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Emily Levin, harp
Julia Choi, violin
Music and Meditation in the Garden
Sunken Garden
All tickets: $30

The well-loved combination of flute and harp anchor our final Music & Meditation concert. Following a short guided meditation, Principal harpist of the Dallas Symphony Emily Levin joins Met Opera violinist Julia Choi to create a textured soundscape ready for your open ears. Our Sunken Garden on a Saturday morning is the perfect spot to shake off the week and let music carry you into the weekend .
Emily Levin, harp
Julia Choi, violin
Jennifer Llewellyn, meditation coach
Rain or Shine Policy: All events at Caramoor take place rain or shine. In the event of inclement weather, this performance will move indoors or under a covered space.

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About the Artists
Praised for her “communicative, emotionally intense expression” (Jerusalem Post) and “technical wizardry and artistic intuition” (Herald Times), harpist Emily Levin has forged a multifaceted career as a soloist, artistic creator, educator, and advocate for new music.
The only American to receive top prizes at two of the most prestigious international harp competitions, Levin won the 2013 Bronze Medal at the 9th USA International Harp Competition, and at just 18 years old, was named a finalist and Renié Prizewinner at the 2009 International Harp Contest in Israel.
Levin joined the Dallas Symphony Orchestra as principal harp in 2016, where she holds the Elsa von Seggern Chair. She has also served as guest principal harp with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Houston Symphony. As a soloist and chamber musician, she has performed at leading venues throughout North America and Europe — including Carnegie Hall, National Sawdust, Bravo! Vail, the Aspen Music Festival, the Kimmel Center, Newport Classical, and Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. With the Dallas Symphony, she has performed as soloist with conductors John Adams, Gemma New, John Stogårds and Jaap van Zweden. Other concerto engagements include performances with the Jerusalem, Colorado and West Virginia Symphonies; the Louisiana Philharmonic; and the Ojai Festival and Lakes Area Music Festival.
Guided by her mission to expand the harp repertoire, Levin works extensively with established and emerging composers alike. In 2021, she founded GroundWork(s), an initiative commissioning 52 American composers—one from each state, plus Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico—to write new works centered on the harp. Recent and upcoming commissions have included works by Angélica Negrón, Reena Esmail, Michael Ippolito, Aaron Holloway Nahum, and Kareem Roustom.
This season, Levin tours her revolutionary solo project Experiments in Play. An immersive, interactive narrative recital, Experiments in Play invites the audience to solve puzzles, interact with the plot, and influence the path of the music itself. Other highlights include concerto debuts with the Waco Symphony and Camerata Notturna, returns to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra as Guest Principal Harp, and the world premiere of GroundWork(s) composer Kareem Roustom’s new work for flute, viola and harp at the Goethe Institute in Boston with flutist Demarre McGill and violist Danny Kim.
Fall 2025 will also bring the release of a new album, Birds of Paradise, which features trios for harp, violin, and cello with violinist Julia Choi and cellist Christine Lamprea. Recorded for Azica Records, Birds of Paradise includes music of Henriette Renié and Reena Esmail, as well as Angélica Negrón’s Ave del paraíso, a work commissioned and premiered by GroundWork(s) in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Levin was a winner of the 2016 Astral Artists National Auditions and was named the Classical Recording Foundation’s 2017 Young Musician of the Year for her debut album, Something Borrowed.
A committed educator, Levin is currently an adjunct associate professor of harp at Southern Methodist University, and a faculty member at the Aspen Music Festival. She received her Master of Music from the Juilliard School under the tutelage of Nancy Allen, where she was a teaching fellow for both the Ear Training and Educational Outreach Departments. A self-described bookworm, Levin completed undergraduate degrees in music and history at Indiana University with Susann McDonald. Her honors history thesis discussed the impact of war songs on the French Revolution.
Praised by The New York Times for her “narrative sweep and involving performance” and lauded by The Classical Source for her “delightful idiosyncrasy,” violinist Julia Choi is recognized for her versatility and artistry. In her strive to be a versatile and well-rounded musician, her musical endeavors span solo, chamber, and orchestral appearances throughout North America, Europe, and Asia.
