HOUGHTON -- Michigan Tech's Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts will be the scene of some great performances this weekend: Songs for the Moon with the Michigan Tech Concert Choir and conScience: Michigan Tech Chamber Singers on Friday, Dec. 9; The Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra presenting Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 -- plus British symphonic music, Black Sabbath metal, and a premiere by Jazz Professor Emeritus Mike Irish -- on Saturday, Dec. 10; and TubaChristmas on Sunday, Dec. 11, in the Rozsa Lobby. All three events will be livestreamed during the performances.*
Songs for the Moon
Join the Michigan Tech choirs for a concert that celebrates the beauty of moonlight and wintertime at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9. The concert will include performances by the Michigan Tech Concert Choir and conScience: Michigan Tech Chamber Singers.
The Michigan Tech Concert Choir is a select ensemble of students and community singers studying and performing choral literature ranging from Gregorian Chant to Renaissance motets, masses and madrigals to fascinating new works by living composers.
If you enjoyed conScience in the annual New Music in the Mine concerts or loved them in the popular video by Visit Keweenaw, you definitely want to attend this spectacular concert!
Click here for tickets and details.
Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra
Music Director Joel Neves conducts the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra. (Photo © and courtesy Michigan Technological University)Michigan Tech Music will present Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2, performed by the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra (KSO) at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 10, at the Rozsa Center. The KSO will be joined on stage by international concert pianist Lindsay Garritson.
Lindsay Garritson has performed throughout the United States and abroad since the age of four. She has appeared on stages such as Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center. She has been a featured soloist with the Phoenix Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre Métropolitain (Montreal), Orquestra Sinfônica Barra Mansa (Brazil), the Yale Philharmonic Orchestra, and the European Philharmonic Orchestra, and now, the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra. (Photo © and courtesy Lisa-Marie Mazzucco)The rest of the evening serves up a delightfully eclectic auditory menu of symphonic music, metal, and jazz. Featured artist Adam Meckler performs on flugelhorn for a Black Sabbath piece arranged by KSO Music Director Joel Neves and the world premiere of a work by Michigan Tech Jazz Professor Emeritus Mike Irish.
The concert will be live-streamed for far-away Michigan Tech Music lovers and alums.*
All public tickets for Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 are Pay As You’re Able. MichiganTech Music believes that the foundation of an equitable and inclusive arts culture requires making events financially accessible to all. This year they are beta testing Pay as You're Able ticketing on a few events, including this one. The $19 "full fee" represents the value of the KSO ticket. For some people, Pay As You’re Able may mean covering their ticket price and part of someone else's through "full fee +." It could also mean paying half or some of the ticket price. Pay As You’re Able invites all attendees to pay what they can afford.
Click here for tickets and details.
TubaChristmas
TubaChristmas, an annual December event, occurs around the world in honor of the first truly great tuba virtuoso, William "Bill" Bell who was born on Christmas Day. Tubists gather yearly in mass numbers around the globe to play songs of the season in performances free to the public. TUBACHRISTMAS concerts are presented with permission from the Harvey Phillips Foundation, Inc.
* The above events will all be on Live Streaming.
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