and versatile conductors of his generation. He previously

served as Music Director of the Opéra National de Lorraine and the Orchestre symphonique et lyrique de Nancy in France. Prior appointments include Assistant Conductor positions with The Cleveland Orchestra, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra and the Aspen Music Festival.

Mr. Muñoz’s recent and upcoming guest appearances include the Cleveland Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Florida Orchestra, Edmonton Symphony, Jacksonville Symphony, Manhattan School of Music and Toronto Royal Conservatory. Additional international engagements include the Orchestre Philharmonique de Marseille, Deutsche Radio Philharmonie Saarbrücken, SWR Sinfonieorchester, Sao Paolo State Symphony and the Brazilian Symphony Orchestra.

Muñoz continues to maintain a close relationship with The Cleveland Orchestra, where he has a regular conducting presence, including a critically acclaimed subscription week as a last-minute replacement for Pierre Boulez. Mr. Muñoz conducted his first joint performances with The Joffrey Ballet and The Cleveland Orchestra in the summer

of 2009. This successful collaboration led to further performances in the summer of 2010 as well as an invitation to tour with The Joffrey Ballet in the 2010–11 season. In the 2012–13 season, he conducted The Cleveland Orchestra’s first complete Nutcracker performances, a program he reprised in 2014–15, and, in summer 2013, led the orchestra’s first staged Rite of Spring, both with the Joffrey Ballet.

Committed to working with young artists, Mr. Muñoz has conducted performances at the Aspen Music Festival, Boston University Tanglewood Institute, Cleveland Institute of Music, Indiana University, Kent/Blossom Music Festival, Music Academy of the West, New England Conservatory, New World Symphony, Oberlin Conservatory, Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, Kinhaven Music School, National Repertory Orchestra, as well as a nine-city tour with the St. Olaf College Orchestra. Additionally, he has had ongoing relationships with the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra and the Portland (OR) Youth Philharmonic, leading rehearsals and masterclasses. He has also led conducting classes at the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen, Cleveland Institute of Music and Indiana University.

A native of New York City, Mr. Muñoz began his musical training as a violin student in the Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program, continuing studies in violin and composition at the Manhattan School of Music Preparatory Division. He attended the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, and participated in the InterSchool Orchestras of New York and New York Youth Symphony. He furthered his training at Queens College (CUNY) as a violin student of Daniel Phillips.

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JON KIMURA PARKER, Piano JUNE 17,18

Known for his passionate artistry and engaging stage presence, pianist Jon Kimura Parker has performed as guest soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Wolfgang Sawallisch in

Carnegie Hall, toured Europe with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Andre Previn, and shared the stage with Jessye Norman at Berlin’s Philharmonie. Conductors he has recently worked with include Teddy Abrams, Pablo Heras-Cassado, Claus Peter Flor, Hans Graf, Matthew Halls, Jeffrey Kahane, Peter Oundjian, Larry Rachleff, Bramwell Tovey, Xu Zhong and Pinchas Zukerman. A true Canadian ambassador of music, Mr. Parker has given command performances for Queen Elizabeth II, the U.S. Supreme Court, and the Prime Ministers of Canada and Japan. He is an Officer of The Order of Canada, his country’s highest civilian honor.

He performs as a duo partner regularly with James Ehnes, Aloysia Friedmann, Lynn Harrell, Jamie Parker, Orli Shaham, and Cho-Liang Lin, with whom he has given world premieres of sonatas by Paul Schoenfield, John Harbison and Steven Stucky. He performs regularly with the Miró Quartet, and is a founding member of the Montrose Trio with violinist Martin Beaver and cellist Clive Greensmith. The Washington Post’s review of the Montrose Trio’s first tour in 2015 proclaimed them “poised to become one of the top piano trios in the world.”

A committed educator, Jon Kimura Parker is Professor of Piano at The Shepherd School of Music at Rice University. His students have won international piano competitions, performed with major orchestras across the U.S., and given recitals in Amsterdam, Beijing, New York and Moscow.

He has lectured at The Juilliard School, The Colburn School, The Steans Institute, New York University and Yale University. Mr. Parker is also Artistic Advisor of the Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival, where he has given world premieres of new works by Peter Schickele and Jake Heggie.Jon Kimura Parker has recorded music of Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Chopin and PDQ Bach for Telarc, Mozart for CBC, Schubert, Schumann, Di Liberto and Hirtz under his own label. His new CD Fantasy features Fantasies of Schubert and Schumann, as well as the sensational Wizard of Oz Fantasy by William Hirtz, receiving this praise from Classical Candor: “The reading is riveting. Parker scores with another favorite recording of the year.”

“Jackie” Parker studied with Edward Parker and Keiko Parker privately, Lee Kum-Sing at the Vancouver Academy of Music and the University of British Columbia, Robin Wood at the Victoria Conservatory, Marek Jablonski at the Banff Centre and Adele Marcus at The Juilliard School. He won the Gold Medal at the 1984 Leeds International Piano Competition. He lives in Houston with his wife, violinist Aloysia Friedmann and their daughter Sophie.

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NotesJUNE 17, 18

Three Dance episoDes FroM on The Town Leonard bernStein

Born August 25, 1918 in Lawrence, MADied October 14, 1990 in New York City, NY

In 1944, Leonard Bernstein became an overnight celebrity after he conducted the New York Philharmonic as a last-minute replacement for Bruno Walter. Later that year his first Broadway musical, On the Town, opened for a run of over 450 performances. Bernstein is mainly remembered for being the first internationally acclaimed American orchestra conductor, but also for his magnetic charisma and infinite popularity. President John F. Kennedy once remarked that the only American he would lose to in an election was “Lenny.”

In addition to conducting, Bernstein was also an acclaimed composer. Rather than limiting himself to composing strictly classical music, Bernstein created works that combined a variety of influences and blurred the line between classical and popular music. Drawing on genres like jazz, blues and boogie-woogie, Bernstein’s music appealed to a wide audience for its accessibility and its tunefulness. His most frequently performed piece is the Broadway musical West Side Story.

On the Town tells the story of three sailors (Gaby, Ozzie and Chip) who are on leave in New York City for one day only. Over the course of their leave, they meet three girls and go on a whirlwind tour of the city, visiting Coney Island, Central Park and Times Square. Bernstein adapted three of the show’s dance episodes for orchestra and they perfectly illustrate his compositional style, which used a mixture of jazz harmonies, blue notes, catchy melodies and surprising rhythms. The first dance opens with jarring, dissonant chords to portray the chaotic urban atmosphere of New York; the second features a long, floating melody punctuated by blue

notes; and the third dance, “Times Square,” is made up of a variety of musical styles, meant to conjure the fun diversity of the city.

The ISO’s last performance of Three Dance Episodes from On the Town was February, 2015 conducted by Jeffrey Kahane.

rhapsoDy in Blue

GeorGe GerShwin

Born September 26, 1898 in Brooklyn, NYDied July 11, 1937 in Los Angeles, CA

In the early twentieth century, American composers began to experiment with incorporating popular music into their classical compositions. While George Gershwin got his start as a Broadway songwriter, by the 1920s and 1930s he had also made a reputation for himself as a classical composer. Gershwin’s contribution to American music was the addition of jazz and blues to art music, resulting in a distinctly American, modernist style.

In early 1924, Gershwin was surprised to learn that American jazz bandleader Paul Whiteman had advertised a concert in the New York Tribune that would include a jazz concerto composed by Gershwin (which he had not begun writing because he did not know about it). After he contacted Whiteman, the two men agreed on a jazz concerto for piano that Gershwin, an accomplished pianist, would perform with Whiteman’s band. Working on a tight deadline, Gershwin feverishly composed the concerto in only five short weeks! The result was Rhapsody in Blue, one of the most frequently performed pieces in American musical history.The iconic opening clarinet glissando (a slide from a low pitch to a high one) has been used in countless commercials, films and radio programs since the 1920s. Gershwin originally did not include the glissando in the piece, but

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Program Notes By Caitlin E. Brown, Doctoral Candidate in MusicologyIndiana University Jacobs School of Music

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Notes JUNE 17, 18

he heard Whiteman’s clarinetist Ross Gorman play one during a rehearsal and decided to add it. The glissando has since become one of the most recognizable sounds in the world. The word “rhapsody” in the title means that the piece was freeform (a musical exploration of a variety of contrasting moods), and the solo piano part gives the false impression of spontaneous improvisation. “Blue” refers to the elements of blues and jazz that Gershwin incorporated. The result is an exciting, fast-paced and “American” sounding piece.

The ISO’s last performance of Rhapsody in Blue was June, 2014 conducted by Eric Zuber.

SyMphony no. 9 in e Minor, op. 95 (“FroM the new worLd”)antonín dvořák

Born September 8, 1841 in Nelahozeves, Czech RepublicDied May 1, 1904 in Prague, Czech Republic

Until the twentieth century, American composers felt pressured to discover a truly “American” sound in their music. While Gershwin and Bernstein had jazz and blues available to them as musical material, American composers in the late nineteenth century had to search for other solutions to the problem of crafting a truly “American” music. Deciding that composers needed European help in this project, Jeanette Thurber (president of the National Conservatory of Music in America) invited Czech composer Antonín Dvořák to teach composition in New York in 1892. Thurber

wanted Dvořák to help American composers discover their national sound.

Dvořák remarked: “The Americans expect great things of me. I am to show them the way into the Promised Land, the realm of a new, independent art, in short a national style of music!” Dvořák’s recommendation to American composers was to look to African-American spirituals and Native American songs for inspiration. To demonstrate how this might be done, Dvořák composed his Symphony No. 9 (“From the New World”) while on vacation in Iowa with his family in 1893.

Dvořák called the second movement Largo “a sketch or study for a later work, either a cantata or opera, which will be based upon Longfellow’s Hiawatha.” He also noted that the third movement was “suggested by the scene at the feast in Hiawatha where the Indians dance.” In addition to Longfellow’s epic poem, Dvořák found inspiration in the wide, open spaces he had seen during his travels across the United States to Iowa. It is not difficult to imagine any of these scenes after hearing the lush orchestration and sweeping melodies. Not only has this symphony become one of the most popular symphonies in the classical repertoire, but it is also a love note from Dvořák to America.

The ISO’s last performance of Symphony No. 9 in E Minor was June, 2014 conducted by Krzysztof Urbański.

New this year! The ISO Sunset Lounge offers the ultimate concert upgrade including access to the tented lounge, private bathrooms, a $10 voucher to purchase food and drink, and occasional artist meet and greets. Lounge patrons

also have access to a special parking area allowing for quick entry and exit.

Tickets for individual concerts can be purchased at IndianapolisSymphony.org or by calling 317.639.4300.

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TRIBUTE TO DAVID BOWIE

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program TwoFriday, June 24, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, June 25, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

JUNE 24, 25

Associate Sponsors

Length of performance is approximately two hours. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

BRENT HAVENS, Conductor MICHAEL RUNYAN, Conductor

TRIBUTE TO DAVID BOWIE

Selections to be announced from the stage.

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BRENT HAVENS, Conductor | MICHAEL RUNYAN, Conductor JUNE 24, 25

Berklee-trained arranger/conductor Brent Havens has written music for orchestras, feature films and virtually every kind of television. His TV work includes movies for networks such as ABC, CBS and ABC Family Channel Network, commercials, sports music for networks such as ESPN and even cartoons. He has worked with some of the world’s greatest orchestras including the Royal Philharmonic in London, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, the Minnesota Orchestra, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, the Houston Symphony, the Atlanta Symphony, the Baltimore Symphony, the Dallas Symphony, the Fort Worth Symphony, the Nashville Symphony, the Buffalo Philharmonic and countless others.

Havens recently completed the score for the film Quo Vadis, a Premiere Pictures remake of the 1956 gladiator film. In 2013 he

worked with the Baltimore Symphony and the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens to arrange and produce the music for the Thanksgiving Day halftime show between the Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers, adapting both classical music and rock songs into a single four minute show. Havens is Arranger/Guest Conductor for twelve symphonic rock programs—the Music of Led Zeppelin, the Music of the Doors, the Music of Pink Floyd, the Music of the Eagles, the Music of Queen, the Music of Michael Jackson, the Music of The Who, The Music of Whitney Houston, the Music of The Rolling Stones, the Music of U2 and most recently the Music of Journey! Havens also premiered a full orchestral show for Lou Gramm, The Voice of Foreigner with Lou singing out front.

Michael Runyan has been making music as a composer, arranger, performer and conductor for many years. He was born in San Diego and raised in Denver, where he began piano lessons at age six and started playing trumpet and horn in grade school.

During high school, Michael began composing and arranging, a discipline he pursued at Brigham Young University and the College-Conservatory of Music of the University of Cincinnati, ultimately receiving a Doctor of Musical Arts degree. He has created hundreds of compositions and arrangements (many in collaboration with his wife, Pamela), contributing to the orchestral and choral repertoires.

Michael is perhaps best known to Indianapolis audiences for his entertaining harmonica performances at IPL Yuletide Celebration,

Printing Partners Pops Series and Marsh Symphony on the Prairie concerts.

Runyan and his wife currently reside in Indianapolis and have four children.

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JUNE 24, 25 BRODY DOLYNIUK, Vocalist

Brody Dolyniuk is a multi-faceted, self-taught musician who began his professional music career playing in piano bars. A chance meeting with a pair of star-shaped

sunglasses led to forming an Elton John tribute band Brody called Yellow Brick Road. Soon YBR began going outside the Elton John catalog to perform other classic rock giants such as Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd.

Within a year, Yellow Brick Road was a steady working band in the Las Vegas music scene and had cultivated a large local following.

YBR also became an in-demand choice for the corporate entertainment market.

After 14 years of solid work, Brody stepped down as front man for YBR to pursue other avenues, namely his role as a vocalist for Windborne Music’s touring symphony shows, singing the Music of Queen, and later The Who, Rolling Stones, U2 and Journey. Simultaneously, Brody had been developing his own production called Symphonic Rockshow.

Now residing in Southern California, Brody continues to tour, as well as perform as a producer and session musician. To stay in touch with the latest happenings, follow him on Facebook.

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STAR SPANGLED SYMPHONY

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program ThreeSaturday, July 2, 2016 at 8 p.m.Sunday, July 3, 2016 at 8 p.m.Monday, July 4, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

JULY 2–4

ALFRED SAVIA, ConductorZACH DE PUE, ViolinMURRAY COX, Narrator (as Abraham Lincoln)COLOR GUARD/REENACTORS

James Beckel American Fanfare Edwin Bagley National Emblem March

John Williams The Patriot

Henri Vieuxtemps Variations burlesques on “Yankee Doodle” Zach De Pue, Violin Arr. Richard Hayman Indiana Medley Randy Edelmen Suite from GettysburgArr. Richard Bronskill The Gettysburg Address& Ralph Ferraro Renuion and Finale Murray Cox, Narrator

Arr. Richard Hayman Servicemen on Parade

INTERMISSION - Twent y M inutes

Meredith Willson “Seventy-six Trombones” from The Music ManArr. Leroy Anderson

George Gershwin Overture to Of Thee I SingArr. Don Rose Jerry Bock Excerpts from Fiddler on the Roof for Violin and OrchestraArr. John Williams Zach De Pue, Violin

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STAR SPANGLED SYMPHONY JULY 2–4

Length of performance is approximately two hours. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Associate Sponsors

Premier Sponsor

Samuel A. Ward America the BeautifulArr. Carmen Dragon Irving Berlin God Bless AmericaArr. Richard Hayman Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 1812, Overture solennelle, Op. 49 John Philip Sousa The Thunderer March John Philip Sousa Hail to the Spirit of Liberty March

John Philip Sousa The Stars and Stripes ForeverArr. Keith Brion & Loras Schissel

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ALFRED SAVIA, Conductor | ZACH DE PUE, ViolinJULY 2–4

Known for his virtuosic, high‐energy performances, violinist Zach De Pue successfully balances his roles as ISO concertmaster, soloist, chamber musician, fiddler, community leader and mentor with

passion and dedication.

