Director of investor relations at Atlanta-based investment firm Piedmont Private Equity, LLC, Samuel Brice Hall oversees both tax mitigation and conservation strategy teams. In the past, he has also handled accounting and reporting operations at a number of different businesses, including real estate investment firms and metal fabrication companies. Samuel Brice Hall is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, holding both a BA in communication studies and a MS in accounting. He is a dedicated supporter of the arts, and enjoys attending Atlanta Symphony Orchestra concerts and performances at Atlanta’s Fox Theatre.
The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra offers numerous programs and groups to foster community engagement, including a social group known as BRAVO, which welcomes young professionals aged 25-40 with an interest in the arts. Membership in BRAVO comes with access to all four BRAVO concerts (with food, drink, and the concert ticket itself included), 10 percent off at the ASO Symphony Store, pre-sale access, 20 percent off of Delta Classical concert tickets, and four complimentary tickets for another Delta Classical Series Concert of the member’s choice. Pre- and post-concert gatherings allow members to socialize and network in a non-traditional environment, meeting other members as well as Atlanta Symphony musicians. For more information, visit https://www.atlantasymphony.org/ConcertsAndTickets/BRAVO-Young-Professionals.
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The recipient of a master's degree in accounting from the University of North Carolina, Samuel Brice Hall currently manages the tax mitigation and conservation strategy team as director of investor relations at Piedmont Private Equity, LLC. Beyond his professional endeavors, Samuel Brice Hall is an avid reader who is currently working his way through Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache series.
A New York Times bestselling author, Penny resides just outside of Montreal, Canada, and worked as a journalist before writing her first novel, which is also the first book in the Gamache series, in her 40s. That book, Still Life, earned numerous awards, including the DorothyL Best Mystery Novel of 2007. The story centers around the mysterious death of Jane Neal in what was typically a quiet village, and the efforts of Chief Inspector Armand Gamache to solve the case. Penny has since authored 13 additional books in the Gamache series, including The Cruelest Month, The Brutal Telling, and The Nature of the Beast, the latter of which has earned nominations for a pair of Anthony Awards and the Agatha Award for Best Crime Novel. Additionally, these and the other novels in the Gamache series have earned praise from publications, such as the Wall Street Journal, People Magazine, Boston Globe, and Chicago Tribune. The next book in the series, A Better Man, has a release date of August 27, 2019. As director of investor relations for Piedmont Private Equity in Atlanta, Samuel Brice Hall oversees tax mitigation as well as conservation strategy project teams. In his spare time, Samuel Brice Hall enjoys listening to various musicians, including the late jazz singer, Ella Fitzgerald. Born in 1917, Fitzgerald entered the music scene by winning a 1934 amateur contest at Harlem’s Apollo Theater. She soon joined Chick Webb’s band and performed often at another venue, the Savoy. In 1938, the singer had her first hit, A-Tisket, A-Tasket. The following year, after Webb’s death, she took over the band. A rising star in the 1940s, Fitzgerald toured with Dizzy Gillespie. Around this time, her singing style evolved to include scat singing. The 1950s and 1960s saw her achieve tremendous commercial success. She made a series of albums based on the songs of Cole Porter, Duke Ellington, and Irving Berlin. At the first Grammy awards in 1958, Fitzgerald won two Grammies, becoming the first African-American woman to achieve that honor. Fitzgerald’s work with Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, and Louis Armstrong enhanced her fame. In addition, her rendition of Mack the Knife was a popular hit. Into the 1970s, she continued to perform in concerts globally. Poor health sidelined her in her later years. Fitzgerald made her last recording in 1989 and her final appearance in 1991. She passed away in 1996. Brice Hall has been the director of investor relations for Piedmont Private Equity, LLC in Atlanta, Georgia since 2011. A fan of jazz music, Brice Hall enjoys listening to Ella Fitzgerald. Born in a small town in Virginia in 1917, Ella Fitzgerald’s father left her mother shortly after her birth. Her mother then took Ella to Yonkers, New York where they lived together with her new boyfriend. Financial difficulties colored her childhood and Ella had to take odd jobs, such as working as a messenger and “running numbers”, to help support her family. When Ella was 15 years old, her mother passed away. After her mother’s death Ella moved in with her aunt, but she struggled in school and was frequently truant. She ultimately ended up in reform school. By the age of 17, Ella’s dream of being a star in show business led her to enter a singing contest at Harlem's Apollo Theater. Her rendition of Hoagy Carmichael’s “June” and "The Object of My Affection" won her the $25 first prize, and helped launch her singing career. |
AuthorIn 2011, Mr. Hall relocated to Atlanta, Georgia, and accepted an appointment as the director of investor relations at Piedmont Private Equity, where he remains. ArchivesCategories
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