For winter and spring concerts at my schools, we have a combined orchestra, band, and choir concert that ideally lasts about an hour. The orchestra portion tends to run about 25 minutes total, so a few pieces performed by the first-year orchestra, a few pieces by the second-year orchestra, and then one or two combined pieces rounds out the orchestra portion. I meet with my students once a week for 30 minutes during recess for full orchestra and 30 minutes once a week during the school day for small group learning, so these pieces are representative of what students can comfortably have concert-ready.
Here is what my students performed last year at these concerts:
Winter Concert
Beginners:- Bile 'em Cabbage Down (students plucked an open string harmony part while I played the melody on the violin)
- Slavonic Folk Song (pizz. open string harmony, then pizz. melody, then arco melody/harmony together)
- Serenata by Dale Brubaker (all open strings, arco)
2nd Year Students:
- Skaters' Waltz by Émile Waldteufel, arr. Richard Meyer (in preparation for the next month's district-wide String Fest)
- Sword Dance by Thoinot Arbeau, arr. Bob Phillips
Combined Orchestras:
- Blueberry Jam by Bonnie Greene (in preparation for the next month's district-wide String Fest)
- Jingle Bells by James Pierpont (my arrangement)
Spring Concert
Beginners:- Ode to Joy (my arrangement)
- It's the Blues Man! (from their Orchestra Expressions book, complete with student soloists improvising the rhythms during their 4-measure solo)
- Student compositions (one four-measure composition per instrument)
- St. Lawrence Overture by Elliot Del Borgo (their first "real" full orchestra piece with independent parts)
2nd Year Students:
- Spring by Antonio Vivaldi, arr. Richard Meyer
- Student compositions (two eight-measure compositions--one for upper strings and one for lower strings)
- Fiddles on Fire by Mark Williams
Combined Orchestras:
- The Lion Sleeps Tonight (arr. Bob Cerulli)
This general format has been working well--in December, I like to start with something that's pizzicato open strings to show where the beginners started at the beginning of the year (and because students would be really comfortable performing that) and work up to something that's arco with D string notes. And the 2nd year students tend to play fewer pieces (about two big pieces alone) because theirs are longer in length. If we do only one combined piece at the end, 2nd year students may play three pieces alone; if we do two combined pieces, 2nd year students generally play two pieces alone.
Here are some of the pieces my students have performed for past winter and spring concerts listed in no particular order (student compositions are on every concert too):
Winter Concert
Beginners:
Pizzicato open strings (one piece)
- Les Toreadors (from Orchestra Expressions)
- Three Point Shot (from Orchestra Expressions)
- Bile 'em Cabbage Down (from Orchestra Expressions supplement)
Arco open strings (one piece)
- Serenata by Dale Brubaker (a winter concert tradition!)
Second Year Students:
A round or something pretty simple (one or two pieces--some years I don't do one of these on the concerts and choose two full orchestra pieces instead)
- Hallelujah by William Boyce (easy round in D Major)
- Brudenell Waltz by David R. Bellwood
- I Got Rhythm by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin, arr. Michael Story
- Skaters' Waltz by Émile Waldteufel, arr. Richard Meyer
- Sword Dance by Thoinot Arbeau, arr. Bob Phillips
- Linus and Lucy by Vince Guaraldi (my arrangement that I got permission from the copyright holder to write--sorry, can't share)
- Appalachian Hymn by Soon Hee Newbold
- Hey Fiddle Fiddle! by Brian Balmages
- Les Toreadors by Georges Bizet (my arrangement)
- Blue Danube by Johann Strauss II (my arrangement)
- Ukrainian Bell Carol by Mykola Leontovich, arr. Sandra Dackow
Combined Pieces:
We always end with Jingle Bells! If we do a second combined piece on this concert, it would be a String Fest piece
- Star of the County Down (melody for 2nd year students; harmony for beginners)
- Variations on a Sea Shanty (my arrangement)
- Linus and Lucy by Vince Guaraldi (my arrangement that I got permission from the copyright holder to write--sorry, can't share)
- Jingle Bells (my arrangement)
Spring Concert
Beginners:Very simple full orchestra piece or a piece from the book
- New World Symphony Theme by Antonín Dvořák, arr. Michael Allen
- Ode to Joy by Ludwig van Beethoven (my arrangement)
- A Traveler's Song (from Orchestra Expressions--played Andante, then Allegro)
Piece from book with student soloists improvising their own rhythms (they play a 4-measure solo, deciding which quarter notes to change to pairs of eighth notes). We play a total of four times--first and last times with everyone playing the melody, the second and third times with soloists to include 6 soloists total.
- It's the Blues Man! (from Orchestra Expressions)
"Real" full orchestra piece
- Medieval Kings by Soon Hee Newbold
- St. Lawrence Overture by Elliot Del Borgo
- First Scale March by Mark Williams
- Royal Promenade by Don Brubaker
Second Year Orchestra:
Two or three full orchestra pieces, possibly one brought back from January's String Fest
- Dragon Dance by Michael Story
- Slavonic Dance No. 1 by Antonín Dvořák, arr. Michael Story
- Jupiter by Gustav Holst (my arrangement)
- Anasazi by John Edmondson
- Fiddles on Fire by Mark Williams
- Honor and Glory by Soon Hee Newbold
- Celtica by Brian Balmages (when I have an advanced violinist who can handle the solo part)
- Rite at Stonehenge by Elliot Del Borgo
Or something a little different
- The Blue Balloon from The Blue Book of Violin Tunes by Bonnie Greene (learned by ear)
Combined Orchestras:
- The Lion Sleeps Tonight by George David Weiss, Hugo Peretti, Luigi Creatore, and Solomon Linda, arr. Bob Cerulli
- Spring by Antonio Vivaldi, arr. Richard Meyer
- Sailors' Song by Mark Williams
- Slavonic Dance by Antonín Dvořák, arr. Richard Meyer
- William Tell Overture by Gioachino Rossini (my arrangement)
- We Will Rock You by Brian May, arr. Paul Lavender
For a more in-depth look at my winter concerts including logistics and sample speaking parts, please see this post :)
Which pieces do you like to program for a beginning orchestra concert? Which pieces should I consider for future concerts?
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