University of Tennessee Symphony Orchestra: Rachmaninoff and Márquez
Thursday, May 2, 2024 at 7:30 p.m.
Rachmaninoff and Márquez


College of Music Logo


Hunter Wilburn, conductor

Thursday, May 2, 2024 at 7:30 p.m.

James R. Cox Auditorium
Alumni Memorial Building
University of Tennessee, Knoxville

 

Danzón No. 2
Arturo Márquez

Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 18
Sergei Rachmaninoff

I. Moderato
II. Adagio sostenuto
III. Allegro scherzando

Katherine Benson, piano

Maria Castillo, flute
Jaren Atherholt, oboe
Victor Chavez, Jr., clarinet
Benjamin Atherholt, bassoon
Katie Johnson-Webb, horn
Arthur Zanin, trumpet
Alexander van Duuren, trombone
Alexander Lapins, tuba
Andrew Bliss, percussion
Kevin Zetina, percussion
Miroslav Hristov, violin
Evie Chen, violin
Hillary Herndon, viola
Wesley Baldwin, violoncello
Jon Hamar, contrabass

Hunter Wilburn

Hunter Wilburn is a violinist/conductor from Signal Mountain, Tennessee. He currently attends the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and is finishing his masters degree in orchestral conducting studying under the tutelage of Professor James Fellenbaum. Hunter received his Bachelor of Music degree in violin performance from the University of Tennessee Knoxville. His previous violin teachers include Dr. Josh Holritz and Dr. Geoffrey Herd but is currently taking from Dr. Evie Chen. Hunter Wilburn also regularly performs with the  Brevard Philharmonic, the Chattanooga Symphony Orchestra, and the Marble City Opera. Hunter Wilburn is a founding member of the Caesura String Quartet and has worked for the UT String Project for 2 years. 

Katherine Benson

Young American pianist Katherine Benson is quickly emerging as an important artistic figure of her generation through her “stunning” (ArtsKnoxville) performances and passion for arts leadership.

A native of Jonesborough, TN, Katherine has performed as a soloist across the USA and abroad in Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom, Canada, and New Zealand. Katherine has additionally garnered numerous triumphs in the competition sphere, having won top prizes in the Seattle, Kerikeri, Walled City Music, Teresa Carreño, and Thousand Islands International Piano Competitions, as well as the grand prize of the 2020 George R. Johnson Concerto Competition. Katherine was most recently one of only four finalists in the prestigious Heida Hermanns International Music Competition.

An avid chamber musician, Katherine is the Artistic Director and pianist for The Paramount Chamber Players (TPCP), one of the premier chamber music ensembles of the the Appalachian region and now in its eighteenth concert season. Since taking her role with TPCP in 2020, Katherine has organized and performed over a dozen concerts with the ensemble, including a professionally recorded and entirely virtual 2020–2021 concert season. Katherine’s recent performance highlights from the ensemble’s live 2021–2022 season include Shostakovich’s Piano Trio in E Minor, Brahms’ Piano Quintet in F Minor, and Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty Suite arranged for piano four-hands.

Katherine is deeply passionate about arts leadership and interdisciplinary collaboration, and her innovative projects have been sponsored by multiple grants from the University of Tennessee and Rackham College at the University of Michigan. As an exploration between the intersections of artistic media, Katherine recently commissioned seven new pieces of art from graduate and undergraduate visual art students, each new work created directly in response to a solo piano piece.

Katherine is currently pursuing her Doctorate of Musical Arts in Piano Performance at the University of Michigan, where she studies with Professor Arthur Greene and serves as a graduate student instructor of private and class piano. She also holds degrees from the Eastman School of Music, Northwestern University, and an Artist Certificate from the University of Tennessee Knoxville, and her teachers include Chih-Long Hu, Nelita True, James Giles, and Jerilyn Paolini. Katherine is on the faculty of the University of Tennessee Knoxville as Adjunct Assistant Professor in Piano.