Ms. Choi joined the First Violin section of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in 2019. Prior to this appointment, her career includes performances as a guest musician with leading ensembles such as the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Verbier Festival Chamber Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, San Diego Symphony Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, and more. Ms. Choi ‘s leadership experience is extensive, having held prominent roles as the Concertmaster and Principal Second with the Juilliard Orchestra, Juilliard Opera, New York String Orchestra Seminar, Music Academy Festival Orchestra, Spoleto Festival Orchestra, and the Manhattan Chamber Sinfonia.
Ms. Choi is a co-founder of the Hyon Trio, which includes pianist Kevin Ahfat and her sister Jennifer Choi on cello. The trio made its memorable debut at Alice Tully Hall in 2015. With her sister, a cellist with the Dallas Symphony, she has performed the Brahms Double Concerto in Santa Barbara, and presented numerous duo recitals in New York City. Ms. Choi has also premiered works as a member of the New Juilliard Ensemble and AXIOM, and regularly collaborated with various New York City groups, including the Korea Society, Manhattan Chamber Players, BalletX, OnSite Opera, Scandinavia House Events, Music on Park Avenue, and Music for Life International.
Recent highlights include Bruch Concerto, The Lark Ascending, and Mozart Concerto No. 3 with various orchestras, and chamber music recitals including a harp trio recital titled “Harp and Harmony” for Newport Classical Festival, and a duo recital, “Johannes and Clara” for Westside Concert Series with pianist Mika Sasaki. She continues to collaborate with her esteemed Met colleagues, bringing innovative programs to Carnegie’s Weill Hall each season.
Her 2025 album Birds of Paradise was released on Azica Records and features trios for harp, violin, and cello and includes works by Henriette Renié, Reena Esmail, and Angélica Negrón. Ms. Choi performed on this album alongside cellist Christine Lamprea and harpist Emily Levin. The harp trio has performed in Dallas, San Juan the Newport Music Festival, and NYC.
Ms. Choi’s summer engagements have included prestigious festivals such as Verbier, Artosphere, Charles Ives Music Festival, Aspen, Music Academy of the West, Spoleto Festival USA, Great Mountains Music Festival, and Meadowmount School of Music. She is also a prizewinner of competitions including the LISMA International, NJ ASTA, Music Academy Concerto, and Caprio Young Artists Competitions.
A native of New Jersey, Ms. Choi began her intensive studies with Sally Thomas at the Juilliard Pre-College Division, and went on to earn her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from the Juilliard School under the guidance of Glenn Dicterow, Sylvia Rosenberg, and Sally Thomas. She was awarded the Juilliard Alumni Scholarship and the Irene Diamond Graduate Scholarship for her studies. Ms. Choi earned a Professional Studies Degree in Orchestral Performance in 2017 from the Manhattan School of Music, studying with Glenn Dicterow and Lisa Kim of the New York Philharmonic.
In addition to her performance career, Ms. Choi is a dedicated educator. She is currently on faculty at Manhattan School of Music’s Pre-College Division, Opus Colorado College of Music, and is part of the Artist-Faculty with Charles Ives Music Festival in Ridgefield, CT, International Summer Music School in Queens NY, and Vilacello Festival in Reading, PA. A third-generation teacher, she has given masterclasses at University of Denver, DePaul University, Orchestra of the Americas, Pontifical Universidad Católica de Chile, and Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico. She frequently adjudicates for Juilliard Orchestra auditions, and various regional competitions. Previously, she was a Teaching Assistant of the Ear Training Department at Juilliard for both the College and Pre-College Divisions for three years, with Mary Anthony Cox, Dr. Kyle Blaha, and Dr. Wayne Oquin. Ms. Choi has taught and led coachings for Juilliard Pre-College, NYC Music School, and Friends with Music. With over a decade of private teaching experience, her students have achieved notable successes in regional competitions, orchestral auditions, and acceptance to Pre-College programs throughout NYC.
Born in Korea, she was raised and is currently based in New Jersey and New York City.
Music and Meditation in the Garden
Music and Meditation in the Garden