Orchestra Conductor Giancarlo Guerrero Connects With the Community

Giancarlo Guerrero has brought new energy to Sarasota Orchestra as he announces programs for his second season.

By Jay Handelman/ArtsBeat.org April 27, 2026

Sarasota Orchestra music director Giancarlo Guerrero is nearing the end of his first season.

As he nears the end of his first season as music director of the Sarasota Orchestra, Giancarlo Guerrero is quickly feeling part of a large community of music lovers. Even as he spends most of his time flying around the world for other engagements, he has been a frequent visitor to Sarasota, conducting numerous concerts, working on plans to build a new music center and getting to know the musicians, donors and staff.

 “It’s been a reaffirmation of everything I knew when I came here during the search. I knew it was an incredible organization with a great vision for the future,” Guerrero says in a Zoom interview from Nashville, where he was preparing to lead a series of concerts. “It’s great to work with amazing people, staff, board members, supporters and the musicians. It’s everything I expected and more.”

Guerrero lives full time in Miami, but spends as much time as he can in Sarasota between other conducting assignments, or when he’s not being secretly whisked off to Los Angeles to appear in the Super Bowl halftime show with Bad Bunny, as he did in February.

“It gives me full days to try to understand what makes the community special and let people see the work of a music director that most don’t see," he says. "The machinery is always going.”

His positive attitude before he joined Sarasota Orchestra has only been reinforced in the months since his fall debut as music director.

“The orchestra is quite remarkable,” he says. “Now that I get to work with them regularly, there’s absolutely nothing they can’t do, no challenge they would not cherish. The proof of that is the repertoire this season and what comes next.”

He also has recognized a “closeness” between the audience and musicians. “The people that support the orchestra, subscribers or regular concert goers, have a great connection with individual players and know them so well," Guerrero says. 

Joseph McKenna, the orchestra’s president and CEO, notes that Guerrero arrived last fall after the organization went nearly six years without a full time music director and was in great need of an artistic leader. 

“Maybe it’s an unfair comparison, but it’s like an NFL team that gets a really great franchise star quarterback to be the spiritual ethos of the group,” McKenna says. “Giancarlo has brought in an incredible level of leadership, musicianship, community engagement. It’s like this incredible surge of all kinds of positive energy.”

Guerrero himself feels a connection with audiences.

“People are reaching out to me," he says. "They’re not afraid to say ‘Have you thought of programming this?’ or ‘What about this soloist?’”

Some of those suggestions may be evident in the season he has revealed for 2026-27, which includes performances by superstar soloists Emanuel Ax and Gil Shaham. He is sure the audience is open to almost whatever he has in mind. 

“The audience here is incredibly sophisticated,” he says. “When given and presented in the right context, they will get [the program] and know where we’re going. I try to take them on a journey in every performance.”

Audience members may come to hear one piece, but will tell him that “this other piece had a great impact on me,” he says.

“When you do that, they start to trust you. I want all of us, including myself and musicians, to go on a journey together," he says. "I put a program together in a lab, like scientists, and we won’t know until we play the pieces back to back if they work together or not. In reality, what I’m asking every single time is to give us a chance and we’ll introduce you to stuff you may not have been familiar with—but you will think, 'Where has this been all my life?'” 

A schematic design of the concert hall by Rawn Architects that will be part of a new Sarasota Orchestra music center.

The more connected audiences feel to Guerrero and the orchestra, the more likely they will be to support construction of the new music center planned for a 32-acre site on Fruitville Road near I-75. It will feature an 1,800-seat concert hall, a 700-seat recital hall and an education and administrative wing. The orchestra is still raising money for the project and has not yet determined a possible pricetag for the construction.

McKenna says new design plans may be revealed later this year, when the orchestra will have a better sense of the overall price tag. He adds that Guerrero has “been very active in sharing the vision of the music center.” 

New Season

Guerrero was announced as the new music director in August 2024, after winning over musicians and orchestra leaders as a guest conductor the previous season. He came to Sarasota after leading the Nashville Symphony since 2008.

He had already booked a number of engagements around the world, so his time in Sarasota this season has been more limited than he would have liked. His schedule allowed him to conduct eight programs; for 2026-27 he will lead nine, including five in the Masterworks series. 

As the orchestra continues to diversify its programs, McKenna says it will drop performances at the Neel Performing Arts Center on the campus of the State College of Florida Manatee-Sarasota in Bradenton. All Masterworks concerts will instead be presented in Sarasota at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall.

“Everything we do at the orchestra is about making sure we continue excellence and provide service and have a strong and positive impact,” McKenna says. He said it is a challenge “coordinating five separate concert series among multiple venues” and says the orchestra is “responding to the post-Covid environment, and doing it in a way that ensures continued excellence, service and impact.”

