Sunday, November 9, 2025 Sunday April 26, 2026

Saturday March 28, 2026 8:00 pm

Boston Civic Symphony’s March 28 concert will feature

Aaron Copland’s Lincoln Portrait with Amanda Shea narrating

and

Mahler Symphony No. 5.

PROGRAM BOOK

TBD

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

  • Francisco Noya
  • Ken Yanagisawa
  • Amanda Shea

Francisco Noya

francisco noya conducting civic portraitFrancisco Noya is a prominent figure in the Boston and New England music scene, where he has earned a reputation as a versatile interpreter of symphonic and operatic literature. He served as music director of the Longwood Symphony Orchestra in Boston and Symphony by the Sea in Manchester. Mr. Noya currently serves as resident conductor of the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra, where he represents the Philharmonic artistically and educationally throughout the Rhode Island community. He is also the music director of the New Philharmonia Orchestra in Newton, MA.

Noya is also a respected member of the conducting faculty of the Berklee College of Music in Boston. In the fall of 2008, he began his tenure as music director of the Berklee Contemporary Symphony Orchestra, where he is actively engaged in the exploration of cutting-edge orchestral repertoire.

Noya began his professional career in his native Venezuela, as conductor of the Youth Orchestra of Valencia, one of the original ensembles of “El Sistema.” After earning advanced degrees in composition and conducting from Boston University, Noya was appointed to serve as assistant conductor of the Caracas Philharmonic and assistant to the music director of the Teatro Teresa Carreño, one of the most prestigious theaters in Latin America. Noya continued his conducting career in the United States by serving as music director of the Empire State Youth Orchestra in Albany, New York for ten seasons. During his tenure, he led the group on two European tours as well as in concerts at both Carnegie Hall in New York City and in Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood.

In the U.S., Noya has appeared as guest conductor of the Boston Pops, Baltimore, Nashville, San Antonio, and Omaha Symphony Orchestras, and the Cape Cod Symphony, among others. In addition, he has performed internationally with orchestras in Argentina, Brazil, Peru, Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Spain, Italy and Russia. In Venezuela, Noya has collaborated with “El Sistema,” teaching Master Classes and conducting orchestral performances throughout the country. For the past three seasons, Noya has been a guest conductor with the Orquesta Académica of Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires.

Ken Yanagisawa

Japanese-American conductor Ken Yanagisawa is the Music Director of the Boston Opera Collaborative and the Boston Annex Players, the Associate Conductor of the Boston Civic Symphony, the Assistant Conductor of the New Philharmonia Orchestra, and an Assistant Professor at Berklee College of Music. He made his Japanese debut conducting Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte with Kansai Nikikai and the Japan Century Symphony Orchestra in February 2023 and will return in Fall 2026 to conduct Mozart’s Clemenza di Tito. A 2024 Aspen Conducting Academy Fellow and James Conlon Conductor Prize recipient, Ken has previously served as a Conducting Apprentice with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and has assisted/covered the National Symphony Orchestra, Rhode Island Philharmonic, Berlin Academy of American Music, and Berlin Opernfest, among others.

Ken recently completed a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Orchestral Conducting at Boston University under the guidance of James Burton and also holds graduate degrees in conducting from the Manhattan School of Music and a B.A. in music from Yale University. Prior to Yale he attended the New England Conservatory as an Undergraduate Diploma candidate for Oboe Performance under the tutelage of John Ferrillo. His other teachers include George Manahan, William Lumpkin, Bernard Labadie, and Tatsuya Shimono. In masterclasses and festivals, he has been taught by renowned artists and pedagogues such as Robert Spano, Leonard Slatkin, Mark Stringer, Dame Jane Glover, Gerard Schwarz, and Jorma Panula. He is deeply grateful for all the excellent guidance and mentorship he has received thus far in his life as a musician.

Amanda Shea

Three-time Boston Music Award-winning Spoken Word Artist Amanda Shea is redefining poetry as a powerful tool for transformative dialogue on a global scale. Revered by The Boston Globe as a “connector of creativity and community,” Shea has curated and hosted intergenerational poetry and hip-hop events on stages including Boston Calling, BAMSFest, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Art Series, and the Jos Literary Festival in Nigeria, with work featured in the Museum of Fine Arts, TEDX, Netflix, Prime Video, BBC News, and GBH.

Shea co-founded and curated six iterations of Activating ARTivism, a community festival in Boston that amplifies POC voices through art, activism, and resistance. She is the curator and host of GBH “Outspoken Saturdays”, the recipient of The Boston Foundation LAB Grant 2024, and serves as the Arts & Culture Director at 617PEAK. As a contractor educator at various Boston Public Schools, she uses her platform to inspire and teach. Shea is set to release her first poetry collection, Pieces of Shea, in 2026 with Balboa Publishing.