Donor Categories:
- INCENDIARY: Sponsor an artist spotlight concert ($5,000 and up)
- FAN THE FLAMES: Sponsor an artist ($2,500 and up)
- PYROTECHNIC: Sponsor a piece of music ($1,250 and up)
- THE DYNAMITE CLUB ($500 – $1,249)
- SKYROCKETS ($200 – $499)
- FIRECRACKERS ($125 – $199)
- SPARKLERS ($1- $124)
- Fannie Taylor Memorial Fund
- James F. Crow Memorial Fund
- Susan Horwitz Memorial Fund
- Anne Stoelting Memorial Fund
- Corporate
- Future Fund (A quasi-endowment to support the transition of BDDS’s founding artistic leadership)
- Planned Giving: Include BDDS in your legacy plan. Contact Samantha
How to Give
Use the [Donate] button below to make a tax-deductable online donation to the Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society:
(BDDS is a 501c3 organization. Tax ID 39-1745105)
OR
For a gift of stock, contact Kaitlyn Senn at Custer Financial Services kaitlyn.senn@lfg.com or call (608) 237-8388.
In the early centuries of chamber music, composers and musicians were supported by patrons. In the 21st century, BDDS revives this tradition with its version of musician patronage. Your sponsorship gifts are the (molten lava) core of our annual budget.
Incendiary
Sponsor an Incendiary Artist Spotlight concert, $5,000 and up.
Meet your artist at a special private rehearsal and social gathering.
Dedicate your sponsorship to a loved one, if you wish.
Fan the Flames
Sponsor one of your favorite BDDS artists or piece of music for a week, $2,500 and up.
Meet your artist at a special private rehearsal and social gathering.
Dedicate your sponsorship to a loved one, if you wish.
Pyrotechnic
Sponsor a piece of music for $1,250 and up.
Meet your artist at a special event just for artist patrons.
Dedicate your sponsorship to a loved one, if you wish.

Michael Bridgeman is the retired Communications Director for Wisconsin Public Television where he oversaw promotion, public relations, design, special events and online services. He has been active in historic preservation and neighborhood organizations and served for ten years on the Madison Arts Commission, including two as chair. Michael has attended BDDS concerts since the first season and also enjoys orchestral music, opera and theater.
Norma Sober, now retired, had a long career as an arts administrator in Madison as the director of outreach at the Madison Civic Center and as director of development and education at Madison Repertory Theatre. She is a member of the Madison Arts Commission and is an occasional consultant to cultural organizations, for which she sometimes gets paid.
David Polet was born in Holland, Michigan into a family of Dutch immigrants. One of his passions was living in Russia, studying language and literature, and attending the St. Petersburg Philharmonic. Having worked at Epic Systems, and CUNA Mutual Group, he is currently employed at the State of Wisconsin Investment Board as a project manager. He likes to attend Chamber Orchestra concerts and is a member of the Salon series at Farley’s House of Pianos.
Sarah Best is the award winning CEO/chief strategist of Sarah Best Strategy, a social media company. She has been invited to speak at various conferences around the country, and is an avid traveler, foodie, and multi-faceted creative. Sarah is also a poet who has been published in The Yale Review. She is a visual artist and film curator who has shown work at many significant Chicago institutions as well as the Echo Park Film Center, in Los Angeles. She is a Madison Downtown Rotarian and is secretary of the board of New Harvest Foundation.
Teri Venker has led arts marketing as the director of marketing for the Madison Symphony Orchestra, from which she recently retired, and for the Wisconsin Union Theater. Teri enjoys bicycling and international travel. She also volunteers at Lakeview Elementary School and with the Madison Trust for Historic Preservation.
Larry Bechler grew up playing music: first piano, then trumpet all the way through college marching band and into post-college bands. He has a love of live chamber music, spawned by BDDS and the Spoleto Festival in Charleston. He practices law at Murphy Desmond S.C and has served on various committees and commissions throughout his life.
Miriam Simmons served as the Assistant Dean for Professional Development in the Graduate School at UW-Madison. A major responsibility was directing the Wisconsin Idea Seminar, a five-day tour of the state that immerses forty faculty and academic staff members in the realities of Wisconsin. She is on the board of the Madison Civic Club and considers BDDS her new BFF.