The horn, the tree, the dog and the others

The Almond Tree in Blossom, an oil on canvas painted in 1890 inspired by Japanese woodcut, was one of Van Gogh's favorites and is also the favorite of Marisol López, cornist at Filarmed. And the flowering branches against a blue sky are the objects that she admires most in this work of art. Like his neighbors in the San Javier neighborhood, a group of trees—which he can see right in front of his house—visited by woodpeckers that frequently drill their stems.

The cornista deeply loves nature, because it inspires her, especially the trees, which give her shade and oxygen. She says: “I am amazed by what I see in everyday life, I like to paint landscapes, take photos of clouds, of the dogs or cats that I find in my path, of the flowers.”

Marisol is a thoughtful woman, who expresses gratitude to her family, especially her mother, because she has always supported her in her career as a musician. Passionate about her instrument, her pets and especially about photography, she dreams of having a home for animals. He began his musical life with lyrical singing, with a few semesters in high school. He then went on to study the horn professionally, because his family, classmates and professors at the University told him that this instrument suited him well and he had the talent to play it.

She participated in the orchestra in 2009, as a guest musician, with Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 “Pathétique” and Grieg's Piano Concerto under the direction of the Russian maestro Guerassim Voronkov. In addition, he was part of other productions for large orchestra: Mahler, Strauss and Holst, “Composers who created large-format works, which require six cornists and even more in a row!”, expresses Marisol with emotion. That same year, with the Seresta philharmonic fusion concert, she debuted as a Filarmed staff musician.

The instrumentalist also loves her pets; the cat Tito and his dogs Lucas and Fruna. “I adopted Fruna in particular in Fredonia when I accompanied the orchestra on a tour of the southwest, it was love at first sight! Even my classmates encouraged me to adopt her. I received her with love and even with fear, because I didn't know how they were going to welcome her at home; “Some musicians nicknamed her the Filarmed mascot,” said the musician.

Marisol is one of the few women in Colombia who plays horn in a professional orchestra. She was assigned to it by pure coincidence when she was in the Medellín Music School Network at the age of 17. He liked it because it seemed like a strange instrument, its shape, its shine, because it was a different instrument.

“You can find music in everything, even in nature, in the singing of birds, the movement of trees, the sound of the wind, a river.”

About the instrument

The French horn or French horn is a metal wind instrument with a conical mouthpiece, very versatile, since its tessitura has a wide variety of musical notes since its cylinders allow it to produce various types of sounds that range from the lowest to the highest. .

2023 Programming

40 years to thank Medellín and the Valle de Aburrá for welcoming us trust and love. Thanks for helping us to transform with music.
Music transcends and takes us further, like an act of love that connects us with the spirit. The Philharmonic Orchestra from Medellin invites the entire city and country to enjoy the 2023 Season concerts to celebrate 40 years of optimism, of evolution, of beating in unison with the city.
CONCERTS

SEASON II 
(25 of February)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: David Merchán, viola

Tannhäuser Overture – R. Wagner​

Moon Serenade – Carlos Castro

Symphony No. 5 – PI Tchaikovsky

SEASON III – Concert of Anniversary (15 of April)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloists: Julieth Lozano, soprano

Ana Mora, mezzo-soprano

Tenor to be confirmed

Jacobo Ochoa, baritone

​Cecilia Espinosa Chamber Choir, Human Tones Choir and Medellín Polyphonic Studio.​

Overture to “The Marriage of Figaro”

– WA Mozart. Directed by maestro Alberto Correa

Symphony No. 9 “Choral” – L. van Beethoven

SEASON IV (April 22)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Matan Porat, piano (Israel)

Piano Concerto No. 1 – J. Brahms​

Symphony No. 10 – D. Shostakovich

SEASON V (June 3)

Director: Christian Vásquez (Venezuela)

Soloist: Milan Milisavljevic, viola (United States)

Muses and wheezing for orchestra – Pacho Flórez​
Sonata for the Grand'Viola – N. Paganini​
Romance for Viola – M. Bruch​
Symphony No. 4 – PI Tchaikovsky

