Currently in his sixth season as Music Director of the Wheeling Symphony Orchestra, ANDRÉ RAPHEL SMITH has established a distinguished career through innovative programming, a strong commitment to American music and performances acclaimed by audiences and critics alike.

André Raphel Smith enjoys an active career as a guest conductor and has appeared with most of America’s major orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, Boston, Chicago and Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestras and The Cleveland, Minnesota and Philadelphia Orchestras. In recent seasons he has conducted the Atlanta, Baltimore, Charlotte, Fort Worth, Hartford, Houston, Indianapolis, Knoxville, Louisville, Memphis, National, New Jersey, New World, North Carolina, Oregon, Saint Louis, Seattle, Syracuse and Utah Symphony Orchestras, Louisiana and Rochester Philharmonic Orchestras and The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. In 1997, he made his Carnegie Hall debut, leading the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, returning to the famed hall with the same orchestra in the following season. Mr. Smith’s international engagements include performances with Germany’s Neubrandenburger Philarmonie, Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra, Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de Costa Rica and New Zealand’s Auckland Philharmonia.

A guest conductor at the major music festivals, André Raphel Smith has led programs at the Blossom Music Festival with The Cleveland Orchestra and at the Mann Music Center with The Philadelphia Orchestra. During 2003, he led the Kennedy Center/National Symphony Orchestra Summer Music Institute. He has also conducted at the Tanglewood Music Center, Eastern Music Festival, Topeka’s Sunflower Music Festival, Chicago’s Grant Park Music Festival, as well as Brazil’s Campos Do Jordao Festival.

For two years, André Raphel Smith served as an assistant conductor to Kurt Masur at the New York Philharmonic. He was Assistant Conductor of The Philadelphia Orchestra for six years, where he worked closely with Wolfgang Sawallisch. Prior to his appointment in Philadelphia, Mr. Smith served three yaers as Assistant Conductor of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, under Leonard Slatkin.

André Raphel Smith has a strong and active interest in audience development and arts education. During his tenure with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, he served as Music Director of its "In Unison" program, a partnership between the orchestra and local churches. He has also been heard nationally as a featured artist on NPR’s "Performance Today." Mr. Smith’s commitment to education is also reflected in his work with orchestras at leading conservatories and training programs throughout the country. He frequently appears with The Juilliard Orchestra and has also led performances at the National Orchestral Institute and with The New World Symphony and Young Artists Orchestra at Tanglewood.

Born in Durham, North Carolina, André Raphel Smith began formal music lessons at age 11.  He received a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Miami, continuing his studies at Yale University, where he earned his Master’s degree. While at Yale, Mr. Smith began his conducting studies with Otto-Werner Mueller. He continued studies with Mr. Mueller at The Curtis Institute of Music, earning a diploma in conducting, and at The Juilliard School, where he was awarded the Bruno Walter Memorial Scholarship and received an advanced certificate in orchestral conducting.  

André Raphel Smith is the recipient of numerous awards, among them Honorary Commendations from the cities of Philadelphia and St. Louis. In 2001, the North Carolina Senate awarded him the “Order of the Long Leaf Pine,” the state’s highest honor for a civilian. West Liberty State College conferred an Honorary Doctorate in 2004. In 2006, Mr. Smith was named the recipient of the Distinguished Service Award from Yale University.

"Mr. Smith is an agile, demonstrative conductor, one who is physically drawn into the music but who doesn't get so carried away as to forget to give cues. The orchestra [New York Philharmonic] played brilliantly for him."
THE NEW YORK TIMES

"Smith's conducting gave an excellent sense of Mahler's kaleidoscopically shifting moods [Symphony #1] and the work's deep roots in folk song and dance as well as the composer's own songs."
THE WASHINGTON POST

"Idiomatically, the performance of Brahms' Tragic Overture was very satisfying. It was Brahms at his best. In Dvorak's Symphony No. 8, Smith again got to the core of the style quickly. His interpretation was robust, but he was never afraid to calm moods and quiet dynamics to impressively subdued levels."
HOUSTON CHRONICLE

"André Raphel Smith returned to Powell Hall to lead the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra in a well-designed program of music informed by an American aesthetic, played for a sold-out house. Smith's conducting is clear and precise, exact and energetic; his ideas are well-formed. The combination made for a successful concert."
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

"Conductor André Raphel Smith performed an act of restoration when he led The Philadelphia Orchestra in the seminal piece at the Acedemy of Music. La Mer may have floated more of this century's music than almost any other work. Smith led a rational performance in which the elements that integrate the music were plain to hear and in which the extraordinary colors within the orchestra claimed attention."
THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

8/31/2008 (7:30pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Anna Kuchinka Amphitheater
"Music Under the Stars"

9/1/2008 (7:30pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Hazel Ruby McQuain Memorial Amphitheater (Morgantown)
"Music Under the Stars"

9/25/2008 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
WesBanco Arena
Pops: "The Return of the Singing Cowboy"
with Michael Martin Murphey

9/26/2008 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Harper-McNeeley Auditorium, Davis & Elkins College (Elkins)
Pops: "The Return of the Singing Cowboy"
with Michael Martin Murphey

10/10/2008 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts (Glen Dale)
Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia (overture)
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto #2
soloist: Vladimir Stoupel
Sibelius: Symphony #2

10/18/2008 (8pm) ASHEVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
Bernstein: Candide (overture)
Mozart: Piano Concerto #23
soloist: Michael Boriskin
Copland: Symphony #3

11/7/2008 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts (Glen Dale)
Dukas: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
Danielpour: Violin Concerto
soloist: Timothy Fain
Tchaikovsky: The Sleeping Beauty (suite)
Tcahikovsky: Francesca da Rimini

12/9/2008 (7pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
WesBanco Arena
"Symphony on Ice"

1/16/2009 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts (Glen Dale)
Beethoven: König Stephen (overture)
Beethoven: Triple Concerto
soloists: Pittsburgh Piano Trio
Beethoven: Symphony #7

3/6/2009 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts (Glen Dale)
Brahms: Academic Festival Overture
Bernstein: Serenade
soloist: Anne Akiko Meyers
Strauss: Ein Heldenleben

4/28/2009 (7:30pm) TEMPLE UNIVERSITY SINFONIA
Tomlinson Theater
Rossini: La Scala de seta (overture)
Poulenc: Harpsichord Concerto
soloist: Joyce Lindorf
Beethoven: Symphony #2

5/15/2009 (8pm) WHEELING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts (Glen Dale)
Adams: The Chairman Dances
Copland: Old American Songs (First Set)
Copland: Lincoln Portrait
soloist: Gregg Baker, baritone
Dvorak: Symphony #9