A rising star among both classical and crossover music fans, he was appointed concertmaster of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in 2007 and became one of the youngest concertmasters in the country. He

graduated in 2002 from the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where he studied with renowned violinists Ida Kavafian and Jaime Laredo. He earned a full‐tuition scholarship to Curtis and he also held the David H. Springman Memorial Fellowship. He served as concertmaster of the Curtis Symphony Orchestra before becoming a violinist in The Philadelphia Orchestra.

With an innate talent for improvisation and arranging, Zach found much of his inspiration from his three older brothers, all violinists and fiddlers. In 1985, the four classically‐trained brothers formed their own acclaimed group, The De Pue Brothers, which combines classical and bluegrass for an eclectic, fun concert experience. The group’s father is Wallace De Pue, a composer and professor emeritus at Bowling Green State University.

Zach’s violin was made by Ferdinand Gagliano of Naples, Italy, in 1757.

Maestro Alfred Savia has been Music Director of the Evansville Philharmonic since the 1989–90 season. Under his leadership, the Evansville Philharmonic has expanded its activities to include a comprehensive

Youth Orchestra program, the incorporation of the Philharmonic Chorus, and the Eykamp String Quartet.

Savia, who was Associate Conductor of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra from 1990–1996, is a frequent guest conductor throughout North America and around the globe. His North American appearances have included performances with the St. Louis, Detroit, Phoenix, Savannah, Columbus,

Memphis, Portland (Maine), Winston-Salem, Roanoke, San Antonio, Spokane and Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestras, among others.

Internationally he has conducted the Korea Philharmonic Orchestra (KBS), State of Mexico (Toluca) Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra da Camera Fiorentina in Florence, Radio & Television Serbia (Belgrade) Symphony Orchestra, Denmark’s Aalborg Symphony Orchestra and the Presidential Symphony Orchestra of Ankara

A native of Livingston, New Jersey, Savia graduated from Butler University’s Jordan College of Fine Arts. He studied conducting with Franco Ferrara at the Accademia Musicale Chigiana in Siena, Italy, and privately with Sixten Ehrling and Otto Werner Mueller (Juilliard School).

Alfred Savia and his wife, Kathryn, an EPO violinist, have two daughters, Laura and Juliana.

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JULY 2–4MURRAY COX, Narrator

Murray Cox has been presenting Lincoln since 1985 before elementary school classes, civic groups, church groups, at Boy Scout Pilgrimages, for Historical societies, and at Civil War events. He has participated in documentaries, Being Lincoln, Men with Hats, and Life as Lincoln. He is a life member of the Association of Lincoln Presenters and lives in Wabash, Indiana where he serves as Business Manager for White’s Residential & Family Services.

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Ad

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Whether they’re designing a flying machine in Create.Connector stepping back in time to meet a friendly new neighbor in 1836

Prairietown, Conner Prairie is a destination for year-round fun.It’s a place where wheels are set in motion—and once kids start

dreaming, who knows how far they’ll go?

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ALL MOZARTJULY 8, 9

Associate Sponsors

DAVID DANZMAYR, Conductor CAROLINE GOULDING, Violin

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Overture to The Abduction from the Seraglio, K. 384(1756-1791)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Concerto No. 3 in G Major for Violin and Orchestra, K. 216(1756-1791) Allegro Adagio Rondo: Allegro Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Rondo in C Major for Violin and Orchestra, K. 373(1756-1791)

INTERMISSION - Twent y M inutes Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 36 in C Major, K. 425 (“Linz”)(1756-1791) Adagio-Allegro spiritoso Poco adagio Menuetto Presto

This performance is endowed by Mrs. William P. Cooling.

Length of performance is approximately one hour and twenty-five minutes. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program FourFriday, July 8, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, July 9, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

July 8 – Teachers’ Night

Premier Sponsor

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DAVID DANZMAYR, Conductor JULY 8, 9

Described by The Herald as “extremely good, concise, clear, incisive and expressive,”David Danzmayr is regarded as one of the most exciting and talented Europeanconductors

of the younger generation. Having served for three years as assistant conductor of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, David has conducted this ensemble in more than 70 concerts, performing in all the major Scottish concert halls and in the prestigious, Orkney based, St Magnus Festival. Since then he worked regularly as guest conductor with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and will return to Glasgow for two further weeks in the upcoming season.

David likewise makes regular appearances as a guest conductor for other internationallyrenowned orchestras, having worked with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra,the Sinfonieorchester Basel, Mozarteum Orchester, Haydn Orchester Bozen, Heidelberger Philharmoniker, Orchestra of the Scottish Opera, Salzburg Chamber Philharmonic, the Chamber Orchestra of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama and the Bruckner Orchester Linz.

David Danzmayr is a prize-winner of the prestigious International Malko ConductingCompetition and was the only European conductor to reach the final of the prestigious Chicago Symphony Orchestra Sir Georg Solti competition. Besides his extensive classical repertoire David also devotes himself passionately to the performance of 21st century music. He is Music Director of the Ensemble Acrobat and a regular guest conductor for the Austrian Contemporary Music Ensemble. .

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Photos courtesy of Music for All

Page 36: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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Page 37: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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CAROLINE GOULDING, Violin JULY 8, 9

Named “precociously gifted” by Gramophone magazine, violinist Caroline Goulding has appeared as a soloist with many of the world’s premier orchestras including

The Cleveland Orchestra, Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra, Toronto Symphony, Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, National Symphony, Nashville Symphony, Milwaukee Symphony, Colorado Symphony, Dallas Symphony, Houston Symphony, Detroit Symphony, Deutsche Radio Philharmonie, Berlin’s ensemblemini and the Orchestra of St. Luke’s. She has appeared in recital at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, Beijing’s Forbidden City Concert Hall, the Tonhalle-Zurich, the Louvre Museum and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

The 2015–2016 season brings forth engagements in Asia, Europe, and North America with the Hong Kong Philharmonic, Dortmunder Philharmoniker, Houston Symphony, Fort Worth Symphony, Omaha

Symphony, Hartford Symphony, Tacoma Symphony, and New West Symphony. Her upcoming recital CD release with pianist Danae Dörken including works by Schumann, Enescu and Dvořák.

Caroline is the recipient of an Avery Fisher Career Grant, a Grammy nomination for her debut album on the Telarc label and has appeared on NBC’s Today, Martha hosted by Martha Stewart, Germany’s Stars von Morgen hosted by Rolando Villazón and can be heard on NPR’s Performance Today and SiriusXM Satellite Radio.

Currently studying with Christian Tetzlaff at the Kronberg Academy, Caroline splits her time between Kronberg, Germany, and Boston, Massachusetts. Other musical mentors have included Donald Weilerstein, Paul Kantor, Joel Smirnoff and Julia Kurtyka.A past member of the Stradivari Society, Caroline currently plays the General Kyd Stradivarius (circa 1720), courtesy of Jonathan Moulds.

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Subscribe and Save Now! Visit the ISO Tent to receive an EXCLUSIVE discount tonight!

For more info, call the Palladium Box Office at 317.843.3800, or visit TheCenterPresents.org

KRZYSZTOF URBAŃSKI

THE PALLADIUM

Handel’s MessiahMahler’s “The Song of the Earth”

Beethoven’s “Eroica”Debussy’s La Mer

Rachmanino� ’s Symphonic DancesCarmina Burana

MUSIC DIRECTOR

INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

TELAMON CLASSICAL SERIES AT THE PALLADIUM

2016-2017 SEASON INCLUDES:

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Page 39: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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A HALLOWEEN MASQUERADE BENEFITING THE INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA’S EDUCATION PROGRAMS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2016 • 7:30PM

MUST BE 21+ TO ATTEND.

HILBERT CIRCLE THEATRE45 MONUMENT CIRCLE, INDIANAPOLIS, IN

ATTIRE: MASQUERADE CHIC

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH:

$75 – includes three drink tickets$100 – includes open bar

INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

FOR MORE INFO, VISIT INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG, OR CALL 317.639.4300 THE FULL ORCHESTRA DOES NOT PERFORM AT THIS EVENT

WITH SUPPORT FROM:

A HALLOWEEN MASQUERADE BENEFITING THE INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA’S EDUCATION PROGRAMS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2016 • 7:30PM

MUST BE 21+ TO ATTEND.

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INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

FOR MORE INFO, VISIT INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG, OR CALL 317.639.4300 THE FULL ORCHESTRA DOES NOT PERFORM AT THIS EVENT

WITH SUPPORT FROM:Subscribe and Save Now! Visit the ISO Tent to receive an EXCLUSIVE discount tonight!

For more info, call the Palladium Box Office at 317.843.3800, or visit TheCenterPresents.org

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Handel’s MessiahMahler’s “The Song of the Earth”

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Rachmanino� ’s Symphonic DancesCarmina Burana

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Page 40: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

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NotesJULY 8, 9

overture to the abduction FroM SeraGLio, k. 384woLFGanG aMadeuS Mozart

Born January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, AustriaDied December 5, 1791, in Vienna, Austria

In 1781, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had already achieved considerable fame for his talent as a pianist and violinist; he spent much of his youth touring Europe with his mother, father, and sister performing recitals and concerts for nobles. After spending a few years in the service of Archbishop Colloredo in Salzburg, Mozart left to pursue a career as a freelance performer and composer in Vienna. What followed was a period of great productivity and success. His opera, The Abduction from the Seraglio, was written at the request of the Austrian emperor Joseph II. It premiered in 1782 and quickly enhanced Mozart’s reputation across the Continent. Amidst this whirlwind of success, Mozart also married Constanze Weber.

The Abduction takes place in sixteenth-century Turkey and concerns the efforts of Belmonte to find his lover Konstanze who has been abducted by pirates and sold to a Turkish Pasha named Osmin. All ends well after Osmin takes pity on Belmonte and pardons both him and Konstanze (and their devoted servants) from further punishment for their attempts at escape. This story was a popular farce in Vienna in the eighteenth century and was familiar to audiences.

Mozart’s travels as a boy and young man gave him a diverse stylistic toolbox from which to draw when he began composing. An essential feature of his compositional fingerprint was a highly varied musical language made up of many different moods, styles, and topics. Mozart was thus eager to set this story to music as it encompassed a myriad of emotions and dramatic twists, not to mention comical and exotic scenes. The overture evokes comedy before the events of the plot

even begin, signaling that this will be a light-hearted opera. Mozart opens with rousing percussion in the Turkish style, incorporating the sounds of timpani, triangle, cymbals, and bass drum (this was a style that countless later composers would mimic). This short overture is fast-paced and exciting!

concerto no. 3 in G Major For vioLin and orcheStra, k. 216woLFGanG aMadeuS Mozart

Born January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, AustriaDied December 5, 1791, in Vienna, Austria

Though Mozart composed in nearly every genre during his lifetime, he only spent one year of his life interested in the violin concerto. In 1775, the 19-year-old composer wrote five violin concerti and never revisited the genre again. Historians have wondered if he would have returned to the genre had he not died at such a young age. His year of violin concerti took place while he was Konzertmeister at the Salzburg court, a position that led to considerable personal turmoil for the composer. Some historians believe that Mozart specifically wrote the set of five concerti for his friend, violinist Gaetano Brunetti.

This concerto was the third that Mozart composed that year, and it demonstrates the level of skill that Mozart was capable of, even at age 19. It has three movements, with a brief pause between each. Each movement is a different tempo (speed) and is meant to show off the virtuosity and skill of the violin soloist. An accomplished violinist himself, Mozart’s attention to intricacy and his concern for the role of the orchestra are the most important features of the work. Overall, the orchestra’s sound is light, while the soloist’s is incredibly ornate. Mozart intentionally composed it this way to highlight the technical skill of the soloist.

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Program Notes By Caitlin E. Brown, Doctoral Candidate in MusicologyIndiana University Jacobs School of Music

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Delivering

in printperformances

outstanding

Notes JULY 8, 9

At the end of each movement, there are complicated and impressive cadenzas (ending solos) by the violinist. The second movement features a slow tempo and quiet, muted strings to highlight the beauty of the solo violin line. The final movement is dance-like and uses a simple orchestration featuring brief solos by other instruments.

The ISO’s last performance of Concerto No. 3 in G Major for Violin and Orchestra, K. 216 was November 2005, with soloist Chee Yun, conducted by Hugh Wolff.

rondo in c Major For vioLin and orcheStra, k. 373woLFGanG aMadeuS Mozart

Born January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, AustriaDied December 5, 1791, in Vienna, Austria

Mozart’s Rondo á la Turk has a unique character because he used what European composers called the “Turkish Style.” This means that Mozart drew on the musical character of Turkish military, or Jannisary bands. These groups and their marches were familiar to most Europeans, and anything Turkish was different, exotic, and endlessly popular for the eighteenth-century Viennese. Composers incorporated the sounds of these bands into their orchestral music by using extra percussion instruments (bass drum, triangle and cymbals), and the piccolo to mimic the high-pitched zurna, all instruments traditionally used in Janissary music.

In this piece for solo piano, Mozart mimicked the sounds of an entire Turkish military band by using quick tempos, repeated notes,

wide contrasts of loud and soft dynamics, and exaggerated grace notes. For pianists in Mozart’s time, this piece would have been particularly evocative of Turkish military music because the type of piano used was constructed differently from the modern piano; when low notes were played loudly, the vibrations of the strings would produce an audible rattle, which could sound like

added percussion. The craze for Turkish music was at its height

in the nineteenth century, when manufacturers began

selling pianos with a special “Turkish stop,” or a pedal that the performer

could press with a foot during performance; this would cause various effects (cymbals, bells, or even a bass drum). This added

feature on the piano became especially associated with performances of Mozart’s rondo.

Mozart composed this short piece during his first years in Vienna, and it quickly became one of the most popular pieces for solo piano. You just might recognize the tune of the

third movement! The ISO’s last performance of

Rondo in C Major for Violin and Orchestra, K. 373 was October 2010, performed and conducted by Itzhak Perlman.

SyMphony no. 36 in c Major, k. 425 (“Linz”)woLFGanG aMadeuS Mozart

Born January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, AustriaDied December 5, 1791, in Vienna, AustriaIn 1783, Mozart traveled to Salzburg with his new bride (Constanze) to reconcile with his father over his disapproval of their marriage.

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NOTESJULY 8, 9

Unfortunately for the composer and his wife, no reconciliation was reached (a matter that would plague Mozart for the rest of his life). As they traveled back to Vienna in late October, the newlywed Mozarts spent time in Linz at the home of Count Thun-Hohenstein, a close family friend. The composer discovered that there was to be a concert in Linz just a few days after their arrival and he decided to write a brand new symphony in time for the performance. The result was his Symphony No. 36, nicknamed the “Linz” for the place it was written and first performed.

A precocious and unpredictable composer, Mozart’s ability to write an entire new symphony in just a few days is not surprising in the least and has been the source of fascination for historians. Despite the impossibly short time frame, the symphony is as complete and sophisticated as any of his other works composed over longer periods.Mozart had likely gained considerable confidence in his compositional abilities since

his relocation to Vienna. His tense relationship with his father and the unsatisfactory appointment he had held in Salzburg had not encouraged him to explore fully his personal style. The first movement of this symphony bears evidence of this shift in his career, boldly inserting a slow introduction before a fast-paced, spirited tempo prevails. Mozart also wrote in the score that the fourth (and final) movement should be played “as fast as possible,” and thus is a breathtaking finish to an accomplished work. Perhaps his inspiration for the breakneck speed of the final movement came from the incredible haste with which he composed the symphony.

