{"content":"The 2026/2027 Seattle Symphony subscription season at a glance\n\nFor two decades, I’ve put together a little pocket guide to the Seattle Symphony subscription season for my symphony friends to help them decide which ticket package they want. We stopped going to the symphony as a group years ago, but I still create this pocket guide out of tradition.\n\nHere’s the at-a-glance season guide for the 2026/2027 season still with no comments from me because it’s not worth trying to rate every piece to help my friends pick one concert. If you’re my friend and want recommendations, just call. Besides, you can probably preview nearly all of the pieces nowadays (minus the premieres) by searching on YouTube.\n\n * Official brochure\n * Press release\n * Subscribe\n\nXian Zhang enters her second season as music director of the Seattle Symphony. She will lead the orchestra on Opening Night as well as for twelve subscription concerts, expanding from the nine subscription concerts she conducted in her debut season. Associate Conductor Sunny Xia is not listed on any of the concerts, nor is she mentioned in the press release, so her contract may have expired. Not sure.\n\nWeek Program 19 13 6A\n6B 7C\n7D 6E\n6F 10G ** 09/19\n2026 Prokofiev: Suite from Lieutenant Kijé\nProkofiev: Piano Concerto #3               09/24\n2026 Bruch: Violin Concerto #1\nBerlioz: Symphonie fantastique               10/22\n2026 Bridge: Enter Spring\nSamuel Adams: No Such Spring\nSchumann: Symphony #1 “Spring”               11/05\n2026 Unsuk Chin: Rocaná (Room of Light)\nSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #2\nStravinsky: Petroushka (1947)               11/12\n2025 Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1\nR. Strauss: Also sprach Zarathustra               11/19\n2025 Joe Pereira: Timpani Concerto¹\nMozart: Requiem               01/24 Itzhak Perlman in recital               01/28\n2027 Haydn: Symphony #82 “The Bear”\nMozart: Piano Concerto #25, K.503\nMozart: Eine kleine Nachtmusik\nHaydn: Symphony #87               02/04\n2027 Ibert: Concertino da camera\nSteven Banks: Come As You Are\nTchaikovsky: Manfred Symphony               02/11\n2027 Lalo: Symphonie espagnole\nGinastera: Four Dances from Estancia\nRimsky-Korsakov: Cappricio espagnol               02/25 Chaplin: Modern Times (with film)               03/11\n2027 Smetana: The Moldau\nSteven Mackey: Concerto for Orchestra¹\nRimsky-Korsakov: Scheherezade               03/18 Berlioz: Roméo et Juliette, Op.17               03/19 Hayato Sumino (“Cateen”) recital               03/19\n2027 Anna Lapwood with Seattle Symphony\nMax Richter: Cosmology\nJongen: Sinfonia Concertante               04/08\n2027 Vaughan Williams: The Lark Ascending\nGrieg: Peer Gynt Suite (selections)\nWebern: Im Sommerwind (In the Summer Wind)\nScriabin: Poem of Ecstasy               04/15\n2017 Dvořák: Violin Concerto\nBeethoven: Symphony #6 “Pastoral”               04/22\n2027 Gabriela Montero: Piano Concerto #1 “Latin”\nRespighi: Fountains of Rome\nRespighi: Pines of Rome               04/29\n2027 Saariaho: Lumière et Pésanteur (Light and Gravity)\nLutosławski: Piano Concerto\nShostakovich: Symphony #10               05/13\n2027 Ian Cusson: IQ84: Sinfonietta Metamoderna\nRachmaninov: Piano Concerto #2\nSibelius: Symphony #2               06/03\n2027 R. Strauss: Träumerei am Kamin\n (Dreaming by the Fireside) from Intermezzo\nDebussy: Ariettes Oubliées (Forgotten Songs)\n (arr. Brett Dean)\nMahler: Symphony #4               06/17\n2027 Brahms: Symphony in #3\nBrahms: Violin Concerto               06/24\n2027 Liszt: Piano Concerto #2\nWagner: The Ring Without Words (arr. Maazel)               Week Program 19 13 6A\n6B 7C\n7D 6E\n6F 10G **\n\n¹ Seattle Symphony Co-commission and World Premiere\n\nInsider tip: Click a column header to focus on a specific series. (This feature has been around for several years, actually.)