Performances
& Events

March
2026
23
3:30 pm

March 23, 2026
3:30 PM

Staff Moderator: Melissa Ngan
Featured Speakers: Dan Visconti , Jeff Scott

There is much more to securing a commission or building a successful consortium than simply writing a great piece of music. In this candid conversation, Melissa Ngan, President and CEO of American Composers Orchestra, will be joined by arts leader Dan Visconti of Visconti Arts and composer and performer Jeff Scott to explore the behind-the-scenes realities of commissioning. Together, they will unpack how artists, managers, and partner organizations collaborate to navigate contracts, fee negotiations, consortium structures, and the delicate balance of honoring the composer’s voice while meeting institutional priorities.

REGISTRATION LINK

March 23, 2026
3:30 PM

Staff Moderator: Melissa Ngan
Featured Speaker: Dan Visconti , Jeff Scott

REGISTRATION LINK

TICKETS & MORE INFO
March
2026
27
7:30 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Moni Jasmine Guo, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto: Radiant Vision

Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra

Powell Hall | St. Louis, MO


Program

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN, The Consecration of the House Overture

MONI JASMINE GUO, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

KEVIN PUTS, Concerto for Orchestra

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN, Piano Concerto No. 5, “Emperor”

Stéphane Denève, conductor

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn) was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Moni Jasmine Guo, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto: Radiant Vision

Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra

Powell Hall | St. Louis, MO

Powell Hall
St. Louis
,
Missouri
TICKETS & MORE INFO
March
2026
28
7:30 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Moni Jasmine Guo, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto: Radiant Vision

Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra

Powell Hall | St. Louis, MO


Program

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN, The Consecration of the House Overture

MONI JASMINE GUO, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

KEVIN PUTS, Concerto for Orchestra

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN, Piano Concerto No. 5, “Emperor”

Stéphane Denève, conductor

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn) was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Moni Jasmine Guo, the sound of where i came from (乡音 Xiāng Yīn)

Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto: Radiant Vision

Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra

Powell Hall | St. Louis, MO

Powell Hall
St. Louis
,
Missouri
TICKETS & MORE INFO
May
2026
16
2:00 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Karena Ingram, RAINN

Masterworks 7: Unbroken

Asheville Symphony

First Baptist Church of Asheville | Asheville, NC


Program

KARENA INGRAM, RAINN

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART, Piano Concerto No. 12

DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH, Symphony No. 10

Darko Butorac, conductor

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

RAINN was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Karena Ingram, RAINN

Masterworks 7: Unbroken

Asheville Symphony

First Baptist Church of Asheville | Asheville, NC

First Baptist Church of Asheville
Asheville
,
North Carolina
TICKETS & MORE INFO
May
2026
16
8:00 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Karena Ingram, RAINN

Masterworks 7: Unbroken

Asheville Symphony

First Baptist Church of Asheville | Asheville, NC


Program

KARENA INGRAM, RAINN

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART, Piano Concerto No. 12

DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH, Symphony No. 10

Darko Butorac, conductor

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

RAINN was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Karena Ingram, RAINN

Masterworks 7: Unbroken

Asheville Symphony

First Baptist Church of Asheville | Asheville, NC

First Baptist Church of Asheville
Asheville
,
North Carolina
TICKETS & MORE INFO
May
2026
30
2:00 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Brittany J. Green, TESTIFY!

Percussion & Rhythm with Andy Akiho

Oregon Symphony

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall | Portland, OR


Program

BRITTANY J. GREEN, TESTIFY!

ANDY AKIHO, Percussion Concerto

PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY, Symphony No. 4

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2024–25 season, ten composers have their works performed by fifteen orchestras across the U.S.

TESTIFY!
was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Brittany J. Green, TESTIFY!

Percussion & Rhythm with Andy Akiho

Oregon Symphony

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall | Portland, OR

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
Portland
,
Oregon
TICKETS & MORE INFO
May
2026
31
2:00 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Brittany J. Green, TESTIFY!

Percussion & Rhythm with Andy Akiho

Oregon Symphony

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall | Portland, OR


Program

BRITTANY J. GREEN, TESTIFY!

