The Shenandoah Valley Youth Symphony will celebrate its 25th year at 草莓社区 on Sunday, Mar. 22, at 4 p.m., in EMU's Lehman Auditorium. The event will feature soloist Lillian Hughes of Eastern Mennonite School and include music composed by alumnus Anthony VanPelt.

25 years of Shenandoah Valley Youth Symphony to be celebrated on March 22

For many attending the upcoming celebration of the 鈥檚 25 years at 草莓社区, the event will bring back memories.

The concert, which is Sunday, March 22, at 4 p.m. in Lehman Auditorium, includes music composed by alumnus Anthony VanPelt, a local musician, composer and teacher, and several alumni musicians joining the ensemble. Alumni, parents of alumni and past conductors of the symphony will be recognized, with a reception following. A $7 donation in support of the youth symphony is requested.

The Youth Symphony includes 42 members with students from Rockingham, Augusta, Shenandoah, and Page counties as well as West Virginia. The Junior Strings ensemble is an intermediate-level group with 13 members from Harrisonburg and Rockingham County.

Both groups are part of , which was started by Wanda Teague Alger`81 in her local music store. It became a part of the university鈥檚 in 1989. The orchestra formed in 1990, partly funded by a grant from the .

For two women who have been involved in the program for years, the opportunity is especially unique.

鈥淚t is rewarding to look back and see the hundreds of students who have been involved in the symphony,鈥 says , who has been a violin-viola teacher since 1989, program director since the orchestra鈥檚 first year in 1990, and conductor of the Junior Strings ensemble since its inception in 2001. 鈥淢ost students in our area would not otherwise have the chance to participate in such a group and play some of the great music written for orchestra. And it鈥檚 exciting to know that an organization with a small beginning has grown into what it is today and is still vibrant.鈥

鈥淪ome students that have passed through the youth symphony program choose to continue music as a profession,鈥 says , symphony conductor since 2002. 鈥淥thers move on to different careers, but no matter what path they choose, music remains in their souls and helps them to become better individuals.鈥

The Program

The program features 鈥淪ymphony No. 1鈥 by Mozart and several selections from the musical, 鈥淔iddler on the Roof,鈥 played by the Junior Ensemble; and several selections by the symphony, including 鈥淥verture to Nabucco鈥 by Verdi; the 鈥淩ussian Easter Overture鈥 by Rimsky-Korsakoff; and the first movement from the 鈥淰iolin Concerto in E Minor鈥 by Mendelssohn, featuring soloist Lillian Hughes.

Lillian, a senior at , describes her solo as 鈥渕ournful鈥 and 鈥渨istful,鈥 with a 鈥渂eautiful soaring melody鈥 and a 鈥渧irtuosic ending.鈥

The daughter of Chris and Mary Hughes, Lillian has studied violin for 13 years through the Shenandoah Valley Preparatory Music Program and been a member of the symphony for six years, serving as co-concertmaster for the past two years. She currently studies with .

She first soloed as a 5-year-old, playing 鈥淪ee the Pretty Flowers鈥 for a preparatory music program spring recital. The experience was memorable, she says: 鈥淚 remember being horribly nervously beforehand, but it all turned out fine in the end.鈥

Lillian has gone on to great success in her musical auditions, which have resulted in selections in two All-State Orchestras and one All-State Chorus, four Senior Regional Orchestras, and the Virginia Governor鈥檚 Summer School for the Performing Arts. She plans to study music and biochemistry in college.

This special celebration concert will also feature a work written by local teacher and composer Anthony VanPelt, who was a member of the youth symphony for its first five years. The ensemble will perform the first movement from VanPelt鈥檚 “New Market.”

In addition, the symphony will perform the winning composition from the New Music for Young Musicians Composers Competition held at James Madison University this year. The chosen work, 鈥淩emember Who You Are鈥, was written by Chris M. Cerreto, a current JMU student.