Landmarks Orchestra's logo that reads: "Boston Landmarks Orchestra" surrounded by a deep purple rectangle. Clockwise, there are other squares with different colors and abstract figures in white, including an orange square with a violin player, a brown square with a conductor with a baton, a red square with a narrator reading from a book, a yellow square with a flute player, a gray square with two figures applauding, and a green square with a dancer.

A Concert for the New Year

Friday, January 3rd, 2024
7:00PM – Chelsea High School

Saturday, January 4th, 2024
4:00PM – The Ray & Joan Kroc Center

Sunday, January 5th, 2024
3:00PM – Twelfth Baptist Church

Table of Contents

Ode for the New Year

Boston Landmarks Orchestra
Christopher Wilkins, conductor
Bethlehem Kelley, violin
Maxwell Fairman, violin
David Coleman, piano

The Shepherd King Overture Wolfgang Amadè Mozart
(1756-91)
Amahl and the Night Visitors: Shepherds’ Dance Gian Carlo Menotti
(1911-2007)
Christmas in the Western World William Grant Still
(1895-1978)
  Los Reyes Magos (Puerto Rico)
Sing! Shout! Tell the Story! (in the style of an African American Spiritual)
Souvenir de Porto Rico (Marche de Gibaros) Louis Moreau Gottschalk
(1829-69)
arranged David Kempers
Gospel Christmas Medley for Solo Piano David Coleman
(b. 1971)

David Coleman, piano

Concerto for Two Violins in D minor BWV 1043 Johann Sebastian Bach
(1685-1750)

Vivace

Bethlehem Kelley, violin
Maxwell Fairman, violin

The Lark Ascending Ralph Vaughan Williams
(1872-1958)

Bethlehem Kelley, violin

L’Arlésienne Suite (excerpts) Georges Bizet
(1838-75)
Prélude
Intermezzo
Farandole

Run Time

The total run time of this concert is approximately an hour and ten minutes, with no intermission.

Boston Landmarks Orchestra

Boston Landmarks Orchestra LogoBoston Landmarks Orchestra builds community through great music. Landmarks produces free concerts and musical events across the greater Boston area. Increasing access to music for everyone, and promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion are at the core of all its programming. Between 2018 and 2023, 70% of the repertoire Landmarks performed was written by composers of color or women. The orchestra intentionally promotes artists and targets audiences that have been historically excluded from orchestral music. Landmarks was founded in 2001 and began its signature summer concert series at the DCR Hatch Memorial in 2007. The orchestra also performs community concerts at local venues in neighborhoods such as Roxbury, Dorchester, and Jamaica Plain.

Headshot of Christopher Wilkins. He is smiling, wearing a gray and light blue shirt.CHRISTOPHER WILKINS was appointed Music Director of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra in the spring of 2011. Since then, he has expanded the orchestra’s mission of making great music accessible to the whole community. He has also helped develop the orchestra’s Breaking Down Barriers initiative, making accessibility a priority in all aspects of the orchestra’s activities.

Mr. Wilkins also serves as Music Director of the Akron Symphony. As a guest conductor, Mr. Wilkins has appeared with many of the leading orchestras of the United States, including those of Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco. Previously, Mr. Wilkins served as Music Director of the Orlando Philharmonic, the San Antonio Symphony, and the Colorado Springs Symphony.

He has served as associate conductor of the Utah Symphony, assisting Joseph Silverstein; assistant conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra under Christoph von Dohnányi; conducting assistant with the Oregon Symphony under James DePreist; and was a conducting fellow at Tanglewood. He was winner of the Seaver/NEA Award in 1992.

Born in Boston, Mr. Wilkins earned his bachelor’s degree from Harvard College in 1978. He received his master of music degree at Yale University in 1981, and in 1979 attended the Hochschule der Künste in West Berlin as a recipient of the John Knowles Paine traveling fellowship. As an oboist, he performed with many ensembles in the Boston area, including the Berkshire Music Center Orchestra at Tanglewood, and the Boston Philharmonic under Benjamin Zander.

Violin I

Gregory Vitale, Concertmaster

Christine Vitale

Colin Davis

Rose Drucker

 

Violin II

Paula Oakes, Principal

Stacey Alden

Robert Curtis

 

Viola

Kenneth Stalberg, Principal

Abigail Cross

 

Cello

Raffi Popper-Keizer, Acting Principal

Javier Caballero

 

Bass

Robert Lynam, Principal

 

Flute/Piccolo

Lisa Hennessy, Principal

Oboe

Benjamin Fox, Acting Principal

Alessandro Cirafici

 

Clarinet/Alto Saxophone

Rane Moore, Principal

 

Bassoon

Lecolion Washington, Acting Principal

 

Horn

Kevin Owen, Principal

Whitacre Hill

 

Trumpet

Dana Oakes, Principal

 

Percussion

Robert Schulz, Principal

 

Piano

David Coleman

 

Personnel Manager 

Christopher Ruigomez

Guest Artists

Headshot of Bethlehem KelleyBethlehem Kelley is an accomplished Ethiopian American violinist who hails from Lenexa, Kansas, and is currently studying with Danielle Belen in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She took 3rd prize in the 2024 Sphinx Competition and won first prize in the Kansas City Symphony Young Artist Competition! Betti has soloed with the Sphinx Honors Orchestra, Midwest Chamber Ensemble, and more. A seasoned chamber musician, she’s also received awards with her Mia String Quartet and performed in prestigious masterclasses.

