The Greater Twin Cities Youth Symphonies (GTCYS) is a group of youth orchestras in the Twin Cities in Minnesota. Founded in 1972, GTCYS has served over 16,000 musicians and put on more than 500 concerts. The top orchestra has also traveled on 12 national and international tours.[1] GTCYS currently features 10 orchestras for young musicians any age through high school.
Greater Twin Cities Youth Symphonies | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Twin Cities, Minnesota, USA |
GTCYS is a youth orchestra program based in the Greater Twin Cities metro that draws over 700 students from eastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin. Its artistic director is Mark Russell Smith, who also conducts the top orchestra, Symphony. History: Founded in 1972.
In 2011, GTCYS and the SPCO formed a strategic partnership to serve the community through music and build classical music audiences.
There are ten school-year orchestras ranging beginning to pre-professional levels. All of the orchestras require an audition to match students with an orchestra that meets their abilities. Auditions are held in the spring prior to the following school-year. Auditions for limited openings in the second semester are open in the winter.
The orchestras, in order of beginning to advanced, are:
Philharmonia East and Philharmonia West.
Sinfonia East and Sinfonia West.
Concertino East and Concertino West.
Camerata
Concert Orchestra
Philharmonic
Symphony
Concerts have been performed at notable venues in the Twin Cities such as Orchestra Hall, Ted Mann Concert Hall, and the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts. GTCYS orchestras have also performed around the world, in such venues as the Sydney Opera House, and the Krzysztof Penderecki European Centre for Music in Poland. Symphony, the flagship orchestra, traveled to Spain during the summer of 2014 by invitation to the Granada International Festival of Music and Dance. In 2016, Symphony travelled to Argentina with major concerts in Buenos Aires, Rosario, and Santa Fe. In 2018, Symphony travelled to Germany, Poland, and Hungary with major concerts in Wrocław, Kraków, the Krzysztof Penderecki European Centre for Music, and Budapest. The orchestra also had the opportunity to attend a concert by the Berlin Philharmonic, participate in a workshop with Berlin Philharmonic cellist Stephan Koncz while in Germany, and visit Auschwitz. In June 2022, Symphony traveled to Southern Italy, postponed from June 2020 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.