Nashville Symphony
The Nashville Symphony has evolved since the 1980s into a nationally recognized ensemble that has championed contemporary music and drawn new audiences with innovative crossover programming. Music director Giancarlo Guerrero has begun to amass a large recorded legacy with frequent releases on the Naxos label.
The group's full name is Nashville Symphony, not Nashville Symphony Orchestra. It traces its background to 1920, when Vanderbilt University musicologist and critic George Pullen Jackson founded a Symphony Society consisting of local professional and amateur musicians. That group foundered during the Great Depression of the 1930s, but was revived after World War II as the Nashville Symphony. The first music director of the new incarnation was William Strickland; he was succeeded by Guy Taylor (1951-1959), Willis Page (1959-1967), and Thor Johnson (1967-1975). Under these leaders, in addition to subscription concerts, members of the orchestra could often be heard in the lush string arrangements cultivated by so-called countrypolitan artists such as Patsy Cline. Michael Charry (1976-1982) led the orchestra's move to the large, downtown Tennessee Performing Arts Center. The next music director, Kenneth Schermerhorn (1983-2009) aimed to bring the orchestra to national prominence with a plan dubbed "Symphony 2000." He inaugurated the Naxos recording program and raised the orchestra's profile with an appearance on the PBS network television series Liberty! The American Revolution. Schermerhorn was honored when the orchestra opened its own new space, Schermerhorn Symphony Center, in 2006. After Schermerhorn's death in 2005, Leonard Slatkin served as artistic director from 2006 until 2009. He was replaced in 2009 by Giancarlo Guerrero after a national search. Guerrero has been especially active in championing contemporary works by a large range of composers from Osvaldo Golijov to John Adams to Jennifer Higdon.
The orchestra has also continued to offer crossover programming, including, but not at all limited to, country music, befitting its presence in one of America's major popular music centers. Guerrero has carried forward the Naxos recording program with a steady stream of releases in the 2010s, including a release devoted to music by composer Jonathan Leshnoff in 2019.
© James Manheim /TiVo
Discography
8 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller
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Aaron Jay Kernis: Color Wheel - Symphony No. 4 "Chromelodeon" (Live)
Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 12 Jun 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Michael Daugherty: Tales of Hemingway, American Gothic & Once upon a Castle (Live)
Zuill Bailey, Paul Jacobs, Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 9 Sep 2016
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Metropolis Symphony - Deus ex Machina
Mary Kathryn van Osdale, Ann Richards, Terrence Wilson, Nashville Symphony, Erik Gratton, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 29 Sep 2009
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Impostor
Béla Fleck, Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero, Brooklyn Rider
Classical - Released by Mercury Classics on 1 Jan 2013
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
John Adams: My Father Knew Charles Ives & Harmonielehre
Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 15 Jan 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Rouse: Symphony No. 5, Supplica & Concerto for Orchestra
Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 24 Jul 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Tobias Picker: Opera Without Words & The Encantadas
Tobias Picker, Nashville Symphony, Giancarlo Guerrero
Classical - Released by Naxos on 28 Aug 2020
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Gershwin: Porgy & Bess - Original 1935 Production Version
Alvy Powell, Marquita Lister, Nashville Symphony, John Mauceri
Classical - Released by Decca Music Group Ltd. on 1 Jan 2006
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo