Tag: NJ Symphony

  • EXPERIENCE THE INGENUITY OF BEETHOVEN’S FIFTH & SIXTH SYMPHONY MASTERWORKS

    EXPERIENCE THE INGENUITY OF BEETHOVEN’S FIFTH & SIXTH SYMPHONY MASTERWORKS

    • By Mabel Pais

    “What the New Jersey Symphony has established, bringing music to the Garden State in schools and in six different cities, is a sincere accomplishment. And it’s never been better.” – nj.com

    Ludwig van BEETHOVEN’s iconic Fifth Symphony will be performed  on February 26, 27 and March 1, 2026 and his equally popular Symphony No. 6, “Pastoral” will have performances on March 27, 28, and 29, 2026 at locations in New Jersey (see details below).

    Beethoven composed these symphonies in tandem, and both premiered at the same concert in 1808. An enduring example of the composer’s ingenuity and range of musical styles: the Fifth is legendary for its drama, while the Sixth presents a softer side of his music, an ode to life in the countryside. 

    Markus Stenz returns to take the podium for Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony paired with Richard Wagner’s Prelude to Act I of ‘Lohengrin.’ Audiences will also hear Kevin Puts’ GRAMMY Award-winning concerto, ‘Contact,’ composed for the genre-defying string trio, Time For Three.

    PROGRAM – BEETHOVEN’S FIFTH SYMPHONY

    Time For Three Plays ‘Contact’

    Markus Stenz conductor
    Time For Three guest artists

    Ranaan Meyer double bass

    Nick Kendall violin

    Charles Yang violin

    New Jersey Symphony

    Richard Wagner Prelude to Act I of ‘Lohengrin’

    Kevin Puts ‘Contact’

    Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 5

    MPAC, Morristown – Thursday, Feb 26 @ 7 pm

    NJPAC, Newark – Friday, Feb 27 @ 7:30pm | Sunday –  Mar 1 @ 2 pm

    NEXT GEN HAPPY HOUR

    Prior to the Friday, February 27 performance, the New Jersey Symphony Next Gen program will host a happy hour event at Newark Local Beer at 5:30 pm. The Next Gen program is a membership program for young music enthusiasts between the ages of 21 and 40 to network with other passionate music lovers from across the state. For more information, visit njsymphony.org/nextgen.

    Classical Conversation

    Friday, February 27, at 6:30 pm and Sunday, March 1, at 1 pm at NJPAC in Newark
    Enjoy a lively Classical Conversation before the performance. Learn more about the music from New Jersey Symphony musicians, guest artists and other engaging insiders. Free for all ticketholders!

    Access the Event page @ https://njsymphony.org/events/detail/beethovens-fifth-symphony-2026

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    BEETHOVEN’S “PASTORAL” SYMPHONY

    Discover the storytelling power of classical music!

    Beethoven’s “Pastoral” Symphony was one of his only works that depicts very specific scenes and storylines, which NJ Symphony will dive into measure by measure in this concert.

    PROGRAM – BEETHOVEN’S “PASTORAL” SYMPHONY

    Juan Esteban Martinez, clarinetist. (Credit: www.njsymphony.org.)

    Xian Zhang conductor
    Juan Esteban Martinez clarinet

    New Jersey Symphony

    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Divertimento in D Major, K. 136

    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Clarinet Concerto

    Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 6, “Pastoral”

    Newark – Friday, Mar 27, 7:30 pm* | Saturday, Mar 28, 7:30 pm

    Morristown – Sunday, Mar 29, 2 pm

    *Special Concert-Opening Performance

    The March 27 concert at NJPAC opens with a special performance by the New Jersey Symphony Youth Orchestra’s Academy Orchestra.

    Classical Conversation

    Saturday, March 28, at 6:30 pm at NJPAC in Newark and Sunday, March 29, at 1 pm at Mayo Performing Arts Center in Morristown
    Enjoy a lively Classical Conversation before the performance. Learn more about the music from New Jersey Symphony musicians, guest artists and other engaging insiders. Free for all ticketholders!

    Access the Event Page @ https://njsymphony.org/events/detail/beethovens-pastoral-symphony

    TICKETS

    Tickets available at njsymphony.org 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476).

    Artist Bios

    Markus Stenz (markusstenz.com)

    Markus Stenz has held several high-profile positions including Principal Conductor of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Principal Guest of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and most recently Conductor-In-Residence of the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. He was General Music Director of the City of Cologne and Gürzenich-Kapellmeister for 11 years, conducting Mozart’s ‘Don Giovanni,’ Wagner’s ‘Ring’ cycle, ‘Lohengrin,’ ‘Tannhäuser,’ and ‘Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg,’ as well as Janáček’s Jenůfa and Katya Kábanová and Eötvös’ ‘Love and other Demons.’ Learn more at https://markusstenz.com.

    Time For Three (TF3)

    GRAMMY and Emmy-winning ensemble, Time For Three (TF3), defies convention and boundaries by showcasing excellence across different genres, including classical music, Americana, and singer-songwriter. Their unique sound captivates audiences, immersing them in a musical experience that merges various eras, styles, and traditions of Western music. TF3, consisting of Charles Yang (violin, vocals), Nicolas “Nick” Kendall (violin, vocals), and Ranaan Meyer (double bass, vocals), combines their instruments and voices in a remarkable sound, establishing a distinct voice of expression that resonates with listeners worldwide.

