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Boston Landmarks Orchestra

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The Boston Landmarks Orchestra was founded in January 2001 to perform free concerts celebrating historical, geographical and architectural settings. By presenting exceptional music performances in significant settings, the Orchestra fosters a broad appreciation of classical music while bringing together the area’s diverse communities.

Upcoming Concerts

DateTimeVenue
07/118:00pmSanders Theatre

This is one of four Neighborhood Concerts, being presented by Boston Landmarks Orchestra and Charles Ansbacher, Conductor and Artistic Director. 

 

It is free and open to the public.

 

Encore performance of Copland and the New World, featuring Aaron Copland’s Fanfare of the Common Man, Dance Episodes from Rodeo and Lincoln Portrait as well as Antonin Devorák’s Symphony No. 9, “From the New World.”

 

Located at Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, 45 Quincy Street, between Cambridge and Kirkland Streets in Cambridge. A 5-minute walk from Harvard Square. The theatre recommends the use of public transportation, as parking is severely limited.

 

This event is part of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra’s  Neighborhood Concerts series which brings free, classical music to diverse neighborhoods in the area through the month of July. In addition to the concert at Sanders Theatre, there will be performances at Jamaica Pond on July 20 at 6:30 p.m., at Adams National Historical Park, Quincy on July 24 at 6:30 p.m., and at Dorchester Park on July 27 at 6:30 p.m. 

 

The Orchestra’s mission is to present high quality professional orchestral music for free to diverse audiences that include residents of and visitors to Boston. Last year, over 50,000 people attended the Landmarks Festival at the Shell, which this year will take place every Wednesday at 7pm at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

 

The original performance of Copland and the New World will take place at the Opening Night of Landmarks Festival at the Shell July 9, 7:00p.m at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

 

For more information, please visit www.landmarksorchestra.org or call 617-520-2200

 

About The Boston Landmarks Orchestra

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra presents exceptional orchestral music performances in significant architectural, historical, and geographical settings throughout the Boston area, always free to the public. It aims to help diverse audiences grow in their appreciation both of the fine music that it offers and the special places where it performs. Through its Concerts for Children, the Orchestra is one of the few performing arts institutions in the country to commission new works for young people that both teach a history lesson and introduce youngsters to the orchestra.

 

About Charles Ansbacher, conductor and artistic director:

Charles Ansbacher is the conductor and founder of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and the Artistic Director of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell. In addition to his recent appointment as the Principal Guest Conductor of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, he has conducted all over the world with organizations such as the Vienna State Opera, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and in cities including Bishkek, Budapest, Jerusalem, London, Quito, Salzburg, Seoul, and Warsaw.

(617) 520-2200  ·  Directions  ·  Website

07/206:30pmJamaica Pond

The concert is free and open to the public. 

Located at the Great Lawn at Jamaica Pond, near Pinebank Promontory 

Green Masterpieces—“Air and Water.” In addition to the world premiere of “Speak, Sing, Whale,” composed by Stephen Feigenbaum, performances include Overture to The Thieving Magpie, by Gioachino Rossini, Nocturnes: “Nuages and Fêtes,” by Claude Debussy, “Menuetto” from Cassation in G (Toy Symphony), by Leopold Mozart, The Seasons: “Autumn,” by Alexander Glazunov, Water Music, by George Frideric Handel, and “The Moldau” from My Fatherland, by Bedrich Smetana.

 Stephen Feigenbaum, 19-year-old Winchester resident and award-winning composer, currently studies music at Yale University. His composition, “Speak, Sing, Whale,” combines sample recordings of whale sounds with a lush chamber orchestration that evokes ocean waves.

 

 

This is one of four Neighborhood Concerts, being presented by Boston Landmarks Orchestra. The Orchestra’s mission is to present high quality professional orchestral music for free to diverse audiences that include residents of and visitors to Boston. Last year, over 50,000 people attended the inaugural season of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell, which will take place this year every Wednesday at 7pm at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

About The Boston Landmarks Orchestra

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra presents exceptional orchestral music performances in significant architectural, historical, and geographical settings throughout the Boston area, always free to the public. It aims to help diverse audiences grow in their appreciation both of the fine music that it offers and the special places where it performs. Through its Concerts for Children, the Orchestra is one of the few performing arts institutions in the country to commission new works for young people that both teach a history lesson and introduce youngsters to the orchestra.

 

About Charles Ansbacher, conductor and artistic director:

Charles Ansbacher is the conductor and founder of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and the Artistic Director of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell. In addition to his recent appointment as the Principal Guest Conductor of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, he has conducted all over the world with organizations such as the Vienna State Opera, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and in cities including Bishkek, Budapest, Jerusalem, London, Quito, Salzburg, Seoul, and Warsaw.

 

(617) 520-2200  ·  Directions  ·  Website

07/118:00pmSanders Theatre

This is one of four Neighborhood Concerts, being presented by Boston Landmarks Orchestra and Charles Ansbacher, Conductor and Artistic Director. 

 

It is free and open to the public.

 

Encore performance of Copland and the New World, featuring Aaron Copland’s Fanfare of the Common Man, Dance Episodes from Rodeo and Lincoln Portrait as well as Antonin Devorák’s Symphony No. 9, “From the New World.”

 

Located at Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, 45 Quincy Street, between Cambridge and Kirkland Streets in Cambridge. A 5-minute walk from Harvard Square. The theatre recommends the use of public transportation, as parking is severely limited.

 

This event is part of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra’s  Neighborhood Concerts series which brings free, classical music to diverse neighborhoods in the area through the month of July. In addition to the concert at Sanders Theatre, there will be performances at Jamaica Pond on July 20 at 6:30 p.m., at Adams National Historical Park, Quincy on July 24 at 6:30 p.m., and at Dorchester Park on July 27 at 6:30 p.m. 

