Work samples

  • Variations on an Ancient Irish Theme by Mark Linkins - The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra
  • In The Pouring Rain by Joel Michael Schwartz, The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra
  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra River Suite by Chuck Levin 2021

About Baltimore

The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, under the direction of Mark Linkins and Associate Director Joel Michael-Schwartz, is a Baltimore, Maryland-based ensemble of mandolins, mandolas, mandocellos, mandobasses, and classical guitars. We play an eclectic mix of classical music, marches, rags, concert dances, pop tunes and a variety of other traditional compositions and arrangements for mandolin orchestra. Please explore our site and find out more about us!

The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra… more

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Recent Recordings

  • Variations on an Ancient Irish Theme by Mark Linkins - The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra
  • In The Pouring Rain by Joel Michael Schwartz, The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra
  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra River Suite by Chuck Levin 2021
  • "Largo" from Winter (from The Four Seasons), Antonio Vivaldi, Arr. Mark Linkins
  • "Concerto in C for Mandolin" Antonio Vivaldi, Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra ft. The Russian Trio
  • Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra performs "Ruxton Troubadours," by Conrad Gebelein
  • Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra performs Eden Macadam-Somer's "Homeward Bound"
  • Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra performs Mark Davis' "Tema de Soto"

History of The Balitmore Mandolin Orchestra

The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra was first organized in 1924 by German-born conductor, composer, and music teacher Conrad Gebelein (at left, ca. 1925). 

The orchestra held its first concert in 1925.  Its early concerts featured more than just mandolin-family instruments.  They included performances by the orchestra's Banjo Club and Hawaiian Troupe, which played types of music that were very popular with concertgoers at the time.  There were also performances by vocalists and instrumental soloists.  Conrad Gebelein himself often played solos on the banjo and Hawaiian guitar.  He also composed and arranged many pieces for mandolin orchestra which were premiered by the BMO.

The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra started out with nineteen members in 1924, and by 1929 that number had almost doubled.

  • Conrad Gebelein (at left, ca. 1925)
    Conrad Gebelein (at left, ca. 1925)

    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra was first organized in 1924 by German-born conductor, composer, and music teacher Conrad Gebelein.

  • Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra 1927 -1928
    Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra 1927 -1928

    The orchestra held its first concert in 1925.  Its early concerts featured more than just mandolin-family instruments. They included performances by the orchestra's Banjo Club and Hawaiian Troupe, which played types of music that were very popular with concertgoers at the time. There were also performances by vocalists and instrumental soloists.  Conrad Gebelein himself often played solos on the banjo and Hawaiian guitar. He also composed and arranged many pieces for mandolin orchestra which were premiered by the BMO.

    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra started out with nineteen members in 1924, and by 1929 that number had almost doubled.

  • The Baltimore Orchestra, ca. 1940, with director Conrad Gebelein (standing center)
    The Baltimore Orchestra, ca. 1940, with director Conrad Gebelein (standing center)

    After the United States entered World War II in December 1941 the Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra disbanded again, and Mr. Gebelein did not attempt to revive it after the war.  He had many other music-related responsibilities, which included serving as music director at Johns Hopkins University, conducting a full-fledged civic symphony orchestra in Baltimore and teaching at his two music studios.

  • The newly re-formed Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra in 1975 with director Conrad Gebelein (standing, center rear)
    The newly re-formed Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra in 1975 with director Conrad Gebelein (standing, center rear)

    Like a Phoenix...

    Many years later, in the mid-1970s, some of Conrad Gebelein's guitar students expressed an interest in playing together in some sort of ensemble.  He pointed out to them that an orchestra made up solely of guitars wouldn't really sound all that good, so he got his students interested in the mandolin family of instruments instead.  A mandolin ensemble would provide the plucked-string equivalent of the full voicing of a bowed-string orchestra, which guitars alone could not do.

    Soon Mr. Gebelein had about fifteen serious and devoted amateur mandolin players and other instrumentalists, and in 1975--at the age of 80--he reconstituted the Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra for the third time and served again as its conductor.

    The newly re-formed orchestra performed its first concert in 1975 at Johns Hopkins University.  This third incarnation of the Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra continues today as a thriving, viable orchestra.

  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, ca. 1986, with director Benjamin Durant (center, front row)
    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, ca. 1986, with director Benjamin Durant (center, front row)

    The Baton is Passed

    Conrad Gebelein conducted the new Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra for five years until his health failed.  In late 1980, Benjamin Durant, a retired U.S. Army bandmaster and retired professor of music at the Community College of Baltimore (and son of an avid amateur mandolinist), took over as director of the orchestra.

    Mr. Durant continued the fine conducting tradition of his predecessor, and the orchestra put on many well-received concerts around the Baltimore area during his tenure.  BMO concerts continued to feature solo performances, including many mandolin solos by Joyce Adams, the orchestra's concertmistress.  Mr. Durant devoted a great deal of effort to improving the orchestra, and he capably led the BMO until his untimely death in 1986.

  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, 1988, with director David T. Evans (standing at left)
    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, 1988, with director David T. Evans (standing at left)

    Still Going Strong!

    David T. Evans, who had been a member of the Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra since 1982, succeeded Benjamin Durant as director on short notice after Mr. Durant's untimely death in 1986.  Mr. Evans conducted the orchestra for many years until his retirement in October 2011. 

    Mr. Evans had played the mandolin since 1974.  He studied classical guitar and music education at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore.

    The orchestra grew in size and matured musically under Mr. Evans' leadership, and it received many favorable reviews of its performances during the years of his tenure.  Since 1994 Italian-born soprano Beatrice Gilbert has contributed her show-stopping vocal talents to the orchestra's performances.

  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, 1999, with director David T. Evans (standing, center rear) and soprano Beatrice Gilbert (seated, front row, center)
    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra, 1999, with director David T. Evans (standing, center rear) and soprano Beatrice Gilbert (seated, front row, center)
  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra with Bea Gilbert  2019
    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra with Bea Gilbert 2019
  • The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra with Bea Gilbert 2020
    The Baltimore Mandolin Orchestra with Bea Gilbert 2020