top of page

West Michigan Symphony Pulls Out All the Stops for All-Star Season Finale

  • 4 days ago
  • 2 min read
West Michigan Symphony All-Star Finale

Muskegon, MI —  West Michigan Symphony’s (WMS) 2025-2026 Mainstage Season comes to a super-sized finish with the thundering “Organ” Symphony No. 3 of French composer Camille Saint-Saëns and the rock-infused Cello Concerto of the iconoclastic Austrian Friedrich Gulda. The former will feature Muskegon’s own Peter Kurdziel at the helm of the Barton theater organ; the latter will showcase the fiery muse and formidable technique of WMS Principal Cello Igor Cetkovic. Opening the concert will be Russian composer Mikhail Glinka’s exuberant Overture to Ruslan and Ludmilla. Conducted by Scott Speck, the concert will be held at 7:30pm Friday, May 8 at the Frauenthal Center, 425 W. Western Avenue in Muskegon. The performance is sponsored by Hines Corporation; Mike and Kay Olthoff are the 2025-2026 Season Sponsors; Blue Lake Public Radio is the Media Sponsor. For tickets, starting at $19 for adults, $10 for students, visit westmichigansymphony.org or call 231.727.8001. 


The Symphony No. 3 of Saint-Saëns is not an organ concerto; it features its namesake instrument only sporadically, and primarily to dramatize musical climaxes with the sheer mass of sound only an organ with all its stops pulled can produce. In addition to the “king of instruments,” the work calls for a king-sized orchestra of 75 players, including two pianos.


The 1927 Barton Theater Organ, located inside the historic Frauenthal Theater, originally accompanied silent films during the golden age of cinema. It was expanded over the years, most recently in the 1990s to reach its present size with three manuals (keyboards), eight ranks and pipe chambers on both sides of the stage. In 2019, a roof leak caused damage to one of its chambers. This will mark its first use by WMS since the completion of repairs. Featured organist Peter Kurdziel is Director of Music at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Grand Haven and previously served in the same position at the Basilica of St. Adalbert in Grand Rapids, Michigan for fifteen years. 


West Michigan All-Star Finale

The eccentric Friedrich Gulda was a sensation in mid-20th century Vienna as a gifted pianist and first-tier interpreter of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert. He branched into jazz and rock and became known for combining pop and dance music on programs with traditional classical repertoire. His Cello Concerto of 1980 reflects this with its unlikely combination of hard rock, big band jazz, classical, mariachi and polka!  


In addition to his role as principal cello of WMS, Serbian-born Igor Cetkovic is an artist-in-residence and principal cello of the Kalamazoo Symphony and a member of the Burdick-Thorne String Quartet. He is on the music faculty of Hope College and has given masterclasses at Grand Valley State University and Western Michigan University, among others. An avid fan of modern music, Igor has played with some of Serbia’s biggest pop stars. Friendly but quiet in his personal interactions, he comes to life when he plays the cello.

Encore Michigan Banner


bottom of page