 

The Orchestra’s mission is to present high quality professional orchestral music for free to diverse audiences that include residents of and visitors to Boston. Last year, over 50,000 people attended the Landmarks Festival at the Shell, which this year will take place every Wednesday at 7pm at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

 

The original performance of Copland and the New World will take place at the Opening Night of Landmarks Festival at the Shell July 9, 7:00p.m at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

 

For more information, please visit www.landmarksorchestra.org or call 617-520-2200

 

About The Boston Landmarks Orchestra

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra presents exceptional orchestral music performances in significant architectural, historical, and geographical settings throughout the Boston area, always free to the public. It aims to help diverse audiences grow in their appreciation both of the fine music that it offers and the special places where it performs. Through its Concerts for Children, the Orchestra is one of the few performing arts institutions in the country to commission new works for young people that both teach a history lesson and introduce youngsters to the orchestra.

 

About Charles Ansbacher, conductor and artistic director:

Charles Ansbacher is the conductor and founder of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and the Artistic Director of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell. In addition to his recent appointment as the Principal Guest Conductor of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, he has conducted all over the world with organizations such as the Vienna State Opera, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and in cities including Bishkek, Budapest, Jerusalem, London, Quito, Salzburg, Seoul, and Warsaw.

(617) 520-2200  ·  Directions  ·  Website

07/206:30pmJamaica Pond

The concert is free and open to the public. 

Located at the Great Lawn at Jamaica Pond, near Pinebank Promontory 

Green Masterpieces—“Air and Water.” In addition to the world premiere of “Speak, Sing, Whale,” composed by Stephen Feigenbaum, performances include Overture to The Thieving Magpie, by Gioachino Rossini, Nocturnes: “Nuages and Fêtes,” by Claude Debussy, “Menuetto” from Cassation in G (Toy Symphony), by Leopold Mozart, The Seasons: “Autumn,” by Alexander Glazunov, Water Music, by George Frideric Handel, and “The Moldau” from My Fatherland, by Bedrich Smetana.

 Stephen Feigenbaum, 19-year-old Winchester resident and award-winning composer, currently studies music at Yale University. His composition, “Speak, Sing, Whale,” combines sample recordings of whale sounds with a lush chamber orchestration that evokes ocean waves.

 

 

This is one of four Neighborhood Concerts, being presented by Boston Landmarks Orchestra. The Orchestra’s mission is to present high quality professional orchestral music for free to diverse audiences that include residents of and visitors to Boston. Last year, over 50,000 people attended the inaugural season of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell, which will take place this year every Wednesday at 7pm at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

About The Boston Landmarks Orchestra

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra presents exceptional orchestral music performances in significant architectural, historical, and geographical settings throughout the Boston area, always free to the public. It aims to help diverse audiences grow in their appreciation both of the fine music that it offers and the special places where it performs. Through its Concerts for Children, the Orchestra is one of the few performing arts institutions in the country to commission new works for young people that both teach a history lesson and introduce youngsters to the orchestra.

 

About Charles Ansbacher, conductor and artistic director:

Charles Ansbacher is the conductor and founder of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and the Artistic Director of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell. In addition to his recent appointment as the Principal Guest Conductor of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, he has conducted all over the world with organizations such as the Vienna State Opera, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and in cities including Bishkek, Budapest, Jerusalem, London, Quito, Salzburg, Seoul, and Warsaw.

 

(617) 520-2200  ·  Directions  ·  Website

07/246:30pmAdams National Historical Park

 

This is one of four Neighborhood Concerts, being presented by Boston Landmarks Orchestra and Charles Ansbacher, Conductor and Artistic Director.

 

The concert is free and open to the public.

 

Located at Beale Estate, Adams National Historical Park, Quincy. In case of rain, the concert will be held in the Quincy High School auditorium, 52 Coddington St. in Quincy.

 

The evening features the world premier of Landmarks’ newest work for children, “John Adams: Voice Heard ‘Round the World,” composed by Anthony DiLorenzo with text by Marian Carlson. The night’s program also includes performances of An American in Paris, by George Gershwin and Symphony No. 9 from “The New World,” by Antonin Dvorák.

 

In tune with the excitement surrounding John Adams earlier this year, Ansbacher chose to commission a piece connecting children with one of the most important Founding Fathers. Specifically for member of the audience ages 8-12, the piece introduces younger generations to classical music and stimulates imagination.

 

The Orchestra’s mission is to present high quality professional orchestral music for free to diverse audiences that include residents of and visitors to Boston. Last year, over 50,000 people attended the Landmarks Festival at the Shell, which this year will take place every Wednesday at 7pm at the DRC’s Hatch Shell on the Esplanade.

 

For more information, please visit www.landmarksorchestra.org or call 617-520-2200

 

About The Boston Landmarks Orchestra

The Boston Landmarks Orchestra presents exceptional orchestral music performances in significant architectural, historical, and geographical settings throughout the Boston area, always free to the public. It aims to help diverse audiences grow in their appreciation both of the fine music that it offers and the special places where it performs. Through its Concerts for Children, the Orchestra is one of the few performing arts institutions in the country to commission new works for young people that both teach a history lesson and introduce youngsters to the orchestra.

 

About Charles Ansbacher, conductor and artistic director:

 

Charles Ansbacher is the conductor and founder of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and the Artistic Director of the Landmarks Festival at the Shell. In addition to his recent appointment as the Principal Guest Conductor of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, he has conducted all over the world with organizations such as the Vienna State Opera, the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and in cities including Bishkek, Budapest, Jerusalem, London, Quito, Salzburg, Seoul, and Warsaw.

(617) 520-2200  ·  Directions  ·  Website

 

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