ANDY AKIHO, Percussion Concerto

PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY, Symphony No. 4

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

TESTIFY!
was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Brittany J. Green, TESTIFY!

Percussion & Rhythm with Andy Akiho

Oregon Symphony

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall | Portland, OR

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
Portland
,
Oregon
TICKETS & MORE INFO
June
2026
11
10:30 am

Jeffery Meyer, conductor

Featured Artists and Works:

Seare Farhat, shadows rising soundless as night

Gregory Kline, West of the Sun

Ty Bloomfield, FRAGRANCES OF SOMETHING SWEET

Coral Douglas, TERROR MANAGEMENT THEORY 

Kimberly Osberg, NIGHT LIGHTS 

Benjamin T Martin, Unfurling Dances

Mentor Composers:

TBD

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music
New York City
,
New York
TICKETS & MORE INFO
June
2026
11
1:30 pm

American Composers Orchestra

June 11, 2026

1:30 PM

DiMenna Center for Classical Music | New York, NY

Featured Artists and Works:

Malachi Brown

REGISTRATION LINK

American Composers Orchestra

June 11, 2026

1:30 PM

REGISTRATION LINK

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music
New York City
,
New York
TICKETS & MORE INFO
June
2026
12
7:30 pm

Jeffery Meyer, conductor

Featured Artists and Works:

Seare Farhat, shadows rising soundless as night

Gregory Kline, West of the Sun

Ty Bloomfield, FRAGRANCES OF SOMETHING SWEET

Coral Douglas, TERROR MANAGEMENT THEORY 

Kimberly Osberg, NIGHT LIGHTS 

Benjamin T Martin, Unfurling Dances

Mentor Composers:

TBD

The DiMenna Center for Classical Music
New York City
,
New York
TICKETS & MORE INFO
November
2026
7
7:30 pm

Virginia B. Toulmin Commission Concert

Melody Eötvös, Red Dirt | Silver Rain

Stanford Philharmonia
Bing Concert Hall | Stanford, CA

Paul Phillips, conductor

The Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program: American Composers Orchestra and League of American Orchestras have established two 30-orchestra consortiums, each supporting commissions by six women and nonbinary EarShot alumni. Each composer writes a 6–8 minute orchestral work and develops an educational or community-focused program presented in partnership with each orchestra. In the 2025–26 season, composers have their works performed by nineteen orchestras across the U.S.

Red Dirt | Silver Rain was commissioned by the League of American Orchestras with the generous support of the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation.

Bing Concert Hall
Stanford
,
California
TICKETS & MORE INFO

Dear Friends,Welcome to American Composer Orchestra’s first concert of the 2017-2018 season at Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall. ACO had an exciting kick-off to its season with a gala 40th Birthday concert last month celebrating the music of American composers past and the present, and now we are honored to be the first event in Carnegie Hall’s focus on this season’s Richard and Barbara Debs Composer’s Chair, Phillip Glass. He is one of our most iconic and cherished artistic voices, and ACO is proud to be able to count him among one of our long-time board members.Here is one of our favorite quotes by Philip (from his fascinating book Words Without Music): “For me music has always been about lineage. The past is reinvented and becomes the future. But the lineage is everything.” He has influenced a generation of emerging American composers including the two on our program tonight and with the idea of “response” connecting them further: Philip’s to Vivaldi, Bryce’s to Lutoslawski, and Pauchi’s to Philip. Lineage is everything, indeed.Tonight’s program includes a discussion at which Philip and Pauchi will discuss their working and creative relationship. ACO would like to thank the Rolex Institute and the Rolex Mentor Protégé Program for their support of Phillip’s and Pauchi’s work on this program.Phillip is an inspiration to us with the range of his artistic collaborations. Before multi-disciplinary was such a buzzword, he worked side-by-side with pioneering artists including director Robert Wilson, choreographer Twyla Tharp, poet Allen Ginsberg, and filmmaker Martin Scorsese. As ACO sets its sights on the next 40 years, our goal is to weave contemporary American orchestral music into fascinating and illuminating collaborations, exemplified by the ground-breaking path Philip has shown us.Artistic institutions should follow their artists, their imagination, and their vision. Having the word “composer” in our name is very deliberate and meaningful, for if we follow them, they will lead us, and our audiences, into the future.Have a great evening and thank you again for joining us!

