The Toronto Symphony Orchestra opened its 2025-26 season with an intriguing double bill: Wynton Marsalis’ Concerto for Orchestra, in only its third performance, and a dramatic, yet sensitive account of Orff’s Carmina Burana.
The Marsalis work is intriguing. Its six movements are eclectic with jazz influences but maybe less than one might expect given the composer. The mood varies from lyrical, to jazzy, to something a bit more abrasive that’s a touch unexpected from an American composer. There are very loud, even bombastic passages, and as one might expect, the principals in the brass and woodwind sections get plenty to do. It’s been performed in Cologne and Los Angeles and now Toronto. It got a fine performance at the Roy Thomson and I can see it getting quite a lot more mileage.
Carmina Burana demonstrated what Music Director Gustavo Gimeno does really well; generate lots of energy while managing the tricky acoustics of Roy Thomson Hall. With a huge orchestra, the massed voices of the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir and the Toronto Children’s Chorus, creating a dramatic, even awesome sound, was always going to be easy and we got it with blazing accounts of “O Fortuna” bookending a generally fiery account. But there was delicacy too and Gimeno was not afraid to drop the orchestral volume right down to allow his excellent trio of soloists space to do more than just fight to be heard and he got the balance right too when the children came in.