Saint Bede Catholic Church

3686 Ironbound Road,
Williamsburg, VA 23188
Phone:  (757) 229-3631

Parking:  Parking available on site

Chrysler Hall

Upcoming Concerts at St. Bede Catholic Church

Holiday POPs Series

Join us for the must-see holiday tradition of the season – Holiday POPS! There’s no better way to lift your spirits than with seasonal songs and traditional carols delivered in full sound and spectacle by the Virginia Symphony and special guests. Holiday POPS will have all the magical elements you’ve come to expect and more – high energy, familiar carols, and lots of holiday warmth! And we’ll even throw in a surprise or two! We can’t wait to celebrate the 2023 holiday season together!

Robert Shoup, conductor
Virginia Symphony Orchestra
Virginia Symphony Orchestra Chorus
Truetone Honeys, special guests
Joanne White, flute
Evelyn White, flute
Derrell Gunn, baritone

 

THANKS TO OUR POPS MEDIA PARTNER
Audacy

Norfolk Native Thomas Wilkins Extended as Virginia Symphony Orchestra Principal Guest Conductor

MPTON ROADS, VA [November 6, 2023] The Virginia Symphony Orchestra (VSO) has announced the extension of Principal Guest Conductor Thomas Wilkins’s contract through the 2026-27 season. From a student at Norfolk’s Booker T. Washington High School to the principal conductor of the Hollywood Bowl, Maestro Wilkins has had an inspiring journey to becoming an internationally renowned conductor.

Dr. Andrea Warren, VSO President and CEO said, “Thomas is a beacon of light to this orchestra and our community. He is a walking inspiration, and we are elated to have him return for three more seasons. He has shown that with hard work and determination, the sky is the limit. His passion for music and unwavering commitment to the VSO has greatly contributed to the growth and success of our organization. We are so lucky to have him as our Principal Guest Conductor and I’m ready to see what marvelous things await us.”

“We are SO fortunate to have Thomas extend his contract with the VSO,” stated Music Director Eric Jacobsen. His artistry, expertise, thoughtfulness, and connection to our community and orchestra is unmatched. I look forward to the incredible concerts Thomas is planning next and feel so grateful to have him as a colleague and a partner in the orchestra.”

Thomas Wilkins is the VSO’s very first Principal Guest Conductor and it’s been an incredible experience. During his tenure with the Virginia Symphony Orchestra, Maestro Wilkins has conducted for prominent artists like Victor Wooten, Julia Bullock, and James Carter. Not only has he been a staple in the Hampton Roads area as a conductor, but he also works tirelessly in the community. Thomas’s renewal is a reflection of VSO’s commitment to fostering artistic excellence and ensuring the continued growth and innovation of our organization. As he often says, “I didn’t choose music; music chose me.”

“I am immensely grateful to continue in partnership with the VSO,” stated Principal Guest Conductor Thomas Wilkins. The musicians’ true commitment to making great music, and the entire organization’s genuine love for every community we serve, is not only a source of great inspiration but certainly something I am proud to be a part of.”

Maestro Wilkins will be conducting his first concerts of the 23/24 season this weekend. Tickets are on sale now at Brahms & Dvořák with Thomas Wilkins | 11/9-11/10 – Virginia Symphony Orchestra.

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As the region’s most celebrated musical, educational, and entrepreneurial arts organization, the Virginia Symphony Orchestra continues to challenge expectations and push the boundaries of what an American orchestra can be. Innovation and excellence are at the heart of the VSO’s narrative. The VSO has received national attention for its unique mission serving a home area of 1.7 million across the diverse communities of southeastern Virginia. Through appearances at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall and its commitment to adventurous programming, the VSO and its musicians have been highlighted in the media including The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and BBC Worldwide News. 

As the largest performing arts organization in southeastern Virginia, the VSO and VSO Chorus present more than 150 concerts and events annually for more than 100,000 residents and visitors. Recent innovations include health and wellness programs, including interactive therapeutic experiences for people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and adopting welcoming concert environments for those who are neurodiverse. Since 2019, the VSO has been recognized nationally for striving to reflect the region’s ethnic and racial diversity in its members, its programming, and its leadership. 

