The Ƶ State University Bailey School of Music is pleased to announce the 2025 Summer Orchestra Directors Symposium! This four-day event offers an immersive professional development experience focused on conducting and designed specifically for both middle and high school orchestra directors. Each afternoon will be devoted to physical conducting technique. Conducting Participants will receive a total of at least 45 minutes of podium time over the course of the event, conducting the symposium lab orchestra under the guidance of Dr. Raphael Jiménez-Director of Orchestras & Ruth Strickland Gardner Professor of Conducting at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music-and Ƶ Director of Orchestral Studies, Dr. Nathaniel F. Parker. In addition to their podium time, Conducting Participants will also receive high-quality video recordings of their conducting sessions and one-on-one follow-up sessions with Dr. Jiménez and Dr. Parker. Each morning features engaging sessions on a variety of conducting-related topics, including score study, programming, rehearsal techniques, and wellness in the orchestra classroom, led by Dr. Jiménez, Dr. Parker, and other distinguished members of the Bailey School of Music faculty. Registration fees for all participation levels include admission to all morning and afternoon sessions, lunches Monday through Thursday, and evening "happy hour" meals on Monday and Wednesday. All participants will also serve as members of the symposium lab orchestra.
Registration Fees
Conducting Participant: $450 Non-Conducting Participant: $195 University Student Auditor (must be 18 or older): $95
Registration Deadline: The primary registration window has closed. Please email nparke22@kennesaw.edu if you would like to inquire whether any spots are still available.
Event Schedule
Monday, June 9: 8:00 a.m. - 5:05 p.m.
Tuesday, June 10: 9:30 a.m. - 5:20 p.m.
Wednesday, June 11: 9:30 a.m. - 5:05 p.m.
Thursday, June 12: 9:30 a.m. - 5:05 p.m.
Detailed schedule coming soon.
Featured Clinicians
Dr. Raphael Jiménez
Director of Orchestras & Ruth Strickland Gardner Professor of Conducting Oberlin Conservatory of Music
Born in Florida and raised in Venezuela, conductor Raphael Jiménez began his musical life as a violinist. While he was a member of the Simón Bolívar National Youth Orchestra of Venezuela, he was assigned his first conducting responsibility at the Venezuelan National System of Youth and Children’s Orchestras (El Sistema). He was soon conducting all the professional orchestras in the country and was appointed principal conductor of the Caracas National Ballet at age 22.
Praised for his “tightly wrought” and “stirring, vividly shaped” renditions (New York Times) and for his “delicious buoyancy and impeccable taste” (Washington Times), Jiménez is celebrated for his work with orchestras around the world, with recent engagements in Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the United States. As a ballet conductor, he has collaborated with several ballet companies, including recent performances with the New York City Ballet at Lincoln Center. He has also served as music director for opera productions with companies in Caracas, Venezuela, at the Teresa Carreño Center for the Performing Arts; Lubeck, Germany; and Palm Beach, Florida.
Equally comfortable on the podiums of professional and preprofessional ensembles, Jiménez is recognized for his deep commitment to education. The South Florida Sun-Sentinel wrote: “The [orchestra], conducted by Raphael Jiménez, played [with] a professional sheen rarely heard from student ensembles.”
Jiménez devotes great effort to the promotion of new music—especially works by Latin American composers—and he has been recognized for his diverse and eclectic programming. He has had the privilege of premiering numerous works, including the world premiere of and flowers pick themselves, featured on the eponymous recording.
He enjoys a very active career, including frequent invitations to conduct symphonic concerts, ballets, and opera productions to critical acclaim. Recent appearances include performances in China with the orchestras of Zhejiang and Guanxi; in Latin America with the symphony orchestras of Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, and Puerto Rico; and leading the opera orchestras of Lubeck in Germany and Palm Beach in Florida. He has also conducted the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, the Florida Orchestra, Orquesta Sinfónica Municipal de Caracas, Lansing Symphony, Battle Creek Symphony, and the Filene Center Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C.
Dr. Nathaniel F. Parker
Director of Orchestral Studies Ƶ State University Bailey School of Music
A talented and versatile musician, Nathaniel F. Parker has conducted professional orchestras in the United States, Peru, Russia, Poland, England, and the Czech Republic. Equally at home working with professionals and training future generations of musicians, Dr. Parker is Director of Orchestral Studies and Associate Professor of Music at the Ƶ State University Bailey School of Music, where he also serves as Interim Assistant Director. Concurrent appointments include the positions of Associate Conductor of the Georgia Symphony Orchestra, the Dr. Bobbie Bailey Artistic Director of the Georgia Youth Symphony Orchestras (GYSO), and Music Director and Conductor of the GYSO Symphony. Dr. Parker’s work as a conductor and educator has been recognized by the New World Symphony (FL), Tanglewood Music Center, the American Prize, the College Music Society, and the College Orchestra Directors Association (CODA), among others. He is also the recipient of a Citation of Excellence in Teaching from the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association. An active scholar, Dr. Parker’s writings have been published by the Conductors Guild and the College Orchestra Directors Association. He has presented research at conferences of College Music Society, the College Orchestra Directors Association, and the Georgia Music Educators Association.
Parker earned graduate degrees in orchestral conducting from Michigan State University
(DMA) and Bowling Green State University (MM). He also earned a BM in Bassoon Performance,
magna cum laude, from Arizona State University. His mentors and teachers include Raphael
Jimenez, Leon Gregorian, Stephen Osmond, and Emily Freeman Brown (conducting), and
Jeffrey Lyman and Catherine Lewis (bassoon).