Color Me Happy Concert Program

Concert Program:
Color Me Happy

This concert is sure to make you smile! “Drawing on American folk idioms and the spirit of dance and movement, [Strum] has a kind of narrative that begins with fleeting nostalgia and transforms into ecstatic celebration.” (Quote – Jessie Montgomery) The joy continues with Holberg Suite, a multi-movement piece that incorporates several dances and is one of strength, gentility, playfulness, and meditation. Mendelssohn wrote, “In the deep twilight we went today to the palace where Queen Mary lived and loved…I think I have found there the beginning of my “Scottish” Symphony.” Every movement of the symphony is based on a folk theme that will stick with you beyond the concert! The coda of the final movement introduces a new majestic theme in A major, thus giving it a “happy ending”.

Strum – Jessie Montgomery
Holberg Suite, op.40 – Edvard Grieg
Symphony No.3, op.56, A minor (Scottish) – Felix Mendelssohn

Dear Friends,

What a thrill it is to welcome you to the 53rd season of concerts with the Ashland Symphony Orchestra.  We open a new chapter in ASO history this season as Michael Repper begins his tenure as Music Director and Conductor.   With an enthusiastic new Music Director, a cadre of outstanding musicians, and a discriminating and appreciative audience, we are poised to enjoy a great year of music together.  ASO will present both familiar and new musical offerings that we expect will delight, challenge, inspire, console, stimulate, or refresh you (or perhaps do a combination of those things).

The ASO Board of Directors thanks you for your continuing support of our outstanding orchestra.  We welcome your comments about the ASO and its programs, so please do not hesitate to share your thoughts with any of the Board members.  We look forward to finding ways to make each concert even more rewarding for you.

Enjoy the music.

Michael Hupfer
President, ASO Board of Directors

Dear Ashland Symphony Orchestra Patrons,

It is my great privilege to welcome you to our concerts at the marvelous Robert M. & Janet L. Archer Auditorium. I am incredibly proud to be taking the helm as Ashland’s new Music Director, and to continue to grow this jewel of Ashland County. We are going to make tremendous music together and enjoy a wonderful communal spirit. Our concerts are a place for everyone – come and enjoy, and be sure to introduce yourself! Our musicians and I are incredibly proud to share our work with you, and we hope you enjoy every minute!

Michael Repper
Music Director and Conductor
Ashland Symphony Orchestra

Here’s to NEW beginnings! For this momentous concert season, we welcome Michael Repper as the ASO’s new Music Director and Conductor, a new Fan Club for students in grades 9-12 and college students, pieces that are new to both patrons and musicians, new collaborations, new fundraisers, the ASO’s new Volunteers Coordinator Mark Gorsuch and new House Manager Ivey Buffenmyer, new complimentary children’s tickets, and much more.

We are back together again in the concert hall and I look forward to welcoming returning patrons as well as new audience members.
Come listen to what people are talking about!

Martha Buckner
Executive Director
Ashland Symphony Orchestra

Michael Repper is one of the most sought-after young conductors in the world. With work spanning four continents, Mr. Repper has an international reputation for engaging and exciting audiences of all spectrums, and for promoting new and diverse musical talents. In 2023, he became the youngest American conductor to win a Grammy® Award in Best Orchestral Performance.

Mr. Repper is the Music Director of the Ashland Symphony Orchestra, Mid-Atlantic Symphony Orchestra, New York Youth Symphony, Northern Neck Orchestra of Virginia, and the Principal Conductor of Sinfonía por el Perú, the elite youth orchestras and choruses representing one of South America’s most versatile social impact music programs. Recognizing his success at these ensembles, and his growing profile as a guest conductor all over the world, Mr. Repper was awarded a Solti Foundation US Career Assistance Award in 2020, 2021, and 2022.

His album with the New York Youth Symphony, which features debut recordings of works by Florence Price, Jessie Montgomery, and Valerie Coleman, achieved widespread critical acclaim, reached #1 on the Billboard Chart, a won a GRAMMY® Award, the first youth orchestra to achieve this milestone.

