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Music Oct. 2-5: Homecoming concerts and historical keyboards

Several Cornell Department of Music ensembles present fall concerts as part of Homecoming weekend. 

The annual takes place Friday, Oct. 3 at 7 p.m. in Bailey Hall. Conducted by , 鈥淭here and back again鈥 features music that tells of journeys and returns, finishing with a few Cornell songs and choir favorites. Attendees of the concert can head over to the laser light show at Schoellkopf afterwards. Parents and families are welcome. Tickets are $3 and available at . 

Members of a large choir, wearing black performance outfits, pose as a group on the steps of a building with stone columns
Casey Martin Cornell Glee Club and Chorus

Then on Sunday, Oct. 5 at 3 p.m. in Bailey Hall, the Cornell Symphony Orchestra and Chamber Orchestra perform 鈥淢usic in Motion,鈥 a program of music inspired by dance and dramatic motion. The Cornell Chamber Orchestra opens with Norman Dello Joio鈥檚 vibrant Choreography, brought to life through a special collaboration with dancers from the Department of Performing and Media Arts, choreographed by . Mozart鈥檚 elegant and spirited Symphony No. 29 in A Major follows. 

After intermission, the Cornell Symphony Orchestra performs Beethoven鈥檚 triumphant Fidelio Overture and Stravinsky鈥檚 dazzling 1919 suite from The Firebird, concluding on a note of Big Red pride with a medley of Cornell songs to send you out singing. Free and open to the public with no tickets required.

Additionally, there are two opportunities to hear instruments from the collection of the . On Thursday, Oct. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in Barnes Hall, fortepianist Matthew Bengtson and cellist John Haines-Eitzen perform an evening of music by Beethoven. The program includes two sets of variations on themes from Mozart鈥檚 opera The Magic Flute and the Sonata in D Major, Op. 102, No. 2. The concert will be performed on gut strings and historical keyboards. Free and open to the public with no tickets required.

Matt Bengtson and John Haines-Eitzen
Provided Matt Bengtson and John Haines-Eitzen

The second iteration in the new series at the Johnson Museum of Art takes place in the Robinson Lecture Hall on Friday, Oct. 3 at 5:15 p.m. In conjunction with the exhibition , the audience will travel back in time to 1830s Weimar and the eclectic home of German literary giant Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749鈥1832). Andrew Weislogel, Seymour R. Askin, Jr. 鈥47 Curator, Earlier European and American Art, will introduce the program, which combines a visual exploration of Goethe鈥檚 residence and collections, as seen through Geibel鈥檚 unique print series. 

, , and will perform selections of German Romantic music from the era. These will include songs set to Goethe鈥檚 poetry and piano works by Clara Wieck, who, as a young prodigy, performed for Goethe on the very type of piano depicted in Geibel鈥檚 prints. An instrument of this same kind, provided by the , will be featured in the performance鈥攅voking the soundscape that once filled Goethe鈥檚 Weimar home. All are encouraged to visit the exhibition (in the Schaenen Gallery, also on Floor 2L) prior to the program. The exhibition will also be open after the performance, during a public reception. Free and open to the public with no tickets required.

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Members of an orchestra playing on a stage
Casey Martin Cornell Symphony Orchestra