THE ARTS & MUSICAL PERFORMANCES
MUSIC LIVES IN NASHVILLE
For more than 200 years, Nashville has been entertaining audiences
around the world. Classical art and modern day pop are equally at home
in Music City. From opera to country, ballet to rock, the performing
arts are prominently displayed in Nashville.
Blair School of Music
vanderbilt.edu/Blair
Blair School of Music serves as the focal point within Vanderbilt
University for the study of music as a human endeavor and as a
performing art, addressing music through a broad array of academic,
pedagogical and performing activities. The Blair School maintains and
promotes the highest standards in the pursuit of scholarly and creative
work, in the delivery of instruction and in the promotion of
professional and public service.
Community Concert Series
nashvillesymphony.org
Throughout the warmer months, the Nashville Symphony performs free
outdoor concerts in various parks all over town. Ranging from big band
to ballroom, the music encourages visitors to bring picnic baskets and
dancing shoes.
Crook & Chase
www.crookandchase.com
Two of radio and television’s most recognizable personalities co-host
‘Crook and Chase Show” on RFD-TV. Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase, who
celebrate more than 25 years in the business, are the longest-running
broadcast team currently on the air.
Grand Ole Opry
www.opry.com
Every Tuesday, Friday and Saturday night, the Grand Ole Opry brings the
sounds of the world’s longest-running radio show (over 85 years!) and
an incredible mix of talent to a live audience. Airing live on 650
WSM-AM, SiriusXM and www.opry. com, the program pays homage to country
music’s past while celebrating its future. Summer months are highlighted
by free Opry Plaza Parties before the weekend performances. Guests can
also enjoy Opry Country Classics at the Ryman Auditorium on Thursday
nights during the early spring season, March-May, or during the month of
October.
Fontanel Mansion
www.fontanelmansion.com
The Fontanel Mansion is the 27,000-square-foot log home formerly owned
by Country Music Hall of Fame® member Barbara Mandrell. Located less
than 15 minutes from downtown Nashville, the mansion boasts three
stories, more than 20 rooms, 13 bathrooms, five fireplaces,
two kitchens, indoor pool and even an indoor shooting range on
136 acres of pristine land. An exclusive spot for the stars, the home
and grounds have been the setting for numerous photo and video shoots.
Additionally, the mansion features one-of-a-kind items, personal photos,
and keepsakes of the Mandrell family and of artists including Alabama,
Kenny Chesney, Big & Rich, Gretchen Wilson and many others.
Guests can also experience The Woods Amphitheater at Fontanel, their
outdoor music venue. Located in Whites Creek and featuring
state-of-the-art sound in a cozy wooded setting, the natural
amphitheater offers a one-of-a-kind concert
experience.
Music City On Stage: Live at Fontanel
www.musiccityonstage.com
Music City On Stage is a brand new live production at the Fontanel
Mansion. Fully staged and costumed, the show features a dynamic cast of
talented performers. This is a true “Dinnertainment” experience for all
ages; serving up a taste of Tennessee with a home-cooked meal with a
side of blues, gospel, bluegrass and chart-topping country music
favorites from yesterday and today.
Nashville Jazz Workshop
www.nashvillejazz.org
Founded in 1998 with a focus on jazz education, the Nashville Jazz
Workshop hosts twice-monthly performances to its offerings: “Snap on 2
and 4” (on the second and fourth Fridays of each month). The
performances take place in the Workshop’s Jazz Cave, located in a
renovated meat-packing complex in Nashville’s East Germantown area. The
venue has been known to feature nationally-recognized jazz artists as
well as top local musicians. With seating for only 100, an unforgettable
jazz experience is guaranteed.
Nashville Nightlife's "The Best of Country Music
Show"
www.nashvillenightlife.com
Experience a celebration of country music from both past and present.
Hear songs first made famous by great artists like Hank Williams, Sr.,
Patsy Cline, Shania Twain and Garth Brooks. Throughout the season, many
guest stars make appearances including Tommy Cash, Steve Hall &
Shotgun Red and Diana Murrell. Exclusive autograph and photo sessions
follow each show.
Nashville Opera Association
www.nashvilleopera.org
The Nashville Opera Association is Middle Tennessee’s only opera
organization. In a typical season, the Opera produces four main-stage
performances and completes a six-week tour to area schools. The NOA also
holds a three-month residency Young Artist Program for young
professional singers and conducts numerous community outreach
programs.
Nashville Symphony
www.nashvillesymphony.org
With more than 200 performances annually, the Nashville Symphony offers
local audiences a range of classical, pops and Pied Piper children’s
series concerts. The Grammy award-winning symphony shares its artistry
with national and international audiences through critically acclaimed
recordings on Naxos’ American Classics series. The Nashville Symphony
currently sells more CDs than any other American
orchestra.
