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Nashville Symphony Principal Pops Conductor Enrico Lopez-Yañez Leads The Music of Star Wars

This Weekend at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center

 

What: The Music of Star Wars with the Nashville Symphony features John Williams’s greatest hits from the Star Wars
franchise, including the Princess Leia’s Theme, “The Imperial March (Darth Vader’s Theme),” and the iconic music from
the opening sequence.
Audience members are encouraged to wear their own costume to participate in the Nashville Symphony’s Star Wars
costume contest and are invited to arrive early to pose for photos with Star Wars cosplayers from ICCCon Nashville. A
grand prize of a pair of tickets to Jurassic Park in Concert will be awarded at each performance, plus more fantastic
prizes for the best costumes.
Three more performances of the Music of Star Wars with the Nashville Symphony: January 12, 13 & 14. Tickets and
costume contest rules are available at nashvillesymphony.org/starwars. Please note: this concert does not feature any
film elements.
Where: Schermerhorn Symphony Center, 1 Symphony Place, Nashville, TN 37201

PHOTO/MEDIA OPP: PERFORMANCE/COSTUME CONTEST: Friday, January 13 beginning at 6 PM (concert at 7 PM)
Notes: B-roll opportunity of pre-concert costume content and of the performance. Interviews with audience members available
before and after the concert. No access to performers.

Please alert Julia Kirchhausen at 917-453-8386 to arrange access to the rehearsal and/or performance.

About the Nashville Symphony

The Nashville Symphony has served as the primary ambassador for classical music in Music City since 1946. Led by Music Director Giancarlo Guerrero, the ensemble is internationally acclaimed for its focus on contemporary American orchestral music through collaborations with composers including Jennifer Higdon, Terry Riley, Joan Tower and Aaron Jay Kernis; commissioning and recording projects with Nashville-based artists including Edgar Meyer, Bela Fleck, Ben Folds and Victor Wooten; and for its 14 GRAMMY® Awards. In addition to the classical season, the orchestra performs concerts in a wide range of genres, from pops to live-to-film movie scores, family-focused presentations, holiday events, jazz and cabaret evenings, and more.

An established leader in the Nashville and regional arts and cultural communities, the Symphony spearheads groundbreaking community partnerships and initiatives, notably, Violins of Hope Nashville, which engaged tens of thousands of Middle Tennesseans through concerts, exhibits, lectures by spotlighting a historic collection of instruments played by Jewish musicians during the Holocaust. Similarly, this spring, the Nashville Symphony presented the world premiere of an epic opera commissioned from Hannibal Lokumbe, The Jonah Project: A Legacy of Struggle and Triumph. Retracing his family’s ancestry and journey from slavery to the present day, Hannibal’s story celebrates the spirit of those who endured and thrived to become Black visionaries and world changers. More at nashvillesymphony.org

In addition to support from Metro Arts and Tennessee Arts Commission, Nashville Symphony is being supported, in whole or in part, by federal award number SLFRP5534 awarded to the State of Tennessee by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Nashville Symphony is also supported in part by an American Rescue Plan Act grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to support general operating expenses in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

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WITH SUPPORT FROM:

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