The ISO’s last performance of Symphony No. 36 (“Linz”) was November, 2014 conducted by Nicholas McGegan.

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44

MOVIE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMS

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program FiveFriday, July 15, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, July 16, 2016 at 8 p.m,Conner Prairie

JULY 15, 16

VINCE LEE, Conductor

John Williams Liberty Fanfare(b. 1932) Theme from Jurassic Park

“Adventures on Earth” from E.T., the Extra-Terrestrial

“Hymn to the Fallen” from Saving Private Ryan Star Wars: The Force Awakens March of the Resistance Rey’s Theme The Jedi Steps

“Hedwig’s Theme” from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone

“The Raider’s March” from Raiders of the Lost Ark

INTERMISSION – Twent y M inutes Olympic Fanfare and Theme

The Olympic Spirit

Wide Receiver (Theme from NBC Football)

“Sayuri’s Theme” from Memoirs of a Geisha

Main Title from Star Wars

“Battle of the Heroes” from Revenge of the Sith “Luke and Leia” from Return of the Jedi “Throne Room” and End Title from Star Wars Suite for Orchestra

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MOVIE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMS JULY 15, 16

Length of performance is approximately two hours. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Associate Sponsors

Premier Sponsor

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VINCE LEE, ConductorJULY 15, 16

Vince Lee currently serves as the Associate Conductor for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. Since 2012, Lee has served on the cover conducting staff of the Philadelphia

Orchestra and as the conductor of the AZLO Orchestra (NYC). In 2013, he joined the Union City Orchestra (NJ) as its Music Director. From 2008–2011, Lee served as the Assistant Conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and the Cincinnati May Festival. In 2007, he made his Carnegie Hall debut with the New York Youth Symphony. As a guest conductor, he has appeared with numerous ensembles including the Toledo Symphony,

Opera Theatre of St. Louis, the Aspen Music Festival and the Cincinnati Ballet. As a champion of modern compositions, he has premiered more than 200 works to date.

Lee earned his Master of Music in Orchestral Conducting from the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University. During his time at IU, he premiered more than 50 works by student performers, conducted 17 orchestral concerts, and served as assistant conductor for the IU New Music Ensemble, Opera Theater and Ballet. Lee earned his Diploma in Orchestral Conducting at The Juilliard School, under the direction of James DePriest. At Juilliard, he was appointed Musical Director for the MAP orchestra (a Juilliard faculty position) and served as Principal Pianist for the Juilliard Orchestras for three years.

For more information visit IndianapolisSymphony.org or call 317.231.6798.

CONFERENCES | ENTERTAINMENT | CORPORATE MEETINGSGRADUATIONS l WEDDINGS

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Tradition of Caring

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Senior Home Companions. The trusted source for compassionate caregivers.

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Learn more at uindy.edu/iso

SUCCESS TAKES CENTER STAGEW H E R E S T U D E N T

At UIndy, you’ll find a top-tier Midwest university that features:

An 11:1 student-to-faculty ratio. Professors know you personally, offering individual attention and experiential learning opportunities.

Outstanding graduates such as Fulbright scholar Zak Mitiche, Class of ’16, who will pursue a study project in Morocco.

5 highly respected doctoral programs in health sciences, nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and psychology.

23 NCAA Division II team sports with 9 teams currently in the nation’s top 20, including Indiana’s only Division II lacrosse teams.

Page 48: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

Reservations for NEW 2,000 sq.ft. Duplex Homes will begin in Late 2016.

HoosiER ViLLagE is ExpaNDiNg!

ith 300 hundred acres, there’s so much to enjoy at Hoosier Village. Pet owners, bird watchers and gardeners all appreciate the convenience of easy access to acres of woods and green space. With miles of walking and biking paths, wooded trails and

our own golf course just minutes away, Hoosier Village offers lots of options for active senior living. There’s plenty to enjoy indoors too. The new Community Center has an indoor pool, fitness rooms, art studio, spa and more. Two on-site restaurants provide both fine and casual dining.

esidents and their families have the security of knowing that Hoosier Village offers a complete continuum of care right on our campus. Additionally, our financial strength and stability ensure that we will maintain the superb level of amenities, accommodations, care and services our residents have selected.

To learn more or to arrange a visit, please call John Koontz or Amy Snyder at 317-873-3349.

Room to enjoy the great outdoors.

Page 49: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

Reservations for NEW 2,000 sq.ft. Duplex Homes will begin in Late 2016.

HoosiER ViLLagE is ExpaNDiNg!

ith 300 hundred acres, there’s so much to enjoy at Hoosier Village. Pet owners, bird watchers and gardeners all appreciate the convenience of easy access to acres of woods and green space. With miles of walking and biking paths, wooded trails and

our own golf course just minutes away, Hoosier Village offers lots of options for active senior living. There’s plenty to enjoy indoors too. The new Community Center has an indoor pool, fitness rooms, art studio, spa and more. Two on-site restaurants provide both fine and casual dining.

esidents and their families have the security of knowing that Hoosier Village offers a complete continuum of care right on our campus. Additionally, our financial strength and stability ensure that we will maintain the superb level of amenities, accommodations, care and services our residents have selected.

To learn more or to arrange a visit, please call John Koontz or Amy Snyder at 317-873-3349.

Room to enjoy the great outdoors.

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MUSIC OF BILLY JOEL & ELTON JOHN

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program SixFriday, July 22, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, July 23, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

JULY 22, 23

Length of performance is approximately two hours. Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Associate Sponsors

www.dcgindy.com

July 22 – First Responders’ Night

JACK EVERLY, Conductor MICHAEL CAVANAUGH, Vocalist

MUSIC OF BILLY JOEL & ELTON JOHN

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Premier Sponsor

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JACK EVERLY, Conductor JULY 22, 23

Jack Everly is Principal Pops Conductor of the Indianapolis and Baltimore Symphony Orchestras, Naples Philharmonic Orchestra and the National Arts Centre Orchestra (Ottawa). He has

conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, The New York Pops at Carnegie Hall and appears regularly with The Cleveland Orchestra at Blossom Music Center. Maestro Everly will conduct over 90 performances in more than 22 North American cities this season.

As Music Director of the National Memorial Day Concert and A Capitol Fourth on PBS, Maestro Everly proudly leads the National Symphony Orchestra in these patriotic celebrations on the National Mall. These concerts attract hundreds of thousands of attendees on the lawn. The broadcasts reach millions of viewers and are some of the very highest-rated programming on PBS television.

Everly is also the Music Director of IPL Yuletide Celebration, now a 30-year tradition. He led the ISO in its first Pops recording, Yuletide Celebration, Volume One, that included three

of his own orchestrations. Some of his other recordings include In The Presence, featuring the Czech Philharmonic and Daniel Rodriguez, Sandi Patty’s Broadway Stories, the soundtrack to Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Everything’s Coming Up Roses: The Complete Overtures Of Jule Styne.

Originally appointed by Mikhail Baryshnikov, Everly was conductor of the American Ballet Theatre for 14 years, where he served as Music Director. In addition to his ABT tenure, he teamed with Marvin Hamlisch on Broadway shows that Hamlisch scored. He conducted Carol Channing hundreds of times in Hello, Dolly! in two separate Broadway productions.

In 1998, Jack Everly created the Symphonic Pops Consortium, serving as Music Director. The Consortium, based in Indianapolis, produces new theatrical pops programs. In the past 13 years, more than 265 performances of SPC programs have taken place across the U.S. and Canada.

Maestro Everly, a graduate of the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University, is a recipient of the 2015 Indiana Historical Society Living Legends Award and holds an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from Franklin College in his home state of Indiana. He is a proud 15 year resident of Indianapolis. When not on the podium you can find Maestro Everly at home with his family, which includes Max, the wonder dog.

Serving the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra formore than 45 years.www.OneAmerica.com

McCready and Keene, Inc. | a OneAmerica® company

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MICHAEL CAVANAUGH, VocalistJULY 22, 23

Michael Cavanaugh is the New Voice of the American Rock & Roll Songbook. A charismatic performer, musician and actor, made famous for his piano/lead vocals in the

Broadway Musical Movin’ Out.

Michael Cavanaugh was handpicked by Billy Joel to star in the title role and evokes a style rivaling the Piano Man. Michael appeared in the show for 3 years totaling over 1,200 performances, receiving accolade after accolade, which culminated in 2003 with both Grammy and Tony award nominations.

Michael began playing at age 7 when his parents bought their first piano. Encouraged by family and friends and inspired by his hero Billy Joel, Michael formed his first band at age 10 and began playing local functions, fine-tuning the craft that would become his chosen career. His first full-time gig as a musician was an extended engagement in Orlando, Florida at a piano bar called Blazing Pianos. In January of 1999, Michael received an offer that would unknowingly

change his life with an opportunity to play Las Vegas at the famed New York, New York Hotel and Casino. It was there that Billy Joel spotted Michael and joined him on stage one fateful night of February 2001. It only took two songs before Billy was convinced that he had found his new Piano Man, Michael Cavanaugh. Michael closed up shop at New York, New York and moved to New York City to work alongside Billy Joel and Twyla Tharp to shape the Broadway Musical that would be called Movin’ Out.

With the close of Movin’ Out at the end of 2005, Michael began touring in his own right, creating a show that reinterprets the modern pop/rock songbook. Michael soon became one of the hottest artists in the corporate/events market. He continues to perform worldwide for company and charity events as well as sporting events including PGA tour events, the U.S. Open and the Indy 500. In October 2008, he signed with Warner/ADA to distribute his first CD titled “In Color”. In June, 2010, Michael debuted his second symphony show in the “Generations of Rock” series entitled “Michael Cavanaugh: The Songs of Elton John and more” and then debuted his third symphony show “Singers and Songwriters: the music of Paul Simon, Neil Diamond and James Taylor” in 2012. He continues to tour all three symphony productions.

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Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Seven*Friday, July 29, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, July 30, 2016 at 8 p.m.Sunday, July 31, 2016 at 7 p.m.Conner Prairie

THE TEMPTATIONS & THE FOUR TOPSJULY 29–31

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Associate Sponsors

THE TEMPTATIONS & THE FOUR TOPS

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Premier Sponsor

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THE TEMPTATIONS JULY 29–31

In addition to being the most consistently commercially successful and critically lauded male vocal group in rock history, The Temptations have been charting hits for 40 years. Unlike most other living institutions, the Temptations remain a vital, hitmaking group with the double-platinum Phoenix Rising from 1998 living up to its name. In their early “classic” lineup—with alternating lead singers Eddie Kendricks, David Ruffin, and Paul Williams, with Melvin Franklin, and group founder, Otis Williams—the Tempts, as they were known, were simply untouchable. Through the years, the group’s trademark razor-sharp choreography, finely tuned vocal harmonies, and a number of compelling lead singers (Ruffin, Kendricks, the little known Paul Williams, and later, Dennis Edwards) made them the exemplars of the Motown style. The Temptations have been distinguished among their Motown stable mates (with the exception of the Four Tops) for their ability to move comfortably from smooth pop and standards to provocative, politically charged rock soul, from the Apollo to the Copacabana (and back). Despite personnel changes and conflicts, through countless triumphs and setbacks, the Temptations, with Franklin and Otis Williams at the helm, forged ahead. Today, with Williams the sole surviving original member, the group continues.

The Temptations currently hold 13 gold and six platinum albums. The group’s chart statistics are unparalleled. Between 1964 and

1975, The Temptations had 19 Top 20 albums. Over its career, the group has had 37 Top 40 singles and 32 R&B Top 10 albums.

The original Temptations came together from two struggling vocal groups. Otis Williams (not to be confused with Otis Williams of Charms fame), Elbridge (also known as Al, or El) Bryant, and Melvin Franklin had been in a series of Detroit groups, including Williams’ Siberians and Otis Williams and the Distants. Once Franklin, the young bass singer of Detroit’s Voice Masters, joined the Distants (which included future Tempt Richard Street) they recorded “Come On” for the local Northern label.

The group’s commercial comeback began in the fall of 1998, when NBC aired the two-part miniseries Temptations, based on Williams’ book of the same name. Released about the same time, Phoenix Rising and its lead single, “Stay” brought the Tempts to a new generation. Produced by Narada Michael Walden, the album was a major coup for the Tempts, and their first album to be certified platinum. As always, the group continued to tour the world. Its followup, 2000’s Grammy-winning Ear-Resistible, produced by Gerald Levert and Joe Little III, entered and peaked on the R&B albums chart at number 16 .

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TheCenterForThePerformingArts /TheCenterPresents@CarmelPalladium @CarmelPalladium

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THE FOUR TOPS JULY 29–31

The Four Tops were one of soul music’s most popular and long-lived vocal groups. This quartet from Detroit endured for more than 40 years without a single change in personnel. Moreover, they charted hits at every stage in their lengthy career. Although they’re best remembered for the records they made at Motown in the Sixties, the Four Tops also had substantial success at such labels as ABC, Casablanca and Arista in subsequent decades. They even returned twice to Motown later in their career. All the while they remained a solid draw on the touring circuit, performing 100 shows per year.

The Four Tops consisted of lead singer Levi Stubbs, first tenor Abdul “Duke” Fakir, second tenor Lawrence Payton, and baritone Renaldo “Obie” Benson. Working closely with the in-house songwriting and production team of Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier and Eddie Holland, the Four Tops cut some of Motown’s most memorable singles during the label’s mid-Sixties zenith.

To avoid possible confusion with the Ames Brothers, the Four Aims renamed themselves the Four Tops. In 1956, they signed to Chess Records, for which they recorded one single (Kiss Me Baby). They also released a single a piece on the Columbia (Ain’t That Love, 1960) and Riverside (Pennies from Heaven, 1962) labels. During this stage in their career, they sang in close harmony, with no single voice standing apart from the others. In their pre-Motown years, they opened or sang backup for the likes of Della Reese, Count Basie, Billy Eckstine, Betty Carter and Brook Benton.For 1983’s Motown 25 TV special, the Four

Tops and the Temptations held a show stopping “battle of the bands,” amicably trading songs. The concept was so well-received that the two groups frequently toured together thereafter. In 1985, the Four Tops recorded a final album for Motown, entitled Magic. A year later, Levi Stubbs served as the singing voice of the man-eating plant in the popular film Little Shop of Horrors. The Four Tops’ last charting single was Indestructible, released on Clive Davis’s Arista label in 1988. If Ever a Love There Was, a collaboration with Aretha Franklin, reached Number 31 on the R&B chart.

Only death could stop the original lineup of the Four Tops. Lawrence Payton died of cancer in 1997. The Four Tops continued to tour, eventually replacing Payton with Theo Peoples (formerly of the Temptations). Renaldo “Obie” Benson succumbed to cancer in 2005, and Levi Stubbs died from stroke-related complications in 2008.

Duke Fakir, the quartet’s sole surviving member, has kept the Four Tops alive. In addition to Fakir and Peoples, Lawrence Payton, Jr. (son of founding member Lawrence Payton) and Ronnie McNair (a Motown acquaintance) round out the revamped lineup. “They have the same feeling as the original Tops—as close you can get without being the real thing,” Fakir said in a 2010 interview.

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EugEnE and marilyn glick indiana History cEntEr 450 WEst oHio strEEt | doWntoWn on tHE canal

www.indianahistory.org | (317) 232-1882

NOW OPEN PRESENTED BY THE RAPP FAMILYWITH SUPPORT FROM THE PENROD SOCIETY

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Our Corporate Sponsors have exclusive access to ISO events, and receive the best value in brand exposure and promotion. Take advantage of our Corporate opportunities and make the most out of your business.

CORPORATE ENGAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES:

Corporate Suite Packages Corporate SponsorshipsPhilanthropic Support

Special Events

Interested in learning more about Corporate sponsorship opportunities? Contact Associate Director of Corporate Giving, Melissa Weseli at [email protected] or 317.262.1880.

