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The Gyeonggi Rivera Orchestra, the area’s first talent-development orchestra for musicians with disabilities organized by a local government, will showcase years of steady growth onstage.
Gyeonggi Arts Center will present the orchestra’s second regular concert, “Spring Ruckus,” at 5 p.m. on the 16th in the center’s Grand Theater. The title—whose hanja characters mean “revive” (甦) and “move” (動)—reflects spring’s vitality and the musicians’ concentrated intensity.
More than a simple recital, the concert is meant to crystallize the members’ musical achievements and artistic potential after years of concurrent training and performance. In the first half, the program features Brahms’ Academic Festival Overture and Grieg’s Piano Concerto. The second half includes Tchaikovsky’s Slavonic March and the first and fourth movements of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5.

Pianist Kim Jung-won will solo in Grieg’s Piano Concerto and serve as host. Known for his solid technique as a performer and for his work as a classical broadcaster, Kim has recently expanded his musical reach through collaborations with artists with disabilities.
Music director Park Seong-ho will conduct. Park, who led the country’s first orchestra for people with disabilities, is recognized for using music to bridge individual experience and the broader community.
The concert will also include interactive elements. Organizers will open a rehearsal to the public on the day of the performance and present a “Classical Salon” with commentary by pianist and YouTuber Ahn In-mo. A crowdfunding component lets audiences participate in the production process.
A Gyeonggi Arts Center official said the concert captures the way individual voices expand into a single resonance and added that it will offer audiences a natural opportunity to experience classical music and the contributions of artists with disabilities.











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