    TF3’s longstanding history of collaboration with contemporary classical composers continues to thrive. They have worked closely with esteemed artists such as Chris Brubeck and Pulitzer Prize winners William Bolcom and Jennifer Higdon. Their most recent commission, ‘Contact,’ composed by Pulitzer Prize winner Kevin Puts, premiered with the San Francisco Symphony and The Philadelphia Orchestra in the summer of 2022. This extraordinary piece, alongside Jennifer Higdon’s Concerto 4-3, was released on Deutsche Grammophon under the album title, ‘Letters for the Future.’ Conducted by Xian Zhang, the album’s exceptional quality propelled it onto the Billboard top 10 Classical Recordings charts. Additionally, it garnered a nomination for an Opus Klassik award and received a GRAMMY win in the Best Classical Instrumental Solo category. Learn more @ https://tf3.com.

    Xian Zhang

    2025-26 marks the GRAMMY and Emmy Award-winning conductor Xian Zhang’s 10th season as Music Director of New Jersey Symphony, and her inaugural season as the Music Director of Seattle Symphony with whom she has been a long-term collaborator since her debut in 2008. Zhang has also been appointed Principal Guest Conductor of the NCPA Orchestra in Beijing, beginning this season. Following her tenure as Music Director of Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano between 2009–16, she continues as their Conductor Emeritus.

    2025-26 highlights include returns to Philadelphia Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, St. Louis Symphony, and National Arts Centre Ottawa. In Europe, she returns to Netherlands Radio Philharmonic with a performance at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw and makes her debut at Finnish National Opera conducting Tosca. This follows her huge success at The Metropolitan Opera in New York, where she recently conducted Madama Butterfly and Tosca to great acclaim. Read full bio @ https://njsymphony.org/musicians-orchestra/musical-leadership/xian-zhang.

    Juan Esteban Martinez

    A native of Colombia, Juan Esteban Martinez moved to the Dominican Republic at a young age, where he began to play the clarinet. He is a graduate of the Yale School of Music and the Peabody Conservatory of Music. In 2022, he was the first prize winner of Sphinx Orchestral Partners Auditions (SOPA) Excerpt Competition. Juan has appeared as a soloist numerous times with the National Symphony Orchestra of the Dominican Republic, making his official debut at the age of 15 performing Rossini’s Introduction, Theme and Variations in a traditional concert that was live streamed on national television. He has been a featured soloist with the Caldas Symphony Orchestra in Colombia and the Coeur d’ Alene Symphony. In 2019, he was selected by concert pianist Gabriela Montero to form the Gabriela Montero Ensemble, a group that went on to perform a program of Montero’s original compositions at the prestigious Victoria Hall in Geneva, Switzerland. Read his full bio @ https://njsymphony.org/musicians/detail/juan-esteban-martinez.

    New Jersey Symphony

    New Jersey Symphony is a GRAMMY and Emmy Award-winning orchestra. Under the direction of Music Director Xian Zhang, the Symphony performs more than 55 mainstage concerts across the state at venues in Newark, Princeton, New Brunswick, Red Bank, and Morristown, as well as at schools and public spaces statewide. Programming at the Symphony reflects an unwavering commitment to diverse communities throughout the state, while providing students unparalleled opportunities to achieve musical excellence through its Youth Orchestra and other education programs. In 2024, the Symphony announced it would continue to deliver its statewide activities from a new, permanent office, rehearsal, and concert space in Jersey City, set to open in 2027. For more information about New Jersey Symphony, visit the website at njsymphony.org.

    Connect with NJ Symphony

    Follow NJ Symphony on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, and YouTube
    Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Spirituality, Social Issues, Education, Business, Health and Wellness, and Cuisine.

  • NJ SYMPHONY OPENS SEASON WEEKEND WITH DUAL CELEBRATION

    NJ SYMPHONY OPENS SEASON WEEKEND WITH DUAL CELEBRATION

    • By Mabel Pais

    This October, experience the New Jersey Symphony in new ways! With a wide variety of events from which to select, there is a program for everyone.

    The New Jersey Symphony opens the 2025 season, October 10-12 celebrating Music Director Xian Zhang’s 10th anniversary with the New Jersey Symphony – a remarkable milestone of a decade filled with musical innovation and spectacular performances.

    PROGRAM

    Oct 10–12: OPENING WEEKEND

    Oct 10 – OPENING NIGHT CELEBRATION

    5:30 pm: Dinner Prelude

    7:30 pm: Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 (one of his most treasured works)

    Concert featuring Xian Zhang, Joyce Yang and the New Jersey Symphony

    Pianist Joyce Yang, described by The Washington Post as an “astonishing artist,” performs the audience favorite in a program that celebrates Music Director Xian Zhang’s 10th season with New Jersey Symphony.Dessert after-party immediately following the concert featuring genre-blending DJ dolltr!ck!

    For event details, reservation form and advertising information, visit https://www.njsymphony.org/assets/doc/Opening-Night-Celebration-Sponsorship-Brochure-v2-5cc7a7a391.pdf

    OPENING NIGHT & CONCERT INFORMATION

    For opening night and concert information, visit https://one.bidpal.net/seasonopening/welcome

    SPONSORSHIP and TICKETS

    For Sponsorship and Tickets, at different levels, visit https://one.bidpal.net/seasonopening/ticketing(details:ticketing-summary

    ADVERTISING

    Artwork is due by September 30, 2025.