Violin
Euclides Andrade
Mason Crowder, principal
Hayden Daniel
Ryan Dixson
Grace Fortune
Abigail Garner
Ethan Hess
Brooke Lafontant, co-concertmaster
Autumn Larmee
Marki Lukynik
Kara McNutt
Maya Momot
Ilarion Osipkin
Mike Perroud
Millie Runion, principal
Mei Lia White, co-concertmaster
Elizabeth Burch, co-concertmaster
Emma Woodward

Concertmasters sit in the Katherine D. Moore Endowed Concertmaster Chair

Viola
Jackson Alderman, co-principal
Rachel Huffer
Noah Kincaid
Emily Martinez-Perez
Anna Robertson
Ian Skelly
Emily Wankerl

Cello
Stephen Arthur
Erik Isakson
Dylan Jowell, co-principal
Eli Parsley
Hannah Paulus, co-principal
Ethan Sharp
Daniel Rivera

Bass
Jase Conley, principal
Lauren Harnetty
Avery Noe
Samuel Sudler

Flute
Whitney Applewhite, principal 
Alan Cook

Piccolo
Alan Cook

Oboe
Matthew Barrett, co-principal
Samuel Willard, co-principal

Clarinet
Rafael Puga, principal
Lillian Smith

Bassoon
Mike Benjamin*, co-principal
Daniel Sippel, co-principal

Horn
Ben Makins, principal
Caleb DeLong
Maya Siddiqui

Trumpet
Alexis Kilgore, principal
John Matthew Dunevant

Trombone
Jacob Noel, principal
Matthew Walker
Bryce McCracken, bass

Tuba
Cameron McKenzie

Percussion
Burke Rivet, principal
Annika Blackburn
Brooke Duez
Chang Gao

Harp
Peter Kelmelis


* guest

 

We hope you enjoyed this performance. Private support from music enthusiasts enables us to improve educational opportunities and develop our student artists’ skills to their full potential. To learn more about how you can support the College of Music, contact Chris Cox, Director of Advancement, 865-974-3331 or ccox@utfi.org.

University of Tennessee Symphony Orchestra: Rachmaninoff and Márquez
Thursday, May 2, 2024 at 7:30 p.m.
Rachmaninoff and Márquez


College of Music Logo


Hunter Wilburn, conductor

Thursday, May 2, 2024 at 7:30 p.m.

James R. Cox Auditorium
Alumni Memorial Building
University of Tennessee, Knoxville

 

Danzón No. 2
Arturo Márquez

Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 18
Sergei Rachmaninoff

I. Moderato
II. Adagio sostenuto
III. Allegro scherzando

Katherine Benson, piano

Maria Castillo, flute
Jaren Atherholt, oboe
Victor Chavez, Jr., clarinet
Benjamin Atherholt, bassoon
Katie Johnson-Webb, horn
Arthur Zanin, trumpet
Alexander van Duuren, trombone
Alexander Lapins, tuba
Andrew Bliss, percussion
Kevin Zetina, percussion
Miroslav Hristov, violin
Evie Chen, violin
Hillary Herndon, viola
Wesley Baldwin, violoncello
Jon Hamar, contrabass

Hunter Wilburn

Hunter Wilburn is a violinist/conductor from Signal Mountain, Tennessee. He currently attends the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and is finishing his masters degree in orchestral conducting studying under the tutelage of Professor James Fellenbaum. Hunter received his Bachelor of Music degree in violin performance from the University of Tennessee Knoxville. His previous violin teachers include Dr. Josh Holritz and Dr. Geoffrey Herd but is currently taking from Dr. Evie Chen. Hunter Wilburn also regularly performs with the  Brevard Philharmonic, the Chattanooga Symphony Orchestra, and the Marble City Opera. Hunter Wilburn is a founding member of the Caesura String Quartet and has worked for the UT String Project for 2 years. 

Katherine Benson

Young American pianist Katherine Benson is quickly emerging as an important artistic figure of her generation through her “stunning” (ArtsKnoxville) performances and passion for arts leadership.