The selection of the young and dynamic conductor Eric Jacobsen as music director in 2021 was another bold step forward for the VSO, further expanding its vision to attract wider and larger audiences with engaging concert experiences and creative and relevant programming. Rounding out the artistic leadership team is Norfolk native Thomas Wilkins in the role of Principal Guest Conductor, reflecting the VSO’s commitment to tell its community’s stories and advance the important conversations that will promote understanding and belonging among all residents.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 6, 2023

Contact: De’Jonna Mayo, Communications Manager
Phone: 757.213.1424
Email: dmayo@virginiasymphony.org

Twitter: @VASymphony
Facebook: facebook.com/virginiasymphony

A Symphony Concert of Profound and Positive Hope

By Montague Gammon III
Veer Magazine

Virginia Symphony Orchestra’s Brahms and Dvořák with Thomas Wilkins November concert features “music that is going to make you feel better about yourself at the end of the evening,” says the VSO’s Principal Guest Conductor Wilkins, who will be on the podium.

It’s actually a tripartite program, beginning with French composer Maurice Ravel’s self-orchestrated, fairy tales linked, Ma Mère l’Oye (trans: Mother Goose, using an archaic spelling of Oie/Oye, ca. 17-20 minutes). Originally composed in 1910 as a five part, four hand piano duet for 6 and 7 year old Mimi and Jean Godebski, the work was orchestrated by Ravel a year later.

Next on the program is a piece about the same length as the Ravel, Johannes Brahms’ choral work Schicksalslied (“Song of Destiny”), Op. 54, composed over the years 1868-71. Brahms was inspired to write this upon reading a poem titled “Hyperions Schicksalslied,” by the German philosopher and romantic poet Johann Christian Friedrich Hölderlin. Hyperion, in Greek mythology, was one of the 12 Titans who preceded the more well known Greek gods. Sometimes he’s the personification of the sun, or, in Hamlet for example, an exemplar of male beauty.

Antonín Dvořák ‘s Symphony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70, B. 141 (1885) wraps up the program with a truly great composition. It takes the listener on such an emotional journey that is it hard to realize, when it ends, that fully forty minutes have passed since it began.

Noted Composer Adolphus Hailstork Honored as 2023 Arts Supporter of the Year Alongside 2021 Honoree Paula Bonds

HAMPTON ROADS, VA [October 30, 2023] Renowned composer, educator, and friend to the Virginia Symphony Orchestra (VSO) Dr. Adolphus Hailstork has been announced as the 2023 Arts Supporter of the Year by Local No. 125 of the American Federation of Musicians. 

Dr. Hailstork’s compositions have been performed all over the world, and the VSO has been the beneficiary of his prodigious output on many occasions, including taking his Concerto for Piano and Orchestra to Carnegie Hall. He will be honored at an event on November 18th at 2 p.m. at Old Dominion University’s Diehn Center for the Performing Arts.   

Presenting the award to Dr. Hailstork will be the previous winner of the award, which is not given every year. Paula Bonds was honored in 2021, but plans for a public event fell victim to the COVID pandemic. Ms. Bonds has worked as a Music Librarian for the Virginia Symphony Orchestra since 2000. The following year she began her work for Bay Youth Orchestras of Virginia and in 2003 she joined Symphonicity in Virginia Beach.  Preferring to work quietly but tirelessly behind the scenes, she has endeared herself to everyone who has had the privilege of working alongside her, especially in the Virginia Symphony Orchestra in her role as Assistant Principal Librarian. In that capacity, she has shepherded many Principal Librarians through the organization.  Her colleagues speak glowingly of her, and many have moved on to bigger orchestras. JoAnn Falletta, the VSO’s Connie and Marc Jacobson Music Director Laureate, sums it up this way, “Not only is Paula Bonds a brilliant and dedicated musician, but she is also one of the most beautiful human beings I have ever had the privilege of knowing.”    

