Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra

Harmony in Black

Two side-by-side photos. On the left is a smiling african american woman with long dark braids and a colorful patterned top sitting at a piano. On the right is a middle aged african american man with a thin dark goatee and glasses.

Friday, October 13

7:30pm

Capitol Theater

Age Recommendation

6 & up

Prepare to embark on an exhilarating and transformative musical odyssey. Witness the convergence of artistry, diversity, and compositional brilliance as we explore the depths of human expression through music. Join us to celebrate the rich cultural heritage and the visionary voices that have shaped our musical landscape.

Harmony in Black is a live performance that will be recorded as part of the multi-year Musical Landscapes in Color project. In partnership with Dr. William Banfield, WCO's Composer in Residence, this year's recording will feature works by Banfield and renowned artist and composer Patrice Rushen. The recording will be published by Albany Records and released in February 2024.

Meet the Artists

Headshot of a middleaged african american man with a goatee and glasses. He is wearing a collared white shirt with a burgundy vest as well as a necklace.

Composer

Dr. Bill Banfield

Banfield was appointed in 2019 as a research associate with the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage (CFCH), one of the Smithsonian’s 12 research and cultural centers. His work focuses on what he identifies as cultural through-lines, delineating the ways in which contemporary artistry and new works harken back and hold onto critical cultural linkages to understand.

Having served three times as a Pulitzer Prize judge in American music (2010, 2016, 2020), Banfield is an award winning composer whose symphonies, operas, chamber works have been performed and recorded by major symphonies across the country. Few have a wider, performed professional composing output, that has had public concert performances, reviews, radio, recordings of some 12 symphonies, 7 opera, 9 concerti, chamber, jazz and popular forms. This alone making Banfield one of the most performed, recorded composers of his generation. Banfield has been a national public radio show host having served as arts and culture correspondent for The Tavis Smiley Show. In 2010, he was hired by Quincy Jones to write a national music curriculum and book for schools learning about American popular music culture.

Dr. Cornel West has called him," one of the last grand Renaissance men in our time..a towering artist, exemplary educator, rigorous scholar, courageous freedom fighter..", and Henry Louis Gates wrote of him, “...Bill Banfield is one of the most original voices on the scene today.. he tunes us in to the conversation happening worldwide between the notes of contemporary musical culture.."

Banfield’s works have been commissioned, performed and recorded by orchestras including; the National, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Dallas, Akron, Detroit, New York Virtuoso, Grand Rapids, Akron, Richmond, Toledo, Savannah, Chicago Symphonia, Indianapolis, Sphinx, Sacramento, San Diego symphonies and the Havana Camerata of Cuba. In 2012, his symphony 10 was commissioned, premiered by the National Symphony at the Kennedy Center with Sweet Honey in the Rock, and his symphony 11 was performed, recorded in Switzerland with the Evoca/ECJ symphony and chorus.

His works as a composer and performing- recording jazz artist are carried on Atlantic, TelArc, CollinsClassics (London), Centaur, Albany/Visionary recordings and Innova records. His  music has been performed and/or recorded  by; George Duke, Patrice Rushen, Don Byron, Leon Bates, Christian Scott, Najee, Ron Carter, Delfeayo Marsalis, Greg Osby, Teri Lynn Carrington,  Oliver Lake, Regina Carter, Rachel Z, Jon Faddis, Marcus Belgrave, Billy Childs, Nnenna Freelon, Alphonso Johnson, Ndugu Chancelor, and Nelson Rangel.

A smiling african american woman with long dark hair and a colorful top sitting at a piano.

Pianist & Composer

Patrice Rushen

Patrice Rushen is an award-winning musician and composer who is also one of the most sought after artists in the music industry. She is a classically trained pianist who originally found success in the 70’s and 80’s with her signature fusion of jazz, pop and R&B. During this era, she composed and recorded the hit song,   “Forget Me Nots,” which has been frequently covered and sampled by other artists. 

Rushen is also a four-time, Grammy nominee who has composed scores for movies and television. She has been the first female musical director for many of the entertainment industry’s top award shows, which include the Grammy Awards, the Emmy Awards, the People’s Choice Awards, the NAACP Image Awards and HBO’s “Comic Relief V.” 

Considered one of the world's top jazz pianists, she has performed with many artists. Among them such esteemed names as Stevie Wonder, Herbie Hancock, Prince, Nancy Wilson, Ndugu Chancler, Carlos Santana, Christian McBride and Lee Ritenour. She is a record producer and an award-winning composer of symphonic music, some of which was commissioned by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Rushen is the ”Ambassador of Artistry In Education” at Boston’s Berklee College of Music,  and is the Chair of the Popular Music Program at USC’s Thornton School of Music. 

Rushen also spends time working with the Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department, NARAS “Grammy In The Schools” program and other organizations dedicated to establishing music education and mentorship programs for underprivileged youth. 

Upcoming Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra Events

  • January 30

    Friday

    Classical Music, Music, Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra Masterworks II - Prokofiev Prowess

    Capitol Theater

    Join the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra for an electrifying evening showcasing the fiery virtuosity of guest pianist Ilya Yakushev in Prokofiev’s “Piano Concerto No. 3.”

    7:30 PM
  • February 27

    Friday

    Classical Music, Kanopy Dance, Music, Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra Masterworks III - Regeneration with Kanopy Dance Company

    Capitol Theater

    Universal rhythms explored through music and movement—weaving together themes of transformation and the endless cycle of renewal.

    7:30 PM
  • March 27

    Friday

    Classical Music, Music, Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra Masterworks IV - Dueling Violins

    Capitol Theater

    Prepare to be mesmerized as two extraordinary violin masters, Gilles Apap and Eric Silberger, return to the stage for “Dueling Violins”—not as rivals, but as creative counterparts.

    7:30 PM
  • April 17

    Friday

    Classical Music, Music, Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra Masterworks V - Saint-Saëns & Salome

    Capitol Theater

    Closing the 2025/26 Masterworks season is an evening of works known for their virtuosic demands and lush expressive beauty.

    7:30 PM