About Amadeus
Concerts

What We Do

Our Mission

Amadeus Concerts inspires a community of classical music lovers in the Washington, D.C., area through up-close performances by professional musicians, educational outreach, and mentoring for young musicians. We collaborate with artistic partners and spotlight performers of the highest caliber, including our own Amadeus Orchestra.

Nonprofit

arts organization

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years of work

DMV

Fairfax County & DMV

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emerging artists events

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audience members each year

Highlights of Past Events

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An Opera Afternoon

Frank Conlon returned as host and accompanist for our beloved annual Opera Afternoon, reimagined for Valentine’s Day weekend as an afternoon of love songs. Joined by an outstanding cast of singers, he led a warm and engaging program featuring music by Donizetti, Bizet, Charpentier, Gershwin, and Herbert.

Kassia Music

Bernard Vallandingham, Susanna Mendlow, and Sam Post brought rhythm, color, and energy to an afternoon of chamber music inspired by dance. Featuring Ravel, Chebotaryan, Bach, and original works, the program moved seamlessly between classical tradition and irresistible groove.

amadeus strings performing

Season Finale

The Amadeus Strings brought the season to a radiant close with a program of British masterworks by Britten, Holst, and Vaughan Williams. Led by returning conductor A. Scott Wood, with tenor Robert Baker and hornist James Nickel, the performance was filled with lyricism, beauty, and celebratory spirit.

Our Impact

How We Help

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Music Without Barriers

Amadeus brings live classical music close to home with concerts, school partnerships, and free or low-cost programs that keep great music accessible to audiences across Northern Virginia.

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Side-by-Side Programs

Our Side-by-Side programs connect Amadeus Orchestra musicians with local students in Fairfax County schools, giving young players the chance to rehearse and perform alongside professional artists.

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Emerging Artists

Through Emerging Artists concerts, scholarships, and special appearances, we spotlight rising performers and help them build experience, visibility, and community connections early in their careers.

Our Own Orchestra

The Amadeus Orchestra is our resident ensemble, performing regularly throughout the season and anchoring key programs, including Side-by-Side concerts in local schools and collaborative performances with guest artists.

Help Us With a Donation

Ticket sales cover only part of what it takes to present exceptional concerts. Donations support our musicians, educational programs, and the long-term vitality of Amadeus Concerts.

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How We’re Different

We present exceptional performances by world-class musicians in intimate spaces in McLean and Great Falls, VA

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More than a concert
— a complete experience

Your ticket includes top-level musicians and post-concert wine and food receptions, where audiences interact with artists — offering value comparable to major institutions, but in a more personal setting.

A deeply connected community of music lovers

A deeply connected community of music lovers

Deep friendships have formed over interest in these concerts, and the audience really pays attention, listens, and loves to talk about what they experienced at the post-concert parties.

Inclusive concerts for diverse audiences

Inclusive concerts for diverse audiences & education impact

Alongside our concert series, Amadeus offers diverse musical programs, learning opportunities, and discounted tickets, creating an inclusive cultural environment for audiences of all generations.

Who We Are

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1981

Founded as Great Falls Music Society by Timothy Rowe, with our first concerts taking place at St Francis Episcopal Church

2006

A Scott Wood appointed as Artistic Director and conductor of the Amadeus Orchestra

2025

Stephen Gorbos appointed Artistic & Executive Director. Wood remains conductor

Today

Our audience has grown to over 800 across our season

Stephen Gorbos

Stephen Gorbos

Artistic and Executive Director

Stephen Gorbos is a composer, arts administrator, and educator based in Falls Church City, VA. Stephen started in June 2025 as the Artistic and Executive Director of Amadeus Concerts; he is also the founder and director of Little City Concerts, an arts organization that pairs amazing performances with social justice issues in Falls Church City.

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Stephen Gorbos

Stephen Gorbos

Artistic and Executive Director

Stephen Gorbos is a composer, arts administrator, and educator based in Falls Church City, VA. As of June 2025, Stephen is the incoming Artistic and Executive Director of Amadeus Concerts; he is also the founder and director of Little City Concerts, an arts organization that pairs amazing performances with social justice issues in Falls Church City.

Stephen composes concert music for a range of ensembles and soloists, as well as music for film, theatre, and dance. His music, described by the Washington Post as “lyrical…warm and richly drawn,” and by Chicagomusic.org as “pulsating with a sense of urban life,” navigates a wide palette of genres and influences, creating a synthesis between styles as diverse as American rhythm & blues, western classical music, and Javanese gamelan. Whether composing for traditional ensembles, electronic media, or a mixture of both, Stephen tries to find and exploit the unique variables at play: this can be the technical abilities of his collaborators, or distinct features in communities with which he might be engaging on a particular project.

Stephen has had his works performed in concert halls across the US and in Europe by musicians such as the Minnesota Orchestra, the Albany Symphony, the NOW Ensemble, Roomful of Teeth, and the Spektral Quartet. Recent projects include Mercurial Shadows (for Gideon), for oboe and electronics, commissioned by Ben Buergel, and the piano trio Vox Siderum, commissioned by the Maryland State Music Teachers Association. Recordings of Stephen’s music are available on Sono Luminous (What I Decided to Keep, with the Inscape Chamber Orchestra) and Albany Records (Push, with the Moores School Percussion Ensemble at the University of Houston). A recording of Veiled by violist Wendy Richman was recently released on New Focus Recordings.