SEASON VI (July 8)

With the Metropolitan Ballet of Medellín

Meditation, from the opera “Thais”

– J. Massenet​

Ballet suite from the opera “El Cid”

 – J. Massenet ​

From the opera Fedora – U. Giordano

Dance of the Hours, from the opera “La Gioconda” – A. Ponchielli ​

Suite from the ballet “Swan Lake” – PI Tchaikovsky

SEASON VII (5 of August)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Gilad Harel, clarinet (Israel)

​Traditional klezmer pieces for clarinet and orchestra.​

Clarinet Concerto – WA Mozart

Symphony No. 4 – R. Schumann

SEASON VIII (19 August)

Director: David Greilsammer

Together with the EAFIT Symphony Orchestra

Atmosphéres – G. Ligeti

Symphony No. 5 – G. Mahler

SEASON IX (16 September)

CARMINA BURANA

With Dangerous Crew

The cantata “Carmina Burana” by Carl Orff with urban style, performed by Filarmed and Crew Dangerous, with participation of city choirs.

SEASON X (October 14)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Ira Givol, cello (Israel)

“Abdelazer” Suite – H. Purcell ​

Cello Concerto in C major – FJ Haydn

Symphony No. 9 “The Great” – F. Schubert​

SEASON XI (November 25)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Laura Payome, clarinet

With the Metropolitan Ballet of Medellín

Clarinet Concerto No. 1 – CM von Weber

Symphony No. 8 – L.van Beethoven

SEASON XII (December 2) 

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloists: Eugenie Lefrebvre, soprano

Melodie Ruvio, mezzo-soprano

Vincent Lievre-Picard, tenor

Yannis Francois, bass

Polyphonic Study of Medellin
Cecilia Espinosa Chamber Choir

Human Tones Choir

The Messiah – GF Händel

With music life sounds brutal

With music life sounds BRUTAL.

It elevates, transforms and takes us to a higher state.
It is there when we need it most, no matter if we are sad or happy, there is always a perfect song for each moment.

There is music to relax, to dance until our feet hurt, to dedicate and others that make our hearts sing. There are songs to concentrate, and even to do cardio... of any kind 😏

The music is there waiting for us to play it to make us forget everything for a few minutes.

And if they ask us what music is, we may not know very well what to answer, but if they ask us what it makes us feel, we will say it by singing.

Because with Music life sounds BRUTAL.

 

This is a collaboration with Mattelsa to celebrate 40 years of Filarmed with a super cool look.

Price of all t-shirts: 79.000

2023 season tickets

We want you to join us to celebrate 40 years touching lives, that's why we want you close with our subscriptions. This modality helps our audience to purchase in advance a package of consumables that can be redeemed during the season.
They are flexible during 2023 season and they are ideal for each person to choose the best option among all the benefits that the orchestra has.
Number of tickets 9 6 3
Discount 25% 20% 15%
Front plate $540.000 $384.000 $204.000
Middle stall $371.250 $264.000 $140.250
Rear terrace and balcony $270.000 $192.000 $102.000
Fertilizers: 
Acquire your flexible passes at www.latiquetera.com discounts between 15% and 25% so you can enjoy this celebration season at the best price, 40 years touching lives. You can redeem the tickets directly at the ticket sales points before the concert for up to 3 tickets per event.
CONCERTS

SEASON II 
(25 of February)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: David Merchan, viola

Overture Tannhäuser – R. Wagner

Serenade of the moon –Carlos Castro

Symphony No. 5  – P.I. Tchaikovsky

SEASON III – Concert of Anniversary (15 of April)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloists: Julieth Lozano, soprano

Ana Mora, mezzo-soprano

Tenor to be confirmed

Jacobo Ochoa, baritone

Choir of camera Cecilia Espinosa, Choir Human tones and Study Polyphonic of Medellin.

