Symphony for a Broken Orchestra: World Premiere
There are over 1,000 musical instruments owned by the School District of Philadelphia that cannot be played because they are broken and there is no available budget to fix them. Symphony for a Broken Orchestra is a city-wide effort initiated by Temple Contemporary in partnership with the Curtis Institute of Music, the School District of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Boyer College of Music and Dance, and numerous professional/amateur musicians throughout the city. Together, these hundreds of musicians will perform a composition that is written specifically for the sounds these instruments can only make in their broken state. This once in a lifetime arrangement is being written by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Lang to unite generations of Philadelphia musicians and audiences in support of music education for our public schools.
Following the performance, Temple Contemporary, in collaboration with instrument repair professionals throughout the region, will repair all of the fixable instruments and return them back to the public schools they came from in the Fall of 2018. Instrument repair kits will also be installed in every public school offering instrumental music classes, allowing any minor repairs to be fixed in the future.
For more information please visit: http://symphonyforabrokenorchestra.org/
Major support for Symphony for a Broken Orchestra is provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, with additional support from the Barra Foundation. Temple Contemporary is part of Tyler School of Art at Temple University.