    MORE INFORMATION

    For more information, contact Jesse Goodale, Manager of Special Events, at 973.735.1729 or events@njsymphony.org. Please reference Opening Night Celebration.

    OPENING WEEKEND – Oct 10-12

    For the Opening Weekend Program, visit njsymphony.org/events/detail/tchaikovskys-piano-concerto-no-1

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    WORLD FAMOUS YOUTUBE CLASSICAL MUSIC COMEDY DUO TWOSET VIOLIN TAKE THE STAGE

    Violinists Eddy Chen and Brett Yang. (Credit: njsymphony.org.)
    • By Mabel Pais

    Oct 5: TWOSET VIOLIN with NEW JERSEY SYMPHONY

    The world-famous TwoSet Violin—a YouTube classical music comedy duo – Violinists Eddy Chen and Brett Yang – will make a stop at NJPAC in Newark on October 5 at 2 PM on their world tour, bringing their unique brand of earnest and silly musical comedy to a new level in this performance, with the backing of a full symphony orchestra.

    PROGRAM

    TwoSet Violin
    Maurice Cohn
    conductor
    New Jersey Symphony

    TICKETS & MORE INFORMATION

    Regular and VIP Tickets to the performance are available. For regular tickets, visit my.njsymphony.org/22662/22935; for VIP tickets, visit my.njsymphony.org/23133/23134?z=0. For more information, visit

    njsymphony.org/events/detail/twoset-violin-with-the-new-jersey-symphony

    New Jersey Symphony

    New Jersey Symphony is a GRAMMY and Emmy Award-winning orchestra. Under the direction of Music Director Xian Zhang, the Symphony performs more than 55 mainstage concerts across the state at venues in Newark, Princeton, New Brunswick, Red Bank, and Morristown, as well as at schools and public spaces statewide. Programming at the Symphony reflects an unwavering commitment to diverse communities throughout the state, while providing students unparalleled opportunities to achieve musical excellence through its Youth Orchestra and other education programs. In 2024, the Symphony announced it would continue to deliver its statewide activities from a new, permanent office, rehearsal, and concert space in Jersey City, set to open in 2026. For more information visit njsymphony.org.

    Connect with NJ Symphony

    Follow NJ Symphony on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, and YouTube

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    CELEBRATE NAVRATRI ATN EW YORK’S SEAPORT MUSEUM

    Raas-Garba dances at NY Seaport Museum. (Credit: theculturetree.com.)
    • By Mabel Pais

    The South Street Seaport Museum celebrates ‘Navratri at the Seaport Museum’ on Saturday, September 27, 2025 from 2–4pm.

    Navratri at the Seaport Museum

    Join the Seaport Museum and The Culture Tree for one of New York City’s only public Navratri events — a vibrant and energetic Raas-Garba celebration aboard the historic 1885 tall ship ‘Wavertree!’

    Anu Sehgal, founder and CEO of The Culture Tree, will begin the afternoon festivities with an introduction to Navratri, the Hindu festival honoring the divine feminine. We will also learn the meaningful connections between ‘Wavertree’ and India before picking up our dandiya sticks and dancing to the beats of traditional Gujarati music from DJ Tauba. The vibrant dance performance and workshop will be led by Shehnaaz Dance Academy, where they will bring this beautiful celebration to life with the stunning costumes and amazing choreography.

    Whether this is your first time or you’re a seasoned dancer, this event is open to everyone and welcomes those who want to learn. Dress in your best traditional attire if you’re feeling inspired, and join this unforgettable celebration on the main deck of this iron-hulled cargo ship!

    The Museum will have a limited number of dandiya sticks available on a first-come, first-served basis. To ensure you can fully join the fun, we encourage you to bring your own if you have them.

    Don’t miss out on this unforgettable afternoon of music, dance, and joy!

    REGISTRATION

    Advanced registration is encouraged for this event but walkups will be accommodated as possible.

    TICKETS

    For tickets to the celebration, visit southstreetseaportmuseum.org/navratri

    The Culture Tree

    The Culture Tree provides South Asian themed educational and cultural programs that enrich the lives of children and their families and promotes a deeper connection with their roots and the world around them. We use language, art, puppet shows, dance, food and the holidays to provide an immersive experience. Learn more @ theculturetree.com.

    The 1885 Tall Ship Wavertree

    Learn more @ southstreetseaportmuseum.org/about-wavertree

    Enjoy More That the Museum Offers

    Access to the historic ships and exhibition galleries at the Seaport Museum is not included with this event. If you would like to explore more that the Museum has to offer, book in advance or ask Museum staff about admission tickets, available Wednesday through Sunday from 11am to 5pm when you check in. Museum admission tickets grant access to the 1885 tall ship ‘Wavertree’ and 1908 lightship ‘Ambrose’ at Pier 16 as well as all current exhibitions on view in the introduction galleries inside Schermerhorn Row located at 12 Fulton Street. Admission tickets also include entry to the new ‘Maritime City’ exhibition in A.A. Thomson & Co. located at 213 Water Street. Learn more @ southstreetseaportmuseum.org/admission

    The South Street Seaport Museum

    Learn more @ southstreetseaportmuseum.org.

