![]() ![]() “What’s kind of baffling to me is that we can have anyone from our college level to, like, 80-year-olds enjoying the music that we’re playing,” he said. ’26, and proof that the fantastical tunes have broad artistic reach. The GSO has even earned invitations to play at the Smithsonian and the Kennedy Center-“bonkers” experiences, said Choir Director Neel Sanghvi Ph.D. “We like to include people that have a real passion for our kind of music and would get the most out of the experience.”Īs the group has grown, it’s added charity events to its semester lineups-like Gaming4Life, with donations supporting Children’s National Hospital-and is exploring partnering with teams from UMD’s blossoming esports scene. “Sometimes sections are very, very competitive,” Hossom said. Now that the pandemic is past its peak, the orchestra is more popular than ever 98 people auditioned this fall, with 42 accepted. The students worked hard to stay afloat, said longtime faculty adviser Derek Richardson, professor of astronomy and a gamer himself, including acquiring special masks for performances and working with campus authorities to resume shows as soon as it was safe. They don’t repeat any pieces for at least two years to keep things fresh for the often-sold-out crowds.Īs it did for other musical ensembles, COVID-19 took the wind out of the GSO’s performances. The group, which includes a full orchestra and choir, rehearses twice a week, with all its music arranged by members or alums from their favorite animated adventures (popular ones include the aforementioned “Zelda” and “Final Fantasy,” as well as “Pokémon,” “Hollow Knight” and “Monster Hunter”). ![]() “(The GSO) seemed like the perfect opportunity of an orchestra that was more relaxed.”īut the gaming focus doesn’t mean the performances are all fun and games. “Being a STEM major, I knew I wasn’t going to get a lot of chances to play my instrument,” said violist Emily Hossom ’23, the club’s orchestra conductor and biological sciences major. ![]() It eclipsed the 100-member mark just five years later, with all majors-not just music-focused ones-welcome. After its first public performance at Maryland Day that spring, featuring tunes from “The Legend of Zelda” and “Final Fantasy,” the orchestra took off. Michelle Eng ’07, a former violist for the UMD Repertoire Orchestra, formally merged those interests when she started the club 17 years ago, recruiting a half-dozen fellow members to form a modest group. “There’s a very strong overlap between people who are into video games and exploring different genres, who also enjoy weird forms of music,” especially among college students who grew up with several consoles, said GSO President Zach Calcagno ‘23. ![]() tomorrow at the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center. Since its 2005 founding, the group has crescendoed in popularity, now with 140 members playing two packed concerts per semester. The Gamer Symphony Orchestra (GSO), the first collegiate ensemble to exclusively arrange and perform video game music, brings the scene-setting songs from the screen to the stage. A University of Maryland club levels up that musical experience. Whether you’re rescuing Princess Zelda, collecting coins as Mario or battling the Covenant in the world of Halo, video game quests wouldn’t be quite as fun without the swells of strings, merry melodies and techno beats providing the soundtrack to your virtual heroism. ![]()
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