Overture of the wedding of Figaro” 

– WA Mozart. Direct he Master Alberto Belt

Symphony No. 9 “Coral” – L. van Beethoven

SEASON IV (April 22)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Matan porat, piano (Israel)

piano concerto No. 1 – J. Brahms

Symphony No. 10 –D. Shostakovich

SEASON V (June 3)

Director: Christian Vasquez (Venezuela)

Soloist: Milan Milisavljevic, viola (USA)

Muses and wheezing for orchestra – Pacho Florez
Sonata for the Grand'Viola – N. Paganini
Romance for Viola – M. Bruch
Symphony No. 4 – P.I. Tchaikovsky

SEASON VI (July 8)

With the Metropolitan Ballet of Medellin

Meditation, from the opera “Thais” 

–J. Massenet

Ballet suite from the opera “El Cid”

 –J. Massenet 

From the opera Fedora – U. Giordano

Dance of the Hours, from the opera “The Gioconda” - TO. Ponchielli 

Suite from the ballet “The Lake of the swans” – P.I. Tchaikovsky

SEASON VII (5 of August)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Gilad Harel, clarinet (Israel)

Parts traditional klezmer for clarinet and orchestra.

concert for clarinet – W.A. Mozart

Symphony No. 5  – S. Prokofiev

SEASON VIII (19 August)

Director: David Greilsammer

Together with the Orchestra Symphony EAFIT​

Atmospheres – G. Ligeti​

Symphony No. 5 – G. Mahler

SEASON IX (16 September)

CARMINA URBAN

With Crew Dangerous

The cantata “Carmina Burana” by Carl Orff with urban style, performed by Filarmed and Crew Dangerous, with participation of city choirs.

SEASON X (October 14)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Anger Givol, cello (Israel)

Suite of “Abdelazer” – H. Purcell 

Cello Concerto in C major – F.J. Haydn

Symphony No. 9 “The big one” – F. Schubert

SEASON XI (November 25)

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloist: Laura Payome, clarinet

With the Metropolitan Ballet of Medellín

concert for clarinet No. 1 – CM von Weber

Symphony No. 8 – L.van Beethoven

SEASON XII (December 2) 

Director: David Greilsammer

Soloists: Eugenie Lefrebvre, soprano

Melody Ruvio, mezzo-soprano

Vincent Lievre-Picard, tenor

Yannis François, low

Study Polyphonic from Medellin
Cecilia Espinosa Chamber Choir

Human Tones Choir

The Messiah – GF Handel

2023 Programming

January

January 21, 8:00 pm I Hay Festival

The Day You Love Me tells the last days of Carlos Gardel in Medellín through his music, in a stage show with actors, dancers and live music with the Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra. This production combines tango and history in a moving and fun staging that will take attendees to live an exciting time.

Free entrance

February

February 18, 6:00 pm Metropolitan Theater

First concert of the season under the baton of our principal conductor David Greilsammer.

Symphony No. 3 by Ludwig van Beethoven

The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky

Ticket office coming soon

February 25, 6:00 pm Metropolitan Theater

*Symphony No. 7 by Jean Sibelius 

*Tannhäuser Overture by Richard Wagner

Moon Serenade by Carlos José Castro 

Symphony No. 5 by PI Tchaikovsky

Director: David Greilsammer

*Repertoire subject to change

Ticket office coming soon

 

 

Reconciliation Choir Call 2023.

You like to sing? Reconciliation Choir is a space to learn, explore and get to know our own voice, leaving a mark, when our voices join in the same song, our hearts also begin to synchronize. . If you are a signatory of peace, reinstated, a victim of the conflict or belong to families that are also part of these processes, we invite you to participate in this project.

All you need is a desire to learn and share your voice to leave your mark. To sing, you only need to speak. Do you want to try?

 

 

Filarmed, to learn with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra

The Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra has been selected in the mentoring program of the Association of British Orchestras and the British Council. María Catalina Prieto Vásquez, executive director of Filarmed will have the director of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra as a mentor. Michael Eakin, director and CEO of the oldest professional symphony orchestra in the United Kingdom, which in addition to its concerts, is a leader in the development of educational, artistic and community projects, will accompany the director of Filarmed for 12 months in the search for innovations and strategies in the orchestra's management model, to aim for its sustainability and permanence over time.  