    #SouthStreetSeaportMuseum #WhereNewYorkBegins

    @SouthStreetSeaportMuseum – Facebook

    @seaportmuseum – Instagram

    @seaportmuseum – X

    @seaportmuseum – TikTok

    Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Spirituality, Social Issues, Health and Wellness, Education, Business, and Cuisine.

  • NJ SYMPHONY RINGS IN NEW YEAR WITH HD HOLST’S ‘THE PLANETS’

    • By Mabel Pais

    “What the New Jersey Symphony has established, bringing music to the Garden State in schools and in six different cities, is a sincere accomplishment. And it’s never been better.”nj.com

    Xian Zhang. (Credit : njsymphony.org)

    The New Jersey Symphony presents Holst’s ‘The Planets’ — An HD Odyssey with Music Director Xian Zhang conducting four performances at three locations in New Jersey.

    PROGRAM

    FIRST HALF

    Opening the program is Caroline Shaw’s ‘The Observatory’ originally premiered by Xian Zhang with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. In 2013, Shaw became the youngest composer to receive the Pulitzer Prize in music. Also in the first half is Ralph Vaughan Williams’ ‘The Lark Ascending,’ which draws inspiration from George Meredith’s 1881 poem of the same name. The piece was originally composed for violin and piano in 1914 and was later reworked for violin and orchestra.

    SECOND HALF

    The second half of the program is devoted to Gustav Holst’s ‘The Planets’ — An HD Odyssey, a spectacular presentation of Holst’s cosmic masterpiece accompanied by breathtaking images of modern space exploration that showcase our solar system in a film by Duncan Copp, in cooperation with NASA and Jet Propulsion Laboratories.

    Nancy Zhou. (Credit : njsymphony.org)

    Nancy Zhou is set to appear in Vaughan Williams’ ‘The Lark Ascending.’ Holst’s ‘Planets’ will also feature Montclair State University Prima Voce, under the leadership of director Heather J. Buchanan.

    PRE-PERFORMANCE EVENTS

    On Friday, January 31, at 6:30 pm, the Symphony will host a Next Gen cocktail hour at Newark Local Beer prior to the performance. The Next Gen program is a free membership program for young music enthusiasts between the ages of 21 and 40. More information on the Next Gen program: njsymphony.org/nextgen.

    A Classical Conversation will take place on Saturday, February 1, at 7 pm at NJPAC and Sunday, February 2, at 2 pm at Mayo Performing Arts Center in Morristown, prior to each performance. Concertgoers will be able to learn more about the music performed by Symphony musicians, guest artists and other engaging insiders.

    Holst’s The Planets—An HD Odyssey

    New Jersey Symphony Classical

    Xian Zhang conductor

    Nancy Zhou violin

    Montclair State University Prima Voce | Heather J. Buchanan, director

    New Jersey Symphony

    New Brunswick – Thursday, January 30, 7:30 pm, State Theatre New Jersey

    Newark – Friday, January 31, 8 pm, NJPAC

    Newark – Saturday, February 1, 8 pm, NJPAC

    Morristown – Sunday, February 2, 3 pm, Mayo Performing Arts Center

    Caroline Shaw ‘The Observatory’

    Ralph Vaughan Williams ‘The Lark Ascending’

    Gustav Holst ‘The Planets’ — An HD Odyssey

    For more information on concerts and tickets, visit njsymphony.org/events.

    TICKETS

    For Tickets to the performance, call  1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or visit njsymphony.org/events/detail/holsts-the-planetsan-hd-odyssey

    Subscribe today! njsymphony.org/subscribe

    Xian Zhang

    Zhang has an exceptional ear for balance, as well as the ability to draw the softest, most transparent tones imaginable from the orchestra….With such skills and obvious audience appeal, Zhang should prove a valuable addition to the Met’s conduction staff.” – New York Classical Review

    2024–25 marks the GRAMMY and Emmy Award-winning conductor Xian Zhang’s ninth season as music director of the New Jersey Symphony. Starting in 2025–26, Zhang will also hold the role of music director at Seattle Symphony. Zhang holds the position of conductor emeritus of Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano, having previously held the position of music director between 2009–2016.

    The 2024–25 season sees Zhang return to the Metropolitan Opera in New York to conduct David McVicar’s acclaimed production of Puccini’s Tosca.

    Zhang is in high demand as a guest conductor, appearing regularly with Philadelphia Orchestra and Los Angeles Philharmonic, returning to both in 2024–25. Her recording with Philadelphia Orchestra and Time for Three, Letters for The Future (released 2022 on Deutsche Grammophon), won multiple GRAMMY Awards in the Best Contemporary Classical Composition (Kevin Puts’ Contact) and Best Classical Instrumental Solo categories.

    Zhang previously served as principal guest conductor of the BBC National Orchestra & Chorus of Wales, the first female conductor to hold a titled role with a BBC orchestra and principal guest conductor of Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. In 2002, she won first prize in the Maazel-Vilar Conductor’s Competition. She was appointed New York Philharmonic’s assistant conductor in 2002, subsequently becoming their associate conductor and the first holder of the Arturo Toscanini Chair. Learn more at xianzhangconductor.com.

