Pacific Symphony to Stream Concert to Mark Anniversary of George Floyd's Death

The program will be available for free streaming on the orchestra's YouTube and Facebook channels through June 23.

Pedestrians carry posters depicting George Floyd during a Juneteenth protest march on June 19, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

The Pacific Symphony will stream a free concert Tuesday in tribute to George Floyd, marking the one-year anniversary of his death at the hands of Minneapolis police.

The Pacific Symphony, in partnership with the Fresno Philharmonic, Monterey Symphony and the San Jose Chamber Orchestra, commissioned Emmy Award-winning composer John Christopher Wineglass to write "Alone Together," a piece that addresses social issues and systemic racial disparities.

Music Director Carl St.Clair will conduct the Pacific Symphony in the world premiere online at 7 p.m. Tuesday. The program will be available for free streaming on the orchestra's YouTube and Facebook channels through June 23.

Audiences will have another opportunity to hear the work next Thursday, paired with Copland's "Fanfare for the Common Man," as part of Pacific Symphony's Thursdays @ 7 online series.

"Alone Together" runs about nine minutes and features strings and percussion. In the composer's note on the musical score, Wineglass relays a recent incident in which two laughing youths drove by and used a bullhorn to yell the "N-word" at him while he was walking beachside in central California.

"A longing for common ground but finding no footing... no continuity. Abrupt silences... alone... many intubated. No foundation... lost in a midst of unbelief of what I was witnessing with my very own eyes in this land of 'equality," he wrote.

"The universe repeatedly brings this up... again... and again before our very own eyes — until we learn. But... I still believe in and have hope... A Ray of Hope... a hope deferred at the moment but a hope nonetheless. A hope that in this struggle together — we will come out TOGETHER somehow and in some way — stronger, more wise and vigilant."

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For more information on the concert, visit the Pacific Symphony's website.

The Pacific Symphony's home stage is the Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall, part of the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa.

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