Mr. Repper has collaborated on large-scale productions of symphonic and theatrical works with the Weill Music Institute at Carnegie Hall, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Ravinia Festival, Peabody Institute of Music, and the New School of Music, among others. An avid pianist, he regularly performs as a soloist alongside his orchestras and choruses, and as an orchestral player as well. Most recently, he played in the Chicago Symphony for their performances of Bernstein’s Mass, which was broadcast on PBS Great Performances. ​

​Alongside the standard repertoire, Mr. Repper is especially invested in programming new music and showcasing fresh talent. His ensembles have performed dozens of world premieres and pursued innovative commissions, as well as a variety of Carnegie Hall premieres from established and emerging composers. Mr. Repper was the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Conducting Fellow for two seasons, and he served as the BSO’s New Music Consultant. A trusted ear, Mr. Repper is asked to assist and cover at orchestras nationwide, including the St. Louis Symphony, and for Naxos recordings with the Peabody Symphony Orchestra. His experience with choruses has been recognized with significant positions, including his tenure as the Music Director at the Baltimore Basilica, the first Catholic Cathedral in the United States. Internationally, Mr. Repper has performed with some of the most highly regarded ensembles and in the world’s greatest venues, including the São Paulo Symphony, and at the Palau de la Musica in Barcelona.

His discography includes the aforementioned album of music with the New York Youth Symphony, alongside an album with the Grammy-Nominated Metropolis Ensemble and Grammy-Winning Brooklyn Youth Chorus (“Musical America”), and several with the Peabody Institute as an Assistant Conductor. With the New York Youth Symphony during the Coronavirus pandemic, he was one of the first to pioneer the practice of distanced orchestral performance videos, and he made two performance appearances on CNN, the final one with Platinum-Artist Billy Ray Cyrus.

Mr. Repper complements his work with professional orchestras with a firm commitment to education, and travels worldwide to work with ensembles of young musicians. As Artistic Director of the Chamber Music Society of Maryland, he ushered in a slate of innovative educational programming, such as the Reinecke Youth Chamber Music Scholarship and Fellowship Program. He conducts several masterclasses each year for orchestras from all over the United States on behalf of the New York Philharmonic, and conducts side-by-side and educational concerts with major orchestras, including the Baltimore Symphony and the Colorado Symphony.

Mr. Repper’s most influential conducting mentors are Marin Alsop and the late Gustav Meier. He believes that a conductor’s main role is to connect people and to use performance as a vehicle for positive change. He aims to promote a diverse and inclusive future for the arts, and to pay forward the passion for community that his mentors demonstrated to him.

Strum
Jessie Montgomery (Born 1981, New York, New York)

Strum is the culminating result of several versions of a string quintet I wrote in 2006. It was originally written for the Providence String Quartet and guests of Community MusicWorks Players, then arranged for string quartet in 2008 with several small revisions. In 2012 the piece underwent its final revisions with a rewrite of both the introduction and the ending for the Catalyst Quartet in a performance celebrating the 15th annual Sphinx Competition. The string orchestra arrangement represents the 2012 final version.

Originally conceived for the formation of a cello quintet, the voicing is often spread wide over the ensemble, giving the music an expansive quality of sound. Within Strum I utilized texture motives, layers of rhythmic or harmonic ostinati that string together to form a bed of sound for melodies to weave in and out. The strumming pizzicato serves as a texture motive and the primary driving rhythmic underpinning of the piece. Drawing on American folk idioms and the spirit of dance and movement, the piece has a kind of narrative that begins with fleeting nostalgia and transforms into ecstatic celebration.

–Jessie Montgomery

Holberg Suite, op.40
Edvard Grieg (Born 1843, Bergen, Norway. Died 1970, Bergen, Norway)

Edvard Grieg is regarded as one of the great composers of the Romantic era, and is a member of a group of composers who are responsible for building a national musical identity through their music. Grieg dedicated his life to writing music that channeled Norwegian folk music, and as such he became a source of musical national pride for Norway, in the same way that Sibelius became a source of musical national pride for Finland.

A talented pianist from an early age, but one who hated practicing (don’t we all!), he was a reluctant student. All the same, he excelled with the encouragement of his teachers and peers, and graduated with honors from the Leipzig Conservatory. He moved back to Norway and supported himself as a conductor and performer. One of his most famous compositions is the Holberg Suite, which we will perform today.