“The ISO is an economic driver, a key to our city’s reputation and our ability to recruit talented people to Indianapolis. The Symphony plays a role in our crucial e�orts to improve education. And, as part of our city’s diverse arts scene, it contributes to the richness and vitality of our civic life. Of special importance to companies like Eli Lilly, the presence of a world-class orchestra here in Indianapolis helps us attract world-class talent from across the country and around the globe.”

- John C. Lechleiter, PhD Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Eli Lilly and Company

BUY TICKETS NOW AT INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG, OR CALL 317.639.4300 | THE ISO WILL NOT PERFORM AT THIS CONCERT

MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 20167:00PM | Hilbert Circle Theatre

“Classical musicmaking rarely achieves this combination of spontaneity and superb craftsmanship.” - Washington Post

This special event features The Silk Road Ensemble with its Artistic Director Yo-Yo Ma, who represent a global array of cultures rede�ning classical music for 21st century artists.

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MUSIC OF ABBA

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Eight*Friday, August 5, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, August 6, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

AUG 5, 6

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

Associate Sponsors

MUSIC OF ABBA

Jules Dodds, BjornLissie Link, Anni-Frid

Rob Arnall, BennyMichelle Cleave, Agnetha

Selections to be announced from the stage.

July 22 – Nurses’ Night

Premier Sponsor

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WATERLOO AUG 5, 6

Waterloo, The Best Of ABBA, is made up of some of the UK’s most sought after musicians, and after the long and wide search all over the world, Bjorn, Agnetha, Anni-Frid and Benny are recreated before your eyes by four of the world’s most accurate, authentic and experienced ABBA Tribute Artists. Now in 2016, their music is still alive and well, unmatched and sounding as incredible as the day it was created.

From Super Trooper to Chiquitita, Voulez-Vous to Dancing Queen, this show has all the hits made fresh by an electric live band. The lighting and sound design is second to none, this is a truly amazing production. Waterloo is currently touring UK theatre making headlines everywhere it goes. This show is quite simply a stunning recreation of a live ABBA concert, an experience not to be missed by any ABBA fan!

Helping you recover body, mind and spiritSt. Vincent Employee Assistance Program (EAP) is a counseling and referral service, designed to assist employees and their families in overcoming personal problems. EAP counselors are trained to deal with a wide variety of employee problems. They will offer you professional support and direction toward resolving the problem. Services offered include:

• Identification/Evaluationofproblems • Short-termcounseling • Educationalworkshops/seminars • 24-hourcrisisphoneline • Referralstootherresourcessuchaslegalservices, physicians,financialcounselingandmore

if your company is interested in receiving more information about our program, please call 317.338.4900 or 1.800.544.9412.

st.vincent.org

Page 62: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

©2016 The National Bank of Indianapolis www.nbofi.com Member FDIC

261-9000

GREATER INDIANAPOLIS IS OUR STAGE.

LOOKING TO GETINVOLVEDWITH THE ISO?

27FabulousConcerts!

Want to join our volunteer team? Attend the ISO volunteer training on Saturday, September 17, 2016!

Registration begins at 6:00 p.m.To reserve your spot, contact Donna Finney, Volunteer Services Manager

at [email protected] or 317-231-6792.Visit IndianapolisSymphony.org/Volunteer for more details.

Want to join our volunteer team? Attend the ISO volunteer training on Saturday, September 17, 2016!

Registration begins at 6:00 p.m.To reserve your spot, contact Donna Finney, Volunteer Services Manager

at [email protected] or 317-231-6792.Visit IndianapolisSymphony.org/Volunteer for more details.

Star Spangled Symphony

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©2016 The National Bank of Indianapolis www.nbofi.com Member FDIC

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*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

CLASSICAL MYSTERY TOUR: MUSIC OF THE BEATLES

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program NineFriday, August 12, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, August 13, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

AUG 12, 13

CLASSICAL MYSTERY TOUR

Tony Kishman – Bass guitar, piano, vocals Jim Owen – Rhythm guitar, piano, vocals

David John – Lead guitar, vocalsChris Camilleri – Drums, vocals

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Associate Sponsors

Premier Sponsor

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CLASSICAL MYSTERY TOUR AUG 12, 13

Jim Owen (John Lennon, Rhythm Guitar, Piano, Vocals) was born and raised in Huntington Beach, California. He gained rich musical experience from his father who played music from the classics for him on the piano and from his extensive library of recordings by the great classical artists. Owen began studying piano at 6. He was 8 years old when he first heard The Beatles and promptly decided to take up the study of the guitar. His first professional performance as a Beatle was at 16. Then, at age 18 ,he began touring internationally with various productions of Beatlemania. In 1996, Owen began working on his idea for a new show with orchestra. It has long been his dream to share with the public live performances of some of the greatest music ever written and recorded. Classical Mystery Tour is the result.

Born and raised on Long Island, New York, Chris Camilleri (Ringo Starr, Drums/Vocals) had a convenient drum teacher; his dad. He started listening to Beatles records at a young age. Gradually Chris gravitated to progressive rock bands but retained a fondness for The Beatles and eventually formed the internationally-renowned Beatles cover band Liverpool which still reunites to perform at the Fests For Beatles Fans (formerly Beatlefest). Chris has played drums for a variety of touring artists, including Peter Noone (of Herman’s Hermits fame), Badfinger, Micky Dolenz, Joe Walsh, and other Beatles-era bands. In addition to The Beatles, his musical influences include Jethro Tull, Genesis, ELP and David Bowie. When not playing music, Chris has an active commercial and voice-over career.

Originally from Nebraska but now living in Salt Lake City, Utah, David John (George Harrison, Lead guitar/vocals) has been performing in various musical acts since the age of 17. From rock, blues, country, progressive, and guitar orchestra pit, he’s covered it all and has shared the stage with such notable names as the Beach Boys, Chicago, Peter Noone & Herman’s Hermits, Young Rascals, Glen Campbell, America, Kansas, Styx, Peter Frampton, Hall & Oates, Hootie & the Blowfish, John Waite, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, and the Temptations. Since 1993, he has taken the stage with a variety of Beatle tribute bands but especially enjoys teaming up with a full orchestra to authentically reproduce the original recordings in a live concert setting. David loves to present George’s guitar arrangements in their articulate detail.

Singer-songwriter Tony Kishman (Paul McCartney, Bass Guitar, Piano, Vocals) was born in Tucson, Arizona where he began his musical career in the early 1970s. Although he had been playing guitar for a number of years, it was not until age 19 that Tony started performing seriously.Kishman’s early influences included Wishbone Ash, Bad Company and Peter Frampton. Between 1973 and 1978, he played guitar in the group Cheap Trix, a cover band performing Top 40 as well as originals.Starting in 1979, Kishman played bass and guitar for six years as Paul McCartney in both the national and international tours of Beatlemania. He then went on to perform in Legends in Concert and produced shows that ran in Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe. He joined the classic supergroup Wishbone Ash for a tour of Europe and the recording of the group’s 18th album.

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TOTO

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Ten*Friday, August 19, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, August 20, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

AUG 19, 20

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

TOTO

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Associate Sponsors

www.dcgindy.com

Premier Sponsor

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AUG 19, 20TOTO

Toto returned in 2015 with an album that could be defined as a realized vision three plus decades in the making. The recordings on TOTO XIV exhibit world-class musicianship, masterful arrangements, topical lyrical commentary, and melodies that the collective genius of Lukather, Paich, Porcaro, Williams and their assembled band-mates bring to life. This new studio album is arguably the true follow-up to a TOTO IV, which made the band global superstars, and the band’s first studio album since Falling In Between (2006).

Keyboardist Steve Porcaro reveals, “This is opposite of going through the motions. We are treating this like it is “Toto V”, our follow-up to TOTO IV. We just want to be the best version of ourselves that we can be. Be true to ourselves and make the best music we can. Entertain people which is what we were put on this Earth for.” Keyboardist David Paich reflects, “I think of Toto as a unit and a band that carries a responsibility when it goes out there in to the public consciousness. There is so much negativity and darkness that I think you have to be as Quincy Jones puts it, ‘beams of light that blast through the darkness’.”

As they began the process of a return to the studio, all of the principle long-term members brought their A-game to the table. Guitarist Steve “Luke” Lukather offers, “When you put us in a room and everybody brings in their pieces, the next thing you know it all fits together. Singer Joseph Williams adds, “We are talking about a band where everybody is a writer, and everybody is a lead singer, and everybody is a player. All involved brought this trio to the table where it could just live on its own.”

Historically, few ensembles in the history of recorded music have individually or collectively had a larger imprint on pop culture than the members of Toto. As individuals, the band members’ imprint can be heard on an astonishing 5,000 albums that together amass a sales history of a half a billion albums.

With over 38 years together and thousands of credits and accolades to their names, Toto remains one of the top selling tour and recording acts in the world.

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WHO’S BAD: MUSIC OF MICHAEL JACKSON

Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Eleven*Friday, August 26, 2016 at 8 p.m.Saturday, August 27, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

AUG 26, 27

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

WHO’S BAD

Taalib YorkJoseph Bell

Michael EstebanArchie Logan

Justin “JC” MartinRay McCall

Aaron McCoy Jr.Daniel Rychlec Vamsi Tadepalli

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Associate Sponsors

August 26 – College Night

Premier Sponsor

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WHO’S BAD AUG 26, 27

Who’s Bad’s live performance is an unrivaled celebration of pop music’s one true King. Their power-packed performance of Michael Jackson’s expansive catalog has ignited crowds on every continent and can only be described as a jaw-dropping. As the longest-running Michael Jackson tribute band and the only one to predate his untimely passing, Who’s Bad has awed even the skeptics, selling out nearly 50 venues in the United Kingdom including London’s O2 in December of 2010, the venue where the King of Pop was slated to end his career with a 50-show “This Is It” concert series.

Beyond this unparalleled achievement, Who’s Bad has checked some of the world’s most famous pavilions off their ‘to-do’ list, selling out their first tour of China with stops at Ningbo’s Grand Theatre and Hunan Grand Theatre in Chengsha. Never neglecting Michael’s U.S. fans, Who’s Bad has packed The House of Blues franchise all across the United States; rocked DC’s 930 Club and returned to their native Chapel Hill, NC boasting larger, more eagerly-awaited performances with every romp around the globe. Sold-out shows from Colorado’s Bluebird Theatre and LA’s Gibson Amphitheatre and Romania’s Sala Palatalui to Teatro do Bourbon Country (Porto Alegre, Brazil) tell the story: no corner of the earth is safe from this infectious party production.

Who’s Bad has earned its name by paying studious attention to Michael Jackson’s every

original groove and gravity-defying dance move, boasting over 100 years of professional experience and a team of dancers with resumes that include Broadway productions such as Phantom of the Opera. Vamsi Tadepalli (Who’s Bad founder, composer, and saxophonist) assembled a cast of North Carolina’s premiere musicians and, from Who’s Bad’s inception, believed in the band’s boundless possibilities. The velvety vocals and pinpoint choreography of frontmen Joseph Bell and Taalib York’s combined with the six-piece band’s synchronized dance routines, blaring horns and down-deep rhythms, results in a performance delivered with soul and precision superseded by no one but the King himself. They’ve shared stages with the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, The Backstreet Boys, The Four Tops, Boys II Men, and hip hop superstar, Pitbull.

Whether you idolized the Jackson 5, fell in love to Human Nature, or learned to moonwalk to Billie Jean, Who’s Bad is The Ultimate music and dance driven Michael Jackson homage. As the curtain opens on a Who’s Bad performance, every MJ fan feels the adrenaline, screams at the sight of that unmistakable silhouette, and succumbs to a surefire Michael Jackson sing-along. The energy is purely magnetic, the musicianship is first-rate, the dance moves deftly inspired. Who’s Bad is a tribute befitting a King.

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IPL Ad

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Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Twelve*Thursday, September 1, 2016 at 8 p.m.Friday, September 2, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

SUPER DIAMOND: THE NEAL DIAMOND TRIBUTESEPT 1, 2

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

SUPER DIAMOND

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Associate Sponsors

Premier Sponsor

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SUPER DIAMOND SEPT 1, 2

San Francisco’s Super Diamond has become one of the most popular live shows at major nightclubs, theaters, ballrooms and public events throughout the United States. For over a decade the band has consistently performed sell-out shows at venues such as Irving Plaza in New York, 930 Club in Washington D.C., Bimbo’s in San Francisco, and House of Blues venues in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Diego, Cleveland and Dallas toname but a few.

At these venues Super Diamond has generated an exuberant audienceresponse previously unheard of for a tribute band. Many would say that Super Diamond has transcended the label of “tribute band” by passionately immersing themselves in Neil Diamond’s huge repertoire and delivering a high-octane show of unforgettable classics such as Cracklin’ Rosie, Sweet Caroline, Forever in Blue Jeans and many others.

Super Diamond has also performed at landmark venues and events such as Hollywood Bowl, Taste of Chicago, Fenway Park in Boston, Coors Field in Denver and numerous fairs, festivals and corporate celebrations across the country and overseas.Super Diamond front man, The Surreal Neil, Randy Cordeiro, astonishes audiences with his live interpretation of the “real Neil.” Randy created the charismatic character when he discovered he had the uncanny ability tocapture not only Neil Diamond’s voice, but also his mannerisms and performance style.

Randy formed Super Diamond with founding members Matt Tidmarsh (bass guitar), Rama Kolesnikow (keyboards), and his childhood friend James Terris (keyboards) and soon after attracted the stellar talents of Chris Collins (guitar) and Vince Littleton (drums). With a dedication to performing a dazzling, rockin’ show and a reputation as one of the best live bands in the country, Super Diamond continuously draws full-capacity crowds and has a loyal, dedicated and ever-expanding fan base that bridges generations.

Super Diamond’s dream came true when Neil Diamond joined them on stage for a surprise appearance at the House of Blues in Hollywood. A moment of endorsement that swelled the band members’ hearts andstunned the audience that night. Neil Diamond also praised the band when questioned about the success of Super Diamond by Katie Couric and Larry King on national television.

Super Diamond delivers a glittering, smoke-filled show performing Neil’spower ballads and up-tempo hits with unrestrained enthusiasm. The showis pure entertainment—classic music combined with fun, energy andpassion—creating nostalgia for the good old days and excitement fortoday’s generation.

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Krzysztof Urbański, Music DirectorJack Everly, Principal Pops ConductorRaymond Leppard, Conductor LaureateVince Lee, Associate Conductor

Marsh Symphony on the Prairie Series/Program Thirteen*Saturday, September 3, 2016 at 8 p.m.Sunday, September 4, 2016 at 8 p.m.Conner Prairie

THE COMPANY MEN: MUSIC OF THE DECADESSEPT 3, 4

*The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra does not appear at this concert. Artists subject to change.Length of performance is approximately two hours.

Recording or photographing any part of this performance is strictly prohibited.

COMPANY MEN

Selections to be announced from the stage.

Associate Sponsor

Premier Sponsor

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THE COMPANY MEN SEPT 3, 4

The Company Men are a nationally recognized pop vocal group who have appeared on numerous national and regional television shows, including Hallmark Home and Family, Good Day New York and PBS to name a few.

Unlike any other four-man vocal group touring today, The Company Men uniquely interweave today’s Top 40 hits with re-imagined classics of the last six decades by blending songs by your favorite artists, including Sam Smith, the Four Tops, Michael Jackson, Katy Perry, Adele, The Temptations,

Billy Joel, Prince, Meghan Trainor, Bruno Mars, Michael Bublé and more. Their show, A Night of Hits, brings you a staggering 50+ songs in just 90 minutes! Featuring performers from the Broadway and National Touring companies of Hairspray, The Lion King, Jesus Christ Superstar, Camelot and the Emmy Award winning NBC mini-series The Temptations, The Company Men bring a signature throwback sound, contemporary look and an all-star band, which has the widest demographic appeal of any touring act.