The Schermerhorn Symphony Center is the home of the Nashville Symphony.
This facility is a state-of-the-art concert hall with acoustic designs
influenced by the best symphony halls in the world. The
197,000-square-foot neo-classically inspired building is the cultural
heart of flourishing downtown Nashville. The Laura Turner Concert Hall
is the main performance space within the Schermerhorn Symphony Center,
with a unique floor system that can change from raked seating to table
seating for pops and jazz performances.
Tennessee Performing Arts Center
www.tpac.org
The performance venues at TPAC are Andrew Jackson Hall (2,472 seats),
James K. Polk Theater (1,075), Andrew Johnson Theater (256) and War
Memorial Auditorium (1,661), the historic landmark located across 6th
Avenue and the plaza from the Center. Among its many operations, TPAC
presents a series of Broadway shows and special engagements, and
administers a comprehensive education program.
TPAC is also home to three resident performing arts organizations:
Nashville Ballet, Nashville Opera, and Tennessee Repertory Theatre.
Presenting their work on the stages of TPAC, all of these organizations
are independent of the center.
W. O. Smith Music School
www.wosmith.org
The W.O. Smith Music School is a fun, safe environment where education,
instruction and encouragement are offered to children with a passion
for music but without the means to afford lessons or instruments.
Children of low-income families have access to music instruction of the
highest quality for the nominal fee of fifty cents a lesson. The
100-member volunteer faculty comprised of area musicians teaches more
than 350 students each year.
PERFORMING ARTS
Great talent comes to Nashville to take part in musical and performing
arts throughout the year. Whether a children’s marionette show, a comedy
or an inspiring classical play, Nashville has much to
offer.
Act 1
www.act1online.com
ACT 1, Artists’ Cooperative Theatre, is an organization dedicated to
bringing theatrical gems, both classical and modern, to Nashville
audiences. ACT 1 has presented productions of more than 50 of the
world’s greatest plays.
Actors Bridge Ensemble
www.actorsbridge.org
Actors Bridge is a training program for new and seasoned actors
dedicated to progressive and provocative productions. A group of artists
committed to the ensemble’s principle, the Actors Bridge is an
incubator for new theatrical works.
Chaffin's Barn Dinner Theatre
www.dinnertheatre.com
Chaffin’s Barn was Nashville’s first professional theatre. Guests can
enjoy dinner while watching professional Broadway-style plays, comedies
and musicals in the MainStage theatre.
Circle Players
www.circleplayers.net
Circle Players is the oldest non-profit volunteer arts association in
Nashville, and it specializes in presenting and performing musicals and
comedies.
GroundWorks Theatre
www.groundworkstheatre.com
GroundWorks Theatre specializes in cutting-edge plays and premiering
original productions.
Jazz & Jokes
www.jazzandjokes.com
Jazz & Jokes infuses comedy, live music and great food all
under one roof. Jazz & Jokes features local, regional and
nationally-recognized comedians and musicians whose careers span from
the small stage to the big screens appearing in television sitcoms,
syndicated late night talk shows and blockbuster
movies.
Marionette Shows at the Nashville Public
Library
www.library.nashville.org
Held throughout the year, marionette productions represent the best of
Tom Tichenor’s marionettes and his legacy as a puppeteer at the library
for 50 years. They recently acquired marionettes from Chicago’s Peeko
Puppet Productions as well as new productions developed by the library’s
talented children’s staff.
Miss Jeanne's Mystery Dinner Theatre
www.missjeannes.com
Solve a musical-comedic mystery while enjoying a gourmet dinner. Work
together with other dinner guests to decipher clues, bribe suspects and
make a guess as to “whodunit.” There are prizes for the
winners.
Nashville Ballet
www.nashvilleballet.com
Founded in 1981 as a civic dance company and established as a
professional company in 1986, Nashville Ballet has flourished as the
only professional ballet company in middle Tennessee. Entertaining more
than 40,000 patrons each year, the Nashville Ballet performs both
classical pieces and contemporary works by noted
choreographers.
Nashville Children's Theatre
www.nashvillechildrenstheatre. org
Nashville Children’s Theatre, the oldest professional children’s
theatre in the country, offers great plays for pre-schoolers through
middle-school age children during the school year. In November 2004,
TIME magazine named the Nashville Children’s Theatre as the fourth best
in the nation. 2012 will mark the Theatre’s 81st anniversary. The
theatre, fully renovated in 2007, provides a state-of-the-art
entertainment experience.