A native of Jonesborough, TN, Katherine has performed as a soloist across the USA and abroad in Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom, Canada, and New Zealand. Katherine has additionally garnered numerous triumphs in the competition sphere, having won top prizes in the Seattle, Kerikeri, Walled City Music, Teresa Carreño, and Thousand Islands International Piano Competitions, as well as the grand prize of the 2020 George R. Johnson Concerto Competition. Katherine was most recently one of only four finalists in the prestigious Heida Hermanns International Music Competition.

An avid chamber musician, Katherine is the Artistic Director and pianist for The Paramount Chamber Players (TPCP), one of the premier chamber music ensembles of the the Appalachian region and now in its eighteenth concert season. Since taking her role with TPCP in 2020, Katherine has organized and performed over a dozen concerts with the ensemble, including a professionally recorded and entirely virtual 2020–2021 concert season. Katherine’s recent performance highlights from the ensemble’s live 2021–2022 season include Shostakovich’s Piano Trio in E Minor, Brahms’ Piano Quintet in F Minor, and Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty Suite arranged for piano four-hands.

Katherine is deeply passionate about arts leadership and interdisciplinary collaboration, and her innovative projects have been sponsored by multiple grants from the University of Tennessee and Rackham College at the University of Michigan. As an exploration between the intersections of artistic media, Katherine recently commissioned seven new pieces of art from graduate and undergraduate visual art students, each new work created directly in response to a solo piano piece.

Katherine is currently pursuing her Doctorate of Musical Arts in Piano Performance at the University of Michigan, where she studies with Professor Arthur Greene and serves as a graduate student instructor of private and class piano. She also holds degrees from the Eastman School of Music, Northwestern University, and an Artist Certificate from the University of Tennessee Knoxville, and her teachers include Chih-Long Hu, Nelita True, James Giles, and Jerilyn Paolini. Katherine is on the faculty of the University of Tennessee Knoxville as Adjunct Assistant Professor in Piano.

Violin
Euclides Andrade
Mason Crowder, principal
Hayden Daniel
Ryan Dixson
Grace Fortune
Abigail Garner
Ethan Hess
Brooke Lafontant, co-concertmaster
Autumn Larmee
Marki Lukynik
Kara McNutt
Maya Momot
Ilarion Osipkin
Mike Perroud
Millie Runion, principal
Mei Lia White, co-concertmaster
Elizabeth Burch, co-concertmaster
Emma Woodward

Concertmasters sit in the Katherine D. Moore Endowed Concertmaster Chair

Viola
Jackson Alderman, co-principal
Rachel Huffer
Noah Kincaid
Emily Martinez-Perez
Anna Robertson
Ian Skelly
Emily Wankerl

Cello
Stephen Arthur
Erik Isakson
Dylan Jowell, co-principal
Eli Parsley
Hannah Paulus, co-principal
Ethan Sharp
Daniel Rivera

Bass
Jase Conley, principal
Lauren Harnetty
Avery Noe
Samuel Sudler

Flute
Whitney Applewhite, principal 
Alan Cook

Piccolo
Alan Cook

Oboe
Matthew Barrett, co-principal
Samuel Willard, co-principal

Clarinet
Rafael Puga, principal
Lillian Smith

Bassoon
Mike Benjamin*, co-principal
Daniel Sippel, co-principal

Horn
Ben Makins, principal
Caleb DeLong
Maya Siddiqui

Trumpet
Alexis Kilgore, principal
John Matthew Dunevant

Trombone
Jacob Noel, principal
Matthew Walker
Bryce McCracken, bass

Tuba
Cameron McKenzie

Percussion
Burke Rivet, principal
Annika Blackburn
Brooke Duez
Chang Gao

Harp
Peter Kelmelis


* guest

 

We hope you enjoyed this performance. Private support from music enthusiasts enables us to improve educational opportunities and develop our student artists’ skills to their full potential. To learn more about how you can support the College of Music, contact Chris Cox, Director of Advancement, 865-974-3331 or ccox@utfi.org.