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NEW WORLD SYMPHONY PRESENTS
SYMPHONIC RELIEF: A HURRICANE BENEFIT CONCERT
Saturday, September 24 at 8 PMLincoln Theatre, 541 Lincoln Road, Miami BeachWLRN-FM to broadcast concert live in Miami and nationallyRadio broadcast to be co-hosted by BRYAN NORCROSS, WFOR Channel 4 Chief Meteorologistand Live from Lincoln Center commentator MARTIN BOOKSPAN In response to the devastation and displacement in the Gulf Coast region from Hurricane Katrina, the New World Symphony will present Symphonic Relief: A Hurricane Benefit Concert on Saturday, September 24 at 8 PM. WLRN-FM will broadcast the performance live in Miami and elsewhere in the U.S. Tickets to this benefit concert are $15, and the entire proceeds from ticket sales will be donated by the New World Symphony to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. Additional funds raised during the radio broadcast will also benefit the many thousands of survivors still in need.
For this special concert and broadcast, the entire New World Symphony, led by NWS Principal Guest Conductor Alasdair Neale, will perform a program featuring the popular Symphonic Dances from Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story and a stirring Suite from Sergei Prokofiev's ballet Romeo and Juliet. Also on the bill is Lichtenstein Triptych, a new work by American composer Kenji Bunch inspired by the paintings of Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein. Mr. Bunch will join the concert via Internet2 from Columbia University and will introduce his work to the concert audience.The entire event will be broadcast live on WLRN-FM in Miami and made available to public radio stations nationwide. The radio broadcast will be co-hosted by noted hurricane expert and WFOR Chief Meteorologist Bryan Norcross and by classical music expert and Live from Lincoln Center commentator Martin Bookspan. During the intermission, the broadcast audience will hear appeals from NWS Artistic Director Michael Tilson Thomas and Pulitzer Prize-winning Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts, Jr., as well as from NWS alumni affected by Hurricane Katrina and from others (MTT's appeal will be pre-recorded).
Representatives of the American Red Cross of Greater Miami & The Keys will be on hand at the concert to collect additional donations. Radio listeners will be able to call 1-800-HELP-NOW to donate to the Red Cross or send a check to The American Red Cross Greater Miami & THE Keys is located at 335 SW 27th Avenue, Miami, FL 33135. Telephone: 305-644-1200.SYMPHONIC RELIEF: A HURRICANE BENEFIT CONCERTSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 at 8 PMAlasdair Neale, conductorBryan Norcross, broadcast co-hostMartin Bookspan, broadcast co-hostKenji Bunch: Lichtenstein TriptychLeonard Bernstein: Symphonic Dances from West Side StorySergei Prokofiev: Suite from Romeo and JulietTICKETS: $15To purchase tickets, call the NWS Box Office at 305-673-3331, visit the Lincoln Theatre Box Office at 541 Lincoln Road, or visit http://www.nws.edu. For additional press information, contact Marc Fest, Vice President of Communications, at 305-673-3330 x233 or marc.fest@nws.edu.
ARTIST AND BROADCAST HOST BIOGRAPHIESALASDAIR NEALE, conductorAlasdair Neale is Principal Guest Conductor of the New World Symphony, Music Director of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music Orchestra, and Music Director of the Marin Symphony.Mr. Neale's Marin Symphony appointment follows 12 years as Associate Conductor of the San Francisco Symphony and Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra. Under Mr. Neale's direction, the Youth Orchestra became one of the finest young ensembles in the world, receiving consistent rave reviews for performances in San Francisco, as well as on tour in Moscow, Madrid, Paris, Prague, St. Petersburg, Dublin, Copenhagen, Leipzig and Amsterdam.Mr. Neale has been guest conductor with orchestras around the world, including the Houston, San Antonio, Sydney, Trondheim, Long Beach, Eugene, Honolulu, Colorado Springs and Pacific Symphonies, the Saint Paul and San Francisco Chamber Orchestras, the Royal Scottish National and Florida Orchestras, as well as the l'Orchestre Métropolitan du Grand-Montréal, Radio Sinfonie Orchester Stuttgart, Long Island Philharmonic, Auckland Philharmonia, Orchestra of St. Gallen (Switzerland), MDR Leipzig, NDR Hannover, Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse and the Ensemble Orchestral de Paris. Highlights of Mr. Neale's upcoming guest conducting schedule include engagements with the Seattle Symphony, San Antonio Symphony, Columbus Symphony and the Florida West Coast Symphony.