\n\nLegend:\n\n19 Symphonic Series 19-concert series (Choice of Thursdays or Saturdays) 13 Symphonic Series 13-concert series (Choice of Thursdays or Saturdays) 6A Symphonic Series 6-concert series A (Thursdays) 6B Symphonic Series 6-concert series B (Saturdays) 7C Symphonic Series 7-concert series C (Thursdays) 7D Symphonic Series 6-concert series D (Saturdays) 6E Symphonic Series 6-concert series E (Thursdays) 6F Symphonic Series 7-concert series F (Saturdays) 10G Symphonic Series 10-concert series G (Sunday afternoons) ** Various special concerts (individually priced)\n\nFor those not familiar with the Seattle Symphony ticket package line-ups: Most of the ticket packages are named Symphonic Series nX (formerly named Masterworks nX) where n is the number of concerts in the package, and the letter indicates the variation. Ticket packages have been combined if they are identical save for the day of the week. For example, 7C and 7D are the same concerts; the only difference is that 7C is for Thursday nights, while 7D is for Saturday nights. The exception is the column I marked **, which is just a grab bag of special concerts.\n\nNotes and changes:\n\n * The main symphony season has been reduced from 21 programs to 19. The A, B, E, and F series have consequently been reduced from 7 concerts to 6. The Sunday series has been expanded from 8 to 10 concerts, which the Seattle Symphony claims is due to popular demand. The four-concert Friday series has been dropped.\n * The 6A/6B, 7C/7D, and 6E/6F concert series do not overlap, so you can create your own pseudo-series by taking any two of them, or recreate the 19-concert series by taking all three.\n * The 13-concert series is the same as the 7C/7D and 6E/6F series combined.\n * The Saturday concert for the weekend of May 13 has been moved to Friday.\n * The 2026/2027 season will be the first to take advantage of the Amplify project’s renovation of the public spaces.\n * The Youth Tickets program provides $25 tickets to up to children per concert for all Symphonic Series concerts, plus most other concerts. If you purchase an adult subscription, you can add a matching Youth Subscription at the same rate of $25 per concert.\n * The Seattle Symphony is part of the TeenTix program which offers teenagers (ages 13 through 19) $5 day-of-show tickets for selected concerts. TeenTix members can also buy up to two $10 tickets for Sunday concerts for non-teenage friends and family.\n * Notable guests: Special concerts by Itzhak Perlman and Hayato Sumino (who is apparently a popular YouTuber), and organist Anna Lapwood. Superstar pianist Yuja Wang performs on Opening Night (Prokofiev Piano Concerto #3). Other prominent soloists performing at regular season concerts are Emanuel Ax (Mozart Piano Concerto #25), Gil Shaham (Dvořák Violin Concerto), and Benjamin Grosvenor (Rachmaninov Piano Concerto #2).\n * Conductor Emeritus Ludovic Morlot returns to conduct a Spring-themed concert on the weekend of October 22. There is also a Spain-and-South-America themed concert (led by Xian Zhang) on the weekend of February 11.\n * Soundtrack-with-film concerts continue to remain popular, and for the first time I can recall, one of these concerts makes it to the regular subscription series: A performance of the score to Modern Times to accompany the film.\n * The April 8, April 15, and April 22 concerts form an in-season Nature in Music Festival.\n * Additional series not listed above include the In Recital, Seattle Pops, Octave 9, Chamber, Tiny Tots, and Family Concerts, as well as a collection of holiday concerts in December. (This year, we have Messiah but no Beethoven’s 9th.)\n * Over the years, the format of the Seattle Symphony official brochure has gradually gotten closer and closer to the format of this pocket guide. This makes my job both easier and arguably superfluous.\n\nThe post The 2026/2027 Seattle Symphony subscription season at a glance appeared first on The Old New Thing.","contentType":"text/plain;utf-8","attachments":[],"quotePin":""}