The Hope College Wind Ensemble’s annual Halloween Concert scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 30, has been canceled.  No information is available regarding rescheduling.

The Hope College Wind Ensemble will present its annual Halloween Concert on Saturday, Oct. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the Concert Hall of the Jack H. Miller Center for Musical Arts.

The public is invited. Admission is free.

As appropriate for the occasion, the musicians will be dressed in Halloween costumes, and the music — both old and new — will be full of scares and hauntings. The program will consist of Hector Berlioz,’s “March to the Scaffold”; Alex Turley’s “City of Ghosts”; “Dancing with the Devil,” by Dana Wilson; “Come Sweet Death,” by J.S. Bach; Kevin Houben’s “Arcana”; and “Music of Amber,” by Joseph Schwantner.

The Wind Ensemble is directed by Gabe Southard. Southard is an associate professor at Hope, where he also conducts the Concert Band, and the Faculty and Student Collaborative Ensemble. He completed his Doctorate of Musical Arts in conducting at Michigan State University and has performed with the Madison Symphony Orchestra and the Lucca, Italy, Opera Orchestra, as well as a number of community orchestras. As a flute player, he maintains an active performing schedule by playing the principal flute in the Holland Symphony Orchestra and giving solo and chamber recitals. Southard is currently engaged in recording a CD of works by Dana Wilson. In 2020 he was named a Pearl Flute Artist by Pearl Musical Instrument Company.

Audience members who need assistance to fully enjoy any event at Hope are encouraged to contact the college’s Events and Conferences Office by emailing events@hope.edu or calling 616-395-7222 on weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Updates related to events are posted when available in the individual listings at hope.edu/calendar

Due to the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, Hope is currently requiring that masks be worn by all individuals while indoors on campus unless in their living space or alone in their workspace.

The Jack H. Miller Center for Musical Arts is located at 221 Columbia Ave., between Ninth and 10th streets.