The suite is dedicated to the Norwegian writer Ludvig Baron Holberg, who lived during the Baroque musical era. So, Grieg decided the piece in his honor should be in the style of a baroque dance suite. As one might expect, the suite opens with a Prelude which serves as a fanfare, and is followed with four traditional baroque dances: a sarabande (a slow, regal dance), a gavotte, a moderate tempo dance that alternates between loud and soft sections, an air (fans of Bach’s Air on the G String will notice similarities), and a rigodoun (a quick celebratory dance that features very challenging solos for the players!).

A staple of the repertoire, the Holberg Suite is one of the most frequently played pieces for string orchestra, and we look forward to performing it for you today.

Symphony No.3, op.56, A minor (Scottish)
Felix Mendelssohn (Born 1809, Hamburg, Germany. Died 1947, Leipzig, Germany)

Felix Mendelssohn, another giant of the Romantic Era, wrote five symphonies, and the numbering we use today reflects the order in which they were published, but not the order they were written. In actuality, this symphony was the fifth and final symphony that Mendelssohn wrote. The mastery of his compositional style is on display throughout the work, which remains one of his most popular pieces.

Felix Mendelssohn visited the British Isles ten times in his life, only once reaching as far north as Scotland. But in 1829, he wrote to his friend Karl Klingemann “Next August I am going to Scotland, with a rake for folk songs and an ear for the lovely, fragrant countryside.” He was so moved by his trip to Scotland, and inspired by local customs, that he dedicated over ten years to completing this symphony to perfection. This symphony is not the only work to be inspired by these travels – another famous work is the Hebrides Overture.

Listening to this five movement composition, one can easily imagine themselves in Scotland. Mendelssohn captures the spirit of Scottish folk music so perfectly that one must be surprised to learn that there is not a single direct quote of an actual Scottish folk tune (in other words, Mendelssohn understood the style so well from his travels that he was able to recreate the Scottish musical style perfectly, while using only completely original themes).

Mendelssohn insists that this symphony be played straight through from start to finish (in other words, all five movements are played without break). Each movement, however, contains its own character. So, I encourage listeners to pretend that they are in Mendelssohn’s shoes, traveling all over Scotland, enjoying centuries-old architecture and wind-swept cliffs, or a pint of beer in a pub!

Violin I

Samuel Rotberg, Concertmaster
     James E. Thomas Endowed Chair
James Gomez
Jane Reed
Cassandra Bryant
Mary Ann Basinger
Belita Stout

Violin II

Mary Kettering, Principal
Ania Kolodey
Steve Ostrow
Michael Sieberg
Frances Hamilton

Viola

Rosalind Soltow, Principal
Joshua Bowman
Jamie Thornburg
Lee Wilkinson

Cello

Ella Bondar, Principal
Nick Schrantz
Rachel Caserta
David Lodono

Bass

David Lenigan, Principal
Aidan Terry

Flute

Tamara Kagy, Principal
Carol Oberholtzer
     John H. Landrum Endowed Chair

Oboe

Andria Hoy, Principal
Axl Pons

Clarinet

Thomas Reed, Principal
Gail Zugger

Bassoon

Ian Hoy, Principal
Derek Schraufstetter

Horn

Laura Makara, Principal
Michael Metcalf, Assistant Principal
Benjamin Hottensmith
Kiirsi Maunula Johnson
Van Parker

Timpani

Kirk Georgia, Principal

Art in the lobby provided by the students of Ashland City Schools and curated by the Ashland High School Chapter of the National Art Honor Society.

The Ashland Symphony Orchestra thanks

Our ushers and volunteers
Philip McNaull, Technical Director
Ashland City Schools for its continued support of the arts
Roger Price, Professional Voice Actor & Announcer, www.RogerzVoice.com

Please silence all electronic devices.
No flash photography or audio/visual recording permitted.
No food or drink permitted in the Robert M. & Janet L. Archer Auditorium.

Thank you for your cooperation.

The individuals and associations listed on this page, by their support of the orchestra’s operating fund, make possible the continuance of the Ashland Symphony Orchestra. Additional support is needed and will be most welcome at any time throughout the year. If there is an error, please notify the office. Donations listed as of 8/25/22.

Make Your Giving Memorable

Celebrate A Birthday! Welcome A New Neighbor! Honor A Memory! Celebrate A Promotion!

The Ashland Symphony will recognize the people or events in your life with a letter that you have donated in their honor to the Ashland Symphony Orchestra. Please send us that person’s name, address and the event along with your donation and we will send a personalized note acknowledging your thoughtfulness along with the printed celebration text in the upcoming program. Call 419-289-5115 for more information.