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Families with preschool children enjoyed a new Teddy Bear Concert called The Big Note,

written by ISO violinist Victoria Griswold. ISO musicians performed this music-based story for movement and listening to more

than 500 families this season.

The ISO’s Metropolitan Youth Orchestra celebrated 20 years of transforming lives through music.

At the Celebration Concert on April 10, Mayor Joe Hogsett declared it “Betty Perry Day”!

The ISO continued its partnership with Greater Greenwood and Avon through the 317 Series, sending ISO musicians

into classrooms to share their music and their stories with young musicians in those communities.

music educators were invited to share the stage with the orchestra to rehearse and play the

No. 1 in D Major (“Titan”).

THE ISO IN YOUR COMMUNITYThis season, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra provided education and engagement opportunities for Indiana residents of all ages. Here are some highlights from the year.

Over 18,000 elementary students attended 14 Discovery Concerts, where they played recorders

and sang along with the orchestra.

59 high school musicians were chosen to play in our Side-by-Side program, creating a 100+

piece orchestra of students and professionals.

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ISO MUSICIANS AROUND TOWN

On July 3, 2016, The Signature Symphony in Tulsa will perform James Beckel’s (Principal Trombone) piece Gardens of Stone with Dr. Barry Epperley conducting.

On July 4, 2016, James Beckel has several pieces that will be performed. The Grand Teton Music Festival will perform Beckel’s piece The American Dream at the Walk Festival Hall in Teton Village, WY. Donald Runnicles is conducting. The Starlight Symphony Orchestra will perform Beckel’s piece Liberty for All with David Oertel conducting and John Berry narrating at the Hays CISD Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m. Ward Stare will lead the Rochester Philharmonic in a performance

of Beckel’s piece, Liberty for All and Matthew Savery will conduct the Bozeman Symphony in a performance of I Am the American Flag.

John Wetherill, Principal Bassoon, will be joining forces with musicians from orchestras around the United States and Europe this summer with Festival Napa Valley in California. This will be the inaugural season of the festival. Festival guest artists include Kathleen Battle and the actor Chris Noth. Performances will take place in Yountville, California.

ELEMENTARY. MIDDLE SCHOOL. HIGH SCHOOL. COLLEGE.

Student tickets for the 2016-17 season go on sale August 8th! From Beethoven to Broadway, student

tickets are available to most shows for only $10!

TICKETS ARE JUST $10 FORSTUDENTS & TEACHERS!

One ticket per valid ID.

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TICKETS AT INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG OR CALL THE BOX OFFICE AT 317.639.4300

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ARTS IN INDY

To advertise your events in the Arts in Indy section, contact Mallory MacDermott at [email protected] or 317.664.7812

Dance Kaleidoscope

Athletic. Artistic. Powerful. Dance Kaleidoscope brings professional contemporary dance to Indianapolis. DK’s season opener will be Moving Sculptures, October 20-23 at Indiana Repertory Theatre. Learn more about DK at dancekal.org and follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Indianapolis Children’s Choir

The Indianapolis Children’s Choir cordially invites you to the beginning of a new era, as we enter our first season with Artistic Director Joshua Pedde at the helm! Beginning this fall, 2016–17 concert season is sure to be an exciting year full of wonderful surprises and firsts for the ICC. Join us as we embark on this new journey! The ICC has programs for students ages 18 months to 18 years. To enroll a child, attend a concert, or make a donation, call 317.940.9640.

Indianapolis Symphonic Choir

Sing with one of the nation’s most respected choruses! The Indianapolis Symphonic Choir will audition new singers in August to be a part of its 80th anniversary season. The Choir is comprised of 200 singers under the direction of Eric Stark and rehearses weekly for 3 hours from September to June. Reaching audiences numbering over 25,000 people annually, the Choir is the choral partner of the ISO but remains a separate non-profit arts institution founded in 1937. For more information about the 80th anniversary season and auditions, visit indychoir.org or call (317) 940-9057.

New World Youth OrchestrasThe New World Youth Orchestras is central Indiana’s premiere youth orchestra organization. Comprised of three separate orchestras, the mission of NWYO is to develop the musical talent and nurture the personal growth of young people in Indianapolis and central Indiana through the rehearsal and performance of orchestra masterworks, both traditional and contemporary. For more information, including auditions for our 2016–2017 season, please visit www.nwyso.org.

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THE ISO’SYOUNGPROFESSIONALS

GROUP

Lee CoomlerSenior Vice President

Morgan Stanley - Wealth Management

Todd Barrett,Partner-Assurance Services

Ernst & Young

Brittany NehmenAnalyst

J.P. Morgan Private Bank

John MainellaDirector of Developement

and Major GiftsSt. Richard's Episcopal School

Danielle TrudeauFinancial Advisor

McCaw/Schneck Group of Merrill Lynch

Senior Associate at CBRE and Proprietor at The District Tap

• ACCESS TO ONE OF INDY’S MOST VIBRANT, ENERGETIC, PROFESSIONAL NETWORKS.

• INVITATIONS TO PRIVATE PARTIES AND RECEPTIONS.

• SOME OF INDY’S MOST INVOLVED YOUNG PROFESSIONALS.

MEMBERSHIPS BENEFITS OR UPCOMING EVENTS, VISIT US ATINDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG.

THESE ARE ONLY 20 OF MORE THAN 125 YOUNG PROFESSIONALS WHO HELP

NETWORK AND PROMOTE THE ISO. JOIN FORTE AND RECIEVE OTHER GREAT BENEFITS!

Dr. Matthew GardlikAssociate Attorney

Woodward, Emhardt, Moriarty, McNett & Henry LLP

Financial AdvisorAssociate Vice President

Ameriprise Financial

Robbie KuszSales Support Specialist

First Person

Maggie TatterSenior Manager

Deloitte & Touche, LLP

Brad LoveAssociate

Barnes & Thornburg LLP

Brandon RussellDirector of Marketing and Communications

Equities First Holdings, Vice Chair

Joey SmithEvents & Promotions Coordinator

NUVO

Heather HallVice President of

Community DevelopmentSun King Brewing Co.

Lauren GuidottiCommunity Outreach

ManagerIndianapolis Motor Speedway

Sherry HongFirst Violin

Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

Catherine JonesPharmacist

CVS Pharmacy

Benham RobertsDirector, Global Marketing

OperationsExactTarget

Carson ShadowenVice President

Senior Wealth AdvisorSBC Wealth Management, Chair

Business AnalystSimon Property Group

Sarah StudzinskiAssociate

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ENDOWMENT

Endowed Orchestra Chairs, Performances and Special EndowmentsEndowed orchestra chairs, performances and special endowment gifts allow our benefactors the opportunity to be recognized for their significant gifts to the Orchestra or to honor others. We would like to thank the following donors for their generous support of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s Endowment Fund.

Endowed Orchestra Chairsthe Ford-weSt concertMaSter chair

Endowed by Richard E. Ford in honor of his mother, Florence Jeup Ford, and Hilda Kirkman WestZachary De Pue, Concertmaster

the Meditch aSSiStant concertMaSter chair

Endowed by Juliette, Dimitri, Marian and Boris Meditch Peter Vickery, Assistant Concertmaster

the wiLcox aSSiStant concertMaSter chair

Endowed by David E. and Eleanor T. WilcoxDean Franke, Assistant Concertmaster

the taureL aSSiStant principaL Second vioLin chair

Endowed by Kathy and Sidney TaurelMary Anne Dell’Aquila, Assistant Principal Second Violin

the dick denniS FiFth chair

Endowed in memory of Richard F. Dennis by Carol Richardson DennisThis Second Violin Section Chair is Seated Using Revolving Seating the jane and Fred SchLeGeL principaL vioLa chair

Endowed by Jane and Fred Schlegel

the aSSiStant principaL ceLLo chair

Endowed anonymously

the randaLL L. tobiaS ceLLo chair

Endowed by Randall L. TobiasIngrid Fischer-Bellman, Cello the dr. and MrS. robert L. rudeSiLL ceLLo chair

Endowed by Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. RudesillAnne Duthie McCafferty, Cello

the Sidney and kathy taureL principaL FLute chair

Endowed by Sidney and Kathy TaurelKaren Evans Moratz, Principal Flute

the janet F. and dr. richard e. barb piccoLo chair

Endowed by Janet F. and Dr. Richard E. BarbRebecca Price Arrensen, Piccolo

the Frank c. SprinGer jr. principaL oboe chair

Endowed by Frank C. Springer Jr.Jennifer Christen, Principal Oboe the ann haMpton hunt enGLiSh horn chair

Endowed by Ann Hampton HuntRoger Roe, English Horn

the robert h. MohLMan principaL cLarinet chair

Endowed by the Robert H. Mohlman FundDavid A. Bellman, Principal Clarinet

the huFFinGton aSSiStant principaL cLarinet chair

Endowed in memory of Robert Huffington by Clarena HuffingtonCathryn Gross, Assistant Principal Clarinet

the robert L. Mann and FaMiLy principaL horn chair

Endowed by Robert L. Mann and FamilyRobert Danforth, Principal Horn

the bakken FaMiLy horn chair

Endowed by a gift from Dawn, Ruth and Darrell BakkenJerry Montgomery, Horn

the w. brookS and wanda y. Fortune principaL truMpet chair

Endowed by W. Brooks and Wanda Y. Fortune

the dr. and MrS. charLeS e. teSt troMbone chair

Endowed by Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Test

the thoMaS n. akinS principaL tiMpani chair

Endowed anonymouslyJack Brennan, Principal Timpani

the waLter MyerS jr. principaL harp chair

Endowed anonymously in honor of Walter Myers Jr.Diane Evans, Principal Harp

the dorothy MunGer principaL keyboard chair

Endowed by the Women’s Committee of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

Endowed Performancesthe FranciS w. and FLorence Goodrich dunn annuaL cLaSSicaL SerieS openinG concertS

Endowed by the Florence Goodrich Dunn Fund September 18-19, 2015 – Beethoven’s “Emperor”

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ENDOWMENT

the perForMance oF cLaSSicaL MuSic incLudinG Major LiturGicaL and choraL MuSic Endowed in memory of Elmer Andrew and Marguerite Maass Steffen by E. Andrew SteffenOctober 9-10, 2015 – Beethoven’s Missa solemnis

Frank and irvinG SprinGer piano perForMance Endowed by Frank C. Springer Jr. November 6-7, 2015 – Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 1

the pauL FaMiLy perForMance oF cLaSSicaL MuSic

Endowed by Dorit, Gerald, Eloise and Alison PaulNovember 13-14, 2015 – Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 2

yuleTiDe celeBraTion openinG perForMance Endowed by Marianne Williams Tobias First Performance December 2015

yuleTiDe celeBraTion cLoSinG perForMance Endowed by Marianne Williams Tobias Last performance December 2015

the MohLMan perForMance oF cLaSSicaL MuSic

Endowed by a gift from Ina M. Mohlman and the late Robert H. MohlmanJanuary 22-23, 2016 – Beethoven’s Fifth & The Rite of Spring

The performance of a GuesT arTisT

Endowed by the Jean D. Weldon Guest Artist fundJanuary 29-30, 2016 – The Planets

the perForMance oF new MuSic

Endowed by LDI, Ltd.February 5-6, 2016 – Music from 2001: A Space Odyssey

the perForMance oF a younG proFeSSionaL artiSt

Endowed by Roche DiagnosticsFebruary 19, 2016 – Caroline Shaw and Shara Worden

the pauL and roSeann pitz perForMance oF cLaSSicaL MuSic

Endowed by the Paul and Roseann Pitz FundMarch 4 - 5, 2016 – Rachmaninoff’s Second Piano Concerto

the perForMance oF iSo principaL chair MuSicianS

Endowed by the Eugene B. Hibbs FundMarch 11-12, 2016 – Don Quixote

the MariLyn k. GLick younG coMpoSer’S ShowcaSe

Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B. GlickMarch 18, 2016 – Nielsen’s “Inextinguishable” Symphony

the Frank e. Mckinney, jr. GueSt conductor chair

Endowed by Marianne Williams Tobias April 15-16, 2016 – André Watts

the MrS. earL b. barneS MeMoriaL Fund in Support oF a GueSt artiSt

Endowed AnonymouslyMay 7, 2016 – The Legendary Menahem Pressler

the denniS t. hoLLinGS perForMance oF cLaSSicaL MuSic

Endowed by the Dennis T. Hollings FundMay 20-21, 2016 – Beethoven’s “Pastoral”

the wiLLiaM L. and jane h. Fortune GueSt conductor

chair

Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. William L. Fortune June 3-4, 2016 – Garrick Ohlsson

the biShop FaMiLy hoLLiday park concert

Endowed by the Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre Fund Summer 2016

the perForMance oF a SuMMer SerieS concert

Endowed by Mrs. William P. Cooling Summer 2016 – Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

special endOwMents

hiLbert circLe theatre Endowed by Stephen and Tomisue Hilbert

the tobiaS Green rooM Endowed by Randall L. Tobias

the MaeStro Society

August and Margaret Watanabe Dr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Mallett Mrs. Walter Myers Jr. Randall L. Tobias Jack Weldon, Maestro Society Founder, given by Penny Ogle Weldon Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Wood Mr. Raymond Leppard Dr. John C. Bloom Edna Woodard-Van Riper Marianne Williams Tobias

the Marianne wiLLiaMS tobiaS proGraM annotator chair Endowed anonymously Marianne Williams Tobias, Program Annotator

artiSt in reSidence endowMent Endowed in memory of Hortense and Marvin Lasky

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ENDOWMENT

the pauL e. and Martha k. SchMidt conductinG Study FeLLowShip Endowed by Paul E. and Martha K. Schmidt

the MichaeL ben and iLLene koMiSarow Maurer younG MuSicianS conteSt Endowed by Michael Ben and Illene Komisarow Maurer

the inStruMent pettinG zoo Endowed by Dr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Mallett

the indiana SerieS Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. J. Irwin Miller

the indianapoLiS SyMphony orcheStra vice preSident oF education Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. William L. Fortune

the MariLyn k. GLick younG coMpoSer’S ShowcaSe Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B. Glick

the iSo pre-SchooL MuSic education proGraMS Underwritten by Friends of Ava Button

the Sarah McFarLand endowMent Endowed by the Sarah McFarland Fund

the pitz LeaderShip award Endowed by the Paul and Roseann Pitz Fund

the inStaLLation and Maintenance oF a theatre pipe orGan Endowed by the Sally Reahard Fund

the j.k FaMiLy Foundation wordS on MuSic Endowed by Marianne Williams Tobias, President, J.K. Family Foundation

the outer Lobby Named to Recognize the Generous Gift of Ruth Lilly to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra 1984

the Grand Lobby Endowed by Marianne Williams Tobias

the box oFFice Lobby Named in Honor of Generous Support from Marianne W. and Frank E. McKinney Jr. “The Art and Science of Music are an Enduring Reflection of the Thoughts & Experiences of Humankind,” June 1991

Second FLoor Lobby

Named in memory of William Fortune, prominent civic leader, by a generous gift from William L. and Jane H. Fortune

orcheStra box c1 This Orchestra Box Endowed by Mrs. Bailey (Gladys) Swearingen

orcheStra box c2This Orchestra Box Endowed by Saundra Lee and H. Tuck Schulhof

orcheStra box c3This Orchestra Box Endowed by Herschel and Angela Porter

orcheStra box c4This Orchestra Box Endowed by E. Andrew Steffen

orcheStra box c6This Orchestra Box Endowed by Mrs. Rhonda Kittle in honor of her late husband, James L. Kittle

the ovaL proMenade

Named to Recognize the Generous Gift of the Eli Lilly and Company Foundation to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra October 1984