John Lindberg, former Principal Timpani of the VSO and former President of Local No. 125 conceived of the award in the late 1990s, recognizing the first recipient in 1999. Long-time VSO supporter and board member Minette Cooper was honored that year for her history of philanthropic support for arts organizations and for her devotion and support for education such as Young Audiences of Virginia. Other winners have included artists, executives in the arts, journalists, philanthropists, and others. The prestigious award is for continuous years of contributing to the arts.   

Tickets are available to the public for $15 and may be purchased on Eventbrite.com or by calling 757-622-8095.

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As the region’s most celebrated musical, educational, and entrepreneurial arts organization, the Virginia Symphony Orchestra continues to challenge expectations and push the boundaries of what an American orchestra can be. Innovation and excellence are at the heart of the VSO’s narrative. The VSO has received national attention for its unique mission serving a home area of 1.7 million across the diverse communities of southeastern Virginia. Through appearances at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall and its commitment to adventurous programming, the VSO and its musicians have been highlighted in the media including The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and BBC Worldwide News. 

As the largest performing arts organization in southeastern Virginia, the VSO and VSO Chorus present more than 150 concerts and events annually for more than 100,000 residents and visitors. Recent innovations include health and wellness programs, including interactive therapeutic experiences for people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and adopting welcoming concert environments for those who are neurodiverse. Since 2019, the VSO has been recognized nationally for striving to reflect the region’s ethnic and racial diversity in its members, its programming, and its leadership. 

The selection of the young and dynamic conductor Eric Jacobsen as music director in 2021 was another bold step forward for the VSO, further expanding its vision to attract wider and larger audiences with engaging concert experiences and creative and relevant programming. Rounding out the artistic leadership team is Norfolk native Thomas Wilkins in the role of Principal Guest Conductor, reflecting the VSO’s commitment to tell its community’s stories and advance the important conversations that will promote understanding and belonging among all residents.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 30, 2023

Contact: De’Jonna Mayo, Communications Manager
Phone: 757.213.1424
Email: dmayo@virginiasymphony.org

Twitter: @VASymphony
Facebook: facebook.com/virginiasymphony

Eric Jacobsen Extended as Virginia Symphony Orchestra Music Director

HAMPTON ROADS, VA [October 26, 2023] The Virginia Symphony Orchestra (VSO) has announced the extension of Music Director Eric Jacobsen’s contract through the 2026-27 season. From his first concert as Music Director with superstar saxophonist Branford Marsalis, Eric has been steadfast in his efforts to bring world-renowned artists and world-class concerts to Hampton Roads.

“We are so excited and honored to have Eric extend for an additional three seasons,” says Dr. Andrea Warren VSO President and CEO. “During my time here, I have had the privilege of seeing how dedicated and committed he is to this orchestra; it’s very awe-inspiring. He takes time to not only work intimately with the orchestra, but he is also very passionate about our community and making real connections. He doesn’t do anything with minimal effort. He goes in with his full heart and always exceeds expectations. We are extremely blessed to continue this relationship, and we look forward to continuing to bring musical excellence to our community.”

“His talent truly speaks for itself,” stated Tim Faulkner, VSO Board Chair. I have had the pleasure of seeing Eric from his first day with us and it has been an amazing journey, to say the least. His spirit is infectious, and I’m just thrilled to have him here with us for more seasons. I know the caliber of artists he brings to the area, and it is unsurpassed. The maestro’s artistic excellence shines through the performances that the orchestra brings to area audiences.”

During his tenure with the Virginia Symphony Orchestra, Eric has been working tirelessly to make the orchestra approachable to everyone. Strengthening ties within the community is one of Eric’s guiding forces. He’s not only worked closely with local artists, but he has also conducted their pieces. Through Eric, the VSO has commissioned and premiered works from esteemed artists like Chris Thile, Gabriel Kahane, Juhi Bansal, and Curtis Stewart.

