Event details
Princeton University Orchestra Concerto Concert
Princeton University Orchestra presents a concert featuring the concerto competition winners.
Ticketing
*Ticket prices are inclusive of all fees.
Faculty and Staff only: In addition to two (2) free tickets, all university Faculty and Staff can also purchase additional tickets at a price point of $6 per ticket.
Program
Haydn- Cello Concerto No. 1 in C
Maurice Neuman ‘28, Cello
Copland- Clarinet Concerto
Daniel Kim ’26, Clarinet
Hannah Ishizaki GS, Conductor
Max Vinetz GS- Swell
Barber- Violin Concerto
Ian Barnett ’27, Violin
About Princeton University Orchestra
The Princeton University Orchestra was born in February 1896, with a concert by professional musicians. The modern history of PUO begins with the appointment of the orchestra's present music director, Michael Pratt, in 1977. Through the fifties and sixties, the ensemble shrank down to as few as thirty students amid "music-is-better-seen-than-heard" mentalities in music academia, as well as insufficient rehearsal and performance spaces on campus. Following Pratt's appointment to the orchestra's podium, this downward trend quickly reversed itself into an upwards explosion. In 1984, the orchestra's home, Alexander Hall, was renovated from a large auditorium into a professional-grade concert hall. Additionally, unprecedented interest in music performance among students, coupled with growth in the overall undergraduate class size and the development of Princeton's dedicated extracurricular hours (two hours every weekday during which classes are forbidden from meeting), allowed PUO to quickly expand into the large symphonic orchestra of over 100 students that it remains today.
In response to students in the orchestra expressing a desire to continue as musicians after their studies at Princeton, Michael Pratt established the Music Department's Certificate Program in Music Performance in 1990—now the Music Major or Minor in Performance-- and he was a major architect in the general integration of performance into Princeton's wider curriculum. Undergraduates in the Music Major/Minor in Performance receive complementary lessons and are eligible to apply for a semester abroad to study at London’s Royal College of Music. The PUO is recognized nationally for its musical excellence, named in a recent independent survey as one of the top then college-age orchestras in the United States. Since 1994 PUO has been takimg international tours and has performed in London, Frankfurt, Madrid, Lisbon, Prague, Vienna, Munich, Bratislava, Krakow, Amsterdam, some of them multiple times.
University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.
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