The second cohort, this mentoring program carried out by the Association of British Orchestras with the support of the British Council, also benefits the Medellín Philharmonic and three other orchestras located in Ukraine, Poland and Qatar.  

For María Catalina, this program allows not only to have feedback from the executive director of one of the most important orchestras in the United Kingdom, but will also give Filarmed the possibility of analyzing the trends of British orchestras, even creating strategies to confront some phenomena. such as the post-pandemic and globalization. “We will learn from the best. The mentoring will allow us to be in contact with a country and an association that has a very great orchestral tradition, this points to the strategic line of the Medellín Philharmonic to become a reference in all of Latin America,” explains the executive director. 

In addition to personalized work with Michael Eakin, Filarmed is invited to the Annual Congress of the Association of British Orchestras, in February 2023, a space in which it will continue to strengthen networking with other organizations and disciplines.  

 

The Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra arrives at the Teatro Colón in Bogotá

With its Latin Grammy-winning work and a Latin American music concert, the Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra joins the celebration of the 130 years of history of the Teatro Colón, one of the most significant spaces in the Nation's culture.  

  • In Bogotá, the Orchestra presents two concerts, the first “Latin America Philharmonic, he Thursday October 27th and the second "Your Little Philharmonic Rock” album Latin Grammy winnerhe Saturday, October 29 and Sunday, October 30.
     
  • Both concerts have been selected as a sample of the musical quality that the orchestra has achieved, its search to make Latin American academic composers visible beyond the universal repertoire and its versatility that allows it to merge with other genres in high-impact projects.
     

For María Catalina Prieto Vásquez, director of Filarmed, the Teatro Colón is one of the most emblematic stages in our country and for the Orchestra it is a privilege to be part of this celebration. “Our concerts in the capital highlight the importance of regional orchestras for the cultural history of the country and remind us that the Medellín Philharmonic is not only a heritage of Antioquia but of the entire country. We come to share with the entire country the world prize for Innovation that Classical Next gave us,” explains the director.   

Programming 

Latin America Philharmonic
Thursday, October 27, 7:30 pm
Main room of the Teatro Colón
Ticket office from $35,000
Point of sale: Your ticket  

“Latinoamérica Filarmónica” presents the sound and diversity of our music under the baton of Tatiana Pérez Hernández, resident director of the Orchestra. Furthermore, this presentation is part of one of Filarmed's artistic commitments, which consists of disseminating the rich sound of Latin America and promoting the talent of its composers. 

In this concert the public will be able to enjoy black regret and The Goodbyes by Juan David Osorio, Serenade for strings by Andrés Castañeda, Metro Chabacano by Javier Álvarez and Camerata in Guaguancó by Guido López Gavilán. In addition, two soloists from Filarmed will accompany the orchestra, the flutist Fernando Martínez and the violist David Merchán, in the interpretation of the Concerto No. 1 for flute by Raimundo Pineda and the Concerto for viola “Serenade of the Moon” by Carlos Castro, respectively.  

“Each country in Latin America has a unique and particular sound. For example, for this occasion we will have a trip through Mexico, Costa Rica, Cuba, Colombia and Venezuela. In Metro Chabacano The composer seeks to represent the busyness and high influx of a Mexico City station that bears the same name as the work;  Camerata Guaguancó, it's a piece full of traditional Cuban rhythms and the works of Juan David Osorio, they represent the creativity and talent of our Colombian artists,” explains Pérez Hernández.   

 

Your Little Philharmonic Rock
Saturday, October 29, 2022 (3:00 pm)
Sunday, October 30, 2022 (11:00 am)
Main room of the Teatro Colón
Ticket office from $20,000
Point of sale: Your ticket  

Attention boys and girls! There is a Tyrannosaurus that has infiltrated the orchestra, a boy who turned into a wolf and walks among the theater chairs, an incredible ocean wave that will flood your emotions and up to a hundred ants will travel from the stage to Paris. 

