ABSTRACT

This chapter investigates the Armidale Symphony Orchestra (A.S.O.), a regional community orchestra in New England, New South Wales (N.S.W.), Australia. The study examines the orchestra, one of the oldest surviving community orchestras in the country, and its existence within a larger ecology through local and regional newspapers, concert programs, council archives, and committee minutes investigating its organisational, social, and cultural history from its establishment in 1943 until 2021.

The A.S.O. is pivotal to regional N.S.W.’s broader arts ecology as a cultural leader in amateur community music making and a collaborator with other musical groups and artists in the area. The importance of the orchestra in its regional location is explored through its repertoire and personnel within the economic, environmental, social, and cultural dimensions utilising four-pillars of cultural value.