Symphony Nova Scotia

Symphony Nova Scotia
Orchestra

Bernhard Gueller and the musicians at the Dalhousie Arts Centre, 2010.
Founded 1983 (1983)
Location Halifax, Nova Scotia
Concert hall Dalhousie Arts Centre
Principal conductor Bernhard Gueller
Website symphonynovascotia.ca

Symphony Nova Scotia is a professional orchestra based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Their primary recitial space is at the Dalhousie Arts Centre's Rebecca Cohn Auditorium.

History

Symphony Nova Scotia began in 1983 with 13 full-time musicians. Today it employs 37 musicians and ten administrative staff, along with over 150 contracted artistic, production and technical personnel. It has won four East Coast Music Awards for classical music.

Orchestral lineage

The first recognized orchestra in Nova Scotia, the Halifax Symphony Orchestra, was formed in 1897. This orchestra, led by conductor Max Weil, reached a membership of 39 musicians and performed four to five concerts each season. The orchestra disbanded in 1908 with Weil’s departure.

In 1947 another orchestra was created in Nova Scotia through the efforts of Walter Kaufmann and Alfred Strombergs as well as Mariss Vetra and Dr. Srul Tulio Laufer. Backed by the Nova Scotia Opera Association, the orchestra primarily served as accompaniment for opera and ballet performances. Formally named the Halifax Sinfoniette in 1951, the group of 13 professional musicians was led by Strombergs until 1955.

In 1955 the Sinfoniette became the second incarnation of the Halifax Symphony Orchestra. The orchestra began under music director Thomas Mayer with 17 full-time musicians (often augmented by members from the Royal Canadian Artillery Band and the Stadacona Navy Band). By 1966 the orchestra had 35 full-time members and presented about 70 concerts annually. Conductors included Jonathan Sternberg (1957–58), Leo Mueller (1958–64), and John Fenwick (1964–67).

When the Halifax Symphony Orchestra and New Brunswick Symphony Orchestra (founded in 1962) were both disbanded in 1968, the Atlantic provinces created the 48-member Atlantic Symphony Orchestra, a regional orchestra designed to tour the four provinces.

Despite the Atlantic Symphony Orchestra’s popularity, it suffered from high costs, declining government and corporate support, and a lengthy labour dispute in 1979. The orchestra declared bankruptcy in 1983.

Foundation

The logo of Symphony Nova Scotia

In October 1983 Symphony Nova Scotia was created under the direction of conductor Boris Brott and Board president Brian Flemming.

The original Symphony Nova Scotia hired 13 full-time players for a January–May season. In its second season the number of employed musicians doubled, and by 1987 the orchestra had grown to a complement of 39. Boris Brott is the only Canadian to be appointed music director of Symphony Nova Scotia.

Under Georg Tintner, 1987-94

Austrian conductor Georg Tintner succeeded Boris Brott in 1987. Under his leadership, Symphony Nova Scotia made six recordings, toured to Ontario and Quebec, and initiated several community outreach programs, including a production of The Nutcracker in collaboration with Halifax Dance and Mermaid Theatre of Nova Scotia.

The orchestra also raised $140,000 during a 1992 fundraising event called Pure Gold that featuried violinist Isaac Stern and contralto Maureen Forrester.

Tintner served as Symphony Nova Scotia’s principal conductor until 1994, and as Conductor Laureate until his death in 1999.

1994-96

The orchestra struggled financially and artistically during a period of severe cutbacks in government funding. Despite attempts to cut costs by imposing wage freezes on the orchestra and staff and cutting the season to 27 weeks, by 1995 the Symphony was forecasting an accumulated deficit of $900,000.

To address the immediate cash flow crisis, the Board of Directors, after consulting with staff and musicians, chose to restructure the organization rather than to shut the orchestra down. The orchestra members donated their services for two weeks during a provincial tour with a young fiddler from Cape Breton, Natalie MacMaster. The administrative staff was reduced and reorganized, and Raffi Armenian was hired as Interim Artistic Director until American conductor Leslie Dunner was chosen to take the podium in 1996-97.

1996-2000

In 1996-97 the orchestra opted to re-establish free public concerts and school visits, previously pared to save costs.

1998-99 was Dunner’s last season as Music Director with the orchestra, and a search began for a new conductor. With the death of Conductor Laureate and Artistic Advisor Georg Tintner in October 1999, orchestra, staff and Board members made artistic decisions until Simon Streatfeild was hired as Artistic Advisor in May 2000.

Under Bernhard Gueller, 2002-present

Symphony Nova Scotia performs at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax

German conductor Bernhard Gueller was announced as the new Music Director in July 2002 and began his inaugural season in September of that year.

Gueller was assisted from 2005-2008 by the orchestra’s conductor-in-residence, Sri-Lankan-born Dinuk Wijeratne. In 2008, when Wijeratne had completed his Canada Council-funded term with the orchestra, Cape Breton native Martin MacDonald was appointed as the new resident conductor. MacDonald completed his term in May 2011, when Israeli-born Shalom Bard was selected as his successor. Jonathan Govias was then selected as resident conductor for the 2012-13 season.

Symphony Nova Scotia presently employs 37 full-time musicians for a 33-week season.

The orchestra has recently renewed a focus on touring, regularly traveling to communities across the province and incorporating a full concert series in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. It also participates in community engagement and outreach initiatives with partners from the educational, artistic, heritage and ethnic communities.

The orchestra has been praised for its versatility and flexibility, and for performances in a variety of styles. Conductor and arranger Howard Cable calls Symphony Nova Scotia “the most versatile orchestra in Canada,” and the Chronicle Herald has said that, “they can play it all: Beethoven, Shostakovich, Hatzis and Current, as well as Tommy Dorsey, Scott Macmillan, Rose Cousins, Buck 65 and Natalie MacMaster.”[1]

Symphony Nova Scotia's education programs reach over 15,000 elementary, junior, and senior high school students each year. The Symphony also conducts accessible community programs, including pre-concert chats, performances in local public libraries, and free community concerts.[2]

Cross-over collaborations

Buck 65 (2006)

Symphony Nova Scotia has collaborated with popular and folk music artists. According to CBC Canada Live broadcaster Andrew Craig, “Symphony Nova Scotia simply proves that orchestras can evolve, and that there is no loss of artistic integrity in promoting the music of living composers, pop or otherwise.” [3]

Pops collaborations in recent years include:

Recordings

Discography

2011/12 Season

2010/11 Season

2009/10 Season

Awards and nominations

Awards

Nominations

Educational programs

Symphony Nova Scotia performs in an elementary school in Nova Scotia

References

  1. Pederson, Stephen (March 29, 2009). "Symphony's Queen concert, Gueller brilliant". The Chronicle Herald.
  2. "Who We Are". About Symphony Nova Scotia. Symphony Nova Scotia. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  3. Craig, Andrew. "Meaghan Smith and Erin Costelo do the orchestral mash". Canada Live. CBC Radio 2. Retrieved 11 May 2011.

External links

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