Mr. Neale holds a bachelor's degree from Cambridge University and a master's from Yale University, where his principal teacher was Otto-Werner Mueller. He lives in San Francisco.BRYAN NORCROSS, broadcast co-host One of the world's foremost hurricane experts, Bryan Norcross literally "talked South Florida through" Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and, since that time, his level-headed advice, professional presence and measured delivery have earned him the trust of South Florida television viewers. As Director of Meteorology for WFOR, CBS4, in Miami, Mr. Norcross provides weather forecasts on the 5 and 6 PM CBS4 newscasts, serves as Executive Producer for the station's hurricane specials, is intimately involved in station hurricane planning, and leads CBS4's round-the-clock coverage whenever a storm threatens. He also works closely with the CBS4 weather team to ensure the station's state-of-the-art forecasting and meteorological capabilities.In addition, Mr. Norcross is the on-air Hurricane Consultant for CBS News in New York, appearing frequently during hurricane season on CBS News programs including the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather and 48 Hours. He also appeared frequently as the primary fill-in weatherman on the CBS Early Show with Bryant Gumbel and Jane Clayson.
Mr. Norcross was named Expert Advisor to the Academic Task Force on Hurricane Catastrophe Insurance by Florida State Treasurer and Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson, and a member of the Governor's Committee to evaluate state response and recommend changes to the state emergency system by Governor Lawton Chiles. In appreciation for his work before, during and after Hurricane Andrew, Mr. Norcross received the 1993 David Brinkley Award for Excellence in Communication. He was also publicly recognized with designations of Bryan Norcross days in Miami, Miami Beach, and Ft. Lauderdale, among other cities. In addition, he's the recipient of an Emmy Award from the Suncoast Chapter of the National Association of Arts and Sciences, and the DuPont and Peabody awards, the highest awards given in broadcasting. In 2003, he was inducted into the Silver Circle of the National Academy of Television Suncoast Chapter for career excellence in Television.
Recently, Mr. Norcross has served on the Board of Directors of the Wolfsonian FIU museum on Miami Beach and has been involved in numerous charitable organizations in South Florida.Mr. Norcross has a Bachelor of Science degree in Math and Physics and a Master's degree in Communications and Meteorology from Florida State University. A resident of Miami Beach, he has lived in Florida most of his life. MARTIN BOOKSPAN, broadcast co-host Martin Bookspan has been commentator for Live from Lincoln Center since the very first broadcast in January, 1976. Martin's lifelong love and appreciation for music and all the performing arts have fueled and shaped his distinguished career in both print and broadcast media, which has included associations with the Boston Symphony, the New York Philharmonic, classical music radio station WQXR, and television Channel 7 News and Channel 11 News in New York City. Mr. Bookspan is the author of 101 Masterpieces of Music and Their Composers (Doubleday) and Consumer Reports Reviews: Classical Recordings (Consumers Union), as well as biographies of Zubin Mehta and André Previn, written with Ross Yockey.
In the non-broadcast arena, Mr. Bookspan has served as a consultant to the Arts Program of the Rockefeller Foundation, as a panelist on numerous programs of the National Endowment for the Arts, as Director of the Concert Division of ASCAP, and as board member of a variety of musical organizations. He currently serves as Chairman of the Advisory Committee of the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation. Established in 1987 under the artistic leadership of Michael Tilson Thomas, the New World Symphony, America's Orchestral Academy, is an intensive, multi-faceted three-year fellowship program that prepares highly gifted graduates of distinguished music programs for leadership positions in orchestras and ensembles throughout the world. Since its inception, more than 640 New World Symphony fellows have established careers as musicians and educators in professional orchestras, ensembles and arts institutions in the United States and abroad. The New World Symphony is internationally recognized for developing new models of orchestral training, including its pioneering use of Internet2, an advanced communications technology. NWS is an accredited member of the National Association of Schools of Music and a member of the American Symphony Orchestra League. Additional information is at http://www.nws.edu.
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