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SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
ADMINISTRATION OFFICE

1245 Seventh Ave.
San Diego, CA 92101
9am – 5pm
Monday – Friday
Admin Phone: 619.235.0800
Admin Fax: 619.235.0005

 

COPLEY SYMPHONY HALL TICKET OFFICE
750 B Street
San Diego, CA 92101

Phone: 619.235.0804
Fax: 619.231.3848

Normal business hours:
Monday – Friday:
10am - 6pm
Saturday & Sunday:
12noon - 4pm
(Sat-Sun hours vary in summer)

Note: Subscription and Single Tickets for
San Diego Symphony's Ashford University
Summer Pops 2012 will be mailed out
around the
 2nd or 3rd week of June

 

FOR HALL RENTAL, CONTACT:
Dennis Legg, Director of Facility Operations
619.615.3916
mailto:dlegg@sandiegosymphony.org

 

QUESTIONS ABOUT DONATIONS?

Contact: Daniel Baker
Development Officer
Tel: 619.615.3908
Email: dbaker@sandiegosymphony.org

                    

San Diego Symphony
1245 Seventh Avenue
San Diego, CA 92101
619.235.0800

 

Stock Gifts Frequently Asked Questions 

Stock Transfer Form

 

ABOUT THE SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY                                           (EN ESPAÑOL)

AN INTRODUCTION

The San Diego Symphony performed its first concert on December 6, 1910. In the over 100 years since its inception, the San Diego Symphony has become one of the leading orchestras in the United States, and was recently designated a Tier 1 Orchestra by the League of American Orchestras. It is committed to providing musical experiences of superior quality for the greater San Diego community and beyond. Through a rich mixture of innovative and educational programming designed to appeal to all ages and cultures, the Symphony makes music an integral part of the cultural and intellectual fabric of Southern California, valued by and relevant to all its residents. This year the San Diego Symphony is celebrating our 100th anniversary, the first California orchestra to reach this milestone.

The Symphony offers wide range of concert experiences and performs over 100 concerts each year. The San Diego Symphony's indoor performances include the Jacobs Masterworks series with music director Jahja Ling, offering traditional classical repertoire and featuring such guest artists as Horacio Gutierrez, Joshua Bell, Lang Lang and Gil Shaham; the Winter Pops series, featuring principal pops conductor Marvin Hamlisch and popular guest artists such as Jennifer Holliday, Michael Feinstein, Robert Klein, Bill Conti and Brian Stokes Mitchell ; the Family Festival, featuring family-friendly concerts; and the Symphony Exposed, a fascinating series of concerts that examine classical works from entertaining and thought-provoking angles.

Each summer, from July through September, the Symphony presents an outdoor Summer Pops season at Embarcadero Marina Park South, mixing classical favorites and pop music in a festive, outdoor atmosphere on San Diego’s picturesque waterfront, all under the baton of Matthew Garbutt, principal Summer Pops conductor. Recent Summer Pops guest artists have included Frankie Valli, Chris Botti, Aaron Neville, LeAnn Rimes, Kool & The Gang, Frank Sinatra Jr., Dionne Warwick and Burt Bacharach.

OUR HOME

Historic Copley Symphony Hall, home of the San Diego Symphony, is regarded as one of the finest classical music venues on the West Coast. Originally built in 1929 as The Fox Theatre, a premiere movie house, this lush movie palace style hall became the property of the San Diego Symphony Orchestra Association in 1984. The beauty and majesty of this historic hall has added to the stature and artistic growth of San Diego Symphony.


RECENT HISTORY

Many renowned conductors have held the position of music director of San Diego Symphony, including Earl Bernard Murray, David Atherton and Yoav Talmi. Robert Shaw was music director of the Symphony from 1953-1958. In 1983, San Diego Symphony’s then composer-in-residence, Bernard Rands, won the Pulitzer Prize, furthering the outstanding reputation of San Diego Symphony. In 1992, the Symphony commemorated the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ landing with a televised concert in Mexico’s Chichen Itza ruins. In the 1980’s and 1990’s, labor and cash flow problems led to several season stoppages and even to bankruptcy. Late in the 1990’s, however, the orchestra recovered and, with the aid of significant gifts, began playing under the leadership of the former assistant conductor, Jung Ho Pak. In 1998 the Symphony revived with a tour of the west coast with Andrea Bocelli.

THE GIFT

On January 14, 2002, the San Diego Symphony celebrated the announcement of the single largest donation ever made to a Symphony Orchestra, totaling $120 million. This pledged gift was generously given by Joan and Irwin Jacobs, solidifying a sustained period of stability for the orchestra marked by what has now been 12 straight years of balanced budgets. At the time of the gift, The New York Times declared the San Diego Symphony was "placed firmly on the nation’s musical landscape" as a result of this news. (Click here for a thorough explanation of the Jacobs Gift as detailed in a Voice of San Diego story on the 10th Anniversary of the Gift.)

 
THE CONDUCTOR

After a world-wide search, conductor Jahja Ling of the Cleveland Orchestra and Cleveland Orchestra Blossom Festival became the current music director of the San Diego Symphony in the 2004-05 season. Mr. Ling’s tenure with the Symphony has now been extended through 2012.