Performances
Seraphim Singers serve up a worthy, timely performance of Rachmaninoff’s “Vigil”
Sometimes titles are deceiving. Sergei Rachmaninoff’s All-Night Vigil, for instance, only lasts […]
Conductor Quigley makes a fiery and impressive Boston Baroque debut
Unity within an ensemble arises not only from blending, but also […]
Blomstedt returns to BSO for lean yet rich and rewarding Brahms
New England might be in the grip of a winter with […]
Articles
Top Ten Performances of 2025
1. Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Die tote Stadt. Andris Nelsons/Boston Symphony Orchestra […]
News
Boston Philharmonic orchestras to shut down after 2026-27 season

Benjamin Zander will conduct the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra’s final season in 2026-27. File photo: Paul Mardy
The Boston Philharmonic Orchestra will shut down permanently after the 2026-2027 season after 48 years of bringing classical music to area concertgoers. Managing director Sean Lewis announced Tuesday that both the BPO and the Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra will wind down operations next June.
Following the 2026-27 season, both institutions—the BPYO was established in 2012—will transition into a newly-formed legacy project called the Zander Center. That venue, as described in a press release, will function as “the headquarters for Benjamin Zander’s artistic and educational endeavors, housing the Boston Philharmonic’s digital media holdings, which expand access to his renowned Interpretation Classes and other educational materials.”
Founded by Benjamin Zander in 1979, the BPO has won plaudits for its performances of the German Romantic canon, particularly the symphonies of Beethoven, Bruckner, and Mahler.
The shuttering of both groups marks the end of an era. Now 87, Zander has been a fixture in Boston’s musical life for more than fifty years and the BPO has been the primary vehicle for the British-born conductor’s charismatic advocacy for classical music.
Comprised of freelance professionals, college-aged music students, and skilled avocational musicians, the ensemble occupies a unique place in the city’s musical fabric. Though its repertoire is largely canonic, its concerts—which are nearly all prefaced by Zander’s celebrated pre-concert talks—are often conspicuously illuminating and refreshing.
If anything, the BPYO has proven just as impressive. Made up of students aged 13-21, the tuition-free collective frequently delivers performances with a professional–level sheen. In 2019, Boston Magazine named the group the city’s Best Classical Music Ensemble and their recordings of Mahler’s Symphonies Nos. 6 and 9 garnered admiring reviews globally.
Performance dates for both groups’ final seasons have yet to be announced, but repertoire will include symphonies by Beethoven and Mahler. The BPO’s final concert will be of the latter’s Symphony No. 9—the same work it presented in its first concert in 1979.
Similarly, the BPYO will perform Mahler’s Symphony No. 2, which it first played during its inaugural season. The youth orchestra, which engages in annual international tours that have brought it to Europe, South and Central America, Africa, and Asia (this summer), will give its final concerts on a traversal of European musical capitals in June 2027.
Posted in News
No Comments
Calendar
March 12
Vivo Performing Arts–CANCELLED
Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cellist
Isata Kanneh-Mason, pianist […]
News
Nelsons’ contract renewal declined by BSO; conductor’s 12-year tenure to end in 2027
In a surprise announcement on Friday, the Boston Symphony Orchestra stated […]


