Upcoming Events

Wednesday, January 15, 20258:00pm

Royal Academy of Music presents Vespers for a New Dark Age at Angela Burgess Recital Hall in London, UK as part of the Students Create Festival

Liturgical Shades stages Bach, Zbinden, and Mazzoli with reactive lighting software, a programmatic voyage abetting the twisted invocations present through Mazzoli’s Vespers for a New Dark Age.

About the Students Create Festival

This year’s incredible line up of student-led projects includes Jazz-Baroque fusion, a fully staged new opera, Beckett with Berio, and a Techno night. Thirteen events include world premieres of new music by students drawn from multiple departments and produced in a matter of days.

Saturday, January 18, 20254:00pm6:00pm

Omega Ensemble performs Dark with Excessive Bright at ACO On The Pier (The Thirsty Mile) in Sydney, Australia as part of Sydney Festival


Suite 3/13A Hickson Rd, Dawes Point, NSW 2000, Australia map

High energy, explosive dynamism, raw beauty. Omega Ensemble presents a program based around two contemporary masterworks – new but already audience favourites.

The title of Missy Mazzoli’s Grammy-nominated concerto comes from Milton’s Paradise Lost – an ‘impossible’ phrase, she says, that evokes the ‘dark but heartrending sound’ of the solo double bass. Drawing easily on influences from the Baroque to indie rock, this music slips from beautiful simplicity to pandemonium beyond recognition.

Samuel Adams (son of post-minimalist composer John Adams) represents a new generation in American music. His Lighthouse was commissioned by Omega Ensemble and received its world premiere in July 2024. It’s a striking work of light, shade and ever-increasing intensity – groundbreaking and mesmerising.

An Omega Ensemble concert embraces the unexpected and celebrates the extraordinary, and this Sydney Festival event will be no exception.

PROGRAM TO INCLUDE

Missy Mazzoli Dark with Excessive Bright – Concerto for double bass and string quintet
Samuel Adams Lighthouse for clarinet, piano and string quintet

January 25January 26, 20258:00pm

Elgin Symphony Orchestra performs These Worlds in Us at The Hemmens Cultural Center, Elgin, IL

The Hemmens Cultural Center
45 Symphony Way, Elgin, IL 60120 map

Music Director Chad Goodman has assembled an exciting series of concerts that will truly commemorate a special anniversary season for the Elgin Symphony Orchestra.

In addition to the outstanding repertoire that was announced earlier this spring and that includes Holst’s The Planets, along with works by Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Dvořák, Ravel, and Vaughan Williams, audiences will enjoy:

COLERIDGE-TAYLOR | Overture to The Song of Hiawatha

MISSY MAZZOLI | These Worlds in Us

JIMMY LÓPEZ BELLIDO | Fiesta!

LIGETI | Lontano

MOZART | Symphony No. 31, “Paris”

January 31, 8:00 pm February 1, 2025, 8:00 pm

Opera Kansas performs Proving Up at the Old Cowtown Museum in Wichita, KS


1865 Museum Blvd, Wichita, KS 67203 map

Opera Kansas celebrates Kansas Day with the opera Proving Up, Composed by Missy Mazzoli, Libretto by Royce Vavrek. Proving Up is a supernatural opera about the American dream and the hardships of settling the West in the 1870s. The opera follows the Zegner family, who are trying to “prove up” their land by meeting the requirements of the Homestead Act of 1862. The opera is based on a short story by Karen Russell.

Thursday, February 13, 20257:30pm

The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic performs River Rouge Transfiguration at Liverpool Philharmonic Hall


Hope Street, Liverpool L1 9BP, UK map

When East meets West, anything becomes possible. For Russian-American conductor Lidiya Yankovskaya, it can mean Missy Mazzoli seeing heaven in a Detroit steelworks, or Brahms embracing his inner Hungarian in one of the sweetest and sunniest of great violin concertos. And above all, it can mean Dmitri Shostakovich combining tragedy, irony and pure knockabout farce in his extraordinary Sixth Symphony. A fitting tribute in his anniversary year.

Friday, February 14, 20256:00pm

Copenhagen Philharmonic performs Dark with Excessive Bright at The Concert Hall, Royal Danish Academy of Music, Copenhagen, Denmark


Rosenørns Alle 22, 1970 Frederiksberg, Copenhagen, Denmark

The composer phenomenon Missy Mazzoli has made a sensational entry on the global classical music scene, among others. with an operatic version of Lars von Trier’s film Breaking the Waves . The American composer’s effective tonal language finds an original culmination in the work Dark with excessive bright from 2018, where she transforms the deep-sounding double bass into a lyrical and virtuosic solo instrument. This evening with the orchestra’s solo bassist Olle Davidsson at the instrument, who is allowed to unfold the most endearing and good-sounding sides of the deepest string.

Saturday, February 22, 20258:00pm

Orchestra of St. Luke’s performs These Worlds in Us at Carnegie Hall in New York, NY


881 Seventh Ave, New York, NY 10019 map

Journey of Faith: A Musical Tribute to Mother Teresa

The repertoire for this concert is selected to prompt reflection on Mother Teresa’s life of service and to provide inspiration for our individual journeys. Mother Teresa offers an example of selfless charity, with meaning for our own times. Featured are four US premieres by Thoma Gaqi, Genc Tukiçi, Holst, and Maestro Dante Anzolini, as well as pieces by three living US composers with ties to New York City: Philip Glass, Nico Muhly, and Missy Mazzoli.