Dinosaurs, Adivinanzas Filarmónicas and even Niño Lobo, are preparing to celebrate and rock the 130 years of the Teatro Colón with the concert “Tu Rockcito Filarmónico”, winner of the Latin Grammy in the category “Best Latin Music Album for Children”. 

“Your Rockcito Filarmónico is made up of stories that are made especially for children. Animals, trips through diverse ecosystems and word constructions lead to play and poetry. Our repertoire dreams of designing environments that enhance the creativity and imagination of those who listen to us,” says Paula Ríos, vocalist of Tu Rockcito. 

In The dinosaurs, children will hear some theories about the extinction of the “fattest and heaviest” that inhabited planet Earth; with We are noisy, we will jump to the rhythm of rock to free the spirit, the body and the voice; with Sea waves, they can play while dancing to the rhythm of the ocean's movements; with Disheveled, they will be able to sing and ruffle their hair in the company of the Lion, the baby orangutan or the anteater and with Philharmonic Riddles, you will discover the wonderful sounds and instruments of the orchestra. 

Other songs that make up the rockiest concert in Bogotá are Song for sad days, Wolf Boy, One Hundred Ants in Paris, La Cionca, We Are the Heavy Rockers and From the cradle to the jungle. 

 

Shape who we are

We unite from trust, democracy and freedom to embrace and redefine our cracks 

Cultural organizations come together to listen to our territories through art and generate a citizen conversation that calls for reflection. We are democracy, freedom, trust. We are a footprint on the Earth.

Culture is closely related to our human nature. The different forms of artistic manifestation correspond to the need or, rather, to the fundamental characteristic of expression that human beings possess. Culture plays a mediating and driving role in life in society, since music, theater, dance, and the plastic arts, through their creation, transmit not only emotions, but also deep messages, and make us reflect on our existence. , social problems and life in general. In them we can form our critical thinking because they show us the essence of individuals, societies and the understanding of our world. From this perspective, we become facilitators with the ability to repair, heal wounds, transform a society, reconcile with ourselves and with others.  

The organizations that have assumed the responsibility of working for the integral development of people, from culture, want to build trust in difference, and we see the urgency of a broad conversation about the world we want, a vital dialogue about the present and the future. future, that puts on the table our cultural diversity and the natural diversity of the territory we inhabit. 

We want to talk about democracy, how we feel it, live it and its meaning in our territory. We know that we can rebuild a more humane and free world, and we also know that to achieve this we must let culture move us with its transformative force towards new ideas and sensibilities.  

A movement without limits that embraces freedom, making culture a dynamic, inclusive and participatory entity that invites us to listen to each other and make new social agreements based on trust. 

Programming // October 

Free entry with registration 

Friday the 7th. Cinema, sound, democracy and freedom
Museum of Modern Art of Medellín – MAMM

9:30 am // MAMM Theater
Breaking the limit. cinema function The Nobodys + conversation
 

Synopsis: Juan Sebastián Mesa / 2016 / Colombia / 84 min. First film by Juan Sebastián Mesa in which he portrays a generation that leaves adolescence forever, in a black and white Medellín. Music, street art, friendship are the weapons with which the characters resist, waiting for the arrival of a journey, a rite of passage that will turn them into others. Inaugural film of the FICCI Cartagena 2016.

Guests:  

Nelson Calderón (communicator, vocalist of ODIO) Esteban Alcaráz (circus artist, co-star of the film The Nobodys) Moderator: María Adelaida Arango, director of MAMM Education
 

3:00 pm Sound walk // Casa Tragaluz meeting point
 

How to listen to a territory? This is a bus walk to take and undo the steps through which the sounds of the neighborhood travel. From red to red, from store to store; We will create sound routes around the Museum to collect the ideas that circulate in the territory about democracy and how to find it in the plurality of voices that inhabit a space in daily life.   

Sunday 9. Rebuilding trust
Metropolitan Theater 

10:00 am Conversation. Shape who we are // Theater Hall
11:00 am Concert. Gabo: between music and letters // Theater Room
 

What would happen if the orchestra starts playing and the dancers don't enter the scene where they should? If a curtain closes at the wrong time? These are some of the reflections that we will share to show the public that we are all vital in the fabric of our society. An invitation to rebuild trust with staging “Gabo: between music and letters” a creation of the Medellín Metropolitan Ballet and with the participation of the Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra, in tribute to one of the most important Colombian writers in history.