“I am thrilled to continue to build on this incredible relationship with the VSO,” stated Eric Jacobsen. “The past several years have been so rewarding as we, the orchestra, have grown in both our artistry and our important work in our community and education programs. We’ve had concerts with the most amazing artists like Yo-Yo Ma, recording projects with Gil Shaham and Bela Fleck, and community partnerships with our incredible friends at Teens With A Purpose and The Rhythm Project…just to name a few! We really look forward to continuing to expand our programming and audiences. I am so grateful for how welcoming the Hampton Roads community has been to me and I can’t wait for more ahead!”

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As the region’s most celebrated musical, educational, and entrepreneurial arts organization, the Virginia Symphony Orchestra continues to challenge expectations and push the boundaries of what an American orchestra can be. Innovation and excellence are at the heart of the VSO’s narrative. The VSO has received national attention for its unique mission serving a home area of 1.7 million across the diverse communities of southeastern Virginia. Through appearances at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall and its commitment to adventurous programming, the VSO and its musicians have been highlighted in the media including The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and BBC Worldwide News.

As the largest performing arts organization in southeastern Virginia, the VSO and VSO Chorus present more than 150 concerts and events annually for more than 100,000 residents and visitors. Recent innovations include health and wellness programs, including interactive therapeutic experiences for people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and adopting welcoming concert environments for those who are neurodiverse. Since 2019, the VSO has been recognized nationally for striving to reflect the region’s ethnic and racial diversity in its members, its programming, and its leadership.

The selection of the young and dynamic conductor Eric Jacobsen as music director in 2021 was another bold step forward for the VSO, further expanding its vision to attract wider and larger audiences with engaging concert experiences and creative and relevant programming. Rounding out the artistic leadership team is Norfolk native Thomas Wilkins in the role of Principal Guest Conductor, reflecting the VSO’s commitment to tell its community’s stories and advance the important conversations that will promote understanding and belonging among all residents.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 26, 2022

Contact: De’Jonna Mayo, Communications Manager
Phone: 757.213.1424
Email: dmayo@virginiasymphony.org

Twitter: @VASymphony
Facebook: facebook.com/virginiasymphony

Rocking Rachmaninoff

By Jeff Maisey
Veer Magazine

Earlier this year, the Virginia Arts Festival celebrated in grand style the 150th birthday of Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff with a series of chamber music concerts featuring the internationally acclaimed Dali Quartet and violinist Tianwa Yang as well as Sterling Elliott (cello), Debra Wendells Cross (flute), and Darrin Milling (trombone).  

Front and center for most of these performances was the phenomenal, often animated pianist Olga Kern, who opened the spring Arts Festival season with a dazzling solo recital.

For Kern the performances hit home in a most personally joyous way.

“Rachmaninoff was a good friend of my great grandmother (Vera Pushechnikova),” Kern said. “She was a mezzo-soprano. They performed together quite a lot. He was accompanying her, so that was very special. In  two of Rachmaninoff’s memoirs she is mentioned and there are the dates that they played.  

“Every time I perform Rachmaninoff’s music I feel his spirit is with me.”

On October 20 (Ferguson Center), October 21 (Chrysler Hall) and October 22 (Sandler Center), not only will the otherworldly energy force of Rachmaninoff be accompanying Kern on stage, so too will the flesh and blood of the mighty Virginia Symphony Orchestra. 

Feast Festively on Beethoven’s Bounty

By Montague Gammon III
Veer Magazine

The Virginia Symphony opens its 2023-24 Season with a Beethoven Festival whose bounties Music Director and concert conductor Eric Jacobsen twice likened to a “steak dinner with dessert,” a two course musical feast of “pieces that will bring people together for many years to come.”

Ludwig’s van Beethoven’s unique 1803-04 Triple Concerto – formally, Beethoven’s Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano in C major, Op. 56 –  opens these mid-September Thursday and Friday  concerts with what might be seen as a mash-up of chamber and symphonic music that lasts a little less than 40 minutes.

Change Agents: A new class of leaders in equity, diversity, and inclusion is transforming American orchestras.

If commitment to equity, diversity, and inclusion has grown more apparent at orchestras around the country, that’s likely because it has increasingly become a full-time job. The number of leadership positions specifically focused on some permutation of EDI have multiplied following the calls for social justice that ignited during pandemic shutdowns. As live performances have resumed, many orchestras are reevaluating how best to connect with and serve their communities, a mission that’s essential to their survival.

