I’m just back from the noon rally at Trade and Tryon for the Charlotte Symphony, which was fun in a too-much-sun, humid sweat kind of way. Especially since I not only got to hear some professional musicians play, but I got to hear former Gov. Jim Martin play the tuba. Who can’t love that?
For the record, he played “Asleep in the Deep” on an instrument he said he borrowed from the Salvation Army. It did indeed have a beat up, well-used look to it. I missed his performance before the official rally started, but he was nice enough to play when I asked him, afterward.
The snoopy journalist in me, of course, required that I ask around about to try to get some clues to the identity of the anonymous donor who just gave the symphony a $500,000 challenge grant. The symphony has until Dec. 31 to raise its matching money, although I was told the challenge grant will be given out in increments, as the matching money is raised.
Meg Whalen, the symphony’s public relations director, told me no one at the symphony knows the donor’s identity except the CSO executive director, Jonathan Martin, and board chair Pat Rodgers. But, Whalen said, the donor intends to remain anonymous forever. So we’re left to speculate about local philanthropists. Leon and Sandra Levine might be atop the list, except they apparently have been busy wiring up a $1 million challenge grant to the United Way of Central Carolinas, announced this morning. And they’ve already been generous to the symphony, with a $25,000 grant in May.
The symphony has to give its financial turnaround plan to the Arts & Science Council on Sept. 2. If the ASC doesn’t like the plan, the symphony gets only a $150,000 in ASC funding, down from $1.9 million last year. If the ASC approves, the symphony gets $900,000.
I’m obviously cheering the symphony on. I’d hate to see Charlotte become one of the largest cities in America without a symphony. Here’s a column I wrote on that topic a couple of weeks ago.