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St. Louis Symphony Will Return To Powell Hall For Modified Spring Season

Alyse O'Brien
A series of spring concerts at Powell Hall will accommodate up to 300 ticket holders.

will perform at a reopened Powell Hall for eight weeks of concerts that begin March 26, orchestra leaders announced Tuesday.

Attendance will be limited to 300 ticket holders per concert, double the number permitted for . Those performances were the orchestra鈥檚 first in front of Powell Hall audiences after St. Louis officials imposed restrictions on public gatherings in the spring to keep the coronavirus from spreading.

Other coronavirus safety measures will remain in place for the upcoming series, such as socially distanced seating and shorter concerts with no intermission or food and drink service.

鈥淲e want to make sure more people can enjoy the concerts,鈥 President and CEO Marie-H茅l猫ne Bernard said. 鈥淣ow, with people getting the vaccination, I think the comfort level is better now than it was in the fall.鈥

Music Director St茅phane Den猫ve will lead five weeks of concerts, Conductor Laureate Leonard Slatkin will conduct one program, and newly appointed Assistant Conductor Stephanie Childress will make her St. Louis Symphony Orchestra debut for two programs. In place of guest artists, orchestra members will step forward as featured soloists during most concerts.

"In time of difficulties, you want to just regroup within your own family and feel this warmth and this feeling of support to each other," Den猫ve said. "And so it felt just perfectly natural that we would concentrate on making music just with us. To see each other, to be together.鈥

The orchestra will also resume outdoor 鈥淥n the Go鈥 performances for small audiences in May and is in talks with city officials to stage a concert in Forest Park in 鈥渓ate spring,鈥 Bernard said.

The announcement came just short of a year after orchestra leaders canceled the first concerts in the face of the escalating pandemic. After staging a series of concerts for limited audiences with small ensembles in October and November, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra elected not to continue the series as coronavirus case numbers continued a post-Thanksgiving spike that lasted through January.

"After the first wave we were finally able to make music again, and at the time we hoped we could extend," Den猫ve said. "And then the second wave hit and it was terrible."

Since then, orchestra leaders also commissioned a study of airflow onstage led by Stephen Liang and Abigail Carlson of Washington University School of Medicine. Effective air circulation onstage and among audience members is key to the organization鈥檚 safety protocols, Bernard said.

鈥淲e wanted to learn about Powell Hall and how safe it was,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd it鈥檚 very safe.鈥

The number of new COVID-19 cases and related hospitalizations fell last month in St. Louis and nationwide in February. Orchestra leaders have consulted with medical experts throughout the pandemic to inform their decisions about concert protocols.

鈥淲e started consulting regularly to see where the trends were heading and the doctors felt that they were heading in the right direction enough to warrant performances in late March,鈥 Bernard said.

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Jeremy is the arts & culture reporter at 漏 2024 外网天堂.