    Nancy Zhou

    Lauded as one of today’s probing musical voices, Nancy Zhou harbors a robust presence that seeks to invigorate appreciation for the art and science of the violin. Her thoughtful musicianship resonates with a global audience in such a way that brings her on stage with leading orchestras and performing artists around the world.

    Zhou has collaborated with several Philharmonics and Symphonies around Europe and America. Alongside projects as a soloist, she harbors keen interest in chamber music and music education. She has performed for Music Festivals, she devotes time to a studio as well, teaching students across the globe and presenting masterclasses on fundamental training and cultivating mindful awareness critical to performance.

    In recent seasons, Zhou has often championed works outside the traditional oeuvre. In collaboration with the New Jersey Symphony and conductor Xian Zhang, she presented Zhao Jiping’s first violin concerto at Alice Tully Hall. Zhou has toured the US and China performing concertos exploring the intersection of various art forms and, indeed, music and culture.

    Zhou recorded her debut album for Orchid Classics featuring solo violin repertoire including Bartók’s Sonata for Solo Violin. The record will be released in June 2025.

    American-born, Zhou commenced violin studies with her father, later studying with Miriam Fried at the New England Conservatory while simultaneously pursuing her interest in literature at Harvard University. She is additionally an Associated Artist at the Queen Elisabeth Music Chapel. Learn more at nancyzhouviolin.com

    Montclair State University Prima Voce | Heather J. Buchanan, director

    Under the direction of Australian-born conductor Heather J. Buchanan since September 2003, the Montclair State University (MSU) choral program has been recognized for successful collaborations with world-renowned artists and celebrated professional musicians in national and international venues.

    Prima Voce is an extra-curricular, SSAA (soprano, soprano, alto) project choir at Montclair State University’s John J. Cali School of Music  with membership drawn from University Singers, Chorale and alumnae. The choir is directed by Dr. Heather J. Buchanan, a professor at the school. Pianist Steven W. Ryan is the Montclair choral accompanist.

    The New Jersey Symphony

    New Jersey Symphony is a GRAMMY and Emmy Award-winning orchestra. Under the direction of the Music Director Xian Zhang, the Symphony performs more than 60 concerts at mainstage venues across the state, including Newark, Princeton, New Brunswick, Red Bank and Morristown as well as schools and public spaces statewide.

    Programming at the Symphony reflects an unwavering commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion while providing students across the state unparalleled opportunities to achieve musical excellence through its Youth Orchestra and other outreach programs.

    In 2024, the Symphony announced it would continue to deliver its statewide activities from a new, permanent office, rehearsal and concert space in Jersey City, set to open in 2026. For more information about the New Jersey Symphony, visit its website at njsymphony.org.

    Connect with NJ Symphony

    Follow NJ Symphony on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X and YouTube

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Business, Social Issues, Spirituality, Cuisine, Health & Wellness, and Education)

  • LUNAR NEW YEAR CELEBRATION BLENDS EAST AND WEST

    LUNAR NEW YEAR CELEBRATION BLENDS EAST AND WEST

    • By Mabel Pais

    The New Jersey Symphony (NJPAC) presents a special performance celebrating the Lunar New Year and ringing in the Year of the Dragon, featuring conductor Yue Bao and pianist Tony Siqi Yun, on Saturday, February 3, 2024, at 7:30 pm.

    First developed by music director Xian Zhang in 2019, the Lunar New Year Celebration honors the start of the Chinese calendar by weaving together the best in classical music from the East and the West. Guest conductor Bao leads a program that includes “Yellow River Boatman’s Song” from Xian Xinghai’s ‘Yellow River Concerto,’ one of the most famous pieces to come from China in the 20th century, and ‘Spring Festival Overture’ by Li Huanzhi, who was influenced by Xian.

    In addition to playing the ‘Yellow River Concerto’ selection, Yun will perform the “Allegramante” movement from Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G, showing the versatility of this rising star in classical music, who won the Gold Medal at the First China International Music Competition in 2019. The performance also includes selections from Huang Ruo’s ‘Folk Songs for Orchestra,’ Dvořák’s Slavonic Dance No. 8, Verdi’s “Va Pensiero” from Nabucco, and Zhou Tian’s ‘Gift.’

    The Symphony will be joined by the Peking University (PKU) Alumni Chorus, which consists of former members of PKU’s student choir alongside singers from the Chinese community in New York and New Jersey. The evening will also feature a performance by the Edison Chinese School Lion Dance Team.

    Pre-Concert Cultural Exchange

    All Concert ticket holders are invited to attend a pre-concert Cultural Exchange Festival in the lobby with musical performances, crafters, demonstrations and more, starting at 6 pm.

    More information and concert tickets are available njsymphony.org/lny.

    Lunar New Year Celebration VIP Event

    Patrons can enhance their concert experience with the Lunar New Year Celebration VIP Event. In addition to the concert, the VIP event adds early access to the pre-concert Cultural Exchange Festival preferred seating for the concert, an after-party with sumptuous desserts, and additional VIP perks such as a VIP reception before the concert and valet parking. More information and event tickets are available at njsymphony.org/lnycelebration.

    PROGRAM

    Pre-Concert Cultural Exchange Festival

    Lobby – 6 pm

    For more information and concert tickets are available njsymphony.org/lny.