“Our history suggests that representation, diversity, and inclusion doesn’t just happen; it has to be intentional and committed to,” says Harold Brown, Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer at the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, where he was among the first top brass doing such work at American orchestras when he was hired in March 2021. “George Floyd’s death spurred folks to action, and I think people finally got the message,” Brown adds, noting that EDI initiatives had been on the rise at orchestras over the past 10 years but have recently kicked into high gear…

At the Norfolk-based Virginia Symphony Orchestra, education initiatives extend to developing a pathway for aspiring musicians in-house. A fellowship program that began last year is offering four young Black musicians extensive training with the VSO, including mentorship, private lessons, and audition prep. “We’re trying to help them be successful in their careers as performers, so they know what to expect as professional musicians,” says VSO Director of Diversity and Engagement Nikki Thorpe, who works closely with every department on their EDI goals. “The orchestra is making an impact by going out to where people are; that’s as important as inviting people in.”

06.20.23 / Fellows Announced for the Second Class of VSO African American Fellowship

Fellows Announced for the Second Class of VSO African American Fellowship

HAMPTON ROADS, VA [June 20, 2023] The Virginia Symphony Orchestra has selected its second class of fellows for the African American Fellowship Program in partnership with Old Dominion University. The Fellows will join the VSO this fall, performing across the region as well as teaching and mentoring in a local public school. The Fellows will also participate in Young People’s Concerts, outdoor community concerts, small ensemble educational concerts for elementary school students, and a variety of media appearances to help equip them to succeed in their careers as performers and educators. The fellowship is a continuation of the VSO’s effort to advance the goal of increased diversity of orchestral musicians nationwide. 

“The fellows have become intrinsic members of our community and have made all of us far better through our shared world,” said Emily Ondracek-Peterson, executive director of ODU’s Diehn School of Music. “They have been inspirational for our students as they see them go from rehearsals on campus to performances with the VSO to teaching and performing at schools throughout the Hampton Roads community.” 

The program’s inaugural season is funded by the Hampton Roads Community Foundation, the Goode Family, and an Old Dominion University grant through the state of Virginia. 

“We are so excited, inspired, and honored to welcome our second class of Fellows this season,” exclaimed Eric Jacobsen, music director of the VSO. “We had such a great experience and we learned so much together in the first year of the Fellows program with Avery, Emmanuel, Omari, and Zacherie. We’re really looking forward to continuing the momentum. This group of four comes to us with so much talent and energy, and we are so grateful to welcome them into the VSO family!” 

Camille Jones is a violinist from Maryland and she’s a passionate collaborator and advocate for diversity in the arts. Camille is establishing herself as a freelance artist in the Michigan area as well, having performed for singer Michael Bublé, rapper Big Sean and Darren Criss. She has also served as a teaching artist for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra’s Civic Youth Ensembles as well as the Sphinx Overture program in Detroit. 

Tyler McKisson is an orchestral and freelance violist originally from Arvada, Colorado. He has played with several American orchestras including the Cheyenne Symphony with tenure, Atlanta Symphony, Kentucky Symphony, National Repertory Orchestra, and the Aspen Conducting Academy. 

Avery Robinson grew up in Western Massachusetts and plays the bass. Avery has studied at many top music schools. Most recently he has received a graduate certificate from Old Dominion University as part of his tenure as an African American Fellow with the VSO during the 2022-23 season and has been invited back to participate for another year. 

Daphine Henderson is a double bassist and vocalist in the DC metro area. She was the first black woman to earn a Master’s Degree in Double Bass Performance at the University of Maryland and the third black woman to receive a graduate degree in strings. Daphine is taking steps in her musical career to create an impact and be an inspiration for younger musicians of color that would otherwise not have ample resources and opportunities to pursue their passion.

 

In addition to their performing and teaching, while in Virginia the Fellows will have several professional development opportunities, including private instrument instruction, mock auditions, and mentorship with VSO musicians. Applications for the 2024-25 program will be open this fall. More information can be found at www.virginiasymphony.org/fellowship.