Pianist Emanuel Ax will perform in the Sarasota Orchestra’s final 2026-27 Masterworks series concert.

While leading major pieces by Beethoven, Prokofiev, Mozart, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky, Brahms and more, Guerrero continues to introduce more contemporary works by American composers, including Carlos Simon’s Tales: A Folklore Symphony, Julia Adolphe’s Underneath the Sheen, Lera Auerbach’s Icarus and John Adams’s Doctor Atomic Symphony in three different Masterworks concerts. Shaham will join the orchestra for the opening concert, which includes Beethoven’s Violin concerto, and Ax will play Chopin's Piano Concerto No. 2 in a program that also includes Gustav Mahler’s Adagio from Symphony No. 10.  

Other guests soloists include violinist Stella Chen playing Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto and two of the orchestra’s own musicians, principal cellist Natalie Helm and principal viola Stephanie Block, who will be featured in Richard Strauss’ Don Quixote.

 “I think the world of our musicians, and we get to highlight some of them telling the story of a knight, who is either completely a genius or out of his mind, and Sancho Panza, whose job was to keep him from killing himself,” Guerrero said.

Two guest conductors will make their Sarasota debuts next season. Benjamin Manis, whose 2026 calendar includes the Utah Opera, Richmond Symphony, Houston Grand Opera and San Francisco Opera, will lead a “Mozart and Dvorak” program that features pianist Zlata Chochieva performing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23, as well as Dvorak’s Symphony No. 7. 

Christian Reif will be one of two guest conductors for the Sarasota Orchestra’s 2026-27 Masterworks series.

Christian Reif, recently named chief conductor of the Gavle Symphony Orchestra in Sweden and the music director designate of the Wuppertal Opera and Symphony Orchestra in Germany, will be joined by cellist Sterling Elliot for Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto in a program that also includes Brahms Symphony No. 2.

Guerrero also serves as artistic director and principal conductor of the Grant Park Music Festival in Chicago, and in February, he will feature the Grant Park Chorus, along with three soloists for a performance of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana.

 He also will lead two of the company’s Discoveries concerts. In October, he will conduct “Classical Music Humor,” featuring works by Rossini, Haydn, Mozart and Prokofiev. 

“This is one of the programs I’m looking forward to most. The omposers were very funny, and they wrote music almost as a joke,” he says.

He also will lead the “Beethoven Bookends” concert, featuring Beethoven's second and eighth symphonies. In January he also will conduct one of the six Chamber Soirees, "Mozart: A Little Night Music,”

“As conductors we don’t get to do a lot of chamber music, but this is a way I can get to know my players more deeply," Guerrero says.

He also plans to conduct a special “Happy Birthday Mozart” as a winter family concert. 

The season also includes six of the popular—often sold-out—Great Escapes Concerts, three Pops concerts and a screening of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi with the orchestra led by Christopher Confessore.

Music director Giancarlo Guerrero leads a performance by the Sarasota Orchestra.

Sarasota Orchestra's Full 2026-27 Season

Masterworks Series

Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall

"Beethoven & Prokofiev," Nov. 7-8, 2026
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor, Gil Shaham, violin

  • Icarus, Lera Auerbach
  • Violin Concerto, Ludwig von Beethoven 
  • Symphony No. 5, Sergei Prokofiev 

“Tchaikovsky & Strauss,” Dec. 5-6, 2026
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor, with Natalie Helm, principal cello, and Stephanie Block, principal viola

  • Don Quixote, Richard Strauss 
  • Act II from The Nutrcracker, Pyotr Ilya Tchaikovsky

 “Mozart & Dvořák,” Jan. 9-10, 2027
Benjamin Manis, guest conductor; Zlata Chochieva, piano

  • Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes, Benjamin Britten
  • Piano Concerto No. 23, Mozart
  • Symphony No. 7, Dvořák

“Carmina Burana,” Feb. 5-7, 2027
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Grant Park Chorus; Jana McIntyre, soprano; Logan Tanner, countertenor; Troy Cook, baritone

  • Concerto for Orchestra, Witold Lutosławski 
  • Carmina Burana, Carl Orff 

“Bernstein & Barber,” Feb. 19-21, 2027
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Stella Chen, violin

  • Tales: A Folklore Symphony, Carlos Simon 
  • Doctor Atomic Symphony, John Adams 
  • Violin Concerto, Samuel Barber 
  • Symphonic Suite from On the Waterfront, Leonard Bernstein

“Brahms & Elgar,” March 5-7, 2027
Christian Reif, guest conductor; Sterling Elliot, cello

  • Underneath the Sheen, Julia Adolphe 
  • Cello Concerto, Edward Elgar
  • Symphony No. 2, Johannes Brahms

“Chopin & Mahler,” April 3-4, 2027
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Emanuel Ax, piano