    2024 Lunar New Year Concert Celebration

    Year of the Dragon

    Yue Bao conductor

    Tony Siqi Yun piano

    Peking University Alumni Chorus

    Edison Chinese School Lion Dance Team

    New Jersey Symphony

    Newark → Saturday, February 3, 7:30 pm, New Jersey Performing Arts Center

    NJ Symphony with Lunar New Year Performers in Concert (Credit/ njpac.org) 

    Li Huanzhi Spring Festival Overture

    Xinghai “Yellow River Boatmen’s Song” from Yellow River Concerto

    Ravel “Allegramente” from Piano Concerto in G

    Ruo Huang Selections from Folk Songs for Orchestra

    I. Flower Drum Song from Feng Yang
    IV. Girl from the Da Ban City

    Dvořák Slavonic Dance No. 8, Op. 46

    Verdi “Va Pensiero” from Nabucco

    Traditional Jasmine Flower Song

    Zhou Tian Gift

    For more information on concerts and tickets: njsymphony.org/events

    2024 Lunar New Year Celebration VIP Event

    Saturday, February 3 at 6 pm | New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark

    Join the NJ Symphony in celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the New Jersey Symphony’s Lunar New Year Celebration VIP Event. The celebration continues the Symphony’s tradition, started by Music Director Xian Zhang, of blending music from East and West in a celebration of cultural collaboration. Net proceeds from this event will raise critical funds that support Xian Zhang’s artistic vision. You won’t want to miss it!

    Your full-night VIP event ticket includes:

    Pre-concert Cultural Exchange Festival with crafters from the Zhejiang province in China, musical performances on traditional Chinese instruments, dancers, singers and a Qipao fashion show!

    Lunar New Year Celebration Concert with preferred seating (Under the baton of conductor Yue Bao, the Symphony will perform selections from Huang Ruo’s Folk Songs for Orchestra and Zhou Tian’s Gift, plus perennial favorites like Spring Festival Overture. Rising star pianist Tony Siqi Yun will perform selections from the Yellow River Concerto and Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G.)

    After-Party with sumptuous desserts!

    VIP perks such as access to an exclusive reception, valet parking and premier concert seating.

    For more information, contact Jesse Goodale, Manager of Special Events, at events@njsymphony.org or at 973.735.1729.

    TICKETS & MORE INFORMATION

    For more information about the New Jersey Symphony, visit njsymphony.org or email information@njsymphony.org.

     Tickets can be purchased by phone 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or at njsymphony.org.

    The New Jersey Symphony

    The Emmy and Grammy Award-winning New Jersey Symphony is redefining what it means to be a nationally leading, relevant orchestra in the 21st century. The Symphony is renewing its deeply rooted commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion by championing new, and often local, artists; engaging audiences for whom the inspiring depth and breadth of classical music will be a new experience; and incorporating the broadest possible representation in all aspects of the Symphony’s organization-all to better reflect and serve its vibrant communities. Since 2021, Music Director Xian Zhang has worked together with composer, violinist, educator and social-justice advocate Daniel Bernard Roumain, the orchestra’s Resident Artistic Catalyst, to offer programming that connects with diverse communities in Newark and throughout New Jersey.

    Connect with NJ Symphony:

    njsymphony.org

    @NJSymphony on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X, formerly known as Twitter

    @NewJerseySymphony on YouTube

    Email: information@njsymphony.org

    (Mabel Pais writes on Social Issues, Spirituality, The Arts and Entertainment, Education, Cuisine, Health & Wellness, and Business)

     

     

  • ENJOY SUMMER WITH NJS PARK CONCERTS

    ENJOY SUMMER WITH NJS PARK CONCERTS

    Summer Concert, Chamber Music, Nimbus Dance. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)

    By Mabel Pais

    The New Jersey Symphony (njsymphony.org) invites you to its free outdoor concerts in Newark, Jersey City, Toms River, South Amboy and Red Bank and a performance at the Giralda Music and Arts Festival in Madison.

    The family-friendly program features John Williams’ Theme from ‘Jurassic Park,’ selections from Leonard Bernstein’s ‘West Side Story,’ William Grant Still’s ‘Festive Overture’ and more.

    For the first time this season, the New Jersey Symphony will perform in Liberty State Park in Jersey City and Raritan Bay Waterfront Park in South Amboy. The Symphony will also return to Marine Park in Red Bank, as well as Ocean County College in Toms River and Essex County Branch Brook concert in Newark. The Essex County Branch Brook Park concert includes fireworks.

    The Chamber Players of the New Jersey Symphony are scheduled to perform a series of chamber music concerts at Hamilton Park in Jersey City. These concerts are free of charge and will feature a variety of repertoire, including a celebration of the best of Bollywood’s Hindi-language film genre and an exhilarating program curated by the orchestra’s Resident Artistic Catalyst, Daniel Bernard Roumain.

    Free concerts take place:

    Sunday, June 25, 6 pm at the Giralda Farms, Giralda Music and Arts Festival, Madison

    Tuesday, June 27, 8 pm at Ocean County College in Toms River

    Wednesday, June 28, 7:30 pm at Raritan Bay Waterfront Park in South Amboy

    Friday, June 30, 7:30 pm at Essex County Branch Brook Park in Newark (includes fireworks!)