 

(To view their bios and headshots click the link below)

https://bit.ly/2324fellows

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As the region’s most celebrated musical, educational, and entrepreneurial arts organization, the Virginia Symphony Orchestra continues to challenge expectations and push the boundaries of what an American orchestra can be. Innovation and excellence are at the heart of the VSO’s narrative. The VSO has received national attention for its unique mission serving a home area of 1.7 million across the diverse communities of southeastern Virginia. Through appearances at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall and its commitment to adventurous programming, the VSO and its musicians have been highlighted in the media including The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, and BBC Worldwide News.

 

As the largest performing arts organization in southeastern Virginia, the VSO and VSO Chorus present more than 150 concerts and events annually for more than 100,000 residents and visitors. Recent innovations include health and wellness programs, including interactive therapeutic experiences for people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and adopting welcoming concert environments for those who are neurodiverse. Since 2019, the VSO has been recognized nationally for striving to reflect the region’s ethnic and racial diversity in its members, it’s programming, and its leadership.

 

The selection of the young and dynamic conductor Eric Jacobsen as music director in 2021 was another bold step forward for the VSO, further expanding its vision to attract wider and larger audiences with engaging concert experiences and creative and relevant programming. Rounding out the artistic leadership team is Norfolk native Thomas Wilkins in the role of Principal Guest Conductor, reflecting the VSO’s commitment to tell its community’s stories and advance the important conversations that will promote understanding and belonging among all residents.

 

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 20, 2023

Contact: De’Jonna Mayo, Communications Manager
Phone: 757.213.1424
Email: dmayo@virginiasymphony.org

Twitter: @VASymphony
Facebook: facebook.com/virginiasymphony

MOLA presents conductor JoAnn Falletta with Eroica Award for Outstanding Service to Music

MOLA: An Association of Music Performance Librarians honors Falletta for her many decades of exemplary leadership and tireless advocacy

BERLIN | June 5, 2023 — MOLA: An Association of Music Performance Librarians is honoring American conductor JoAnn Falletta with the 2023 Eroica Award for Outstanding Service to Music.

MOLA is the premier professional association for music performance librarians who acquire, prepare, catalogue and maintain music for their institutions. With more than 450 members, this international nonprofit represents more than 300 organizations, including symphony orchestras, opera and ballet companies, music academies, professional bands and ensembles across the world.

As a multiple GRAMMY® Award winner who has led more than 100 orchestras across the globe, Falletta is an internationally celebrated conductor and an outstanding ambassador for music. In a video message shared last night at the 41st annual MOLA conference in Berlin, Falletta spoke of her deep respect and gratitude for performance librarians.

“This award means so much to me,” Falletta said. “I think that many of you know how much I admire MOLA and the work that you do — how much I admire your scholarship, your wisdom, your understanding of music, your support and appreciation of each other, and your incredible patience with all of us.”

Falletta thanked several librarians by name and acknowledged the important role they play in the performing arts ecosystem.

“I know I could never have the life I have in music without your support,” Falletta said. “And I’m very grateful to you. How can I ever say ‘thank you’ enough for that? I will treasure this beautiful Eroica Award, but you are the true heroes.”

The criteria for the Eroica Award for Outstanding Service to Music is to recognize an individual (or group of individuals) who inspires MOLA with their advocacy for the art form, artistic excellence, and/or leadership. MOLA encourages nominations for those who champion underrepresented works or composers, mentor young musicians, bridge communities, or break new ground. Whether a performer, scholar or editor, the recipient can represent any facet of the music world.

Falletta embarked on her first season as music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic in the 1999-2000 season, and in doing so, became the first woman to lead a major American ensemble. However, her inspired leadership extends well beyond the podium. A passionate advocate for up-and-coming musicians, she has led seminars for women conductors and helped create mentoring opportunities for rising conductors at top conservatories, elite summer programs and at the Buffalo Philharmonic. She has been championing women conductors, composers and musicians for decades.

