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Springtime Stories

May 3, 2026 @ 4:00 pm
$13 – $16

Buffalo High School Performing Arts Center
3:00 pm Conductor Chat
4:00 pm Concert

 

Brahms: Double Concerto in A minor, Op. 102, 3rd mvt
Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade

ABsoloist

 

 

BCO is excited to feature 2 of our very own! Maestro David Carrillo on violin and Andrew Burgdorf on cello will join forces on the 3rd movement from the Double Concert in A minor by Johannes Brahms. Previously having performed the first and second movements, Dr. Burgdorf is excited to complete perform this final movement of one of his favorite pieces of classical music.

 

This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a grant from the Central MN Arts Board, thanks to a legislative appropriation form the arts and cultural heritage fund.

Dr. Andrew Burgdorf, M.D.
Andrew is a charter member of the Buffalo Community Orchestra since 1995. Mary Ellen Lundsten coaxed him to come to the initial planning meeting early 1995 to possibly start a community orchestra ignoring Dr. Burgdorf’s protests of not having enough time due to his young family and full time medical practice.

Since then, he has enjoyed playing in nearly all of the 140 plus concerts BCO has performed including soloing on cello concertos by Saint-Saens, Dvorak, Vivaldi, Haydn, and the first two movements of the Brahms Double Violin and Cello Concerto with Marion Judish and Erika Blanco. He will now be joined by BCO’s current conductor and violinist, Jose David Carrillo Siliezer, in performing the exhilarating final movement of the Brahms Double Concerto, “Vivace non troppo.”

Andy considers the Brahms Double to be the greatest composition of classical repertoire combining both musical genius and intentionality to reconcile a bitter animosity between the composer and the Hungarian violinist of the day, Joseph Joachim. Joachim had become jealous of his wife, Amalie Weiss, and decided to divorce her in a nineteenth century courtroom with overwhelming odds in his favor until she surprised the judge revealing a private letter that Brahms had written supporting her innocence to which the judge acquitted her. This enraged Joachim halting all communication with Johannes for the next few years until a fellow string quartet cellist intervened convincing Brahms to send Joachim a casual postcard asking if he would be willing to take a look at a new composition that Brahms had been writing on his walks in the countryside of the Swiss Alps pairing violin and cello in a double concerto which was something that had never been tried before. Joachim was intrigued by the musical challenge and restored their close friendship thereby giving the world a gorgeous treasure of intensity and beauty. The Brahms Double final movement culminates with the cello and violin cascading in rapid paralleled harmony that blurs distinguishing the two apart. Reconciliation is not only possible in music, but can create an even stronger collaboration in the end if done with intentionality… and… yes, plenty of individual and joint practicing!

Andrew has studied cello under Eric Wahlin, Tanya Remenikova, Tony Ross, Jacqueline Ultan, and Eric Wheeler. He has played with the Jerusalem Hebrew University Orchestra, and the Mankato Symphony Orchestra. He plays a Finocchi 1790 Italian cello and a 2022 cello, which took luthier, John Waddle, four years of creative experimentation to create a brand new instrument pattern instead of copying any previous cello design, by using a single measurement from the older instrument, a compass, and a ruler. Either instrument is worthy of the Brahms Double and is yet to be decided which will have the joy of being played for the upcoming performance. Andrew alternates playing a W. Watson bow that was owned by Minnesota Orchestra’s previous principal cellist, Bob Jamieson, an Albert Nurnberger bow, and a modern Matthew Wheeler bow.

Dr. Burgdorf thanks his wife Sherilyn and family, violinist & conductor David, and BCO for the chance to perform the most incredibly beautiful and moving masterwork for a very special concert.

David Carrillo
Costa Rican born conductor David Carrillo comes from a long lineage of musicians: he learned the violin from his mother, she learned it from her dad, and he learned from his uncle. David's father is a choral conductor who inspired him to eventually become a conductor. David is the music director of the Golden Valley Orchestra and the Buffalo Community Orchestra. David also conducts various ensembles at the University of Minnesota as the instructor of record: the University Philharmonic, Campus Orchestras, and the UMN Opera Theatre. An active violinist as well, David is entering his third season as a member of the first violin section of the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra.

David holds an undergraduate degree in violin performance from the University of Minnesota and is currently a Sample Fellow finishing his doctoral degree in orchestral conducting. David is currently a pupil of Mark Russell Smith in conducting, and of Sally O’Reilly in violin. When David is not busy conducting or playing his violin, he enjoys cooking, playing chess, salsa dancing, and hiking around the many lakes in the Twin Cities area.

Two Ways to Get Tickets:

All tickets are for general admission seating. Doors open 30 minutes prior to scheduled concert time.

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Details

Date:
May 3, 2026
Time:
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Cost:
$13 – $16

Venue

Buffalo High School Performing Arts Center
877 Bison Blvd
Buffalo, MN 55313 United States
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