• Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    GERSHWIN, RACHMANINOFF, & TRANE

    Winston-Salem Symphony
    Robert Young Saxophone
    Michelle Merrill Conductor

    Our season-opening weekend coincides with the centennial celebration of High Point native John Coltrane, who left an enduring legacy in the jazz idiom. Saxophonist Robert Young brings Coltrane’s influence to bear in a recent concerto by Guillaume Connesson. Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and Rachmaninoff’s fiery Symphonic Dances, two of the rare orchestral pieces that include saxophone, round out this program.

    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    GERSHWIN, RACHMANINOFF, & TRANE

    Winston-Salem Symphony
    Robert Young Saxophone
    Michelle Merrill Conductor

    Our season-opening weekend coincides with the centennial celebration of High Point native John Coltrane, who left an enduring legacy in the jazz idiom. Saxophonist Robert Young brings Coltrane’s influence to bear in a recent concerto by Guillaume Connesson. Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and Rachmaninoff’s fiery Symphonic Dances, two of the rare orchestral pieces that include saxophone, round out this program.

  • Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    VIOLINS OF HOPE

    In this program, we remember victims of the Holocaust in a deeply musical way: by performing on surviving instruments of the Holocaust, collectively known as the Violins of Hope, in music of Mendelssohn, Bernstein, John Williams, Jessie Montgomery, and others. Guest pianist Sara Davis Buechner also joins for UNCSA faculty composer Jared Miller’s poignant work Shattered Night in remembrance of the November anniversary of Kristallnacht.

    Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    VIOLINS OF HOPE

    In this program, we remember victims of the Holocaust in a deeply musical way: by performing on surviving instruments of the Holocaust, collectively known as the Violins of Hope, in music of Mendelssohn, Bernstein, John Williams, Jessie Montgomery, and others. Guest pianist Sara Davis Buechner also joins for UNCSA faculty composer Jared Miller’s poignant work Shattered Night in remembrance of the November anniversary of Kristallnacht.

    Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    CIRQUE DE LA SYMPHONIE

    The incredibly popular, high-flying acrobats, jugglers, and contortionists of Cirque de la Symphonie join to ring in the holiday season. with two shows to choose from on Thanksgiving weekend, you can bring the whole family!

    Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    CIRQUE DE LA SYMPHONIE

    The incredibly popular, high-flying acrobats, jugglers, and contortionists of Cirque de la Symphonie join to ring in the holiday season. with two shows to choose from on Thanksgiving weekend, you can bring the whole family!

  • Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    HANDEL’S MESSIAH

    This stunning Christmastime tradition blends your Symphony and Chorus with fantastic soloists for one of music's most cherished works.

  • Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    BRAHMS 1

    Hear two Winston-Salem Symphony premieres on one concert! Enjoy the Symphony’s first-ever performance of the overture to Beethoven’s only ballet, Creatures of Prometheus, plus the vibrant violinist Yevgeny Kutik in the Second Violin Concerto of Philip Glass. Known for his mesmerizing “minimalist” sound, Glass’s music has a broad appeal among symphony audiences, opera lovers, and movie buffs. Brahms’ captivating First Symphony—which took Brahms over twenty years to write—balances the program.

    Titan
    Reynolds Auditorium 301 Hawthorne Rd. NW, Winston-Salem, NC
    $28 – $98

    BRAHMS 1

    Hear two Winston-Salem Symphony premieres on one concert! Enjoy the Symphony’s first-ever performance of the overture to Beethoven’s only ballet, Creatures of Prometheus, plus the vibrant violinist Yevgeny Kutik in the Second Violin Concerto of Philip Glass. Known for his mesmerizing “minimalist” sound, Glass’s music has a broad appeal among symphony audiences, opera lovers, and movie buffs. Brahms’ captivating First Symphony—which took Brahms over twenty years to write—balances the program.