“JoAnn Falletta’s incredible leadership on and off the podium, her mentoring and advocacy for young conductors and musicians, and her selfless work helping the Hawaii Symphony through their reorganization, are just a few of the reasons that she received a record number of nominations from our MOLA member librarians,” said Courtney Secoy Cohen, MOLA president. “Her dedication to championing underserved composers and gracious interactions with everyone she works with have enriched the classical music world, and we are all so grateful for her altruistic contributions to help ensure the lasting future of classical music.”

MOLA member and principal librarian of the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra, Kim Kiyabu, said Falletta was a “superior” human being and nearly “overqualified” for the award.

“The Hawaii Symphony Orchestra would not exist without her massive donation of time, energy and goodwill,” Kiyabu said. “Emerging from a bankruptcy period in 2009, she has worked pro bono as our artistic advisor in the very difficult transition from the Honolulu Symphony into the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra. She volunteered her time and expertise to counsel our board and leadership as the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra found its footing. She also voluntarily sat through auditions. She programmed the first-ever Ukulele Concerto by Byron Yasui with Jake Shimabukuro as the guest artist and championed other local Hawaii composers. She has conducted masterworks and community concerts in seemingly impossible places. I am unable to voice the enormous gratitude, “Mahalo Nui Loa” and “Aloha Kakou” — the closest meaning would be a love and sharing of our lives together — from the entire body of the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra for the life and passion of the always very gracious JoAnn Falletta.”

Other nominators echoed similar sentiments about Falletta’s generosity with time and advocacy for underrepresented musicians.

Virginia Symphony Principal Librarian and MOLA member Carl Wilder has enjoyed working with Falletta since day one.

“When I joined the Virginia Symphony, I was immediately impressed with her warmth and welcoming spirit,” Wilder explained. “Her support and respect of the library has been invaluable. She is incredibly kind and generous with her time and has mentored many composers and musicians. She is a wonderful person who has championed countless works, composers, and musicians throughout her career.”

Virginia Symphony Assistant Librarian and MOLA member Paula Peebles Bonds referred to Falletta as a “champion on and off the podium” as well as a “perfect candidate” for the honor.

Falletta is the second-ever recipient of the Eroica Award for Outstanding Service to Music. In 2022, the association presented violinist Jennifer Koh with the inaugural award at its 40th conference in Philadelphia.

For Falletta and MOLA, it’s clear the admiration is mutual.

“MOLA represents for me the epitome of professionalism and the highest standard of knowledge in our music world,” Falletta said. “You are the incredible people who make it possible for conductors and musicians to do the work they love. The orchestral world simply could not exist without you.”

Learn more about MOLA at mola-inc.org. Visit joannfalletta.com to learn more about this year’s award recipient.

For photography, interviews or media inquiries, please contact admin@mola-inc.org.

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About MOLA: An Association of Music Performance Librarians

Founded in 1983 as the Major Orchestra Librarians’ Association, MOLA’s mission is to facilitate communication between professional performance librarians, educate and assist them in providing service to their organizations, provide support and resources to the performing arts, and work with publishers to achieve the highest standards in music performance materials.

The first MOLA meeting was held in Philadelphia in 1983, when 25 librarians from the United States and Canada met for a day to discuss issues of common interest. Today MOLA is an international, nonprofit corporation spanning the globe with a membership of over 300 professional performing arts organizations, represented by more than 450 performance librarians from symphony orchestras, opera and ballet companies, music academies, professional bands and ensembles in North America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, South America, and Australasia. The job of these performance librarians is to acquire, prepare, catalogue and maintain the music for each institution. Through MOLA, librarians share information and resources to help them in their daily work. Learn more at mola-inc.org.

About JoAnn Falleta

Multiple GRAMMY® Award-winning conductor JoAnn Falletta serves as Music Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic, and the Connie and Marc Jacobson Music Director Laureate of the Virginia Symphony, Principal Guest Conductor of the Brevard Music Center and Artistic Adviser to the Hawaii Symphony. She was recently named one of the “Fifty Great Conductors,” past and present, by Gramophone Magazine, and is hailed for her work as a conductor, recording artist, audience builder and champion of American composers.

