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Omaha Symphony Orchestra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Omaha Symphony
Orchestra
Founded1921
LocationOmaha, NE
Concert hallHolland Performing Arts Center
Music directorAnkush Kumar Bahl
Websitehttps://www.omahasymphony.org/

The Omaha Symphony is a professional orchestra performing more than 200 concerts and presentations annually in Omaha, Nebraska and throughout the orchestra's home region. The orchestra was established in 1921. It is considered a major American orchestra, classified under "Group 2" among the League of American Orchestras, which ranks symphony orchestras by annual budget, with Group 1 the largest and Group 8 the smallest. Its annual budget in 2022 was approximately $8.4 million.[1] The orchestra's home and principal venue is the 2,005-seat Holland Performing Arts Center, the $100 million purpose-built facility designed by Polshek Partnership that opened in October 2005. In a review, The Dallas Morning News called the Holland "one of the country's best-sounding" symphony halls.[2][3]

2024 Omaha Symphony Orchestra

The current music director, Ankush Kumar Bahl, has been at the top artistic position since July 2021. Its music director from 2005-2021 was Thomas Wilkins. He also is principal guest conductor of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra,[4] which is under the auspices of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Wilkins also is the Germeshausen Family and Youth Concerts Conductor for the Boston Symphony Orchestra since 2011; the Boston Globe named him among the "Best People and Ideas of 2011."[5] Before his Omaha post, Wilkins was resident conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Since the 1992/93 season, Ernest Richardson has served as the Omaha Symphony's resident conductor. Prior to coming to Omaha, Richardson was a violist with the Phoenix Symphony.[6]

In 2002, under the baton of then-Music Director Victor Yampolsky, the orchestra performed the world premiere of Philip Glass's Piano Concerto No. 2 (After Lewis and Clark).[7] It regularly performs with some of the world's most highly regarded musicians, including Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zukerman, Joshua Bell and Renee Fleming, whose 1990 performance of Maria Padilla with Opera Omaha, for which the Omaha Symphony is the resident orchestra, is considered a major debut and a springboard for her noted career.[8]

About

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The Omaha Symphony presents more than 200 live performances from September through June. Its season series includes: Masterworks, Pops, Joslyn, Family, Movies, Rocks and a series of special concerts. The orchestra reaches an estimated audience of 300,000 annually; its concerts also are broadcast on radio in Omaha and throughout the region.[9] The full orchestra includes 92 musicians.

The symphony also performs a six-concert orchestra series at the Joslyn Art Museum's Witherspoon Hall.

The orchestra also performs dozens of outreach and school concerts through its Mission: Imagination!, Concerts for Youth, and Celebrate Creativity programs, reaching more than 40,000 students and preschoolers, among others.[10] Through its participation in the Carnegie Hall Link Up program, the Omaha Symphony reaches an additional 5,000 area youth. The symphony orchestra in 2010 won the Leonard Bernstein Award for Educational Programming, a national honor given by Ascap, or the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. The award is given to an orchestra that focuses on introducing new audiences to new works.[11]

New Music

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On March 17, 2023, the Omaha Symphony performed a world premiere of Grammy award-nominated composer Andy Akiho’s composition written to honor visual artist and Omaha icon Jun Kaneko. Commissioned by the Omaha Symphony, the work incorporated Kaneko’s sculptures on stage, which Akiho played as percussive instruments.

The world premiere performance was recorded and released as an album in September 2023. The album received three Grammy nominations in 2024: Best Classical Instrumental Solo, Best Classical Compendium, and Best Contemporary Classical Composition.[12]

The orchestra commissioned and performed the world premiere of the Grammy award-winning composer Michael Daugherty's Trail of Tears Flute Concerto. Flautist Amy Porter performed the work with the Omaha orchestra at its premiere on March 26, 2010.[13]

The orchestra commissioned the 2005 Joan Tower work Purple Rhapsody, which the Omaha Symphony also performed in a world premiere in Columbus, Ohio.[14]

In 1978, the orchestra performed the U.S. premiere of Henry Cowell's 1928 Piano Concerto under the baton of then-Music Director Thomas Briccetti.[15]

The symphony each year sponsors the Omaha Symphony New Music Symposium, an international call for new works. In 2012, Pulitzer Prize and Grammy-winning composer William Bolcom judged new works and offered master classes for those selected to participate. The Omaha Symphony Guild sponsors the symposium, and pays the expenses of those chosen to participate. Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Joseph Schwantner also has mentored the participating new music composers. The top prize comes with a $3,000 stipend and a recorded performance with the Omaha Symphony's Chamber Orchestra.[16]

The orchestra each year also plays host to the Omaha Symphony Conductors Symposium, which exposes young conductors from around the world to masters of the craft.

