Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra

making great music personal



our next performance

    • Thursday, 16 Feb 2012
    • Zipper Concert Hall
    • 7 pm
    • buy tickets

baroque conversations 2

  • Vivaldi Trio Sonata in D minor, RV 63, “La folia” (“The Folly”)
  • Antonio Soler Fandango in D minor, S. 146
  • Gaspar Sanz Pavanas
  • Gaspar Sanz Canarios
  • André Campra Selection from Les fêtes vénitiennes (“The Venetian Festivals”)
  • Jean-Baptiste Lully Selection from Atys
  • Rameau Selection from Dardanus
  • André Campra Selections from L’Europe gallant (“Galant Europe”)

upcoming performance

    • Saturday, 25 Feb 2012
    • Ambassador Auditorium
    • 8 pm
    • buy tickets

discover bach's magnificat

  • Bach Magnificat in D major

special event

the crystal ball

Join friends, family and music lovers from near and far to pay tribute to Jeffrey Kahane for his vast contributions to the Orchestra and the community at large at the 10th annual Concert Gala, The Crystal Ball.

    • Saturday, 11 Feb 2012
    • The California Club
    • 5 pm
Laco People

about LACO

The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra was founded in 1968 as an artistic outlet for the film and record studios’ most gifted musicians. The respected music critic Jim Svejda praised LACO as “America’s finest chamber orchestra.” Learn More.

For tickets and additional information, call 213 622 7001.



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noteworthy & new

single tickets now available online!

The wait is over! Single tickets are now available to purchase online for the Family Concert Series and Westside Connections. But don’t worry, there is still time to purchase subscriptions!

andrew norman joins LACO!

This summer, LACO welcomes Andrew Norman as the Orchestra’s composer-in-residence for the next three years. Learn more about Andrew in this recent LA Times article.

the LACO blog

mozart (mostly). entertaining (completely).

I’ve been going to LACO concerts for a few years now, and they deliver every single time. Sometimes the program isn’t necessarily my favorite cup of tea, but even then I can still appreciate their passion, their precision, and the pure artistry of what’s happening onstage. Last night, at the Mozart (Mostly) concert at the Alex Theatre, I added a new level of appreciation to the list, because something new dawned on me for the first time. It’s an idea that has probably percolated, to some extent, throughout my brain at previous concerts, but last night, it hit me like a ton of perfectly synchronized bricks: The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra is an outrageously attractive collection of people. And I mean that in the shallowest way possible – everyone on that stage is drop-dead beautiful. Every single one. It’s mind-boggling how much beauty is on that stage… and that’s before they pick up their instruments. Once they start playing the music… well, it’s enough to make one buckle over in a mix of awe and jealousy.

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