Real Life Players
www.reallifeplayers.com
Middle Tennessee’s only teen-owned-and-operated theatre company.
Proceeds from Real Life Players productions traditionally benefit a
Nashville non-profit organization that impacts
youth.
School of Nashville Ballet
www.nashvilleballet.com
The affiliated School of Nashville Ballet has an annual enrollment of
more than 500 students and offers a variety of training programs
throughout the year. The ballet curriculum is firmly rooted in the
classical technique, but also offers an eclectic education including
modern dance, jazz and Pilates. The school’s faculty is comprised of
national and international instructors who bring a wealth of teaching
and performing experience to each and every student.
Tennessee Repertory Theatre
www.tennesseerep.org
The Rep is Tennessee’s largest professional theatre company. The Rep
performs five main-stage and three off- Broadway productions annually in
theatres at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center.
MUSEUMS AND ART GALLERIES
The recent growth of the fine arts scene in Nashville is adding greatly
to the culture and creating another way for Music City’s heritage to be
told.
Aaron Douglas Gallery at Fisk University
www.fisk.edu
Founded in 1866, Fisk University was one of the first private
educational institutions offering a secondary liberal arts curriculum to
freed slaves. During the mid- 1900s, the school determined that
aesthetic development was an important part of the education process,
and painter/illustrator Aaron Douglas commissioned the Fisk Murals for
the new library in 1930. Douglas later established Fisk’s first formal
art department where he served as chairman for over 30 years. The Aaron
Douglas Gallery, a free museum, has become a venue of changing
exhibitions highlighting artworks from the University’s permanent
collection, as well as temporary exhibitions of artworks loaned by
organizations in the art, education, civic and business arenas. The
collection contains pre-modern, modern and contemporary paintings,
sculptures, photographs, textiles and prints from a variety of cultures
and by many mid-career, established and world-renowned
artists.
Carl Van Vechten Gallery at Fisk
University
www.fisk.edu
In 1949, Fisk University’s president orchestrated the transfer of a
gift of 101 modern artworks from renowned painter Georgia O’Keeffe.
These paintings, photographs, drawings and sculptures were from the
private collection of her late husband, noted photographer Alfred
Stieglitz. In the collection are 29 acclaimed American and European
artists including Pablo Picasso, Paul Cézanne, Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
Diego Rivera, Arthur Dove, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Georgia O’Keeffe,
Charles Demuth, John Marin, Marsden Hartley, Gino Severini, Abraham
Walkowitz and Stieglitz, himself. African sculpture from Stieglitz’s
collection also was included in the gift. This museum is free and open
to the public.
Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of
Art
www.cheekwood.org
Just eight miles southwest of downtown Nashville stands Cheekwood
Botanical Garden & Museum of Art. Cresting the hillside of this
55-acre property is a 1932 mansion where Cheekwood’s permanent art
collection is housed. Located in the 30,000-square-foot Georgian-style
home are world-class collections of American contemporary painting and
sculpture, English and American decorative arts and renowned traveling
exhibitions. Collections also include silver and 350 pieces of the most
comprehensive Worcester porcelain collection in America. Cheekwood’s
American art collection includes 600 paintings and 5,000 prints,
drawings and photographs.
The Contemporary Art collection, housed in the galleries created out of
the estate’s original garage and stables, includes paintings by Larry
Rivers, Andy Warhol, Robert Ryman and Red Grooms. Additionally, seven
small galleries were created in the old horse stable stalls to enable
the Museum to display installation art (rarely exhibited in the
Southeast). Cheekwood’s Temporary Contemporary was initiated in 1996 and
consists of four solo exhibitions each year. Each show features
innovative, influential and thought-provoking works by artists in the TC
gallery.
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum of
Art
www.countrymusichalloffame.org
The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum has been the home of
America’s music since its opening in 1967 on Music Row. In May 2001, the
Museum relocated to a new $37 million building in downtown Nashville.
The facility boasts a vast collection illustrating country music’s story
as told through the years. An immense compilation of historic country
video clips and recorded music, dynamic exhibits and state-of-the-art
design, a regular menu of live performances and public programs, a
museum store, live satellite radio broadcasts, on-site dining and
fabulous public spaces all contribute to an extraordinary
museum experience.
The museum’s major new exhibition The Bakersfield Sound: Buck Owens,
Merle Haggard, and California Country opened in March 2012 and will run
through December 2013. Narrated by Dwight Yoakam, the exhibit explores
the roots, heyday and impact of the Bakersfield Sound, the loud,
stripped-down and radio-ready music most closely identified with the
careers of Country Music Hall of Fame members Buck Owens and Merle
Haggard.
Downtown Art Galleries
Downtown Nashville offers several unique art galleries including those
located in the eclectic Arcade and expanding 5th Street art district.
