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On April 6 via Zoom webinar, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (BSO) unveiled details of its 2021-22 “A Season of Discovery,” including the return of live, in-person performances for audiences at both the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall and The Music Center at Strathmore.
The program included both details on programming and safety precautions and concluded with a live Q&A session. Peter T. Kjome, BSO President and CEO, and Tonya McBride Robles, BSO Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, outlined the upcoming season along with a short video from members of the BSO artistic leadership team and BSO musicians.
Renowned Guest Conductors, Superstar Soloists, and Special Collaborations Planned as In-Person Concerts Resume
ASO s Miller surprised by second Grammy
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Richard O Neill, the Violist who performed the winning pieceRichard O NeillShow MoreShow Less
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David Alan Miller didn’t think he would win a Grammy. The music director of the Albany Symphony was out food shopping and was walking back to his parked car when his daughter yelled to him from it that the symphony had won the Grammy in the best classical instrumental solo category. The piece that won was a viola concerto composed by Christopher Theofanidis, and performed by violist Richard O’Neill.
“I m thrilled. And I was quite stunned by it because I had really emotionally prepared myself not to win for a number of reasons,” said Miller, who had been nominated for a Grammy six times before, winning only once before this. Second among his reasons for not expecting to win was being up against some of the most celebrated orchestras in the world, including the Boston Symphony and the Philade
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In a challenging year for the performing arts, the Albany Symphony Orchestra got some good news this fall. It has been nominated for a Grammy for the fifth time in seven years.
It’s a sound – and feeling – that a lot of us haven’t experienced in a while. In a year that has largely stifled the music industry, the ASO was nominated for its newly-released performance of Christopher Theofanidis’ “Concerto for Viola and Chamber Orchestra” – a performance recorded way back in 2018, in a livelier Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.
Music Director David Alan Miller says he’s thrilled by the nomination (for “Best Classical Instrumental Solo”), particularly because it showcases new work.
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