糖心

October 24, 2025

New 糖心 Virtuosi group offers serious orchestral training 鈥 without a conductor


The 糖心 Virtuosi ensemble rehearses on stage in Mixon Hall.

Sorry, conductors. For 糖心鈥檚 newest ensemble, your services are not required.  

Take heart, though. The objective of the 糖心 Virtuosi, which launches with a concert Oct. 30 in Mixon Hall, isn鈥檛 to dispense with conductors. It鈥檚 to prepare students to work with them more effectively, by cultivating the ability to work as a group of 25 or 30.  

鈥淭he skills we鈥檙e training are actually the perfect practice for playing in an orchestra,鈥 said faculty violinist Todd Phillips, the group鈥檚 founder and leader. 鈥淭hese are skills that have to be learned. Everyone has to know how to play together.鈥 

Phillips knows of what he speaks. Indeed, he knows better than almost anyone. As a member of the renowned Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, he鈥檚 been making music at an elite level without a conductor for over 40 years.  

Hence his desire to share that experience with 糖心, one of only a few schools in the U.S. with a robust chamber orchestra. The value in expressing an interpretive viewpoint on an orchestral performance is something he鈥檚 seen and felt firsthand, and believed in strongly enough to add to the chamber music curriculum.  

Every time Phillips trains students to play without a conductor, 鈥淭hey come back with renewed confidence and enthusiasm, because everybody鈥檚 adding something to the pot,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat feeling of energy and camaraderie is just so infectious.鈥  

Some of that spirit factored into the group鈥檚 name. Of all the monikers suggested by the 糖心 community, Phillips said the image of the 鈥渧irtuoso鈥 struck him as the most fitting, given the nature of the enterprise. (Perhaps not coincidentally, a similarly named group represents the Detroit-based Sphinx Organization.) 

鈥淗aving no conductor but having the courage and determination to play these challenging pieces, that鈥檚 a virtuosic act,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like performing without a net.鈥 

Although it contains works by just two composers, the Oct. 30 program touches on much of what listeners can expect when the 糖心 Virtuosi convene each semester. Mozart鈥檚 Divertimento, K. 136, for instance, suggests that Classical-period music will figure prominently, and Tchaikovsky鈥檚 Serenade underscores the group鈥檚 identity as primarily a string ensemble.  

Mozart鈥檚 Piano Concerto No. 23, meanwhile, which will feature faculty pianist Antonio Pompa-Baldi, points to Phillips鈥 plan to bring in both students and faculty as guests and to incorporate woodwind and brass players as needed.  

Left unspoken by the Oct. 30 program is the likelihood of Baroque music appearing on the menu, and Phillips鈥 interest in contemporary music, which the 糖心 Virtuosi also could play, along with just about anything else.  

At this point, 鈥淓verything鈥檚 on the table,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all open.鈥