  • Overture to Der Freischütz, Carl Maria von Weber
  • Adagio from Symphony No. 10, Gustav Mahler
  • Piano Concerto No. 2, Frederic Chopin 
  • Daphnis et Chloé Suite No. 2, Maurice Ravel 

Orchestra Pops

Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall

“Hollywood’s Greatest Hits,” Jan. 22-23, 2027
Evan Roider, conductor

“Music of the Knights,” Feb. 26-27, 2027
Mélisse Brunet, conductor

“Rock Legends of the ‘60s & ‘70s,” April 9-10, 2027
John Gennaro Devlin, conductor, with singers Rick Brantley, Sarah Darling and Jesse Nager

Discoveries

Sarasota Opera House

“Classical Music Humor,” Oct. 3, 2026

Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Terrence Wilson, piano

  • Overture to The Barber of Seville, Rossini 
  • Andante from Symphony No. 94 (Surprise), Haydn 
  • Menuetto maestoso from Ein musikalischer Spass (A Musical Joke), Mozart 
  • Thunder and Lightning Polka, Strauss, Jr. 
  • Le Tombeau de Liberace, Michael Daugherty 
  • Symphony No. 1 (Classical), Prokofiev 

“A Festive Celebration,”  Dec. 23, 2026
Naomi Woo, conductor; Sarah Fleiss, soprano

  • Overture from The Nutcracker, Tchaikovsky
  • Bal masqué, Amy Beach
  • Exsultate, jubilate, Mozart
  • Rejoice Greatly, O Daughter of Zion” from Messiah, Handel 
  • Men of Goodwill: Variations on A Christmas Carol, Britten 
  • Kiwetin-acahcos (North Star), Andrew Balfour
  • Andante festivo and Finlandia, Jean Sibelius  

“Beethoven Bookends,” May 8, 2027

Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor

  • Symphony No. 2, Beethoven
  • Symphony No. 8, Beethoven

Great Escapes 

Holley Hall, Symphony Center

“Planes, Trains, & Automobiles,” Oct. 14-17, 2026
Evan Roider, conductor

“Happy Holley Days,” Dec. 9-13, 2026
Tamara Dworetz, conductor

“Moonlight,” Jan. 13-17, 2027
Matthew Troy, conductor

“Romantic Rendezvous,” Feb. 10-14, 2027
Mélisse Brunet, conductor

“Soundstages,” March 10-15, 2027
Christopher Confessore, conductor

“Voices of Spring,” April 14-17, 2027
William Waldrop, conductor

Chamber Soirées

Holley Hall, Symphony Center

“Water Music,” Sept. 27, 2026

  • Last Round, Osvaldo Golijov
  • Serenade for Winds, Dvořák
  • Suite No. 2 from Water Music, Handel

“Adagio for Strings,” Oct. 29, 2026

  • Dance Suite, Leonard Bernstein 
  • Phantasy for Piano Quartet, Frank Bridge
  • Le Tombeau de Couperin, Ravel 
  • String Quartet, Barber

“In the Mix,” November 15, 2026

  • Quintet for Harp and Strings, Arnold Bax
  • Octet for Brasses and Piano, Florence Price
  • LIgNEouS, Andy Akiho
  • Petite symphonie, Charles Gounod 

“Mozart: A Little Night Music,” Jan. 28-29, 2027

  • Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor
  • Eine kleine Nachtmusik, Mozart 
  • Serenade No. 9 (Posthorn), Mozart 

“Old World/New World,” Feb. 28, 2027

  • Four Outings for Brass, André Previn
  • Variations sur un thème libre, Eugène Bozza 
  • String Quartet No. 2, Alexander Borodin 

“Bruch & Beethoven,” April 8, 2027

  • Piano Quartet, Max Bruch
  • String Quartet No. 16, Beethoven

Special Concerts

“The Conductor’s Magical Book,” Oct. 9. 
Free family concert. Stilian Kirov, conductor

“Star Wars: Return of the Jedi in Concert,” Oct. 23-24, 2026. 
Film with live orchestra. Christopher Confessore, conductor

“Happy Birthday Mozart,” Jan. 31, 2027. 
Winter Family Concert: Guerrero, conductor

“Side-by-Side,” April 18, 2027
Stuart Malina, conductor

“Disco Divas,” Outdoor Pops, April 23-24, Ed Smith Stadium.
Byron Stripling, conductor, with singers Shayna Steele, Crystal Monee Hall and Kelly LeVesque, vocals

For ticket and subscription information: 941-953-3434; sarasotaorchestra.org

This story was originally published by ArtsBeat, a nonprofit cultural journalism initiative powered by DreamLarge in partnership with Gulf Coast Community Foundation and Suncoast Searchlight. Learn more at ArtsBeat.org.

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