FirSt Monday MuSic cLub

Endowed anonymously

StaGe terrace SeatinG

Endowed anonymously

special acknOwledGeMents

perForMance oF the wurLitzer pipe orGan

Generously underwritten by David and Eleanor Wilcox

the new Steinway concert Grand piano

Given in memory of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball by Mrs. Lucina B. Moxley

the MuSic Library oFFice Underwritten by the Musicians and Staff of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in memory of Richard Grymonpré

the iSo aSSociation oFFice

Endowed by Peggy & Byron Myers

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LYNN SOCIETY

Albert & Gail Ammons Earleen M. AshbrookMs. Nancy AyresDawn, Ruth* & Darrell* BakkenJanet F. & Dr. Richard E. BarbFrank & Katrina BasileDr.* & Mrs. Paul F. BenedictDale & Barb BensonDr. John C. BloomRosanne BonjouklianMrs. Charlotte BoseCharles & Cary BoswellDr. Ella H. & Mr. Robert R. BowmanMr. & Mrs. Charles H. BoxmanJohn Charles Braden &

Denton RaubenoltDonald & Barbara BroadlickPhilip J. BurckAlex. S. CarrollNancy & Chris* ChristyMs. Patricia C. ChunnNorman I.* & Maxine CohenJohn & Ulla ConnorChris W. & Lesley J. ConradPeter CooneyMr. & Mrs. Ronald A. CoxStephen & Andrea CranfillMr. & Mrs. Thomas E. DappLou & Kathy DaughertyEdgar* & Joanne DavisCarol Richardson DennisRollin & Cheri DickMr. & Mrs. Richard A. & Helen J. DickinsonClarita DonaldsonMrs. Lewis A. EnkemaMr.* & Mrs. Richard FeltonMr. Murray R. FischerDr.* & Mrs. W. Brooks Fortune

Dr. & Mrs. Larry C. FranksBradley S. & Teresa G. FusonDr. & Mrs. Richard W. GarrettDavid & Deloris “Dee”* GarrettMs. Patricia GarrityCy* & Pris GerdeJames E. & Judith A. GillespieDavid & Julie GoodrichMrs. Anne M. GreenleafJohn S. GriffinGail H. HallMary & George HarlessMike & Noel HeymannTom & Nora HiattClarena HuffingtonAnn Hampton HuntTy A. JohnsonJoan & David F.* KahnSwadesh & Sarla KalsiBob & Rhonda KasparPatricia KilburyMs. Peg KimberlinMs. Marie E. KingdonJohn J. Kloss, JDKay F. KochH. Jean Jones KyleJames E. & Patricia J. LaCrosseDr. Ned & Martha LamkinLawrence & Vivian LawheadMr. & Mrs. Richard L. LedmanRaymond LeppardMr. L. Robert Lowe Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Gordon E. MallettDr. & Mrs. Karl L. MandersMr.* & Mrs.* Michael Ben MaurerStacy MaurerJanice & John F. McHenryW. Jean McCormickAlice* & Kirk* McKinneyRobert B. & Eleanor S. McNamara

Marian Y.* & Boris E. MeditchWilliam F. Murphy, CPAJohn & Carolyn MutzPeggy & Byron MyersMr. & Mrs. Charles J. O’DrobinakDorit & Gerald PaulJoan S. PaulinDr.* & Mrs. Bruce PeckMarian Pettengill and FamilyMrs. Joseph D. PierceDr. & Mrs. George RappJosette RathbunMr.* & Mrs. Elton T. RidleyDr. & Mrs. Robert L. RudesillHenry & Vel* RyderJane & Fred SchlegelPaul & Martha SchmidtCarl & Laurel SchnepfH. Tuck & Saundra L. SchulhofMargaret A. ShawJean & Clifton SmithMr. & Mrs. Clark L. SnyderSue K. StatonDr.* & Mrs. James B. SteichenAnn R. StrongKathryn* & Sidney TaurelMrs. David ThielWilliam & Karen ThompsonMarianne Williams TobiasAnn VaughanAnna S. & James P. WhiteMildred M. WieseDavid E. & Eleanor T. WilcoxMr. & Mrs.* Charles D. Williams, IIIRichard D. & Billie Lou* WoodMr. & Mrs. C. Daniel YatesMike & Phyllis* ZimmermannAnonymous (15)

*Deceased

Anna Ross AlexanderMrs. Raymond A. BassoMiss Helen F. BernheiselBetty Thorp BoydMrs. Elba L. Branigin Jr.John F. BrennanMrs. Ferne BrewerLenore B. BrignallSuzanne Swain BrownH. Earl Capehart Jr.

Walter ChroniakEdgar L. ConnAllen E. & Mary CrumJohn H. DarlingtonJ. Richard DelbauveVivian F. DelbrookSuzanne S. DettwilerLillian J. DuckwallFrancis W. & Florence Goodrich

Dunn

Mr. & Mrs. Don B. EarnhartMr. Robert A. EdwardsMr. Francis E. FitzgeraldMr. Richard E. FordMr. & Mrs. William L. FortuneNelle GodioMr. Raymond K. GretencordCarol E. GruenLouise W. HansonDr. & Mrs. F. R. Hensel

The Lynn Society has been established to recognize and honor those who, like Charles and Dorothy Lynn, wish to ensure the artistic greatness of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in perpetuity.

Members of The Lynn Society have notified the orchestra of their intention to make a legacy gift through estate plans or life-income arrangements. For more information, please contact the Office of Development at 317.713.3342.

THE INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA GRACIOUSLYACKNOWLEDGES GIFTS RECEIVED FROM THE ESTATES OF:

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Mr. & Mrs. Byron HollettMr. Dennis T. HollingsEmma Stutz HornMr. David A. JacobsFrances M. JohnsonMr. E. Patrick KaneMr. & Mrs. E.W. KelleyMr. Donald M. KerchevalLouise Lage KirtlandPeter B. KriegRuth LillyMr. & Mrs. Charles J. LynnDoris L. LynnMr. Stuart L. MainMr. & Mrs. Robert L. MannMarjorie N. McClureSarah Forney McFarlandMrs. Judd R. McKayMartha MeansMr. & Mrs. J. Irwin MillerMrs. Walter Myers Jr.Mr. Don Nicholson

Louis W. Nie, M.D. Mr. Donald G. NutterFrieda NyhartMarcia L. O’BrienMrs. Joanne W. OrrLois Heuse OttenDr. F. Bruce PeckMr. & Mrs. Paul G. PitzDr. Henry PlaschkesMr. Theodore N. PopoffPatricia A. QuinnMiss Sally ReahardMr. Vernley R. RehnstromPeter C. & Dr. Jeanette P. ReillyDr. Mary Avery RootSanford Rosenberg Frances M. SchagerMrs. Raiford ScottMrs. Mary SchulzMs. Violet H. SelleyMacy M. Glendining SimmonsJeannette Soudriette

Mr. Frank C. Springer Jr.Mr. Charles B. Staff Jr.Andrew SteffenFlorence Barrett StewartMrs. Samuel Reid SutphinDr. & Mrs. Charles E. TestH. Richard UnkelMrs. Helen E. Van ArendonkMary Jane WackerVirginia M. WagnerMargaret WarnerPenny WeldonHarriett Denny WhiteClara M. WilmethMs. Mary WrattenMildred R. YoungWilma K. YoungSteven J. ZellmanKarl & Barbara ZimmerAnonymous (5)

reMeMBerinG tHe isO in YOur will

It’s easy to make a bequest to the ISO, and no amount is too small to make a difference. Here is sample language:

“I hereby give ____% of my estate (or specific assets) to the Indiana Symphony Society, Inc., 32 East Washington Street, Suite 600, Indianapolis, IN 46204, for its general purposes.”

YOUR LEGACY MATTERS

Remembering the ISO in your will impacts

the music we share for generations to come.

No amount is too small to make a difference.

Contact Casey Chell, Director of Development, with questions about The Lynn Society at or [email protected].

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ANNUAL FUND

Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra depends on contributed income for about 43 percent of its annual budget. This Orchestra is pleased to recognize those who make it possible for one of America’s premier music ensembles to perform year-round in central Indiana.

Annual Fund Donor Honor RollIt is our privilege to list the following donors who have contributed to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s Annual Fund. Every donor is a valued partner in each achievement, both onstage and throughout our community outreach and education programming. This listing reflects the gifts received as of April 29, 2016. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this listing. However, we apologize for any inadvertent errors or omissions.

Please contact the Development Office at 317.713.3343 or visit us online at IndianapolisSymphony.org to make a donation today. Donations and general information requests may also be mailed to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at 32 East Washington Street, Suite 600, Indianapolis, IN 46204.

$100,000 and aboveAnonymousMs. Christel DeHaanMr. Jim S. IrsayKay F. KochB. M. “Marti” RipbergerYvonne H. ShaheenMarianne Williams TobiasRandall & Deborah Tobias

AnonymousArts Council of Indianapolis and the City of IndianapolisThe Christel DeHaan Family FoundationEfroymson Family FundEli Lilly and CompanyThe Herbert Simon Family FoundationIndianapolis Power & Light CompanyIndianapolis Symphony Orchestra AssociationLilly Endowment, Inc.The Margot L. and Robert S. Eccles Fund, a fund of CICFMarsh Supermarkets, LLC.Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable TrustRuth Lilly Philanthropic Foundation

Founders’ society, Music director($50,000+)

AnonymousRollin & Cheri DickSarah & John LechleiterAnn M. & Chris StackRichard D. Wood

The Glick Fund, a fund of Central Indiana Community FoundationPrinting Partners

Founders’ society, concertMaster($20,000-$49,999)

Christina Bodurow, Ph.D.Trent & Amy CowlesAnn DettwilerDawn M FazliPhil & Colleen KenneyDr. & Mrs. E. Henry Lamkin, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Eli Lilly IIDr. Gordon & Carole MallettMrs. F. Bruce Peck, Jr.Dr. Jeffrey Vanderwater-PiercyDr. Kenneth & Mrs. Debra RenkensRobert & Alice SchlossDr. & Mrs. Eugene Van HoveMartin & Mary WalkerDavid & Eleanor Wilcox

Kathy & Ralph Wilhelm

AnonymousAnthem Blue Cross and Blue ShieldArthur Jordan FoundationBarnes & Thornburg LLPBMO Harris BankBudweiser Zink Distributing Co, LLCChaseCitizens Energy GroupThe Clowes FundDelaware Community FoundationDuke EnergyErie InsuranceSalesForceIce Miller LLPIndiana Arts CommissionAnn and Gordon Getty Foundation and the League of American OrchestrasMacAllister Machinery Company, Inc.National Endowment for the ArtsNavientNicholas H. Noyes Jr. Memorial FoundationOneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc.R.B. Annis Educational FoundationRaymond James & Associates, Inc.Roche DiagnosticsScott A. Jones FoundationSt.Vincent HealthTelamon CorporationTerry Lee HyundaiThe Martin D. & Mary J. Walker Charitable Foundation

Founders’ society, First chair($10,000-$19,999)

Anonymous (2)The Honorable & Mrs. Alex M. Azar IIMr. & Mrs. Robert BaderCharlene & Joe BarnetteMr. & Mrs. Barry J. BentleyMaestro Raymond Leppard & Dr. John C. BloomBryan & Elaine BrennerDr. & Mrs. Thomas A. BroadieVincent & Robyn CaponiMr. & Mrs. Daniel P. CarmichaelMr. Daniel CorriganFred & Priscilla CrawfordMr. & Mrs. James E. DoraErin & Scott DorseyCraig & Mary FennemanDon & Carolyn HardmanEmily and Peter HowardAllan & Kathy HubbardBob & Rhonda Kaspar

Joseph & Kathy KesslerTimothy J. & Cindy KonichDr. Gwen & Mr. Robert KriviJames E. & Patricia J. LaCrosseDrs. W.H. & K.T. LandschulzMr. E. Kirk McKinney, Jr.Karen Mersereau & Dr. Michael HelmsMrs. Nancy Ann MorrisDorit & Gerald PaulWalt & Mary ProutyMary Frances RublyPhyllis & Gary SchahetMarlyne SextonJeff & Cassandra ShortChristopher A. Slapak & Michael J. RobertsonMr. Kevin D. TaylorRoberta & Bill WitchgerDr. Christian Wolf & Elaine Holden WolfHsiu-Chiung Yang & Marian MosiorJim & Rita Zink

ADL Charitable TrustBuckingham Foundation Inc.CNO Financial GroupCommunity Health NetworkDorsey FoundationDow AgroSciencesElba L. & Gene Portteus Branigin Foundation Inc.The Glick Family FoundationFenneman Family FoundationFifth Third BankThe Frenzel Family Charitable Lead TrustHendricks County Community FoundationIndiana Members Credit UnionThe Indiana Rail Road CompanyIndiana University Health PartnersIndustrial Dielectrics HoldingsThe Junior League of IndianapolisLacy FoundationMacy’sNextGear CapitalRicker’sRonald McDonald House Charities of Central Indiana and McDonald’s of Central IndianaRotary Foundation of IndianapolisThe Sells GroupShaheen Family FoundationTobias Family FoundationVectren Corporation

Founders’ society($5,000-$9,999)

Anonymous (9)Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. AdamsThomas N. AkinsTeresa & Don AltemeyerBob & Pat AnkerMr. Aasif BadeDrs. Douglas & Deborah BaloghTrudy W. BantaMs. Sarah BarneyDr. & Mrs. John E. BatchelderMr. & Mrs. Michael BecherAlpha BlackburnSuzanne B. BlakemanCharles & Joyce BoxmanMr. & Mrs. John BrattDonald & Barbara BroadlickCharles W. BrownMr. Richard F. Brown & Mrs Cathy Springer-BrownMichael & Mary Ann BrowningMr. & Mrs. Walter P. Bruen, Jr.Mike & Pat ByersMs. Jane ConleyDexter & Rosemary CooleyStephen & Andrea CranfillDavid & Consuelo DavisJack Everly & Ty A. JohnsonMs. Carol J. FeeneyDr. & Mrs. Richard W. GarrettMichael & Beth GastineauGary Ginstling & Marta LedererLarry C. & Lee A. GlasscockCharles & Susan GoldenMr. & Mrs. Thomas W. & Mary P. GreinJohn & Chichi GuySteve L. Hamilton & Keith O. NorwalkRichard & Elizabeth HolmesMr. & Mrs. W. Seymour HoltDr. Sharon HoogDr. Ann H. HuntDr. and Mrs. Ronald IacoccaDr. & Mrs. Raymond V. InghamCarlyn JohnsonKimra KiddDrs. Sandra & Charles KinsellaNed & Wendy KirbyMrs. James L. Kittle, Sr.David H. KleimanDon & Jen KnebelDr. & Mrs. Eugene P. KroeffMr. & Mrs. Joseph C. LanningNancy LillyDr. Richard E. LindsethGregory & Alexandra LoewenDr. & Mrs. Carlos Lopez

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Andrew J. MachtMs. Karen MangiaMr. & Mrs. Morris MaurerStacy A. MaurerMr. & Mrs. Bruce McCawRobert H. McKinneyVirginia MelinMr. & Mrs. Dayton MolendorpDavid MorganEllie, Weber & Emaline MorseJerry & Anne MossJohn & Carolyn MutzMr. & Mrs. Charles J. O’DrobinakMichael P. & Leanne M. O’NeilHolly & John PantzerKay Pashos & Neal SteinbartMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. PenceDonald & Karen PerezBart PetersonZeb & Barbara PortanovaDr. & Mrs. Robert L. RudesillFred & Bev RuebeckMargaret Cole Russell & Steve RussellMr. & Mrs. William N. SalinMs. Natalie SchneiderPerry & Lisa ScottWilliam & Faye SigmanMaribeth & Al SmithSusanne & Jack SogardMichael & Carol StaytonMr. & Mrs. Frank D. WalkerPete & Lena WardMargaret WatanabeMr. & Mrs. Daniel O. WeismanDavid P. Whitman & Donna L. ReynoldsLynn & Andy WiesmanJacquie & Fred WintersSara & Michael ZeckelJohn & Linda ZimmermannJennifer & Michael Zinn