Stephen’s work has received recognition and support from the state of Virginia (2024 Operations Grant from ArtsFairfax, 2023 and 2024 Project Grants from the Falls Church City Arts and Humanities Council, 2016 Strauss Artist Grant), The Randy Hostetler Living Room Foundation (2024 Foundation Grant) ASCAP (2005 Morton Gould Award), Meet the Composer (2007 Creative Connections Grant), and the American Music Center (Composer Assistance Project Grants in 2006 and 2010). In 2008, Stephen was awarded a Subito Grant from the American Composers Forum, and, as a recipient of the Aaron Copland Award, was composer-in-residence at Copland House. During the summer of 2012, Stephen was composer-in-residence at High Concept Labs, a multidisciplinary arts space in the heart of Chicago. Stephen has also been a fellow at both the Tanglewood Music Center (2006) and the Aspen Music Festival’s composition masterclass (2002), and his music has been featured at Ostrava Music Days (2007), the Oregon Bach Festival Composers Symposium (2005), the Chamber Music Academy and Composers Forum of the East (2005), the Bowdoin Summer Music Festival (2004).

Active as an educator, Stephen maintains a private studio specializing in composition, theory, and music technology. Previously, Stephen taught at The Catholic University of America from 2008 – 2025, where he was an Associate Professor and served for 7 years as Chair of the Department of Music Theory, History, and Composition. Other teaching posts include Visiting Assistant Professor positions at Yale University (2012 – 2013) and The College of the Holy Cross (2007 – 2008). Stephen holds a BFA from Carnegie Mellon University, an MM from the Yale School of Music, and a DMA from Cornell University.

A. Scott Wood

Conductor of the Amadeus Orchestra

Scott Wood is the the conductor of the Amadeus Orchestra, and previously served for many years as the Artistic Director of Amadeus Concerts. The orchestra performs several times each season on our concert series, performs on Amadeus collaborators’ programs and visits schools through the Amadeus Concerts’ Side-by-Side program. 

Learn more

A. Scott Wood

Conductor of the Amadeus Orchestra

A. Scott Wood is the Artistic Director of Amadeus Concerts and the conductor of the Amadeus Orchestra. The orchestra performs several times each season on our concert series, performs on Amadeus collaborators’ programs and visits schools through the Amadeus Concerts’ Side-by-Side program.

Mr. Wood is also music director and conductor of the Arlington Philharmonic and the Amadeus Orchestra and directs the Montgomery Symphony Orchestra and the National Cathedral School and St. Albans School Orchestra.

He has guest-conducted the Wolf Trap Orchestra, the Orchestra Society of Philadelphia, the Brevard (North Carolina) Philharmonic, the Rutgers Sinfonia, and the Washington Symphonic Brass, which he prepared for a Kennedy Center concert conducted by Leonard Slatkin. He has also appeared as a guest conductor for the Kennedy Center’s popular Messiah Sing-Along and worked with many choral ensembles, including the Vienna Choral Society, the Reston Chorale, the Fairfax Choral Society, the Navy Sea Chanters, and soloists from the Washington National Opera Domingo-Cafritz Young Artists.

Mr. Wood conducted the Fairfax Symphony Orchestra at the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival, was conductor-in-residence of the American University Orchestra, and conducted productions at Eldbrooke Opera, The Washington Savoyards, and Signature Theatre.

He has been lauded in as “an incredible talent” by the Virginia Commission for the Arts and recognized for achievement in the arts by the American Association of University Women. In 2016 the National Cathedral School awarded him a fellowship in recognition of outstanding teachers and their lifelong impact on students. He received the Serage Award for Music Education from the Fairfax Symphony Orchestra. Legendary Bollywood singer Asha Bhosle, the most-recorded musician in history, praised his musicianship to a rapturous audience at Wolf Trap.

Mr. Wood is on the conducting faculty of the Washington Conservatory of Music. He has given lectures for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and National Philharmonic at the Strathmore Performing Arts Center, the Goethe-Institut, and the Concurso di Canto Lirico in Peru as well as for Encore Learning, OASIS, and the Borders College of Classical Knowledge.

Mr. Wood has worked with young musicians as well, including the American Youth Symphony Orchestra and the Shenandoah Valley, Potomac Valley, Chesapeake, Prince William, and D.C. Youth Orchestras as well as George Mason University’s Potomac Arts Academy. He has been engaged as a guest-conductor for numerous honors orchestras and mentored teacher-conductors through the Fairfax County Public Schools Academy.

Born into a military family, Mr. Wood traveled extensively as a young man and learned the trumpet in a German Musikverein. While attending the University of Illinois, he went to London as a finalist in the International Trumpet Guild Solo Competition. He subsequently was a fellow at the International Conductor’s Workshop in the Czech Republic, was granted the first joint fellowship of the American Symphony Orchestra League and Chorus America, and was given a study fellowship in Italy.

Mr. Wood lives in Alexandria, Virginia, with his wife Mary, their daughters Emma (born in 2003) and Eileen (born in 2006), and their dog Pixie.

How to Get Involved

Donate

Donations support our musicians, educational programs, and the long-term vitality of Amadeus Concerts.

Become a Corporate Partner

Support our concerts and educational programs while aligning your organization with artistic excellence and community impact.

Join the Board

We are always interested in connecting with individuals who care deeply about music, education, and community impact — and who want to help guide our organization forward.

Become a Board Member

Join the Board

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Volunteer

From events to outreach, volunteers play an important role in making our concerts and programs possible.

Volunteer with Amadeus

Volunteer

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