Quo Vadis: Orchestra@UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ
The Orchestra@UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ concerts continue to delight audiences.Ìý Please join us for this spring classic.
The Orchestra@UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ concerts continue to delight audiences.Ìý Please join us for this spring classic.
The University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Chamber Choir explores music on the themes of time and place, with a performance of Alex Berko’s cantataÌýSacred Place. Ìý
The finalists from the 2025 competition will vie for first place.Ìý
The Kestrel String Quartet, with 4 well known local musicians, will be performing "Something Shiny"
A concert of music for cello and bass featuring Parlour Games by Michael Oesterle
Every year since its inception, Magisterra Soloists has presented a concert honouring the victims of the Holocaust, highlighting howÌýart has and will always be aÌývaluable form of expression during times of hardship.ÌýMagisterraÌýSoloists andÌýFellows will perform the music of Holocaust survivors.
The program primarily features art song and opera from the 19thÌýand 20thÌýcenturies including a set of songs by the underappreciated 19thÌýcentury composer, Peter Cornelius. Originally scheduled for 2024, it has been rescheduled for January 15 at noon in the Grebel Chapel.
Instrumental Chamber Ensemble students come from all six faculties, and play in chamber groups of three to four players.
The trio of Annette Barbara Vogel (violin), Tom Landshoot (cello) and Mehdi Ghazi (piano) will perform Schoenfield's Cafe Music (hence the title) and Mendelssohn's Trio No. 1 in D minor.
Violinist Jung Tsai, accompanied by pianist Anna Ronai, will perform works by Eugene Ysaye, Karol Szymanovski, and George Gershwin.
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