Manchester Symphony Orchestra announces 85th season

The Manchester Symphony Orchestra announces its 85th season with a schedule of four concerts under Debra Lynn, conductor and artistic director.

“I’m tremendously excited about this season,” Lynn said. “Each concert offers a smorgasbord of music from a wide variety of time periods. There will definitely be something for everyone.”

Balancing celebrated masterworks with pieces by composers who are underrepresented in classical music, Lynn has crafted a season to remember. Nearly a quarter of the programming is music by non-male and non-white composers.

All concerts are at 3:00 PM on Sundays.

Serenade of Strings is October 8 in Cordier Auditorium on the North Manchester, Indiana, campus of Manchester University. The all-strings concert offers “Serenata Notturna” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, “The Fire Remains” by contemporary composer Linda Kernohan, “A Moorside Suite” by Gustav Holst, and the world premiere of “Proverbes sur les Animaux” (proverbs about animals) composed by Lynn. The debut’s soloist is Emily Lynn, soprano, a 2020 graduate of Manchester University who is pursuing a career in opera.

Glory and Wonder! is December 10 in Cordier. It features “Gloria” by Francis Poulenc, “Toccata in the Style of Frescobaldi” by Hans Kindler, “Suite from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” by Danny Elfman, and it ends with the “Christmas Overture” by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. The symphony is hosting the Fort Wayne Youth Symphony and area high school choirs at this concert.

“Our grand finale should be particularly stunning with our combined ensembles,” Lynn said. “With the Manchester Symphony, youth symphony, and high school choirs, there will be a lot of people on stage!”

Brahms and Beyond is March 10 in Cordier. Symphony guest artist Filip Michalak will perform “Piano Concerto No. 1” by Johannes Brahms. The concert also presents the grand “Royal Fireworks Overture” by George Frideric Handel and “Duo Ye” by contemporary Chinese composer Chen Yi.

“Our fabulous guest artist-in-residence, Filip Michalak, is a very talented up-and-coming pianist from Copenhagen,” Lynn said. “Brahms’s monumental “Piano Concerto No. 1” is on of the most beautiful piano concertos in the repertoire.”

Michelak will be in North Manchester for a week, working with the orchestra, doing K-12 outreach, offering a master class, and doing a recital of solo works in addition to the MSO concert.

Creatures Great and Small on May 12 at the Honeywell Center, Wabash, Indiana, celebrates animals and nature. It features “Wood Notes” by African-American composer William Grant Still; “And God Created Great Whales,” a symphonic poem for orchestra and recorded whale sounds by Alan Hovhaness; concertmaster Elizabeth Smith will perform the shimmering “The Lark Ascending” by Ralph Vaughan Williams; and the finale of the season is “Overture to Die Fledermaus” by Johann Strauss.

Tickets are $20 for general admission. Admission with ID is free for Manchester University students, faculty and staff, as well as anyone younger than 18. Go to www.manchestersymphonyorchestra.org to buy tickets. They can also be purchased at the door.

For the media
Dr. Debra J. Lynn is a collaborative musical storyteller. Learn more about Dr. Lynn: https://debralynnmusic.org/
To arrange an interview with her, email DJLynn@manchester.edu.

About the guest artist: Pianist | Filip Michalak
About the symphony: Manchester Symphony Orchestra
About the guest artist program: Guest artist Residency Fund — Manchester Symphony Orchestra

Dr Debra Lynn photo