Oklahoma City Philharmonic

Oklahoma City Philharmonic
Orchestra
Founded 1924
1938
1988
Concert hall Civic Center Music Hall
Principal conductor Joel Alan Levine
Website www.okcphilharmonic.org

The Oklahoma City Philharmonic (formerly known as the Oklahoma Symphony Orchestra) is an American symphony orchestra in the city of its namesake.

History

As is the case with many American symphony orchestras, the Oklahoma City Philharmonic owes a degree of its heritage to two predecessor professional symphonic orchestras in the city, the first having been launched in 1924 as the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra. As a marker in history, the orchestra finished the 1928–1929 season, its fifth consecutive season, having performed 7 concerts during the winter to audiences of 2,000 in the Shrine Auditorium that had been erected in 1923.[1]

The Second Oklahoma Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1938 with Ralph Asher Rose, Jr. (1911–1984) conducting the inaugural season. Rose was an Oklahoma City-born virtuoso violinist. He grew-up in Bayside, New York, studied with Michael Press, and at Curtis beginning at age 12, then at Juilliard. He then worked as a violinist in Dallas.[2] During the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, under conductors Victor Alessandro and Guy Fraser Harrison (1894–1986),[3] the Oklahoma Symphony attained national and international rank on several levels, helped by a regular series of radio broadcasts on the Mutual Broadcasting System and the Voice of America for American troops abroad. Conductor Ainslee Cox led the orchestra from 1974-1978.[4]

In 1988, when the Oklahoma Symphony Orchestra was disbanded, Joel Alan Levine (born 1948) spearheaded the founding of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic with the help of individuals, corporations, and philanthropic institutions — culturally-minded civic leaders, the newly incorporated Oklahoma City Orchestra League, Inc., and grants from five major Oklahoma corporations (Oklahoma Gas & Electric, Oklahoma Publishing Company, Southwestern Bell, Kerr McGee, and First Interstate Bank).[5] Adding Levine's nine consecutive seasons as associate conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony (from 1979 to 1999), and his twenty-eight-year tenure as music director and conductor of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic, he has led the orchestra for thirty-seven consecutive seasons, the longest of anyone in the City's history. The Philharmonic is the largest professional performing-arts organization in the state, in terms of budget and performers employed.

In September 2001, the OKC Philharmonic opened its season in the newly renovated Civic Center Music Hall. The renovation was one of several Metropolitan Area Projects (MAPS) and cost $52.2 million, resulting in a complete transformation of the performance chamber into the Thelma Gaylord Performing Arts Theater. [6] In addition to a complete interior renovation, the new music hall included a multistory atrium, improved acoustics and a hydraulic orchestra pit. [7]


Notes

  1. The Realm of Music, San Diego Union, July 28, 1929, pg. 39, col. 1 (bottom)
  2. Flushing Friends to Greet 17-Year-Old Prodigy, The Brooklyn Daily Star, Queensboro Edition, December 17, 1928, pg. 9
  3. Harrison, Guy Fraser (1894-1986), biography compiled by Sion M. Honea, Oklahoma Historical Society (2007)
  4. John Rockwell (September 7, 1988). "Ainslee Cox, 52, A Longtime Leader Of Goldman Band". The New York Times.
  5. Southwestern Bell later became reaffiliated with its earlier parent, AT&T; First Interstate Bank was acquired by Wells Fargo.
  6. Anderson, Mark (October 27, 2015). "The OKC Philharmonic and its people are woven into the fabric of our community". News Review.
  7. Williams, John (August 22, 2010). "Oklahoma City's Civic Center Music Hall to celebrate 75 anniversary". News Review.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.