ABOUT THE NASHVILLE SYMPHONY
One of Tennessee’s largest and longest-running nonprofit performing arts organizations, the Nashville Symphony has been an integral part of the Music City sound since 1946. Led by music director Giancarlo Guerrero and president and CEO Alan D. Valentine, the 83-member ensemble performs more than 150 concerts annually, with a focus on contemporary American orchestral music through collaborations with composers including Jennifer Higdon, Terry Riley, Joan Tower, Aaron Jay Kernis, Michael Daugherty, Christopher Rouse, John Harbison and Jonathan Leshnoff. The orchestra is equally renowned for its commissioning and recording projects with Nashville-based artists including bassist Edgar Meyer, banjoist Béla Fleck, singer-songwriter Ben Folds and electric bassist Victor Wooten. The Nashville Symphony is one of the most active recording orchestras in the US, with 30 releases. Together, these recordings have earned a total of 24 GRAMMY® Award nominations and 13 GRAMMY® Awards, including two for Best Orchestral Performance. Schermerhorn Symphony Center is home to the Nashville Symphony and widely regarded as one of the finest concert halls in the US.
ABOUT GIANCARLO GUERRERO
Six-time GRAMMY® Award-winning conductor Giancarlo Guerrero is music director of the Nashville Symphony and the Wroclaw Philharmonic Orchestra in Poland, as well as principal guest conductor of the Gulbenkian Orchestra in Lisbon, Portugal. He has championed contemporary American music through commissions and recordings, presenting nine world premieres with the Nashville Symphony by composers including Michael Daugherty and Terry Riley. As part of this commitment, he helped guide the creation of Nashville Symphony’s Composer Lab & Workshop initiative. In North America, Guerrero has appeared with the orchestras of Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Toronto, and the National Symphony Orchestra. He has developed a strong international profile working with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, the Brussels Philharmonic, the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, the Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. An advocate for music education, he works regularly with the Curtis Institute of Music, the Colburn School in Los Angeles and the National Youth Orchestra (NYO2) in New York.
ABOUT JONATHAN LESHNOFF
Distinguished by The New York Times as “a leader of contemporary American lyricism,” composer Jonathan Leshnoff is renowned for his music’s striking harmonies, structural complexity and powerful themes. Leshnoff’s works have been performed by more than 60 orchestras worldwide, including commissions from Carnegie Hall; the Atlanta, Baltimore, Dallas, Kansas City, and Nashville Symphony orchestras; the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra; and the IRIS and Philadelphia orchestras. This is the fifth album devoted to Leshnoff’s music on the Naxos American Classics imprint. Celebrated by Fanfare magazine as “the real thing,” Leshnoff’s music has been lauded by Strings Magazine as “distinct from anything else that’s out there” and by The Baltimore Sun as “remarkably assured, cohesively constructed and radiantly lyrical.” Leshnoff’s catalog is vast, including several symphonies and oratorios in addition to numerous concerti, solo works, and chamber works. He is a professor of music at Towson University, Maryland. “My essential aesthetic has always been that I have to communicate and take people on a journey,” Leshnoff says. “Where listeners decide to go, what they do with the music they hear, is of course going to be based on their own lives and what is inside them.”
ABOUT JASON VIEAUX
Jason Vieaux has an extensive discography that includes the 2015 Best Classical Instrumental Solo GRAMMY® Award winner, Play. Performance highlights include the Caramoor Festival as artist-in-residence, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, the Royal Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, New York’s 92nd Street Y, and the Ravinia Festival. Frequent collaborators include the Escher String Quartet, harpist Yolanda Kondonassis, violinist Anne Akiko Meyers, and accordionist/bandoneonist Julien Labro. He has appeared as a soloist with over 100 orchestras and, in addition to this new work by Jonathan Leshnoff, has fostered premieres by Avner Dorman, Jeff Beal, Dan Visconti, David Ludwig, Vivian Fung, and José Luis Merlin. Vieaux has received a Naumburg Foundation top prize, a Cleveland Institute of Music Distinguished Alumni Award, First Prize at the Guitar Foundation of America International Guitar Competition, and a Salon de Virtuosi Career Grant. Vieaux was the first classical musician featured on NPR’s Tiny Desk series. He plays a 2013 Gernot Wagner guitar with Augustine strings.
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