    Saturday, July 1, 8 pm at Marine Park in Red Bank

    Sunday, July 2, 7:30 pm at Liberty State Park in Jersey City

    Free Chamber Series at Hamilton Park in Jersey City

    Thursday, July 13, 7 pm: Sounds of the Summer with Nimbus Dance

    Thursday, July 27, 7 pm: The Music of Bollywood with Kulture Kool

    Thursday, August 10, 7 pm: A Summer Evening with DBR

    Clarinetist Timothy Lien, winner of the New Jersey Symphony Youth Orchestra’s 2023 Henry Lewis Concerto Competition, joins the Symphony for the first movement of Ludwig Spohr’s Clarinet Concerto In C Minor, Op.26. for the Giralda Farms, Branch Brook Park, Marine Park and Liberty State Park concerts. José Luis Domínguez, the New Jersey Symphony Youth Orchestra Artistic Director, conducts.

    UPDATES

    For more information, updates, and changes owing to weather conditions, visit njsymphony.org/summer.

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    WINNING COMPOSERS GET FEEDBACK  FROM CONE INSTITUTE, NJ SYMPHONY AND OTHERS

    Cone Institute ‘New Scores’ Concert (Poster): NJS Orchestra, Host Steve Mackey, & Conductor Case Scaglione. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)
    ‘New Scores’ Winners. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)

    By Mabel Pais

    The New Jersey Symphony (njsymphony.org) announces the composers for the ninth Edward T. Cone Composition Institute. The 2023 Institute will take place from Sunday, July 9 to Saturday, July 15 in Newark, culminating in a performance of the composers’ works on Saturday, July 15, 2023. This year’s winning composers include Tom Morrison with his work ‘Messages in the Ground,’ Kory Reeder with his work ‘Walls of Brocade Fields,’ Sam Wu with his work ‘Hydrosphere’ and Yangfan Xu with her work ‘Bya.’

    The four composers will hear their music rehearsed and performed by the Symphony and participate in in-depth feedback sessions with Institute Director Steven Mackey, guest conductor Case Scaglione, New Jersey Symphony musicians and industry leaders.

    The Symphony and Maestro Case Scaglione will present the participants’ works along with the final movement, ‘Sphere,’ from Steven Mackey’s ‘Concerto for Curved Space’ in concert at NJPAC’s Victoria Theater in Newark on Saturday, July 15 at 8 pm.

    The Edward T. Cone Institute Experience

    By the conclusion of the Institute’s comprehensive experience, participants will have gained invaluable musical and practical feedback about composing for orchestra. They will also have participated in critical discussions about best practices for getting contemporary classical music funded, published and performed.

    The New Jersey Symphony Edward T. Cone Composition Institute grew out of musical score-reading sessions the Symphony has held with Princeton University graduate students biennially for more than a decade. The Institute celebrates its namesake Edward T. Cone’s legacy as both a composer and a Princeton University professor. This is a collaboration between the New Jersey Symphony and Princeton University Department of Music. Learn more at njsymphony.org/institute.

    Winning Composers

    Tom Morrison

    Tom Morrison is a composer of acoustic and electroacoustic music. Morrison is a graduate of The Juilliard School (MM); also a graduate of the University of Montana (BM) in Missoula where he cultivated his love for nature and the environment. He holds an MFA and Ph.D. from Princeton University, where he will be a Post Graduate Researcher in the fall 2023 semester. He won the 2016 Thailand International Composition Festival Competition and first place in the 2021 Symphonia Caritas Competition for first-generation college students. His work can be found at tom-morrison.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: ‘Messages in the Ground’

    ‘Messages in the Ground’ is inspired by Richard Power’s novel ‘The Overstory’ and the complex nature of trees and humanity’s complex relationship with them. The work is a meditation on the nature of trees and how they communicate with each other. The governing structural idea is simple: the piece begins at the higher end of the orchestra’s register and ends at the lower end—it goes from the leaves to the roots.

    Kory Reeder

    Kory Reeder is an American composer and performer whose music draws inspiration from the visual arts and political theory.

    Reeder is from Nebraska and currently resides in Texas where he is an active performer. He received his Ph.D. from the University of North Texas and holds a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Nebraska at Kearney and a Master of Music from Bowling Green State University. Learn more at koryreeder.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: ‘Walls of Brocade Fields’

    In Lincoln, Nebraska, there is the International Quilt Museum and while walking through, I couldn’t help but feel a sense of duality: the richly decorated and ornate patterns combine with the somewhat nostalgic quality that can come with the medium. I’m particularly drawn to flowers and brocade fabrics; the fields of intricately designed flowers lining the walls and filling your vision. This piece is full of overlapping, repeated patterns laid across each other, at times interacting and sometimes more exposed. There are moments in the piece where sounds are encompassing and warm, wrapping the listener in a blanket of sound, others are sparse, open and nearly still. The overlapping tones and phrases create subtle, perhaps fleeting cadences and nearly tonal reminisces, but underneath all this harmonic wrapping is a unifying pulse that connects the material and keeps the threads together.

    Sam Wu

    Sam Wu’s music deals with the beauty in blurred boundaries. Many of his works center around architecture, urban planning, climate science and the search for exoplanets that harbor life.

    Besides receiving numerous awards and recognitions, Wu has also won an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award, First Prize at the Washington International Competition, Harvard’s Robert Levin Prize and Juilliard’s Palmer Dixon Prize.