Upon her appointment as Music Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic, Falletta became the first woman to lead a major American ensemble and has been credited with bringing the Philharmonic to an unprecedented level of national and international prominence. The Buffalo Philharmonic has become one of the leading recording orchestras for Naxos, with two GRAMMY Award-winning recordings. This season, the BPO performed at Carnegie Hall for a centennial celebration of former BPO Music Director Lukas Foss. The orchestra also traveled to Florida for their fifth tour of the State under Falletta’s leadership.

Her North American guest conducting appearances include the National Symphony, and the orchestras of Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, Detroit, Dallas, Baltimore, Indianapolis, Vancouver, Toronto, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Montreal, Seattle, San Diego, and the Orchestre Métropolitain of Montréal to name a few. Internationally, she has conducted many of the most prominent orchestras in Europe, Asia, and South America, with concerts in Spain, Sweden, Germany, Brazil, and Croatia earlier this season. In 2022, she led the National Symphony in two PBS televised specials for New Year’s Eve and the 50th Anniversary of the Kennedy Center and made her Boston Symphony Orchestra debut at the Tanglewood Music Festival.

With a discography of more than 125 titles, Falletta is a leading recording artist for Naxos. She has won two individual GRAMMY Awards, including the 2021 GRAMMY Award for Best Choral Performance as conductor of the world premiere Naxos recording, Richard Danielpour’s The Passion of Yeshua. In 2019, she won her first individual GRAMMY Award as conductor of the London Symphony in the Best Classical Compendium category for Spiritualist, her fifth world premiere recording of the music of Kenneth Fuchs. Her Naxos recording of John Corigliano’s Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems of Bob Dylan received two GRAMMY Awards in 2008. Her 2020 Naxos recording of orchestral music of Florent Schmitt with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra received the prestigious Diapason d’Or Award. Her most recent releases for Naxos include the complete William Walton Façade, with narrators Kevin Deas, Hila Plitmann and American Public Media Host Fred Child, and the Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Players, and two recordings with the BPO: Scriabin’s Poem of Ecstasy and Symphony No. 2, and a world premiere recording of Adophus Hailstork’s Piano Concerto together with Danny Elfman’s Violin Concerto.

Falletta is a member of the esteemed American Academy of Arts and Sciences, has served by presidential appointment as a Member of the National Council on the Arts during the George W. Bush and Obama administrations and is the recipient of many of the most prestigious conducting awards. She has conducted over 1,600 orchestral works by over 600 composers with over 150 world premieres In 2019, Falletta was named Performance Today’s first Classical Woman of The Year, calling her a “tireless champion, and lauding her “unique combination of artistic authority and compassion, compelling musicianship and humanity.” A leading advocate of works by women composers she has conducted over 135 works by over 70 women composer many of which were US or world premieres. ASCAP has honored her as “a leading force for music of our time.”

Falletta is a strong advocate and mentor for young professional and student musicians. She has led seminars for women conductors for the League of American Orchestras and established a unique collaboration between the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Mannes College of Music to give up-and-coming conductors professional experience with a leading American orchestra. In 2018, she served on the jury of the Malko Competition in Denmark. She has had great success working with young musicians, guest conducting orchestras at top conservatories and summer programs such as the National Repertory Orchestra, National Orchestral Institute, Interlochen, and Brevard Music Center, and as Artistic Advisor at the Cleveland Institute of Music.

Falletta has held the positions of Principal Conductor of the Ulster Orchestra, Principal Guest Conductor of the Phoenix Symphony, Music Director of the Long Beach Symphony Orchestra, Associate Conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, and Music Director of the Denver Chamber Orchestra and The Women’s Philharmonic.

After earning her bachelor’s degree at Mannes, Falletta received master’s and doctoral degrees from The Juilliard School. When not on the podium, Falletta enjoys playing classical guitar, writing, cycling, yoga and is an avid reader.

For further information, visit joannfalletta.com.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 5, 2023

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