March 14, 7:30 pm March 16, 2025, 2:00 pm

Tucson Symphony Orchestra performs These Worlds In Us at Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, Tucson, AZ


260 S Church Ave, Tucson, AZ 85701 map

Chopin’s mellifluous Piano Concerto No. 2 returns to the Classic series stage in the hands of Venezuelan superstar Gabriela Martinez, who made her orchestral debut at the age of 6! The concert also explores imagined worlds, and deeply buried worlds. Prokofiev’s Romeo & Juliet ballet music brings to life Shakespeare’s beloved play of star-crossed lovers, and Missy Mazzoli’s poignant These Worlds In Us delves into the worlds of intense memory that each person holds in themselves.

Wednesday, March 19, 20257:30pm

The Philharmonia Orchestra performs These Worlds in Us at The Anvil, Basingstoke, UK


Churchill Way, Basingstoke RG21 7QR, United Kingdom map

Young Japanese pianist Mao Fujita is taking the classical music world by storm with his technical mastery and ‘tremendous versatility’ (The Times). Celebrated for his interpretation of Mozart, tonight he performs his Piano Concerto No. 25. A jewel of the Classical period, it is widely considered one of Mozart’s greatest concertos.

After the interval comes Mendelssohn’s ‘Reformation’ Symphony. Never published during the composer’s lifetime, the Symphony showcases Mendelssohn’s unmistakable genius. In this celebration of the Protestant Reformation, he gives us music full of religious allusions, rich in colour and packed with warming melodies.

Osmo Vänskä has chosen Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds In Us to open the programme. Dedicated to the composer’s father who was a soldier during the Vietnam War, it’s a moving reflection on memory, grief and love.

Thursday, March 20, 20257:30pm

Philharmonia Orchestra performs These Worlds In Us at Royal Festival Hall in London, UK


Southbank Centre, Belvedere Rd, London SE1 8XX, United Kingdom map

In the second of a pair of concerts with the Philharmonia, Mao Fujita plays one of Mozart’s greatest concertos.

The young Japanese pianist is taking the classical music world by storm with his technical mastery and ‘tremendous versatility’ (The Times). Celebrated for his interpretation of Mozart, he makes a second stop in London as part of a UK tour with the Philharmonia.

Mendelssohn’s ‘Reformation’ Symphony, written when he was just 21, showcases his unmistakable genius for melody and orchestral colour. Mendelssohn wove Martin Luther’s hymn tune ‘Ein Feste Burg’ through the symphony’s final movement. Introduced by a gentle choir of woodwind, it builds to a powerful statement by the full orchestra.

Osmo Vänskä has chosen Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds In Us to open the programme. Dedicated to the composer’s father, who was a soldier during the Vietnam War, it’s a moving reflection on memory, grief and love.

Friday, March 21, 20257:30pm

The Philharmonia Orchestra performs These Worlds in Us at Bedford Corn Exchange, Bedford, UK


Corn Exchange, 13 St Paul's Square, Bedford MK40 1SL, United Kingdom map

Young Japanese pianist Mao Fujita is taking the classical music world by storm with his technical mastery and ‘tremendous versatility’ (The Times). Celebrated for his interpretations of Mozart, tonight he performs his Piano Concerto No. 25. A jewel of the Classical period, it is widely considered one of Mozart’s greatest concertos.

After the interval comes Mendelssohn’s rarely performed ‘Reformation’ Symphony. Never published during the composer’s lifetime, the Symphony is a lesser-known masterpiece showcasing the unmistakable genius of Mendelssohn. Written as a celebration of the Protestant Reformation, he gives us music full of religious allusions, rich in colour and packed with warming melodies.

Osmo Vänskä has chosen Missy Mazzoli’s These Worlds In Us to open the programme. Dedicated to her father who was a soldier during the Vietnam War, it’s a moving reflection on memory, grief, and love.

Sunday, March 30, 20257:00pm

Basel Sinfonietta performs These Worlds in Us and Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres) at Stadtcasino Basel, Basel, Switzerland


Konzertgasse 1, 4051, Basel, Switzerland
MISSY MAZZOLI

These Worlds in Us (2006)

ALEX PAXTON

Od Ody Pink’d (2019)

JULIUS EASTMAN

Stay on It (1973)

MISSY MAZZOLI

Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres) (2013)

JESSIE COX

Schattenspiel (Shadow Play) (2023)

DERRICK SKYE

Prisms, Cycles, Leaps (2015)

ALEX PAXTON, TROMBONIST
KEVIN JOHN EDUSEI, CONDUCTOR
BASEL SINFONIETTA

Friday, July 11, 20257:00pm

Chautauqua Institution presents a workshop presentation of Lincoln in the Bardo in Chautauqua, NY as part of the Chautauqua Festival


1 Ames Avenue, Chautaqua, NY 14722 map

Chautauqua has long offered a cross-fertilization of art forms, bringing together art makers and art lovers in community — and increasingly it serves as an incubator for new, exciting work, providing a window into the process of creative experimentation and excellence. What are the dual roles and responsibilities of the artist and the audience, and what do works of art tell us about cultural, political, and social ideas and/or ideals? This week aims to connect impactful artistic experiences with a deeper understanding of artistic meaning and process from the makers themselves.