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CARLOS BANDERA: Materia Prima (World premiere, ACO Underwood Commission Winner 2018)ELLEN REID: Floodplain (New York premiere, Commissioned by Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, American Composers Orchestra with the generous support of Linda and Stuart Nelson, and RTÉ National Symphony)CARLOS SIMON: Fate Now ConquersKAKI KING: Modern Yesterdays (World premiere of orchestrations by D. J. Sparr, ACO commission)www.americancomposers.org/events/modern-yesterdays

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Carnegie Hall co-presents Sanctuary with ACO, a concert that explores the places, company, and states of mind in which composers seek inviolable refuge. Lisa Bielawa’s Sanctuary, a concerto for violinist Jennifer Koh, is an extraordinary historical research project around this powerful word, documenting the rhetoric around founding American principles and every important struggle along the way to a more perfect union.  In Restless Oceans, Anna Clyne finds inspiration in a poem by Audra Lorde; the musicians raise their voices in song and use their feet to stand united in a defiant work that embraces the power of women.  Hannah Kendall’s alternately buoyant and serene Tuxedo: Vasco ‘de’ Gama takes its title from Jean-Michel Basquiat’s iconic collection of 16 diagrammatic block pieces. With a nod to the traditional African-American spiritual “Wade in the Water”, the work conjures both the majesty and elegance highlighted by the artist as well as her own reflective take on the history of globalization and multiculturalism ushered in by the famed Portuguese explorer.  Newly commissioned works by Dai Wei and Paula Matthusen complete this rich musical odyssey into the human soul that is both internal and external, local and international, abstract yet wholly tied to our everyday existence.

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inti figgis-vizueta: Seven Sides of Fire (World Premiere)Mark Adamo: Last Year: Concerto for Cello and String OrchestraYvette Janine Jackson: Hello Tomorrow! (World Premiere)Viet Cuong: re(new)al for chamber orchestra and percussion quartetwww.americancomposers.org/events/the-natural-order

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This evening American Composers Orchestra (ACO) is excited to present Where We Lost Our Shadows, a concert that threads its way through culture and time with three wholly original voices, reimagining the orchestra along the way. ACO first commissioned Du Yun six years ago, premiering her hypnotizing Slow Portraits, and since then she has continued to captivate audiences worldwide with works that defy traditional boundaries between theater, film, and music. Native New Yorker Morton Feldman and expatriate composer Gloria Coates, who has resided in Germany for many decades, are two true American mavericks of our era.In the spirit of bringing our audience and composers together, last season ACO launched its Commission Club, whose members take a deep dive into the creative process. Our first Commission Club composer was Ethan Iverson,who shared insights about writing his offbeat and jazz-tinged Concerto to Scale. This season, in conversation with Du Yun, audience members followed the creative arc of the work you’re hearing tonight, witnessing how she and her collaborators constructed an artistic narrative and brought it to the stage.We hope you’ll join us next season for our third Commission Club and our featured composer Mark Adamo, whose piece speaks to issues in the environment. His apocalyptic Last Year mourns four extreme landscapes,with the deep-voiced cello of virtuoso Jeffrey Ziegler as narrator. Next season in Zankel Hall, alongside Adamo’s work, ACO presents two more musical portraits of our natural world: the world premiere of Nina C. Young’s complete song cycle Out of whose womb came the ice, depicting Ernest Shackleton’s daring expedition to Antarctica, and the New York premiere of John Luther Adams’s mesmerizing Become River. ACO also focuses on New England—the “cradle” of American classical music—presenting the world premiere of a guitar concerto for dazzling virtuoso JIJI by Underwood Readings commissionee Hilary Purrington, the New York premiere of Matthew Aucoin’s Evidence, and an array of world-premiere arrangements of Ives songs by Purrington, Jonathan Bailey Holland, and Hannah Lash for mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton.In the meantime, we invite you to open your ears for tonight’s concert, and please join us afterwards in the lobby to celebrate Gloria Coates’s 80thbirthday and her enormous contribution to American music!