Ann & Gordon Getty FoundationBarefoot WineThe Barrington of CarmelBKDBose McKinney & Evans LLPCare Institute Group, Inc.Charles W. Brown FoundationChubb Group of Insurance CompaniesCity of CarmelCornelius Family Foundation, Inc.Deloitte & Touche LLPDMC Holdings, Inc.Faegre Baker DanielsFedEx CorporationFranklin Symphonic Council, Inc.Hoover Family FoundationHuntington BankIndiana Space Grant ConsortiumIndianapolis Chapter of The Links, Inc.James O. & Alice F. Cole FoundationJungclaus-Campbell Co., Inc.The Julia L. and Andre B. Lacy Charitable Fund, a fund of CICFLumina Foundation for EducationMcCaw Family FoundationMeridian Dermatology

Merrill LynchMusicCrossroadsThe National Bank of IndianapolisRegions BankThe Rock Island Refining FoundationSkiles DetrudeThe StratfordWinners Circle

conductor’s circle($2,500-$4,999)

Anonymous (2)Mr. James AdamsDr. Albert Allen & Ms. Kathryn MaeglinMr. & Mrs. Michael AlleyJ. Dara & Sherry AmlungDr. & Mrs. Richard BarbFrank & Katrina BasileMr. C. Harvey Bradley Jr.Kenneth & Patricia BurowDr. & Mrs. John T. CallaghanElizabeth A. ChamberlinNancy ChristyDave & Christie CrockettFred & Alice CronerRobert Crouse & Anne WerryJames J. & Barbara CurtisRick & Jody DennerlineMs. Andrea DevoeSteve & Mary DeVoeKerry Dinneed & Sam SutphinMr. & Mrs. Craig DoyleRobert W. Dyar, M.D.Ms. Phyllis Dye TurnerMrs. Marian ElliottDorothy Schultz EnglehartDr. & Mrs. Michael E. FlaughSteve & Lisa FordMr. & Mrs. L. D. Foster, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Larry C. FranksJulia & Doug GardLou GerigDavid Gerstein, M.D.Cora A. GibsonSteven M. Giovangelo & Gerald J. BedardBert & Martha GormanJim & Roberta GrahamDr. Christian & Mrs. June GriesBob HallamMr. & Mrs. James HancockNancy J. HarrisonMr. Henry Havel & Ms. Mary StickelmeyerDr. David K. & Clarice F. HennonClarena HuffingtonMarsha A. HutchinsLarry & Annette HutchisonMs. Harriet Ivey & Dr. Richard BrashearMr. & Mrs. John C. Jenkins & FamilyScott & Holly JohnsonDr. & Mrs. C. Conrad JohnstonMr. & Mrs. John JokantasDaniel H Joseph and Liu LiDr. Louis N. Jungheim & Dr. Thalia NicasDr. and Mrs. John E. KalsbeckMr. & Mrs. Michael J. KenniffPeg KimberlinPeg LavagninoAndrew & Lynn Lewis

Jim & Sarah LootensMalcolm & Joyce MalletteMr. & Mrs. David MalsonMary & Charles MatsumotoMr. & Mrs. Robert B. McNamaraSusanah M. MeadBoris E. MeditchPete & Cindy MethodFlip & Cindy MillerMilton & Margaret MillerJim & Jackie MorrisDr. & Mrs. Daniel H. MowreyElizabeth & William MurphyPeggy & Byron MyersF. Timothy & Nancy NaglerMr. & Mrs. Guido NeelsCindy NicholsJackie NytesMr. & Mrs. Robert H. OrrNoel & Beth OutlandJane & Andrew PaineJack & Katie PattersonEloise Paul & Bill LeeMel & Joan PerelmanCarol PhillipsMyrta J. PulliamDr. & Mrs. George F. RappRichard & Betty Lou ReasonerJasmine ReeseMary Ann Dalton RickertDr. Merrill RitterTom & Ursula RobertsMrs. John R. RoeschNancy Ray RossMr. & Mrs. Todd K. RutledgeMr. Gilva F. SalleeJames & Mary Beth SchaferJane & Fred SchlegelKlaus & Joel SchmiegelDrs. Lei Shen and Soomin ParkEric Siemers & Peggy EdwardsJackie Simmons & Tom SchnellenbergerDr. Mike SimmonsDick & Susan SimonJoanne & Gerald SolomonDee & Tom SpencerDrs. Pamela Steed & Peter FurnoSydney L. SteeleJim & Cheryl StrainDrs. Randall & Bonnie StrateJames SweeneyNorm & Dawn TablerDr. & Mrs. Reed TarwaterMrs. David ThielDr. & Mrs. Ron ThiemeJeffrey & Benita ThomassonDr. James & Linda TrippiMs. Cathy TurnerMartha Anne VarnesJoe and Sue VertinJane & Hugh WatsonDr. & Mrs. William J. WheelerAnna S. & James P. WhiteBob & Marnie WilkenJames & Joyce WinnerTerence & Margaret YenBarrie & Margaret Zimmerman

500 Festival, Inc.The Ackerman Foundation

DB Engineering LLCDonovan CPAs & AdvisorsEnflora Flowers for BusinessErnst & Young LLPFirestone Building Products and Industrial ProductsFirst PersonHoosier Park at AndersonHorace MannIndiana American Water Co., Inc.Indiana Farm Bureau InsuranceIndiana Spine GroupThe Indianapolis RecorderInterDesignITT Technical InstitutesJ M Smith FoundationJohnson County Community Foundation, Inc.Dr. Michael J. Helms, DPMMike Watkins Real Estate Group IncRBC Wealth ManagementSEI InvestmentsThe Shaw-Burckhardt-Brenner FoundationSheila Fortune FoundationSkyline Club, IndianapolisSmoke Free IndySymphony at Sunset Group, IncUnitedHealthcareWestern Reserve Partners, LLCWitham Health Services

President’s club($1,500-$2,499)

Anonymous (5)Dr. & Mrs. Wayne AmbrousJoan BakerNicholas Barbaro & Sue Ellen ScheppkeMary Ruth BarnardSpencer & Marcia BavenderJames & Lynda BeckelMs. Susan BeverJay & Julie BishopMr. Benjamin & Mrs. Ashley BlairMr. & Mrs. Jesse L. BobbittCarla & George BoderKirk & Sharon Boller -- Bottom-Line Performance IncDr. & Mrs. W. C. BonifieldTerry & Robert L. BowenRandall Trowbridge & Alice BrownMatt & Janette BrownGordon & Celia BruderMrs. Alva BuchholtzMr. & Mrs. John CampbellJohn & Ulla ConnorChris W. & Lesley J. ConradBill & Angela CorleyMr. & Mrs. Bert CurryMr. Douglas DaviesMr. & Mrs. Gregory C. DavisManuel & Sally DebonoJulie & David DeWittDennis K. Dickos, M.D.Mr. & Mrs. Erold R. DillerMr. & Mrs. Robert M. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Dan DumbauldMiss E. Frances EickhoffDr. Thomas & Paula ElamAndrew & Irene EngelKristi Espiritu

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John N. & Julia Luros FaileyJim & Gracia FloydDr. Norm & Adrienne FogleDr. & Mrs. Mark FoglesongDick & Brenda FreijeStephen F. FryDr. Lawrence I. GoldblattJoe & Kathy GrahnMr. & Mrs. Berl J. GrantMr. & Mrs. Robert GregoryMs. Julie GriffithKenneth & Barbara HamiltonVelda HammanJoseph L. HanleyMr. & Mrs. Richard A. HarrisonMs. Lisa HeidGregory Henneke & Martha O’ConnorMr. & Mrs. Jerome T. HenningMr. & Mrs. Gerald V. HinchmanMr. & Mrs. V. William HuntMr. Gerald R. JennDr. & Mrs. Philip E. JohnstonJoan & David F. KahnDana & Marc KatzDonn & Dot KaupkeJames & Jennifer KelleyMr. Charles E. KendallPatricia KilburyLarry & Rose KleimanMr. Doug KlitzkeDr. Elisabeth KrugMr. & Mrs. George KyleDr. & Mrs. Richard LasburyBob & Maureen LeeCindy & Rick LefflerMr. & Mrs. Allan LitzDeborah & Joe LoughreyRalph & Nancy LundgrenJohn & Ingrid MailJon D. Marhenke, M.D.Linda & Carter MathewsDr. & Mrs. Ronald MausDr. & Mrs. Douglas R. MaxwellScott & Tiffany McCorkleAnn & John McGrathMarni McKinneyNancy L McMillanMr. & Mrs. Richard MenkeJim MillerMr. & Mrs. Robert E. MillerMrs. Ina MohlmanDr. & Mrs. Phillip G. MosbaughEric MoySarah MyerJack & Judy MyersMr. & Mrs. Daniel MytelkaTimothy S. NeedlerMr. Carl & Dr. Loui Lord NelsonTom & Nancy NewlinMr. & Mrs. John S. NullBill & Jamie ParrishAllen H. PekarMr. Lee & Mrs. Patricia PerkinsonBeverley & Bill PittsLois PlessSue & David PowersChristine & Ken PriceScott & Susan PutneyPatricia L. RaganMark & Susan RidlenMr. & Mrs. Randall Riggs

Mr. & Mrs. Byron RobinsonGordon & Patsy RoeDr. & Mrs. Randall G. RowlandMr. & Mrs. John & Vicky RuhlCol. & Mrs. Cecil SalterDave & Marcia SappDr. & Mrs. John F. SchaeferJerry & Rosie SemlerArmen and Marie-Claude ShanafeltMichael & Priscilla ShawRandall & Amy ShepardMr. & Mrs. Jeff SmithburnMr. & Mrs. Larry SpeerRita & Larry SteinbergEd & Barbara StewardRichard & Lois SurberR. H. TempleJerry & Linda ToomerStephen L. TracyDr. James & Linda TrippiJohn & Kathy VahleJoe & Diane Vande BoscheScott & Sue WebberCourtenay & Emily WeldonEmily A. WestMrs. Phyllis WestMrs. Mary WhalinMrs. Lucy WickKen & Wendy YerkesJosephine Yu

Batt Family FoundationConrad IndianapolisEndowment Development ServicesGracia E. Johnson FoundationThe Jenn FoundationJoanne W. Orr Charitable FundMallor Grodner LLPMarni McKinney FoundationMcKinney Family FoundationNTN DriveshaftPaul Family Foundation, Inc.The Penrod SocietyThe Toomer Family FoundationVan Riper Woodard Family Foundation

syMPhony club($1,000-$1,499)

Anonymous (10)Kate & Dan AppelMr. Wilbur L. Appel, Jr.Mr. Gregory & Mrs. Kimberly ArnottMr. & Mrs. Bradford H. ArthurMr. & Mrs. John S. AyreMs. Cindy BaileyMrs. Taylor L. BakerTerry & Patricia BalkoMeaghan BanksClay & Karen BarnesDean BarnhardMr. Walter H. BartzMs. Susan BatesMr. Brett & Mrs. Shari BaystonEric & Elaine BedelDr. & Mrs. Steven C. BeeringMr. & Mrs. Henry B. BlackwellRev. James R. BonkeMrs. Jeanne BookJeffrey Stant & Mary BookwalterErv & Priscilla Boschmann

Mr. & Mrs. R. Robert BraffordChristine & Robert BroughtonTiffany & William Browne, Jr.Terri BrukschRandall & Ann BurgessLorene M. BurkhartCeleste & Derrick BurksPam & Jack BurksHelen BurnettDonald W. ButtreyMs. Katharine CarrMr. & Mrs. E. M. CavalierRay and Lisa ChildersMr. & Mrs. Randall ChristieDan & Laura ConderMr. & Mrs. James M. CorneliusMrs. Mary C. CreanJoanne Meyer DavisRebecca & Larry DavisDavid & Brenda DayMr. Douglas B. DayDr. & Mrs. Frank DeaneDiantha V. DeGrawMr. & Mrs. Joseph E. DeGroffCasey Chell & Daniel DuarteConstance C. EarleDr. Carmel Egan & Mr. Gerard CarthyMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. EggersMs. Linda A. EricksonDavid & Julie EskenaziSherry FarisDr. & Mrs. Harvey FeigenbaumLinda FeltonDavid & Ann FrickMr. Carl & Mrs. Donna GahwilerMr. & Mrs. James F. GallagherPaul & Beth GayloMr. & Mrs. Raymond GibsonMarianne GlickMr. Scott & Ms. Amy GoldsmithMr. & Mrs. Ray E. GotshallMr. Jonathan Gottlieb & Valerie OmicioliThomas & Nancy GrembowiczMrs. C. Perry GriffithPeter Grossman & Pauline SpiegelJerry & Kathleen HackerKimberly J. HadleyDr. & Mrs. Jim HambyMrs. Elizabeth HamiltonMr. & Mrs. Eugene E. HennMike & Noel HeymannMrs. Sue HirschmanC. Jane HodgeMrs. Ginny HodowalMrs. Jill HoyleMs. Lysiane HuberCarolyn HumkeKrisztina & Ken InskeepMrs. Ninalou IsaacsonMs. Kristine IsenbergEthan & Joyce JacksonDavid L. Johnson & Anne NoblesMr. & Mrs. Richard JohnsonTy A. JohnsonCatherine JonesDr. & Mrs. Charles E. JordanMike & Linda JordanTerry KahnDr. & Mrs. Frederick M. KelvinRichard & Susan KentMr. Jerald W. King

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E KlausnerRichard & Roxanne KovacsBarry KrootTerrence & Jodi KunstekGene & Carolyn LauschMr. Eric Everett LeiterRev. Richard & Mrs. Nancy LewerDr. Erik L. LindsethMr. & Mrs. William LindstaedtMr. & Mrs. John D. LongLowell & Penelope LumleyCarey LykinsMr. Kevin Malley & Mr. Ronald NoblesMike & Jill MargettsBenton & Sandi MarksJames R. & Rita E. MartinDr. Rose MaysCarson & Betsy McCawMichael & Patricia McCroryCraig & Kathleen McGaugheyMr. & Mrs. Thomas McGinleyDorothy J. McIverAlan & Ann McKenzieMr. Allen & Mrs. Deborah MillerMr. & Mrs. James MillerJames E. LeGrand & William A. NicholsDr. Bruce & Mrs. Stefany MitlakLucina B. MoxleyAnn & Jim MurtlowMr. Reid NagleCarolyn and Blake Lee NeubauerMr. & Mrs. David L. NickelsPaul NordbyLara NorenThomas & Stacy O’LearyMichael & Lorelee PalmetierMrs. Karen L. ParrishSally & Jay PeacockLinda PenceMarian PettengillJim and Ray Luther-PfeilGayle L. PhillipsLarry & Nancy PughRoger & Anna RadueJo & Chris RathbunBarb and Tom ReedBob & Carol Reynolds, Barnes & ThornburgMrs. Mary L. RiceJean & Lamar RichcreekThe Riggs FamilyWilliam R. & Gloria RiggsMr. Larry RoanN. Clay & Amy RobbinsJoseph & Leanna RobertsPeggy L. RobinsonBill & Gail RodeckerDr. & Mrs. Gary R. SampsonDr. & Mrs. Andreas SashegyiRoderick & Anne ScheeleDr. Richard Schevitz & Ms. Rosemary ErvinRoger & Barbara SchmennerPaul & Martha SchmidtDavid & Kitty SedgleyJonathon & Donna SedgwickJohn SeestCarson & Carla ShadowenMr. & Mrs. Henry E. SleethMrs. Marian Small

