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The year 1963 was book-ended by two tragic events. The first one, which is never remembered, was the loss of the nuclear submarine Thresher. The second one is never forgotten and took place on November 22. It was a year of political upheaval beginning with great liberal optimism versus conservative paranoia and ending with conservative optimism amongst liberal paranoia.
In a state best known for basketball, corn, and car-racing, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra leverages that optimism and prepares for some of the best concerts of its existence. The opportunities to improve its world wide ranking culminate with the hosting of the American debut of an internationally acclaimed pianist from the Soviet Union. The debut, which was arranged by the state department, does not sit well with certain members of the local community. The result is a thrilling performance, sabotage, and dire consequences for those most closely connected to the success and failure of the orchestra.
The pressure of success while performing to sold-out audiences and hostile reviewers summons the loftier aspects of the human spirit while revealing the rich artistic and political sub-cultures that exist in any symphony orchestra and its community.
The principal figures of this political thriller are Leon Zellingari, the magically magnificent conductor of the orchestra; Micaela Miklos, the recently acquired and voluptuous first cello, who is a refugee from Czechoslovakia; and Jed Norton, a viola player from southern Indiana, who is a member of a rightwing extremist organization. Limestone Concerto follows the intriguing tale of the conductor, the cellist, and the viola player as they struggle to survive the ambition, romance, and violence so pervasive in that watershed year of America.