 

The most innovative orchestra in the world is Colombian! The Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra wins the Classical:NEXT Innovation Award

The world society for classical and artistic music Classical:NEXT gave to the Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra he Innovation Award.

Classical:NEXT is a network of professionals who work in the classical music sector around the world, and holds a biennial meeting in which more than a thousand people gather to learn about trends and advances in the sector. It is the world's leading event for musicians, producers, agents, journalists, trainers and in general for the entire sector about the future. The meeting that ends today in Hannover, delivered the Innovation Award 2022 to Filarmed. This award for the management model is added to the Latin Grammy for best Latin music album for children obtained in 2021 for the work Tu Rockcito Filarmónico.

The jury valued the Orchestra's management model that strengthens close relationships, believes in music as an agent of social transformation and focuses its efforts on programs that bring symphonic music to all populations in the region, reaching unconventional spaces and that serves neurodiverse youth, victims and former combatants of the armed conflict in Colombia, children in rural environments affected by violence, blind youth, health workers from all over the country and other vulnerable populations.

How to be an innovative orchestra in the 21st century?

Orchestras around the world have asked themselves how to be relevant and strengthen their ties with communities after discovering that the traditional model that is more than 200 years old, offering concerts only in theaters to the same niche audience, is not sustainable. For Filarmed it is very important to have a differentiating factor; being an orchestra in Europe, or in the United States, is not the same as an orchestra in a country like Colombia, in a city like Medellín that is in constant transformation and where the participation of The community is essential to build a better future. “That has been the main motivation, stay relevant and ask ourselves how we can contribute to weaving a better society based on what we know how to do best: symphonic music”, express Maria Catalina Prieto, executive director of Filarmed

For Prieto, it is a great privilege to win the Classical:NEXT Innovation Award, a recognition of what has been cultivated in years of intentional and conscientious work, of being a close, relevant orchestra, of having a differential factor. “That they recognize us like this in Classical:NEXT, where the trends of classical music in the world are set, is of utmost importance,” emphasizes the director.

“Classical:NEXT recognizes ensembles, artists and orchestras that are doing something unusual in the world of music. This is of utmost importance because part of our mission is to look to the future, see opportunities to create and bring them to stimulate the universe of classical music. Filarmed brings innovation and wants to show the world that classical music is for everyone. And it is as it should be, full of new, fresh and dynamic ideas. “This is fantastic!” he says. David Greilsammer, appointed as principal director of Filarmed.

The future of the most innovative orchestra

Filarmed is a non-profit entity, created 39 years ago, it is financed with public and private resources from local, national and international organizations to carry out projects in which music has the greatest impact on society.

It is currently in one of the most interesting moments in its history. In the next five years will work on four fronts: first, be a musical reference in Latin America, to be recognized as one of the most important orchestras in the region and even worldwide. Second, being a bold and innovative organization, which can produce captivating experiences with versatile musicians; that beyond playing an instrument well, they work with others and with other artistic disciplines. Third, being a orchestra rooted in and committed to all types of populations in diverse territories, putting their abilities at the service of social transformation, using music to improve everyone's lives, and finally being a sustainable orchestra financially, organizationally and environmentally.

“We firmly believe in the transformative power of music…we have been working for five years with young people with cognitive disabilities, displaced communities and ex-combatants and victims of the armed conflict, we have also started working with young people and children with hearing and visual disabilities. These communities have in common that through music they can redefine their relationship with the city, with the other and with themselves and others,” explains María Catalina.

 

 

Innovation, our highest note

The search for artistic excellence and its understanding as an agent of social transformation are the two sides of the same coin that represent Filarmed. And this is how the innovative model that transforms communities has been consolidated:

Education
Music in the classrooms, dreams and life

Filarmed's pedagogical model is developed in three phases: awareness, musical initiation and orchestral practice. The awareness phase It consists of a first approach to symphonic music in which basic concepts are learned. In the last year they have attended to 11,156 students from 13 educational institutions located in Rionegro, Copacabana, Marinilla, La Ceja, Bello, Segovia and Medellín, thanks to the Comfama Inspiration program.