‡Sponsor – sponsorships are still available for this season. Call 419-289-5115.
*Additional gift given to the Change for Music Education Campaign
Pacesetters – patrons who pledged on or before August 31, 2022 are indicated in bold.
Name in italics – increased pledge by at least 10%
NAME IN ALL CAPS – increased pledge to move up to a new giving level

Sustainers’ Circle $5,000 and up

Robert M. and Janet L. Archer‡*
Hugo H. and Mabel B. Young Foundation
Ohio Arts Council
Samaritan Hospital Foundation‡

Encore Circle $3,000-$4,999

Dr. JoAnn Ford Watson‡*
Tony and Karen Marallo
Trinity Lutheran Church – Rybolt Fund‡

Artists’ Circle $1,500-$2,999

Anonymous
Ashland County Community Foundation‡
Stan and Diana Brechbuhler
Denbow-Gasche Funeral Home & Crematory
DR. AND MRS. CARLOS CAMPO‡
FORREST CONRAD
George and Ann Franklin‡
Grandpa’s Cheesebarn & Sweeties Chocolates‡
Susan Lime
ALAN AND MARJORIE POORMAN
RALPH AND BETTY JO TOMASSI

Charles and Peggy Ulrich

Symphony Circle $1,000-$1,499

Don and Barb Gilbert*
Barbara Glenn
Brad Hendrickson, DDS
CATHERINE HINER
Bud and Cuda Ingmand‡
JOHN AND JEANIE SHULTZ
Spreng-Smith Agency‡

Maestro’s Circle $650-$999

Charles and Melody Barnes
Ron and Lisa Blackley
MARTHA BUCKNER
John and Lori Byron
Peace Evangelical Lutheran Church‡

PATRICIA PEREZ
Tom and Jane Reed
John and Dana Sherburne*
Bill and Chris Strine

President’s Circle $300-$649

Abbott Laboratories EGC
Allan and Mary-Rose Andersen

Sara Battison
DOUG AND SUSAN BLAKE
Blue Pumpkin Boutique‡
Coldwell Banker Ward Real Estate‡
Doug and Ruth Cellar
James and Kristi Cutright*
Ramon and Cherie Dever

Jean Dierks
Thomas and Kristie Donelson
Justina Fabich
Rev. Robert and Vickie Groenke*
Jonathan and Melinda Haag

Louise Hamel
Jan W. and Sharon Howe
MICHAEL AND SEIKO HUPFER
Loretha Kline

Stan and Carol Kopp
DAVID AND SANDRA LENIGAN
DANN AND CONNIE MARBLE
Ron and Carolyn Marenchin‡
MEL MCKEACHIE AND MELODY SNURE
Tom and Mary McNaull*
BRUCK AND BEA NORTH
James H. Prinz*
Bob and Jayne Roblin*
Marlene Rose
Debbie Seaman*
Dex and Corrine Sedwick*
Jim and Carolyn Smith
Rev. Tom and Kitty Snyder
Dorothy Stratton*
Michael and Deborah Sullivan
ANN AND SCOTT VANSCOY

Sterling Ward
Russell and Jan Weaver
Whitcomb & Hess CPAs and Financial Advisors‡
Marla and Steve Willeke
Tim and Linda Workman

Concertmaster’s Circle $200-$299

Myron and Carolyn Amstutz
Betsy Chapman
Brooke DaHinden
Gretchen M. Emery
DR. AND MRS. A.W. GARRETT
RON AND BONNIE GRAVES
Dr. Robert and Susan Gregg*
Ed and Karen Grose
Linda Hawk*
Henry and Norma Hiner
Barbara Hoshiko

Irwin Financial Associates CPA’s
Robert and Shirley Matz
Tim and Beverly McMillen
Ken and Sheila Milligan
Larry and Diane Moretz
Pam and Mike Mowry
KEVIN AND CAROL OBERHOLTZER
LANA POTTER
Glen and Judy Stewart
David Straits
Robert and Trina Swan

Musicians’ Circle $100-$199

Anonymous
Jeff Alix
Larry Ames and Teresa Durbin-Ames

Lucy Amsbaugh
Rhiannon and Jordan Appleby
Ashland Noon Lions
Tim and Laura Baker
Baker Bowman and Co
Mary Bauer
Shirley Bookmyer
William Buckingham