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ANNUAL FUND

Nancy C. & James W. SmithMr. Peter & Mrs. Chris SmithhislerChristy & Jeffery SoldatisDennis SponselBetty & Alan StanfordBarb StangT.S. SunNela Swinehart & Lonn BayhaSteven & Robin TamesMr. John TanPhillip A. TerryMr. & Mrs. Robert ThomasThe Throm FamilyDouglas L. TillmanMrs. Clara TrappBarbara S. TullyKenneth L. TurchiJim & Leah TurnerLynn C. TylerConstance Van Valer, M.D.Don & Coleen WalkerDr. Kevin Waltz & Rhonda Fox WaltzMr. & Mrs. Bradley WarneckeMr. & Mrs. Charles WarrenNick and Maureen WeberFrank & Sandy WeddleJ. Anne WerryL. Alan & Elizabeth WhaleyMr. & Mrs. Frederic Wiese, Jr.Meg Williams & Nicole CollinsForrest WilliamsonMr. & Mrs. Meredith L. WilsonBob & Debbie WingerterMr. & Mrs. Robert WittJim & Karen WolfMrs. Edna WoodardTurner & Diann WoodardMrs. Irene YackoDiana & Dan YatesMr. & Mrs. Leslie R. ZimmermanMary Ann & Gene ZinkSue & John Zinser

AnonymousThe Ruth E. Stilwell Endowment Fund, a fund of CICFBlankenship Vocational ServicesCavalier Family FoundationCole Hardwood, Inc.Dayton FoundationThe Dr. Lawrence M. and Eldoris J. Borst Family Fund of the CICFASA Concierge Psychological Services, LLCGracie CommunicationsGregory & Appel InsuranceThe Humke Foundation, Inc.Indiana First Lady’s Charitable Foundation, Inc.Indiana Utility Shareholders AssociationLinebarger Janin Family Fund, a fund of Central Indiana Community FoundationMilestone Ventures IncPsi Iota Xi, Iota TauRSE Realty, IncSalin Bank & TrustThe Saltsburg Fund; Karen Lake Buttrey (deceased), Donald W. ButtreySBC Wealth ManagementStraubinger Flutes

virtuoso($750-$999)

Anonymous (8)Michael D. BartleyMark & Ann BearMr. & Mrs. Robert BergerMr. & Mrs. George BoguslawskiMr. & Mrs. Fred BosoKevin M. ClementsMr. James & Mrs. June ConineTerry & Debbie CottinghamDaryl, Sherry & Kevin CoxPatrick and Jennifer CrossNorman Dean

Jessica R. Di SantoJack & Connie DouglasJudith EricksonMr. Kenneth FrazaDr. Karen & Thomas GallagherDr. Matt GardlikMs. Dorothy GitlinDrs. Jean & Gerald GodfreyJohn & Mary Ann GroganMs. Lauren GuidottiMr. & Mrs. Alan HamiltonMr. & Mrs. Chris HanleyMr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Harvey, Jr.Stephen & Susan HensonMr. Ronald N. HermelingAbigail W. HohmannJack & Ruth HooverLarry & Marianne JacobiMr. William A. & Mrs. Elizabeth M. KerrDr. & Mrs. Jerry L. KightRobert & Cindy KirkpatrickDr. Yukiko KitagawaSteve & Sharon KlusmanCol. A. D. KneessyHoward & Sarah KnightMr. Richard & Mrs. Gwen KnipsteinMr. & Mrs. Tim KonradMs. Katherine KovacMr. Robbie KuszDennis & Karen LichtMr. & Mrs. Donald R. MacPhersonReverend Dr. Joan MalickJeffrey & Christine MarksMr. & Mrs. Ken MatsumotoDennis & Anne McCaffertyMr. & Mrs. Ralph McCormickEarl Miller & Ek-Leng Chua-MillerLawren MillsMr. Bill MoreauDr. Kathy MoreiraGraham Denby MoreyDr. and Mrs. Patrick J. MurphyMs. Brittany NehmanDavid & Diane Nesbitt

Brian OakleyDr. Donald and Mary Jean OranderDr. John A. & Cinda OvermanMuriel PattersonAnne K. Perry & Marvin C. Perry, IIJohn Mainella & Michael PettryJaneann PitzThe Prible FamilyScott A. ReefDiane RichardsonMs. Judy SchaeferSaundra & Tuck SchulhofDr. & Mrs. William SegarDr. & Mrs. Robert K. SilbertMs. Shelley StinerMr. Bill & Mrs. Linda StricklandMs. Sarah StudzinskiClaudia V. SwhierM. C. TannerMrs. Maggie TatterMs. Sheree ToneyMrs. T. Marilyn TroutBob & Sue TruePaul & Gretchen WatsonMr. & Mrs. Clark WilliamsonMiss Gretchen WolframLarry E. Wollert II & Arif KocabasDr. & Mrs. Steve YoungRichard E. ZieglerIndianapolis Symphony Orchestra Association South Group

contributed Goods and services($5,000 and above)

Blue & Co, LLCBuckingham Foundation Inc.Conrad IndianapolisEnflora Flowers for BusinessLynch, Incorporatedmitsch designNUVO NewsweeklyPrinting PartnersCatherine RossiWell Done MarketingWTTS

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TRIBUTE GIFTS

Tribute gifts are an excellent way to honor someone who values the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and they help ensure the continued excellence of the Symphony. We gratefully acknowledge the following tribute gifts received from March 17, 2016–April 29, 2016.

Memorial Gifts

In Honor of Jack Brennan Dr. Holly Hendrickson

Honor GiftsIn Honor of Sam Rothstein Mrs. Lea A. Einterz

In Memory of Joannie Burgett South Group Board, ISOA In Memory of Lamar Johnson James J. Titak

In Memory of Dan McLean Mrs. Sandy McLean

In Memory of Paul and Roseann Pitz George Pavlovich and Deborah Stude-Pavlovich

In Memory of Achille Rossi Paul and Donna Hilgeman

In Memory of Zena Myers Smith, sponsoring one classroom of students to attend a Discovery concert Mr. and Mrs. Jason Levin

GET SOCIALWITH THE ISO

INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

FOLLOW THE ISO ON SOCIAL MEDIA FOR CONCERT UPDATES, BEHIND-THE-SCENES PHOTOS, EXCLUSIVE CONTESTS, VIDEO INTERVIEWS AND MORE!

VISIT US ONLINE AT WWW.INDIANAPOLISSYMPHONY.ORG

Indy_SymphonyIndySymphony IndySymphony Indianapolis-SymphonyIndy_Symphony

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WHY WE GIVEBRUCE AND JAMIE MCCAW

If it is a Saturday night in summer, you are mostly likely going to find Bruce and Jamie McCaw at Marsh Symphony on the Prairie, entertaining friends and clients and enjoying a concert under the stars. It is a summer tradition for the McCaws that dates back nearly to the start of their marriage. After growing up in Joplin, MO, Bruce attended college at Northern Arizona University where he played basketball and baseball. Bruce and Jamie met in the cafeteria one day and “the rest was history.”

They moved to Indianapolis following their marriage, and Bruce had a mentor who began taking them to Starlight Musicals on the Butler campus. Bruce and Jamie both grew up with an appreciation for music, and Jamie played piano and continues to sing today in her church choir. They were happy to have the opportunity to enjoy music here in Indianapolis. About 15 years ago, Bruce joined the ISO Board of Directors, and the McCaws began attending more and more ISO concerts. They love the IPL Yuletide Celebration, The Lilly Classical Series and the Printing Partners Pops Series, but Marsh Symphony on the Prairie holds a special place in their hearts. With hectic lives and frequent travel, Bruce and Jamie appreciate the opportunity to take time to sit back and enjoy the music on a warm summer evening.

Bruce and Jamie believe that having the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in this community is a gift. It not only helps attract and retain talent to local businesses, but also provides the opportunity to share this wonderful heritage of music with future generations. Because of this, Bruce and Jamie invest philanthropically in the ISO personally and through their family foundation. Bruce and Jamie believe that music and music education are important and worthy of support, and because of this, Bruce and Jamie are proud donors to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.

For more information, please contact: Casey Chell, Director of Development, 317.713.3342 or [email protected]

Throughout summer 2016, the ISO will have matching gift opportunities available thanks to the generosity of an anonymous donor and ISO Board Vice Chair Yvonne Shaheen.

Make your gift or pledge by August 31 to be eligible for a match.

YOU MAKE THE MUSIC TOO

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CORPORATE SPONSORS

The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following companies for their major support. To become a corporate partner, please contact Melissa Weseli, Associate Director of Corporate Giving at 317.262.1880.

btlaw.com

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ISO ASSOCIATION

sHerrY aMlunG / PresidentwendY adaMs / President Electrita Martin / Recording SecretaryrOBerta GraHaM / Corresponding Secretary

nela swineHeart / Treasurer cindY OHlrOGGe / Assistant Treasurer cOnnie Menke / Immediate Past President

BOard MeMBers, citY GrOup & state unitsJ. Dara AmlungMary Kay AnthonyJanet BarbCharlene BarnetteSusan BeckettPeg BrummitJoannie BurgettFaye CrabtreeNancy ChristyE. J. ChoeMarty DavisRebecca DavisRuth Durbin – VPCarol Edgar

Glenda GriffinKaren HardingPat HoeffkenRuth HudsonKay Kinder – VPMeme KramerMable Lewis – VPPat McCormick – VPGail McDermott-BowlerAnn McKenzieSue MeyerDorothy MillerPeg Myers – VPLaura Nelson

Leslie NelsonDavine NolcoxSharon PaskinsJoyce PetersonJan Pierce – VPKimberly PotosnakBarbara RalphMary RichardsCarol Rohrabaugh-MoteCheryl RosenfeldHelena RudolfSondra ScaggsBetty SiscoSusan Smithburn – VP

Sarah StoelPeg Strodtbeck Linda Sykes – VPMarge VogelJoanna WeilerMary Ellen WeitekampEsther WeaverMary WhalinDorothy WhiteEleanor WilcoxJackie WilliamsMargie Zaring

past presidentsAlma AyresJo LathamSarah GoodmanJosephine MaddenMarion FotheringhamFlorence CurleMargie TomlinsonJessie Burns

Lou RameyMartha Anne VarnesMarian MeditchMargaret Hansen KahnKitty BakerAnn StrongJean QuinnAnna White

Helen RudesillSue MaineDagnia KleinopsIllene MaurerNancy ChristyKaren DavisPeggy MyersKatie Patterson

Dawn FazliJanet BarbPatricia A. QuinnCharlene BarnettePam HicksConnie Menke

L E T U S E N T E R TA I N YO U

Save the DateAUGUST 7, 2016

Unwind and Dine at the Stunning Home and Gardens of Landscape Architect Ron Tisdale

Gourmet Dinner • Music by Tim Wright

I N D I A N A P O L I S SYM P H O N Y O R C H E S T R A A S S O C I AT I O N

Bring friends to support the ISO’s education programs!

For more information or to request an invitation, please call

317.262.4068 or email [email protected]

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EXECUTIVE OFFICEGary Ginstling, Chief Executive Officer Laura Irmer, Executive Assistant

OPERATIONSDanny Beckley, Vice President and General ManagerPhilomena Duffy, Operations Coordinator

Orchestra OperationsK. Blake Schlabach, Orchestra Personnel Manager L. Bennett Crantford, Assistant Personnel ManagerBekki Witherell Quinn, Administrative Assistant

Operations and FacilitiesJoanne Bennett, Director of Operations

Audience Services & EventsDavid Armstrong, Director of Audience ServicesDonna Finney, Volunteer Services ManagerKalyn Smith, House ManagerFrances Heavrin, Event Coordinator Artistic AdministrationGregg Gleasner, Artistic AdvisorAndrew Koch, Manager, Artistic PlanningTy A. Johnson, Senior Director, Pops Programming and PresentationsBrandy Rodgers, Manager, Pops, Yuletide Celebration & Symphonic Pops ConsortiumMallory Essig, Pops & Presentations Coordinator

DEVELOPMENT Holly C. Johnson, Vice PresidentMegan Meyer, Executive Assistant to the Vice PresidentCasey Chell, Director of DevelopmentRita Steinberg, Senior Major Gift OfficerMissy Eltz, Director of Development OperationsMeg Williams, Director of Development, Corporate and Foundation GivingMelissa Weseli, Associate Director of Corporate Giving Carol Ann Arnell, Special Events and Donor Benefits ManagerDanielle Dennis, Corporate Relations ManagerSally Meyer Chapman, Foundation and Grants ManagerCindy McHone, Gift Processing ManagerBrian Oakley, Individual Giving ManagerCaily Wolma Lee, Individual Giving Associate

MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONSSarah Myer, Director of MarketingJennifer Welch, Art DirectorJoshua Shuck, Group Sales ManagerCatherine Cardwell, Audience Development ManagerMarci Taylor, Graphic Designer

CommunicationsLeila Viera, Publications ManagerLauren King, Digital Marketing and Communications ManagerMarianne Williams Tobias, Program Book Annotator

Patron ServicesDavid Storms, Box Office Manager Mary Ferguson Senior Customer Care RepresentativeAnita Blackwell Janine KnuutilaCrystal Black Nick Neukom Erika Fowler Customer Care Representatives

LEARNING COMMUNITYBeth Perdue Outland, Vice President, Community Engagement & Strategic Innovation Endowed by Mr. and Mrs. William L. Fortune Linda Noble, Associate Director, Education Betty Perry, Artistic Director, Metropolitan Youth OrchestraRuth Wolff, Director, ISO Learning CommunityKrystle Ford, Associate Director, Metropolitan Youth OrchestraPerry A. Accetturo, Education Program Coordinator

FINANCESteve L. Hamilton, Vice PresidentAdam White, Controller Candi Berry, Staff AccountantTeaka Vest, Accounts Payable Coordinator

Information TechnologyDee Dee Fite, Director of TechnologyMolly Inglish, Manager of Patron Technology

Human ResourcesLarry R. Baysinger, DirectorMelissa Nelis, HR Generalist

ADMINISTRATION

Strengthening the Fabric of Our Community

Old National proudly supports Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra!

As much as we are a financial institution, Old National is a group of parents, volunteers, artists, athletes, neighbors and friends. By making investments of our time, talent and treasure, we work with you to strengthen the fabric of our community.

Serving Indianapolis with 21 locations throughout the metro area • 1-800-731-2265

oldnational.com

Page 95: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

Strengthening the Fabric of Our Community

Old National proudly supports Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra!

As much as we are a financial institution, Old National is a group of parents, volunteers, artists, athletes, neighbors and friends. By making investments of our time, talent and treasure, we work with you to strengthen the fabric of our community.

Serving Indianapolis with 21 locations throughout the metro area • 1-800-731-2265

oldnational.com

Strengthening the Fabric of Our Community

Old National proudly supports Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra!

As much as we are a financial institution, Old National is a group of parents, volunteers, artists, athletes, neighbors and friends. By making investments of our time, talent and treasure, we work with you to strengthen the fabric of our community.

Serving Indianapolis with 21 locations throughout the metro area • 1-800-731-2265

oldnational.com

Page 96: Marsh Symphony on the Prairie

Oxford proudly supports theIndianapolis Symphony Orchestra.

Oxford is independent and unbiased — and always will be.

We are committed to providing families generational estate planning advice

and institutions forward-thinking investment strategies.

CHICAGO ✦ CINCINNATI ✦ GRAND RAPIDS ✦ INDIANAPOLIS ✦ TWIN CITIES

317.843.5678 ✦ WWW.OFGLTD.COM/ISO