The phase of musical initiation is presented with the Complementary School Days which was born as the possibility of bringing the little ones closer to culture from their classrooms. The program, in alliance with Comfama, is developed in educational institutions in La Ceja, San Jerónimo and Santa Fé de Antioquia and in the last year it reached 258 students.

The phase of orchestral practice, supported by Fundauniban, is carried out with 379 children in Apartadó, Carepa, Chigorodó, Currulao and Nueva Colonia. This orchestra and pre-orchestra process not only seeks to teach them about classical music, but also to give them tools and values for their lives.

The best thing that can be shared is knowledge

In 2020, the Ecosystem Workshops began, taught by musicians from Filarmed, which seeks to improve the quality of professionals and students in music. Initially the program had departmental scope; Today, thanks to virtuality, the workshops were able to expand throughout Colombia and even internationally.

Social programs

Reconciliation Choir: peace is also built with music

 

Music, like all art, has the ability to unite, reconcile, and make us see each other equally and without discrimination. Ex-combatants from illegal armed groups and victims of the armed conflict make up the 20 voices that make up the Reconciliation Choir, and who contribute through music to the construction of peace to heal and free their hearts.

I am a Musician: inclusion, a commitment

Five years have passed since the Orchestra recognized that disability can also contribute to transformation and creativity, and that its encounter with music should have no borders. Since 2017 the program was created I'm a musician, in which neurodiverse youth and adults participate in a process of strengthening their musical identity, through musical creation and performance, guided by music therapists.

 

Music and health

As a moment of respite and calm for health professionals and patients from hospitals in various departments in Colombia, Filarmed created the initiative “Music and health” which has offered a series of virtual concerts and personalized messages full of encouragement and hope. Although this project was primarily focused on health professionals, hospitalized patients have also benefited.

 

Working with others makes us more creative

Filarmed set out to be an orchestra of and for the city and the world; a relationship of peers with allies and friends of the cultural and creative sector of Medellín, to develop joint projects to strengthen the sector. In addition to fusions with top-level popular artists, the Orchestra works hand in hand with museums, theaters, ballet companies and various artistic collectives.

Best in Classical:NEXT

The importance of this recognition is seen not only in the importance of the entity that grants it but in the nominated experiences, among which the finalists were projects such as Big hART for 'The Acoustic Life of Sheds' (Australia), Death of Classical ( United States), Heartbeat Opera (United States), Musical Storytelling (Lithuania), Nevis Ensemble (Ukraine), Ngarra Burria (Australia), Opera Calcetin (Chile), The Choral Hub (Ukraine) and Tutti a Santa Cecilia (Italy), who use music with a vision of the future and broad social and solidarity content.

 

This May 28, we will celebrate in concert being the most innovative orchestra

The Medellín Philharmonic Orchestra presents “Music and Democracy”, a tour of musical works that portray political and social situations. Compositions about imperialist battles, fidelity in love, independence, slavery, nationalism, to name a few. for spanish Francisco Valero-Terribas, director of this concert, music itself is a paradigm of democracy and therefore freedom. “…music is made up of different voices that create independent melodic lines, but they only make sense when they are heard in agreement. Each and every one of the voices are necessary and essential, they all express their arguments and have moments of relevance, all of them make up a sublime message.”

To listen

  • Overture to “The Happy Slaves”
    JC Arriaga
  • opera arias
    Deh, come not late from “The Marriage of Figaro”
    Ach, ich fühl's from “The Magic Flute”
    W. A. Mozart
    O wär ich schon mit dir vereint de “Fidelio”
    L. van Beethoven
  • Overture 1812
    P.I. Tchaikovsky
  • Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 43
    J. Sibelius

Soprano: Manuela Tamayo Briceño (Colombia)
Director: Francisco Valero-Terribas (Spain)