>
NEXT IN THIS TOPIC

All material found in the Press Releases section is provided by parties entirely independent of Musical America, which is not responsible for content.

Press Releases

The Chelsea Symphony Announces 2022/23 Season: Near & Far

August 26, 2022 | By The Chelsea Symphony

 

The Chelsea Symphony Announces 2022/23 Season: Near & Far

The Chelsea Symphony’s 17th Concert Season includes an astonishing 19 solo-feature works, multiple world and regional premieres, and an incredible array of contemporary, BIPOC, AAPI, and female-identifying composers alongside seminal orchestral favorites.

TCS shows off its virtuosic ensemble artists in multiple solo works in each concert cycle by Samuel Barber, Fernande Decruck, Adolphus Hailstork and more.

All-premieres program at Merkin Concert Hall to feature special collaboration with award-winning composer Shuying Li and the Four Corners Ensemble.

The season opens with works written in turbulent times: a world premiere by Michael Boyman, plus works by Grazyna Bacewicz, Richard Strauss, and Ralph Vaughan Williams led by Artistic Director Matthew Aubin.

 

 

 


 

(New York, NY) - The Chelsea Symphony's (TCS) 2022/2023 season, Near & Far , ties together powerful orchestral works by theme, place, and history to highlight the connectivity of the human experience and the journey forward. Ralph Vaughan Williams’s turbulent and emotional Symphony No. 4, Margaret Bonds’s stirring Montgomery Variations, and Dmitri Shostakovich’s haunting Symphony No. 11 headline the season and evoke a throughline of revolution around the world. Others like Brahms’s Symphony No. 2, Augusta Holmès’s Roland Furieux, and Shuying Li’s World Map concertos explore journeys across the globe and through a lifetime.

September 23 and 24, 2022: Turbulence

The Chelsea Symphony returns with Artistic Director Matthew Aubin in a season opener exploring works written in turbulent times. Michael Boyman’s Clarinet Concerto was written at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and draws influence from the tempestuous Sturm und Drang music of Haydn & Mozart. This performance will be the world premiere of the work.

Ralph Vaughan Williams’s Symphony No. 4 intones the emotional aftermath of serving in World War I and the sudden loss of a dear friend. Markedly non-programmatic, the symphony stands as a testament to the profound tragedy of war and, perhaps, a well-timed admonition.

Both nights open with Grazyna Bacewicz’s Overture for Orchestra written in Poland at the height of World War II. This work vacillates between scintillating bursts of optimism and poignant moments of repose knitting together a sunny antithesis to Sturm und Drang ringing with her anti-war defiance. Saturday features the rhapsodic Richard Strauss Oboe Concerto written in the first days of peace following World War II and dedicated to a visiting American soldier by the reclusive Struass.

Clarinetist Angela Shankar performs the solo in Boyman’s new work on Friday and Saturday nights. She is a member of the reed trio Reeds Amis and a regular solo and orchestral performer in the greater NYC area.

Phil Rashkin is featured in Saturday’s performance of the Strauss Oboe Concerto. He is an oboist, conductor, pianist, and composer based in New York City.

In addition to his work with TCS, Matthew Aubin is Music Director of the Jackson Symphony and recently appointed Music Director of the Southwest Michigan Symphony Orchestra.

 

October 29 and 30, 2022: Movement

Movement has always held great power, both in physical form and as a means to change. Opening this all-American program, Reuben Blundell conducts the New York premiere of Sam Wu’s Wind Map, a musical exploration of Van-Gogh-esque charts that map the movement of air. Margaret Bonds’s Montgomery Variations, a powerful tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr., the Civil Rights movement, and the city of Montgomery, AL, closes each performance. Each night also features a different showpiece: Samuel Barber’s true-to-self Violin Concerto with Camille Enderlin, and David Baker’s jazz-influenced Concert Piece for Trombone and Orchestra with Matthew Stewart.