    From Melbourne, Australia, Sam holds degrees from Harvard University and The Juilliard School, and is currently a DMA candidate in composition at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. His teachers include Tan Dun, Anthony Brandt, Pierre Jalbert, Chaya Czernowin and Richard Beaudoin. Learn more at samwumusic.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: Hydrosphere

    ‘Hydrosphere’ is inspired by the water cycle—a macroscopic, planetary process that shapes oceans and continents.

    Water is the source of life as we know it; its eternal cycle nourishes generations across the aeons. Despite its ubiquity, water is precious—we must protect Gaia’s lifeblood.

    Yangfan Xu

    Yangfan Xu is a Chinese-born US-based composer who comes from a musical family in Lanzhou, Gansu province. Xu was the winner of the Society for New Music’s 2021 Israel/Pellman Award. She won the 2021 New Juilliard Ensemble (NJE) Composition Competition, and her commissioned work Fantastic Creatures of the Mountains and Seas premiered at the Lincoln Center in a concert by NJE in 2022.

    Xu received a bachelor’s degree in composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music studying with Mason Bates. Before her undergraduate studies, she studied musicology at the high school affiliated with the Central Conservatory of Music in China. Xu earned her master’s degree in composition at The Juilliard School, studying under Robert Beaser. She is a current DMA candidate at the New England Conservatory of Music studying under studio teacher Kati Agócs. Learn more at yangfanxu.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: Bya

    “Bya”(བྱ) is from the Tibetan language. It means “birds.” The piece is inspired by my trip to Tibet in 2016. When the pandemic first broke out, the city was put on lockdown, and I started to have recurring dreams about my trip to Tibet. It is the most wonderful land I have ever seen; Tibet is said to be the closest place to heaven on earth. When I saw it with my own eyes, I couldn’t agree more. The landscape is so stunning that it feels like a place that is unreal. Yamdrok Lake was the name of the lake I visited. There’s a bird island in the middle of the lake where you can see hundreds of different kinds of birds—it was magnificent and mind-blowing.

    Bya’s opening section is about the general shock I felt when I first arrived in Tibet. The middle slow section, where you can hear the trumpet’s extended technique imitating a bird’s call, depicts the bird’s island and the Yamdrok Lake. The final section of the piece is about a Tibetan tradition known as the sky funeral. When people die, their bodies are placed on top of a temple and the birds eat them. I find the ritual very special to me because it represents an eternal bond between humans and nature.

    Steven Mackey

    Bright in coloring, ecstatic in inventiveness, lively and profound, Steven Mackey’s music spins the tendrils of his improvisatory riffs into large-scale works of grooving, dramatic coherence.

    As a teenager growing up in Northern California obsessed with blues-rock guitar, Mackey was in search of the “right wrong notes,” those heart-wrenching moments that imbue the music with new, unexpected momentum. Today, his pieces play with that tension of being inside or outside of the harmony and flow forward shimmering with prismatic detail.

    Today, Steven Mackey writes for chamber ensemble, orchestra, dance and opera—commissioned by the greatest orchestras around the world. He has served as professor of music at Princeton University for the past 35 years, and in fall 2022, he joined the composition faculty at the Curtis Institute of Music. He has won several awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Kennedy Center Friedheim Award. He continues to explore an ever-widening world of timbres befitting a complex, 21st-century culture, while always striving to make music that unites the head and heart, that is visceral, that gets us moving. Learn more at stevenmackey.com.

    Case Scaglione

    Case Scaglione is currently in his fifth season as a Chief Conductor of the Württembergisches Kammerorchester Heilbronn in Germany and in his fourth season as a Music Director of Orchestre national d’Île de France. He has previously served as Associate Conductor with the New York Philharmonic and as Music Director of the Young Musicians Foundation Debut Orchestra of Los Angeles. Case was the driving force behind the artistic growth and diversification of the organization, founding their educational outreach initiative ‘360° Music.’

    Previously in North America, Case successfully collaborated with the New York Philharmonic and the Houston, Dallas, Detroit, San Diego and Baltimore symphony orchestras. In Asia, he has led concerts with the China Philharmonic Orchestra as well as the Shanghai and Guangzhou symphony orchestras, in addition to regular returns to the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra.

    Case enjoys close relationships with many of the world’s leading soloists, including Joshua Bell, Yulianna Avdeeva, Jean-Efflam Bavouzet, Behzod Abduraimov and Khatia Buniatishvili. Case has been mentored by some of the most prominent conductors on the world stage today, including Alan Gilbert, Jaap van Zweden and David Zinman. Learn more at casescaglione.com.

    SAFETY MEASURES

    All New Jersey Symphony performances follow safety measures in partnership with the venues and based on the guidance provided by the CDC and the State of New Jersey.

    TICKETS & INFORMATION

    For more information about the New Jersey Symphony, visit njsymphony.org or email information@njsymphony.org.

    Tickets are available for purchase by calling 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or at njsymphony.org.

    New Jersey Symphony

    The Emmy and Grammy Award-winning New Jersey Symphony, celebrating its Centennial Season in 2022–23, is redefining what it means to be a nationally leading, relevant orchestra in the 21st century.

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    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Health & Wellness, Education, Cuisine, Spirituality, and Business)