Romantic Reflections
- Date February 7th, 2025 Time 7:30pm Venue UIS Performing Arts Center - Springfield
Be moved by the power of our Symphony Orchestra concerts!
Ken Lam, Conductor | Aristo Sham, Piano
Tian Gift – Brahms Symphony No. 3 – Liszt Piano Concerto No. 1 – Liszt Les Preludes
Join us one hour before the concert for a pre-concert discussion with pianist Aristo Sham and conductor Ken Lam. And, join us after the concert for our Play On After Party!
Listen LIVE with us!
Tickets: $65 / $45 / $30
Students (Age 24 & Under): $10
Springfield
Friday, February 7, 2025 @ 7:30 PM
UIS Performing Arts Center
Concert Comments @ 6:30 PM
Bloomington-Normal
Saturday, February 8, 2025 @ 7:30 PM
ISU Center for the Performing Arts
Concert Comments @ 6:30 PM
Discover the Music
Tian The Gift Listen Now
Support Provided By:
Debra & Daniel Brownstone, M.D., The Landmark Automotive Group, Alan & Marty Stutz, Barbara & Warren Stiska, Sarah H. Thomas, Steve & Joyce Nardulli, Elaine Cousins
Springfield Venue UIS Performing Arts Center - Springfield
1 University Plz #397, Springfield, IL 62703
Your Illinois Symphony Orchestra performs Symphony Orchestra and Pops concerts at the UIS Performing Arts Center in Sangamon Auditorium.
Physical Address:
220 Ernest Hemingway Dr | Springfield, IL 62703
Mailing Address:
1 University Plaza, MS PAC 292 | Springfield, IL 62703
UIS Ticket Office Information
Tickets for all Illinois Symphony Orchestra season concerts are sold through the UIS Ticket Office. Tickets may be purchased by in-person, by phone, or online.
- In-Person: UIS Ticket Office is located in the lobby of the Public Affairs Center Building on the UIS Campus.
- Phone: (217) 206-6160
- Online: uispac.com
UIS Ticket Office Hours
Monday through Friday: 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday - Sunday: Closed
Performance Days: Opens Two Hours Prior to Performance
UIS Performing Arts Center Event Parking
Free parking is NOW available for all events held at UIS Performing Arts Center. Click here to view a map of the parking lots closest to the UIS Performing Arts Center. There will be no premium parking for donors who give $1,000 or more to the Illinois Symphony Orchestra due to UIS offering FREE parking to events held at the UIS Performing Arts Center.
Featured:
Ken Lam
Ken Lam is the Director of Orchestral Studies at The Tianjin Juilliard School and resident conductor of the Tianjin Juilliard Orchestra. He is Artistic Adviser of the Illinois Symphony Orchestra, resident conductor of the Brevard Music Center in North Carolina and serves as Artistic Director of Hong Kong Voices.
Lam was Music Director of the Charleston Symphony Orchestra from 2015 to 2022 and Music Director of Illinois Symphony Orchestra from 2017 to 2022. Previously, Lam also held positions as associate conductor for education of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, assistant conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and principal conductor of the Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra.
In 2011, Lam won the Memphis Symphony Orchestra International Conducting Competition and was a featured conductor in the League of American Orchestra's 2009 Bruno Walter National Conductors Preview with the Nashville Symphony. He made his US professional debut with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center in June 2008, as one of four conductors selected by Leonard Slatkin. In recent seasons, he led performances with the symphony orchestras of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Pops, Baltimore, Detroit, Buffalo, Memphis, Hawaii, Brevard and Meridian, as well as the Hong Kong Sinfonietta, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Seungnam Philharmonic, Guiyang Symphony, and the Taipei Symphony Orchestra.
In opera, he directed numerous productions of the Janiec Opera Company at Brevard and was assistant conductor at Cincinnati Opera, Baltimore Lyric Opera and at the Castleton Festival. In recent seasons, Lam led critically acclaimed productions at the Spoleto Festival USA, Lincoln Center Festival and at the Luminato Festival in Canada. His run of Massenet's Manon at Peabody Conservatory was hailed by the Baltimore Sun as a top ten classical event in the Washington D.C/Baltimore area in 2010.
Lam studied conducting with Gustav Meier and Markand Thakar at Peabody Conservatory, David Zinman and Murry Sidlin at the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen, and Leonard Slatkin at the National Conducting Institute. He read economics at St. John's College, Cambridge University and was an attorney specializing in international finance for ten years before becoming a conductor.
Lam is the 2015 recipient of the John Hopkins University Alumni Association’s Global Achievement Award, given to individuals who exemplify the Johns Hopkins tradition of excellence and have brought credit to the University and their profession in the international arena.
Aristo Sham
Hailed by The New York Times as a pianist “who's playing combines clarity, elegance, and abundant technique,” and by The Washington Post as a young artist with “boundless potential” who can “already hold his own with the best,” pianist Aristo Sham has dazzled audiences on five continents. In 2009, Aristo was featured in the documentary The World’s Greatest Musical Prodigies, broadcast by Channel 4 in the UK.
Aristo has also performed for royalty and dignitaries such as Prince Charles, the Queen of Belgium, and ex-President Hu of China, and collaborated with orchestras such as the Minnesota Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra under Sir Simon Rattle, Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra under Edo de Waart, English Chamber Orchestra under the late Sir Raymond Leppard, and Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne and the Utah Symphony under Steven Jarvi. Upcoming concerts include performances with the Illinois Symphony, Arizona Friends of Chamber Music, and the YCA Season Finale at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall. This season Aristo will record and host the complete Brahms piano solo music on RTHK4, Classical Radio in Hong Kong.
Aristo first came under international recognition when he won First Prize in the Ettlingen International Piano Competition in Germany in 2006, and First Prize in the Gina Bachauer International Junior Piano Competition in 2008. Aristo is the First Prize Winner of the 2018 YCA Susan Wadsworth International Auditions and more recently has won prizes in the Vendome Prize at Verbier Festival, Casagrande, Gina Bachauer, Dublin, Clara Haskil, New York, Saint-Priest, and Viotti International Piano Competitions. In 2023, he won the Grand Prix at the Monte-Carlo Music Masters.
Aristo holds a Bachelor's in Economics from Harvard University and a Master’s in Piano Performance at New England Conservatory and an Artist Diploma from The Juilliard School under Robert McDonald and Orli Shaham. His principal teachers include Eleanor Wong, Colin Stone, Victor Rosenbaum, and Julia Mustonen-Dahlkvist, and he has been mentored by Gabriela Montero. In his free time, Aristo enjoys traveling, languages, gastronomy, and oenology.