 

December 2, 2022: Home

As the year nears its end, The Chelsea Symphony returns home to its roots, performing light classical and holiday pops favorites from its repertoire. Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Christmas Overture opens the evening in fanfare with lucious settings of traditional Christmas carols. Max Bruch’s Scottish Fantasy and Gerald Finzi’s Five Bagatelles feature long-time members of the orchestra, Joseph Morag and Christine Todd, respectively. Closing out the night are two long-standing TCS traditions: Leroy Anderson’s Sleigh Ride led by a past holiday raffle winner, and Aaron Dai’s The Night Before Christmas, featuring a special guest narrator.

 

January 20 and 21, 2023: Se Souvenir (To Remember)

History is not always known for its preservation of women’s contributions to their fields, and music is no exception. Led by Artistic Director Matthew Aubin and Artistic Director Laureate Miguel Campos Neto, this all-French program sees the US premiere of Augusta Holmès’s Roland Furieux, a fantastical work from 1867 based on Ludovico Ariosto’s epic poem Orlando Furioso that only received its first performance in 2019. Saturday evening also features two works originally written for saxophone and orchestra by women whose music is still largely under recognized today: Paule Maurice’s programmatic Tableaux de Provence, featuring Rob Wilkerson, and Fernande Decruck’s Sonata in C-sharp for Viola and Orchestra, performed by Mitsuru Kubo. Camille Saint-Saens’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with pianist Candance Chien rounds out the weekend.

 

March 3 and 4, 2023: Tour

Travel has long been a source of inspiration for many artists, including composers. Conductor Nell Flanders opens this series on Friday with Ernest Chausson’s Poème, a work written while on holiday in Italy, performed by violinist Bryn Digney and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s Variations on a Rococo Theme, featuring Nelly Rocha. Saturday features Thomas Purcell in Vivian Fung’s Violin Concerto No. 1, which draws inspiration from the composer’s experience preparing for a gamelan tour in Bali. Both evenings conclude with Johannes Brahms’s sunlit Symphony No. 2, a work he famously wrote while vacationing in southern Austria.

 

May 26, 2023: World Map

The Chelsea Symphony, in collaboration with composer Shuying Li, presents Li’s World Map concertos, featuring members of the Four Corners Ensemble in all new orchestrations of the concertos for chamber orchestra. Originally written for and recorded by the Four Corners Ensemble, each concerto journeys to a different country or region around the world, highlighting the diverse backgrounds of each featured musician. The evening opens with a new work by Aaron Dai and closes with John Luther Adams’s Become River, bringing the theme of world exploration together through the bodies of water that connect us all.

 

June 16 and 17, 2023: Past & Present

Artistic Director Mark Seto leads The Chelsea Symphony in an examination of time and historic parallels in the orchestra’s season closer. Each program opens with an American brass concerto written within the last 15 years: Adolphus Hailstork’s Concertino for Trumpet and Orchestra, performed by Rebecca Steinberg, and Jay Krush’s Concerto for Bass Trombone, featuring Owen Caprell. Both evenings close with Dmitri Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 11, a dark and complex work memorializing the Russian Revolution of 1905, written in the time of the Hungarian Uprising, and perhaps a timely reminder of humanity’s continued fight against autocracy.


 

Offering seven weekend concert series from September 2022 through June 2023, The Chelsea Symphony’s 2022/23 season NEAR & FAR ties together powerful orchestral works across time and space.

Premium unassigned seating in special reserved areas is available for sale on Eventbrite.

Limited day-of tickets are available at the door for a suggested donation of $20.

For more information, interview inquiries, and press tickets contact our team at marketing@chelseasymphony.org.


 

Listing Information

 

Turbulence

Friday, September 23 at 8pm

Saturday, September 24 at 8pm


The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Matthew Aubin

St. Paul's Church (315 West 22nd Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Grazyna Bacewicz: Overture for Orchestra

Richard Strauss: Oboe Concerto (Saturday Only)

      Phil Rashkin, oboe

Michael Boyman: Clarinet Concerto (World Premiere)

      Angela Shankar, clarinet

Ralph Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 4 in F minor

______

Movement

Saturday, October 29 at 8pm

Sunday, October 30 at 5pm

The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Reuben Blundell

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music (450 West 37th Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Sam Wu: Wind Map (NY Premiere)

