The 鶹Ƶ Orchestra is one of only three ensembles, and one of only two from the United States, chosen to perform in the culminating Evening Showcase Concert in Carnegie Hall during the 19th annual New York International Music Festival running Saturday–Wednesday, April 5–9.
The concert on April 8 will feature the Hope orchestra along with the Fresno State Wind Orchestra and the Jong Strijkers (Youth Strings) Nederland, a youth orchestra from Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
“It is a great honor for our orchestra to be selected as one of the three showcase ensembles performing at Carnegie Hall,” said Sam Pang, who directs the 85-member Hope College Orchestra and is an assistant professor of music instruction at the college. “We are a community that isn’t afraid of dreaming big. We dream together. We work hard together. And we thank the Lord that we are reaping good results from our hard work.”
Presented by World Projects Corporation, the is open to all performing ensembles (bands, orchestras and choirs), but admits only two collegiate-level showcase ensembles and six high school ensembles each year, all chosen through audition. For the high school groups, the festival includes an instructional clinic, an outdoor concert and competition through an adjudicated afternoon concert at Carnegie Hall. The showcase groups each present an outdoor concert in addition to being featured during the closing evening event.
In Carnegie Hall, the ensembles will perform on the Ronald O. Perelman Stage of the 2,790-seat Isaac Stern Auditorium. The outdoor performance venues will be weather-dependent, but potential locations include Central Park, Bryant Park or Brooklyn Bridge Park.
Please visit the college’s for student reflections on participation in the orchestra and a behind-the-scenes look at how the group’s Carnegie Hall concert program was planned
Running a fast-paced 45 minutes, the Hope orchestra’s April 8 performance is titled “The Symphonic Story of Hope.” Reflecting the themes and selections of the orchestra’s spring 2024 and fall 2024 concerts at Hope, the program will feature seven works arranged to reflect the journey from earthly concerns to salvation through Christ.
“We as humans want to progress and develop, but we also make a lot of mistakes,” Pang said. “As culture develops, sin also develops. But, as dark as things might be, there’s redemption and victory at the very end.”
The orchestra will open its evening performance with the fourth movement of Antonín Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9, which premiered in the same auditorium on Dec. 16, 1893. Known also as “From the New World,” the work was inspired by the American landscape and American folk music during the composer’s time in the U.S.
The program will continue with “Liebesleid” (Love’s Sorrow), by Fritz Kreisler; “Theme to Schindler’s List,” by John Williams; a cello and oboe duet version of “Gabriel’s Oboe,” the main theme of the film “The Mission,” by Ennio Morricone; “O Magnum Mysterium” (O Great Mystery), by Morten Lauridsen, arranged for orchestra by Pang; the hymn “All the Way My Savior Leads Me,” by Fanny Crosby, arranged for orchestra by Pang; and the finale of Symphony No. 3 (“Organ Symphony”), by Camille Saint-Saёns.
The performance of “All the Way My Savior Leads Me” is being dedicated in memory of orchestra member Jennifer Kasunick, a Hope sophomore and violinist who died on Saturday, Jan. 11, of injuries sustained when she was struck by a train.
The orchestra’s outdoor performance will be a 20-minute, pops-style event on Monday, April 7, and is currently scheduled to take place at the Naumburg Bandshell in Central Park. Selections will include the main theme from “How to Train Your Dragon,” by John Powell; “Concerto for Timpani and Full Orchestra, Horse Ride,” by Ney Rosauro; “Introduction and Theme with Variations,” by Gioachino Rossini; and “Rhapsody in Blue,” by George Gershwin.
The 鶹Ƶ Orchestra is the college’s premier audition-based instrumental ensemble, and has approximately 85 members who include students majoring in music and students majoring in other disciplines. For the performances in New York, the students will be joined by four recent graduates who while still students were involved in planning the program last year; and by three guest performers who are students at The Juilliard School. Funding for the trip has been provided through sources including the 鶹Ƶ Patrons for the Arts and an estate gift from the late David Roossien, whose longtime support of the music program at Hope included donating the Casavant Frères in the Concert Hall of the Jack H. Miller Center for Musical Arts.
Tickets for the April 8 Evening Showcase Concert, which will begin at 8 p.m., are $50 ($40 plus a $10 fee) and are available through the .
West Michigan will have an opportunity to enjoy the orchestra’s Carnegie Hall repertoire shortly before the group leaves for New York. The orchestra will perform at Hope on Friday, April 4, at 7 p.m. in the Concert Hall of the Jack H. Miller Center for Musical Arts, and will present the program planned for the festival’s evening Showcase Concert. The public is invited to the concert at Hope, and admission is free.
, which was commissioned by Andrew Carnegie and opened in 1891, is arguably the nation’s most prestigious music venue. Across its nearly 134 years, Carnegie Hall has hosted acclaimed musicians representing every genre, from Tchaikovsky, Dvořák, Mahler, and Bartók, to George Gershwin, Billie Holiday, Benny Goodman, Judy Garland and The Beatles.