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In fall 1995, American composer Andrew Waggoner received a commission from the Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic of the Czech Republic for a new orchestral work, which was premiered on today’s date in 1996.
“I had a symphony in my mind for some time and decided that this was the chance I needed to see it through,” Waggoner wrote.
The resulting work, Waggoner’s Symphony No. 2, opens with a solo for the cello, an elegy, perhaps, for cellist Anna Cholakian, the founding member of the Cassatt Quartet, who had died from cancer while Waggoner was working on the piece.
“Quite unexpectedly, and for the first time in my life as a composer, the piece began to draw from everything around it,” Waggoner wrote, including some recycled elements from his own music, including a setting of one of the Holy Sonnets by 17th century British poet John Donne.
Waggoner was born in New Orleans in 1960, and studied music at the Eastman School and Cornell University. In addition to his composition work, he’s worked as an announcer and producer for public radio stations WXXI in Rochester and WNYC in New York. His Symphony No. 2 was recorded by the same Czech orchestra that premiered it.
Andrew Waggoner (b. 1960): Symphony No. 2; Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic; Petr Pololanik, conductor; CRI 884
By American Public Media4.7
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In fall 1995, American composer Andrew Waggoner received a commission from the Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic of the Czech Republic for a new orchestral work, which was premiered on today’s date in 1996.
“I had a symphony in my mind for some time and decided that this was the chance I needed to see it through,” Waggoner wrote.
The resulting work, Waggoner’s Symphony No. 2, opens with a solo for the cello, an elegy, perhaps, for cellist Anna Cholakian, the founding member of the Cassatt Quartet, who had died from cancer while Waggoner was working on the piece.
“Quite unexpectedly, and for the first time in my life as a composer, the piece began to draw from everything around it,” Waggoner wrote, including some recycled elements from his own music, including a setting of one of the Holy Sonnets by 17th century British poet John Donne.
Waggoner was born in New Orleans in 1960, and studied music at the Eastman School and Cornell University. In addition to his composition work, he’s worked as an announcer and producer for public radio stations WXXI in Rochester and WNYC in New York. His Symphony No. 2 was recorded by the same Czech orchestra that premiered it.
Andrew Waggoner (b. 1960): Symphony No. 2; Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic; Petr Pololanik, conductor; CRI 884

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