 

Headshot of Maxwell FairmanMaxwell Fairman is a 20-year-old violinist involved in several arts programs at the local, state, and national levels. A devoted chamber musician, Maxwell Fairman made his White House debut in 2016 at age 12 as part of the string quartet The Perfect Fourth. The Perfect Fourth performed alongside the renowned duo Black Violin as well. Maxwell performed at Stern Auditorium in Carnegie Hall in 2017 as a part of the Peraza Music Workshop Ensemble. A leader, he was a concertmaster in 2024 for the NEC Philharmonia under Stefan Asbury, the NEC Symphony under Hugh Wolff, and the Chautauqua Music Festival Orchestra under Timothy Muffitt.

Maxwell Fairman made his solo debut at age 13 with the Cincinnati Philharmonic Orchestra. He won first place in the NAACP’S National ACT-SO competition in 2019. Maxwell was a semi-finalist in the national 2022 Sphinx Competition Junior Division and the 2022 Cooper International Violin Competition. As the first-place winner of the 2021-2022 CSYO Philharmonic Concerto Competition, he performed the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and CSYO under John Morris Russell.  He performed William Grant Still’s Summerland with Peter Dugan on show 407 of NPR’s From the Top. He has won several other local, regional, and state competitions.

Maxwell Fairman began playing the violin at age 4 and currently studies with Donald Weilerstein at New England Conservatory on a full-tuition merit scholarship funded by the Starling Foundation. Before, he studied with Almita Vamos, Davis King, and Marion Peraza. He has enhanced his studies at summer camps including Center Stage Strings, Meadowmount, and Chautauqua. Maxwell is also a composer, and he has had works premiered by Boston Landmarks Orchestra and Castle of Our Skins. In his free time, Maxwell enjoys video games, card games, and hanging out with friends.

David Coleman has his arms rested on a piano. He is looking at the camera.David Freeman Coleman is a Boston-based composer, educator, music director, and speaker specializing in multiple genres of music – Classical, Gospel, Choral, Pop, R&B, Hip-Hop, and Musical Theater – as well as leadership efforts in DEI work at the academic and artistic institutions he works with.

Currently an Associate Professor of Africana Studies at Berklee College of Music, and formerly an Associate Professor of Theater at Boston Conservatory at Berklee, Coleman is a Lecturer of Music at Tufts University, the Director of 225-voice Tufts Gospel Choir, and the Minister of Music at Greater Framingham Community Church, Coleman is sought after as a musician and as a teacher in several different spaces which allows him to be a bridge between diverse communities and an ambassador for the arts.

A graduate of Boston University College of Fine Arts and Tufts University he has assembled and directed choirs for Mariah Carey, Ryan Gosling, Bobby McFerrin, Patti Labelle, and Phish.  He has performed in dozens of schools, churches, prisons and shelters as well as Fenway Park, Carnegie Hall, the Vatican, and the White House.

As a composer,  songwriter, and producer, he has recorded 10 CD’s of his original work, which is featured on iTunes, Spotify, and Amazon.  He is a four-time nominee and the 2023 recipient of the Eliot Norton Award for Outstanding Music Direction.  He is the 2013 recipient of two New England Urban Music Awards.  In 2021, he was a featured artist with the Boston Pops, both as a soloist and as a co-host with Keith Lockhart, engaging in discussions of race, cultural appropriation, and the significance of Jazz music.  He has been commissioned to compose pieces for the Boston Pops Orchestra and the Boston Symphony Chorus, including the 2021 Holiday at Pops feature, “The Good News Voyage.”

Ambassador Program

Started in 2022, the Ambassador Program aims to seasonally employ enthusiastic, music-loving folks from a variety of backgrounds, representing the diversity of Boston’s neighborhoods. With 54% of our Ambassadors speaking more than one language—including Spanish, Portuguese, and French—they help spread the word of Boston Landmarks Orchestra to a vast number of Boston communities, including Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, East Boston and more. From promoting our concerts in their own neighborhoods, to helping patrons both new and familiar navigate the Esplanade, our Ambassadors are here to engage as many people as possible, promoting Boston Landmarks Orchestra’s mission of building community through great music.

THANK YOU
to our many donors and supporters. 

Click here for current list of donors 

Special thanks to Directors, Advisors, Musicians and Staff who make our work possible.

Click here for a list of Board Members

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