Sonatenabend
Wednesday, October 11, 6pm
Juilliard School
Pianists from Juilliard’s Collaborative Piano department perform sonata repertoire in partnership with student instrumentalists. FREE.
American Symphony Orchestra
Wednesday, October 11, 8pm
Carnegie Hall
Come hear American works by Bernstein, Sessions and Copland, and see if you can spot Rachel Riggs, of our viola faculty, performing with the orchestra! There is a Pre-Concert Talk at 7pm.
Peter and the Wolf and Other Stories
Saturday, October 14, 2pm
Carnegie Hall
The Orchestra of St. Luke’s returns to Carnegie Hall with three family-friendly stories for orchestra and narrator. Prokofiev’s classic Peter and the Wolf, Caroline Shaw’s adaptation of The Mountain That Loved a Bird by Alice McLerran, and Robert Xavier Rodriguez’s take on a favorite children’s book, The Dot and the Line by Norton Juster. Perfect for ages 6-12. Tickets from $10 to $22.
Philharmonic Ensembles
Sunday, October 15, 3pm
Merkin Concert Hall
An Ensembles concert provides an intimate connection between musician and audience and an up close look at the individual talents of the Orchestra. This concert features the Carmen Suite for Five Cellos, Mendelssohn String Quartet in Eb Major, Schulhoff Concertino for Flute, Viola, and Double Bass and more! $36.
Pre-College Student Recital
Saturday, October 21, 6pm
Morse Hall
Come hear Juilliard Pre-College students perform Chamber Music on a Saturday evening. Especially great for our Sunday Program and String quartet students! FREE.
Ongoing
Juilliard Historical Performance
Tuesdays at Noon
Home of the celebrated Bach Vespers series, the 113-year-old Holy Trinity Lutheran Church offers a historically appropriate venue for the performance of early music in these free, hour-long lunchtime concerts on Tuesday afternoons throughout the season.
The Art of Music
Select weekdays at 11:15am
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Highlighting the connections between the musical traditions of different peoples, places, and time periods, this tour gives visitors an appreciation of the Museum’s global holdings of instruments selected for social significance, technical virtuosity, tonal quality, and visual beauty.