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A celebration of composers with roots in New England, ACO’s season opener includes the world premieres of Hilary Purrington’s Harp of Nerves featuring guitarist JIJI and orchestrations of Selected Songs by Charles Ives, arranged by Purrington, Hannah Lash, and Jonathan Bailey Holland, featuring mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton. The New York City premiere of Matthew Aucoin’s Evidence completes the program.

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Dear Friends,Welcome to American Composer Orchestra’s first post-pandemic concert at Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall. ACO had an exciting kickoff to its season with a Friends and Family composer gathering and our telematic tour-de-force New Canons. Tonight, we are honored to return to Carnegie Hall with Sanctuary, featuring two stellar artists—conductor Marin Alsop and violinist Jennifer Koh—whose tireless work on behalf of composers throughout the world has changed the face of music in our generation. The fact that Maestra Alsop performed with ACO decades ago makes this evening doubly special for both our musicians and audience. Sanctuary is a journey exploring the places, company, and states of mind in which composers seek inviolable refuge and inspiration. Throughout the two years of the pandemic, sanctuary has taken many forms for us all, as we have grappled with challenges both quotidien and metaphysical. For those of us who love and participate in the performing arts, the period has assured us that we will never again take for granted the kind of communal experience in which we partake this evening. Lisa Bielawa’s Sanctuary, written for Jennifer Koh, is an extraordinary historical research project around this powerful word, documenting the rhetoric around founding American principles and every important struggle throughout our history. In Restless Oceans, Anna Clyne finds inspiration in a poem by Audra Lorde; the musicians raise their voices in song and use their feet to stand united in a defiant work that embraces the power of women. Hannah Kendall’s alternately buoyant and serene Tuxedo: Vasco ‘de’ Gama takes its title from Jean-Michel Basquiat’s iconic collection of 16 diagrammatic block pieces. With a nod to the traditional African-American spiritual “Wade in the Water,” the work conjures both the majesty and elegance highlighted by the artist as well as her own reflective take on the history of globalization and multiculturalism ushered in by the famed Portuguese explorer. Dai Wei's commission Invisible Portals, her Underwood Readings commission, is a meditation on Shambhala, the legendary Tibetan realm of peace and prosperity. She describes the portals as a place in which "multicultural and multidimensional conversations interweave beyond time and space." And Paula Matthusen's newly commissioned Prophecy in Reverse considers whether the notion of sanctuary evokes a space, feeling, sound or something else entirely. The work is a collaboration with poet Danielle Vogel, whose work Sea Margin: a prophecy in reverse, punctuates the movements via projections. We at ACO are delighted to welcome you back to Carnegie Hall with this rich musical odyssey into the human soul that is both internal and external, local and international, abstract yet wholly tied to our everyday existence. With gratitude,Derek BermelArtistic DirectorMelissa NganPresident and CEO

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The Gathering: A Collective Sonic Ring Shout is a sonic quest rooted in the African and African American ritual of the Ring Shout. Woven together through a diverse array of multidisciplinary artists featuring new musical works for orchestra and choir, this evening-length event brings the ancestral tradition of the Ring Shout into a contemporary context, opening a space to collectively grieve, to awaken JOY as a source of LIBERATION, and to find LOVE as a form of resistance. Directed by National Black Theatre’s Executive Artistic Director, Jonathan McCrory, the program features Carlos Simon’s Amen!, Courtney Bryan’s Sanctum, and the New York premiere of Seven Last Words of the Unarmed by Joel Thompson. These works are in conversation with new commissions from Herb Alpert Award-winner Toshi Reagon, Tony Award-winner Jason Michael Webb, and Lelund Thompson created to honor our present needs for a collective space of remembrance. The performance is anchored by an 80-member orchestra and a 50-voice choir composed of singers, professional and amateur, from multiple African American churches and choral ensembles in New York.

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