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Blissful Insolence - Lowell Chamber Orchestra

  • Richard and Nancy Donahue Acdemic Arts Center 240 Central Street Lowell, MA, 01852 United States (map)

Suleiman - Nocturnes

Program notes coming soon

Ryan Suleiman was born to Lebanese and midwestern parents in California. His music engages with dreaming, the natural world, and the understated beauty of everyday life. His one-act chamber opera, Moon, Bride, Dogs, was described by the San Francisco Chronicle as “a gem” with “an aesthetic that is at once so strange and so accessible.” While his artistic interests vary, he seeks ways of conveying the simultaneity of beauty and dread that characterizes our times. Suleiman’s music has been performed at numerous festivals, including the Summer Institute for Contemporary Performance Practice in Boston, Massachusetts; June in Buffalo in New York; and the NANOworks Opera Workshop in Atlanta, Georgia; and he has collaborated with numerous ensembles. Recent projects include the opera The School for Girls Who Lost Everything in the Fire (in progress) with writer Cristina Fríes, a piano concerto exploring the apocalypse, and a work for socially-distanced soprano and chamber ensemble that contemplates collective feelings of isolation. Suleiman completed his Ph.D. at the University of California, Davis, where he wrote his dissertation on Unsuk Chin’s Cello Concerto through the lens of dreams and performance. He is currently an assistant professor at Berklee College of Music and has held teaching positions at the Sacramento State School of Music and UC Davis. He currently resides in Boston with his partner and several furry animals.

Bernstein - Serenade, after Plato's “Symposium”
David Bernat, solo violin
Winner of the 2026 LCO Young Artist Competition

Despite its title, Bernstein’s “Serenade is not a traditional serenade but a violin concerto in all but name. Written in 1954 for violinist Isaac Stern, the work draws inspiration from “Symposium,” Plato’s philosophical dialogue on the nature of love. Each movement reflects the ideas of different speakers in the text, tracing a journey from playful attraction and earthly desire to deeper forms of love and wisdom. Rather than attempting to narrate the dialogue, Bernstein captures its spirit through a dazzling variety of musical styles. Lyrical passages, jazzy rhythms, and energetic dances coexist with moments of profound introspection. The violin serves as both narrator and participant, engaging in a lively conversation with the orchestra. The Serenade combines intellectual depth with irresistible vitality, revealing the composer’s unique ability to unite classical tradition, modernist language, and American musical energy.

Recognized for his deeply personal approach to music and ability to connect with a wide range of audiences, violinist David Bernat leads a multifaceted career as a performer, educator, and artistic director. David has appeared as a soloist with the Brookline Symphony, Fort Dodge Symphony, and Waterloo Cedar Falls Symphony and given recitals throughout the United States, Europe, and China. A sought-after chamber musician, David was appointed violinist of the Formosa String Quartet who serve as ensemble in residence at the University of Houston Moores School of Music and the National Youth Orchestra of Canada. Recent engagements include performances at Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, Tanglewood with the New Fromm Players, Marlboro Music Festival, Lake Champlain Chamber Music Festival and Red Barn Chamber Music in Iowa City, and radio appearances on the BBC Radio 3 program “In Tune” and WQXR’s Greene Space. He has collaborated with the Frisson Ensemble and Chameleon Arts Ensemble, and has been a participant in the Bowdoin International Music Festival and Moritzburg Festival Academy (continue reading).

Beethoven - Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92
Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony is a celebration of movement, energy, and the joy of music itself. Premiered in 1813, it was an immediate success, and has remained one of the composer’s most beloved orchestral works. Rather than telling a story, the symphony seems driven by rhythm itself. Richard Wagner famously called it the “apotheosis of the dance,” a description that still resonates today. From the noble introduction of the first movement, the music quickly bursts into energetic motion. The famous second movement offers a striking contrast, unfolding as a solemn procession of haunting beauty. The scherzo sparkles with playful vitality, while the finale drives forward with almost unstoppable force, building to one of the most thrilling conclusions in the symphonic repertoire.

This concert is part of Middlesex Community College’s “A World of Music” Concert Series