Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra

Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra
Also known as  FSYO f/k/a Florida Symphony Training Orchestra
Origin Orlando, Florida, United States
Genres Classical
Occupation(s) Youth Symphony Orchestra
Years active 1957–present
Website www.fsyo.org
Members Executive Director
Heide Evans-Waldron
Music Director
Hanrich Claassen

Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra is a music education program consisting of six ensembles of nearly 300 student musicians. The organization is under the musical direction of Hanrich Claassen. FSYO is the oldest youth symphony in the state of Florida and believed to be the 3rd oldest in the southeastern United States. The FSYO was previously affiliated with the now-defunct Florida Symphony Orchestra.

History

FSYO was founded in 1957 by Alphonse Carlo,[1] who was both the concertmaster of the professional Florida Symphony Orchestra and an associate professor of music at Rollins College. The first rehearsals were held at Rollins College.  From the very beginning through the late 1970s, the youth orchestra was jointly supported and sponsored by both the Florida Symphony Society (which was the parent organization of the now-defunct Florida Symphony Orchestra) through its Women’s Committee and the Rollins College School of Creative Arts.  On November 29, 1959, the youth orchestra had its first In public concert in Eustis, FL with 59 students. In 1962, the program gained considerable structure and support under the full wing of the professional Florida Symphony Orchestra and its music director, Henry Mazer. [2].

Relationship with Florida Symphony Orchestra

In 1982, FSYO incorporated as an independent non-profit and received its 501(c)(3) charitable tax status in 1984. Despite its legal and financial independence, FSYO remained very closely associated with the Florida Symphony Orchestra (FSO) until the professional orchestra ceased operations in 1993. Documents discovered in Rollins College Dept. of Archives & Special Collections, show that while FSO provided the music staff and administration during the early years, the Rollins College School of Creative Arts paid for the expenses of running the youth orchestra, including paying for conductor salaries, music, rent, janitorial, etc. Although complete records are missing, it appears that this arrangement continued for approximately 20 years from the late 1950s until the late 1970s.[3]

FSYO Logo -1978-1985

Name changes

According to archive concert programs and other records, the youth orchestra changed its name 6 times in its first 20 years. A concert program from Nov 1959 shows the original name of “The Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra.” In 1962, FSO Music Director Henry Mazer took over the youth program and re-branded it as the “Florida Symphony Youth Training Orchestra” and later called it the “Florida Symphony Training Orchestra.” After Mazer left, the name was changed back to the “Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra” for a brief time.  Next came new FSO music director, Herman Hertz in 1967, who promptly changed the name to the “Florida Youth Symphony” and then later changed it again to “Florida Youth Orchestra.”   In the mid-'70s the name was ironically changed back to the original, “Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra” and it has remained so for 40 years.

  

Ensembles

Summer tours

Music directors

Years Music director
2016–present Hanrich Claassen
2015-2016 Matthew Davis (interim)
2007-2015 Andrew Lane[5]
2005-2007 Harold Levin
1998-2005 Andrew Lane
1994–1998 Jonathan May
1993-1994 Andrews Sill (interim)
1984-1993 Joseph Wise
1983-1984 Gordon O'Hara
1982-1983 Alfred Savia (interim)
1971-1982 Charles Gottschalk
`1970-1971 Pavle Dešpalj
1967-1970 Herman Herz
1966-1967 Yuri Krasnopolsky/Ward Woodbury (interim)
1965-1966 Carter Nice
1963-1965 Joseph Kreines
1962-1963 Henry Mazer
1960-1962 Edgar "Jack" Williams
1957-1960 Alphonse Carlo

References

  1. "Orlando Loses Music Pioneer". Retrieved 2016-07-27.
  2. Smith, Ruth Gilbert (1975). The Florida Symphony Orchestra: A Silver Anniversary History. pp. 63–66.
  3. Rollins College - Olin Library, the Department of Archives and Special Collections
  4. "A Noteworthy Trip". Retrieved 2016-07-27.
  5. Sentinel, Orlando. "Andrew Lane resigns from Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra". Retrieved 2016-07-26.
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