Guild

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The Omaha Symphony Guild, made of community volunteers and which exists to support the symphony orchestra, has a mission to, "promote the growth and development of the Omaha Symphony Orchestra for the pleasure and education of residents of Greater Omaha and the States of Nebraska and Iowa." With a history extending since 1956, the Guild has had a hand in organizing a youth symphony, community outreach events and study circles on music, among other activities throughout the region.

Leadership

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The music directors of the Omaha Symphony:

  1. Henry Cox (1921-1924)
  2. Sandor Harmati (1925-1929)
  3. Joseph Littau[17](1930-1932)[18]
  4. Rudolph Ganz (1936-1941)
  5. Richard Duncan (1940-1943, 1947-1952, 1954-1958)[18]
  6. Emil Wishnow (1952-1954)[18]
  7. Joseph Levine[19][20](1959-1969)[18]
  8. Yuri Krasnapolsky (1970-1974)[18]
  9. Thomas Briccetti[21](1975-1984)[18]
  10. Bruce Hangen[22](1984-1995)[18]
  11. Victor Yampolsky (1995-2004)[18]
  12. Thomas Wilkins (2005–2021)
  13. Ankush Kumar Bahl (2021-Present)[23]

History

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In 1949, trombone player Helen Jones Woods joined the Omaha Symphony but was dismissed after her father picked her up from a performance, tipping off the orchestra that she was not white.[24]

References

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  1. ^ "Nonprofit Report for OMAHA SYMPHONY ASSOCIATION". guidestar.org.
  2. ^ "Holland Performing Arts Center". hdrinc.com.
  3. ^ "Fisher Dachs Associates - News - Making Some Noise: Omaha's Concert Hall - Modern and Masculine". fda-online.com.
  4. ^ "Thomas Wilkins". hollywoodbowl.com. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  5. ^ "Germeshausen Youth and Family Concerts Conductor, endowed in perpetuity". bso.org. Archived from the original on 13 August 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  6. ^ "Resident Conductor - Omaha Symphony". www.omahasymphony.org. Archived from the original on 11 December 2012.
  7. ^ "MATA » Philip Glass". matafestival.org.
  8. ^ "From the Archives: Opera Comes Alive Behind the Scenes at Opera Omaha Staging of Donizetti's 'Maria Padilla' Starring Rene Fleming - Leo Adam Biga's Blog". Leo Adam Biga's Blog. 26 September 2011.
  9. ^ "Omaha Symphony : : The Orchestra". Archived from the original on 17 August 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2008. accessdate = 2008-07-03
  10. ^ (nd) "Omaha Symphony," Charity Navigator Rating. Retrieved 7/13/07.
  11. ^ "Omaha Symphony wins ASCAP's Leonard Bernstein Award for Educational Programming" (PDF). www.omahasymphony.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  12. ^ "2024 GRAMMYs: See The Full Winners & Nominees List | GRAMMY.com". grammy.com. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  13. ^ "Michael Daugherty - Trail of Tears". boosey.com.
  14. ^ "Joan Tower's 'Purple Rhapsody'". allthingsstrings.com. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013.
  15. ^ "Piano Concerto". Bibliocommons. 30 October 1978.
  16. ^ "Scholarship Search". Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  17. ^ https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1977/10/02/461158202.pdf [dead link]
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h "Omaha Symphony Program, Omaha, Douglas County, NE, USA" (1, September 18, 2015 - February 21, 2016). 14 December 2015: 18–19. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ "Joseph Levine, 83, Conductor and Pianist". The New York Times. 26 March 1994. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
  20. ^ "Joseph Levine Collection". umd.edu.
  21. ^ "Thomas Briccetti—Biography". thomasbriccetti.com.
  22. ^ "Bruce Hangen". bostonconservatory.edu.
  23. ^ "Ankush Kumar Bahl Music Director". omahasymphony.org. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
  24. ^ Leland, John (4 August 2020). "Helen Jones Woods, Member of an All-Female Jazz Group, Dies at 96". The New York Times.
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