Ted and Pat Byerly
Tom and Pattie Castor
Lynne Conway
Bob and Jan Cyders

Denny and Polly Davis
Roger and Nancy Fox
Gene and Jan Haberman

Jan Hamilton
Tom and Chris Herron
Rebecca Humrichouser*
Stan and Joyce Hunt
Bob and Colleen Jackson

Jessica and Shane Kremser
KAY KRUEGER
Larry Lattanzi

John and Donna Rae Maiken
John and Laurie Maurer
CAROL MEININGER
Jack and Diane Messner
Moritz Materials, Inc.

Rebecca A. Owens
Jane Roland
Paul and Barbara Schantz
Bill and Patti Schumaker
Dan and Diana Scott*
Jack and Nancy Smith

Thomas H. and Mary Steffek Blaske
Dr. Tamara Stevens
Dr. Gene and Sally Telego
Mike and Nancy Udolph

Leroy and Donna Weaver
Lillian White
DANIEL AND RITA WIERBIKI
Dave and Kimberly Wolbert
Harvey and Beverly Young

Ensemble Circle $50-$99

Anonymous
Ashland Musical Club
Marilyn Byers
Madeline Cole
Darcie Gilbert and Chris Koch*
Mark Gorsuch
David and Debby Gray*
Frances Hamilton
Mrs. Pat Hildebrand
Rev. Justin D. Hyden
Carl and Sandra Leedy
Greg and Nancy Locke
Keith and Sandy McConnell
Alice Metcalf
Rev. Lisa and Dan Peterson

PAMELA POTTER
Ms. Karen Reaume
Patricia Saunders
Peter and Elizabeth Slade in honor of Jacob Slade
Dr. George and Doris Spink
CHRISTOPHER AND LINDA SWANSON
Ralph and Betty Jo Tomassi
Wappner Funeral Directors & Crematory
Rich and Krista Wasowski
Ron and JP Whitehill


In 1997, Bob and Jan Archer established the first donor fund through the Ashland County Community Foundation to benefit the Ashland Symphony Orchestra. The ASO then partnered with the ACCF in 1999 and created the “Ashland Symphony Orchestra Fund in Memorium of James E. Thomas”. Since then, three new agency funds and fourteen additional donor advised or designated funds have been established! The Ashland County Community Foundation can assist you in creating a fund to benefit the Ashland Symphony Orchestra now or as part of your estate plan. For more information, call the Foundation at 419-281-4733.

Donations may be made to existing endowments at any time. Contact the Foundation for more information www.ashlandforgood.org.

*To contribute to these funds, please send donation to Ashland Symphony Orchestra, 401 College Ave., Ashland, OH 44805.

The Ashland Symphony Orchestra is thankful for the following funds:

Robert M. & Janet L. Archer Fund est. 1997

Ashland Symphony Orchestra Fund in Memorium of James E. Thomas est. 1999*

ASO Podium Endowment Fund in Honor of Maestro Arie Lipsky est. 2018*

ASO Harold Weller Music Education Endowment Fund est. 2019*
gift from Nick & Edna Weller Charities: Harold & Betsy Weller and Thomas Weller

ASO Rev. John H. Landrum Memorial Endowed Chair for Flute 2 est. 2020*
gift from Marybelle H. Landrum

Ashland Symphony Orchestra est. 2000

Mary M. Case Memorial Fund est. 2005

Ann K. Guthrie Fund est. 2009

Arie Lipsky Honorary Endowment Fund est. 2010

Kopp Family Fund est. 2011

Dr. Alvin W. Garrett Fund est. 2017

William and Marlene Rose Fund est. 2017

J. Robert and Ruth L. Tipton Fund est. 2017

Dr. JoAnn Ford Watson Fund est. 2017

Dr. Beverly Bixler Fund est. 2018

Billy Harris Charitable Fund est. 2018

Lawrence and Catherine Hiner Endowed Chair for Percussion of the ASO Fund est. 2020

John R. Donelson for the benefit of the ASO est. 2021

Elizabeth Pastor Fund for the benefit of the ASO est. 2021

F. Dean and Joan Bartosic Family Fund for the benefit of the ASO est. 2023

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