Skip to Navigation | Skip to Content

Calvin Orchestra

History of the Calvin College Orchestra

The Calvin College Orchestra is a nationally reputed ensemble of more than sixty instrumentalists drawn from various academic disciplines. Along with its participation in campus-wide events and major tours, each semester the orchestra performs two major concerts consisting of significant symphonic works, including a Concerto Concert, and accompanies the Calvin Oratorio Society in its annual production of Handel’s Messiah.

Calvin College Orchestra 1913But this present prosperity grew from humble beginnings. The first Calvin orchestra, formed in 1908 by Martin Ten Hoor, was an eclectic ten-piece ensemble that enjoyed some success before being disbanded in 1910. The orchestra was revived in 1913 by Gerrit Winsemius, grew to include twenty-five members, and had such phenomenal success that it made the cover of the March 1914 issue of The Banner, only to subside the following year.

For the next decade there was no orchestra at Calvin, and the resurgence of the orchestra in 1925 was soon cut short by the Great Depression. The vicissitudes that had Calvin College Orchestra 1915accompanied the Calvin orchestra from the beginning continued through the war years. But in the decade following 1945, Henry Bruinsma and Harold Geerdes alternated as conductors to bring a level of stability, sophistication, and success to the orchestra that has continued to the present day.

For more than two decades beginning in 1955, the orchestra flourished under the direction of Harold Geerdes, culminating in the invitation of the Calvin orchestra to the Midwest Conference of Music at Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1965. Following the brief appointments of Gerald Bartlett (1977-78), Douglas Scripps (1978-81), and Dr. John Worst (1981-82), Dr. Derald De Young began his tenure as conductor of the Calvin orchestra. Over the next fifteen years under De Young, the orchestra toured extensively in both the United States and Eastern Europe, hosted several high school string festivals with guest clinicians, and featured violin soloist James Oliver Buswell performingCalvin College Orchestra 1962 Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1 and cellist Ross Harbaugh of the New World String Quartet performing Dvorak’s Cello Concerto.

The Calvin Orchestra has since been ably directed by Dr. Peggy Wheeler (1996-99), John Varineau (1999-2001), and Dr. Robert Ritsema (2001-02). The current conductor, Robert Nordling, was appointed in 2002.