David Baker: Concert Piece for Trombone and String Orchestra (Saturday Only)

      Matthew Stewart, trombone

Samuel Barber: Violin Concerto, Op. 14 (Sunday Only)

      Camille Enderlin, violin

Margaret Bonds: The Montgomery Variations

______


Home

Friday, December 2 at 8pm

The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Mark Seto and Reuben Blundell

St. Paul's Church (315 West 22nd Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Christmas Overture

Max Bruch: Scottish Fantasy

      Joseph Morag, violin

Gerald Finzi: Five Bagatelles

      Christine Todd, clarinet

Leroy Anderson: Sleigh Ride

Aaron Dai: The Night Before Christmas

______


Se Souvenir (To Remember)

Friday, January 20 at 8pm

Saturday, January 21 at 8pm


The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Matthew Aubin and Miguel Campos Neto

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music (450 West 37th Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Camille Saint-Saëns: Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 22 (Friday Only)

      Candace Chien, piano

Paule Maurice: Tableaux de Provence (Saturday Only)

      Rob Wilkerson, saxophone

Fernande Decruck: Sonata in C# for Viola and Orchestra (Saturday Only)

      Mitsuru Kubo, viola

Augusta Holmès: Roland furieux (US Premiere)

______


Tour

Friday, March 3 at 8pm

Saturday, March 4 at 8pm


The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Nell Flanders

St. Paul's Church (315 West 22nd Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Ernest Chausson: Poème, Op. 25 (Friday Only)

      Bryn Digney, violin

Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Variations on a Rococo Theme, Op. 33 (Friday Only)

      Nelly Rocha, cello

Vivian Fung: Violin Concerto No. 1 (Saturday Only)

      Thomas Purcell, violin

Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73

______


World Map

Friday, May 26 at 8pm


The Chelsea Symphony

Featuring the Four Corners Ensemble

Conducted by Matthew Aubin, Mark Seto, Reuben Blundell, and Nell Flanders

Merkin Concert Hall, Kaufman Music Center (129 W 67th Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Aaron Dai: New Work (World Premiere)

Shuying Li: The Dryad (Version Premiere)

      Erika Boysen, flute

Shuying Li: American Variations (Version Premiere)

      Joshua Anderson, clarinet

Shuying Li: The Peace House (Version Premiere)

      Christina Adams, violin

Shuying Li: Matilda’s Dream (Version Premiere)

      Allan Hon, cello

Shuying Li: Canton Snowstorm (Version Premiere)

      Mi-Eun Kim, piano

John Luther Adams: Become River (NY Premiere)

______


Past & Present

Friday, June 16 at 8pm

Saturday, June 17 at 8pm


The Chelsea Symphony

Conducted by Mark Seto

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music (450 West 37th Street)

$25 reserved premium general seating on sale at Eventbrite

$20 suggested donation seating available at the door


Adolphus Hailstork: Concertino for Trumpet and Orchestra (Friday Only) (World Premiere)

      Rebecca Steinberg, trumpet

Jay Krush: Concerto for Bass Trombone (Saturday Only)

      Owen Caprell, bass trombone

Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 11 in G Minor, Op. 103 “The Year 1905”







About The Chelsea Symphony


The Chelsea Symphony, hailed as an “enterprising group of young musicians" by Time Out and "New York's most
intimate orchestral experience" by Lucid Culture, upends the traditional hierarchy of the classical orchestra:
members rotate as featured soloists, conductors, and composers. The self-governing ensemble is a cultural focus
for Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood and presents vibrant concerts of inspiring symphonic music both old and
new. From the American Museum of Natural History to the Amazon Original Series Mozart in the Jungle, the
orchestra—now in its seventeenth season—remains committed to its focus on professional development, inclusive
and relevant programming, and a commitment to music by living composers. In recent years, TCS has worked to
expand its reach by providing accessible concerts for inmates on Rikers Island in partnership with the NYC
Department of Correction, as well as a free and informal chamber music series at Chelsea Market.

 

RENT A PHOTO

Search Musical America's archive of photos from 1900-1992.

 

»BROWSE & SEARCH ARCHIVE