Take part in the “First Saturday Art Crawl.” Every first Saturday of the
month, multiple downtown galleries open their doors to avid art lovers
for a night of art enjoyment.
Frist Center for the Visual Arts
www.fristcenter.org
Located in downtown Nashville, the Frist Center for the Visual Arts is
the city’s largest art exhibition center. Opened in 2001, the Frist has
no permanent collection, but instead specializes in exhibiting premier
collections on loan from other galleries around the world. Many of the
exhibits on display are compiled exclusively for the Frist Center and
cannot be seen anywhere else. Located in Nashville’s former historic
main post office, this city landmark was placed on the National Register
of Historic Places in 1984.
LeQuire Gallery & Studio
www.lequiregallery.com
The gallery features contemporary paintings, drawings and sculpture
with an emphasis on figurative work. Exhibits change quarterly with work
from Alan LeQuire - the nationally recognized sculptor of Musica and
Athena Parthenos - always on view.
The Parthenon
www.parthenon.org
The Parthenon, the world’s only exact replica of the ancient Greek
temple, resides only two miles from downtown Nashville. Inside the
temple stands the 42-foot-tall gilded goddess of wisdom, Athena, the
western hemisphere’s largest indoor statue. Housed in the downstairs
gallery is the city’s permanent art collection. Known as The Cowan
Collection, it spans the years 1765-1923. This 63-piece collection
emphasizes landscapes and seascapes with techniques ranging from the
smooth, almost non-brushstroke of the Neo-classic to the impasto and
laded brushwork of Impressionism. All of the artists in this collection
were American, and many were members of the National
Academy.
Sarratt Gallery at Vanderbilt University
www.vanderbilt.edu/sarratt
The Sarratt Gallery, a free gallery, showcases artists from all over
the country, as well as from students and faculty at Vanderbilt. Located
in the main lobby of the Sarratt Student Center at Vanderbilt
University, shows change each month and include the popular Holiday Arts
Festival, which features contemporary crafts by Tennessee
artists.
Tennessee State Museum
www.tnmuseum.org
Free to the public, the Tennessee State Museum is one of the largest
state museums in the nation with more than 60,000 square feet of
permanent exhibits and a 10,000-square-foot changing exhibition hall.
The museum’s interpretive exhibits span 15,000 years of Tennessee’s
history during the Prehistoric, Frontier, Age of Jackson, Antebellum,
Civil War and Reconstruction periods. These sections include special
displays of furniture, silver, weapons, quilts and paintings produced by
Tennesseans.
The Tennessee State Museum’s Civil War holdings of uniforms, battle
flags and weapons are among the country’s finest. The museum also has
many one-of-a-kind items associated with such famous Americans as Andrew
Jackson, Daniel Boone, James K. Polk, Andrew Johnson, David Crockett,
Sam Houston, Alvin C. York and Cordell Hull.
The Military Museum, a branch of the Tennessee State Museum, is located
in the War Memorial Building. Free and open to the public, exhibits
deal with America’s overseas conflicts, beginning with the
Spanish-American War in 1898 and ending with World War II in 1945. The
exhibits look at the beginning of each war, major battles and the
outcomes.
Included in the museum is a deck gun from the U.S.S. Nashville, which
fired the first shot of the Spanish-American War. The exhibit on World
War I features weaponry, personal military equipment and other materials
affirming Tennessee’s involvement in “the war to end all wars.”
Tennessee’s most famous soldier, Alvin C. York, is highlighted in a
display including his uniform and decorations. The World War II exhibit
shows propaganda posters, uniforms, a soldier’s belongings, weaponry and
General Dwight Eisenhower’s jacket. On the plaza area outside the
museum are memorials to Tennessee soldiers who died in World War I, and
the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery
www.vanderbilt.edu
The Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery, a free museum, features
six exhibitions each year that represent the diversity of artistic
production today, as well as throughout the history of Eastern and
Western art. In addition to exhibitions drawn from the permanent
collection and organized from public and private sources, a number of
traveling exhibitions are presented as well.
The University’s permanent collection, totaling more than 5,000 works,
serves to illustrate the history of world art in its most creative and
comprehensive aspects. This historical art collection is the only one of
its kind in the area, serving the needs of students and the community
at large. The collection has grown to include strong works in East Asian
art, European Old Master paintings, paintings from the Barbizon school
and African, Oceanic and Pre- Columbian art and
artifacts.
The gallery’s most recent addition to their permanent collection was a
donation of approximately 150 original Andy Warhol photographs and
prints. This collection helps to strengthen the Gallery’s growing
collection of 20th century art.

