Manchester Symphony Orchestra Performs Concert Sunday

March 11, 2021 at 2:05 p.m.

By Staff Report-

NORTH MANCHESTER – As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, the Manchester Symphony Orchestra has found creative solutions to stage concerts.

Its third performance of the season, “Beethoven’s Belated Birthday Bash,” is at 3 p.m. Sunday in Cordier Auditorium on the North Manchester campus of Manchester University.

 General admission is $15. It is free for Manchester students, faculty and staff, and anyone younger than 18. Masks and social distancing are required.

 The orchestra presented two strings-only concerts earlier in the season, which meant fewer musicians were onstage, and that allowed for social distancing. Wind instruments pose additional challenges because players expel air to produce notes and keyholes can leak air.

 This spring semester, the symphony received a grant of about $12,000 from the state of Indiana that made it possible to bring back the brass, woodwind and percussion sections for the final two concerts of the season.

 The money was used to buy special masks for all wind players, bell covers for the brass instruments, and instrument bags for woodwinds that are specifically designed to minimize the spread of any virus-laden aerosols that could be produced while the instruments are in use.

 “Being able to use these funds to bring our full orchestra back together really is a triumph for the arts against COVID-19,” said MU Professor Debra Lynn, symphony conductor.

 The masks, bell covers and bags have not come without issues. Kathy Davis, associate professor of chemistry at MU and principal flutist, says she has struggled a bit with the flute bag and trapezoid-shaped mask.

 “The bag over the flute causes extra clumsiness, and I am no longer able to put my flute down fully during rests where I normally would. The mask also keeps collapsing against my face, making it difficult to play at times,” she said. “However, ultimately I am so happy to be playing again that all of the challenges are small in comparison.”

 Luckily, Plexiglass partitions are coming to the rescue. The university event technology director came up with a way to enclose each woodwind and brass player to limit the spread of aerosols that might carry the COVID-19 virus.

 “The bags pose a lot of problems for bassoon players, like getting caught on wires, and the Plexiglass barriers are so much nicer to play in,” said Kendall Brown, a junior at MU who plays the bassoon. One of the newest members of the symphony, Brown is from Tecumseh, Mich. He said it is quite difficult to hear well with the barriers, “so it is a challenge we have to overcome.”

 The Sunday concert will include two works by Ludwig van Beethoven, a nod to the concert in his honor that was shut down by COVID late last year. The belated 250th birthday bash features a composition by Korngold, “Theme and Variations,” and the “Bacchanale” dance from Saint-Saëns’s opera, “Samson and Dalilah.”

 This is Lynn’s first season as symphony conductor. After 12 years, Assistant Professor Scott Humphries, director of bands and music education, passed the baton to Lynn while he concentrated on establishing the Spartan Pride Marching Band at MU. With Lynn on sabbatical in the fall, MU music instructor Robert Lynn conducted the first two performances of the season.



NORTH MANCHESTER – As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, the Manchester Symphony Orchestra has found creative solutions to stage concerts.

Its third performance of the season, “Beethoven’s Belated Birthday Bash,” is at 3 p.m. Sunday in Cordier Auditorium on the North Manchester campus of Manchester University.

 General admission is $15. It is free for Manchester students, faculty and staff, and anyone younger than 18. Masks and social distancing are required.

 The orchestra presented two strings-only concerts earlier in the season, which meant fewer musicians were onstage, and that allowed for social distancing. Wind instruments pose additional challenges because players expel air to produce notes and keyholes can leak air.

 This spring semester, the symphony received a grant of about $12,000 from the state of Indiana that made it possible to bring back the brass, woodwind and percussion sections for the final two concerts of the season.

 The money was used to buy special masks for all wind players, bell covers for the brass instruments, and instrument bags for woodwinds that are specifically designed to minimize the spread of any virus-laden aerosols that could be produced while the instruments are in use.

 “Being able to use these funds to bring our full orchestra back together really is a triumph for the arts against COVID-19,” said MU Professor Debra Lynn, symphony conductor.

 The masks, bell covers and bags have not come without issues. Kathy Davis, associate professor of chemistry at MU and principal flutist, says she has struggled a bit with the flute bag and trapezoid-shaped mask.

 “The bag over the flute causes extra clumsiness, and I am no longer able to put my flute down fully during rests where I normally would. The mask also keeps collapsing against my face, making it difficult to play at times,” she said. “However, ultimately I am so happy to be playing again that all of the challenges are small in comparison.”

 Luckily, Plexiglass partitions are coming to the rescue. The university event technology director came up with a way to enclose each woodwind and brass player to limit the spread of aerosols that might carry the COVID-19 virus.

 “The bags pose a lot of problems for bassoon players, like getting caught on wires, and the Plexiglass barriers are so much nicer to play in,” said Kendall Brown, a junior at MU who plays the bassoon. One of the newest members of the symphony, Brown is from Tecumseh, Mich. He said it is quite difficult to hear well with the barriers, “so it is a challenge we have to overcome.”

 The Sunday concert will include two works by Ludwig van Beethoven, a nod to the concert in his honor that was shut down by COVID late last year. The belated 250th birthday bash features a composition by Korngold, “Theme and Variations,” and the “Bacchanale” dance from Saint-Saëns’s opera, “Samson and Dalilah.”

 This is Lynn’s first season as symphony conductor. After 12 years, Assistant Professor Scott Humphries, director of bands and music education, passed the baton to Lynn while he concentrated on establishing the Spartan Pride Marching Band at MU. With Lynn on sabbatical in the fall, MU music instructor Robert Lynn conducted the first two performances of the season.



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