97th Annual Concordia Christmas Concert

Join us for the region's grandest Christmas celebration! Featuring more than 300 student musicians and five ensembles, the 2023 Concordia Christmas Concert will be performed in Memorial Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 1; 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2; and 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 3 and at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis at 6 and 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 7.

Moorhead Concerts

Tickets for Moorhead concerts will be available online, in-person at the Memorial Auditorium Box Office (9 a.m.-1 p.m. Monday-Thursday), or by calling 888.477.0277 (9 a.m.-1 p.m. Monday-Thursday (closed Friday) starting at 9 a.m. Tuesday, October 24th.

Purchase Moorhead Tickets Moorhead Seating Chart

Minneapolis Concerts at Orchestra Hall

The concert will be performed at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis at 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 7.

Tickets for Orchestra Hall concerts will be available online or by calling 800.292.4141 starting at 9 a.m. Tuesday, October 24. 

Purchase Orchestra Hall Tickets

Virtual Christmas Concert

While a video can never replace the experience of attending an in-person Concordia Christmas Concert, in an effort to bring the Christmas Concerts to as many people as possible, we will provide a virtual viewing option each year. We hope this helps those who cannot attend an in-person concert experience a taste of the concerts and provides a way for those who did attend an in-person concert to relive the special memories they made.

This year, we will video record our 2023 concerts at Orchestra Hall and create a one-hour version of the concert to make available for online, on-demand viewing from the comfort of your own home Dec. 21, 2023, through Jan. 2, 2024. Registration is required to view the video. Register before Dec. 21 for only $25!

Register for the Virtual Concert

Broadcast Schedule

Previous Concordia Christmas Concerts will be broadcast on television and radio this holiday season. 

View Schedule

Support Christmas at Concordia

Christmas Concert Gift Boxes

Bring a taste of the Concordia Christmas Concerts to your family's home. Each box includes either one or two 2022 Christmas Concert mugs, a CD of our 2021 Christmas Concert "...And Glory Shone Around," artwork by mural designer Paul Johnson, a special note from artistic director Michael Culloton, and more. Limited quantities available — order soon!

About the Artists

Paul Johnson

Visual Artist

Paul Johnson is a communication art and design instructor at Alexandria Technical College in Alexandria, Minn. He is a native Minnesotan and principal behind Paul Johnson Design & Illustration. Johnson received his education from Minnesota State University Moorhead and was previously employed for 13 years as a corporate artist at Banner Health System, Fargo, N.D.

He previously worked as a graphic designer for David Hetland, former artist of the Concordia Christmas Concert murals for 28 years.

Bryan Duncan

Director, Campus Lighting

Director of campus lighting since 1991, Bryan Duncan has designed the staging and lighting for more than 400 events. He produced the multimedia display for the 2006 Christmas Concert that memorialized the work of muralist David Hetland. Duncan has received the Meritorious Achievement Award several times from the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival and his groundbreaking lighting designs for a 2003 Concordia Theatre production was the subject of feature stories in three national publications.

History of the Concordia Christmas Concert

Since 1927, the Concordia Christmas Concerts have become a vital part of life within this institution, the community-at-large and a good portion of the Upper Midwest.

In the Beginning

Clara Duea, Concordia’s piano and organ professor, organized the Concordia Music Club in 1927 and one of their activities was a Christmas program. The very first concert was performed in Old Main’s chapel, but in 1928 it was moved to Moorhead’s Trinity Lutheran Church.

Paul J. Christiansen

Christiansen joined the faculty at Concordia in 1937. Among his responsibilities was the continuation of the Christmas Concert. This was the same year the concert venue began to alternate between Trinity and First Lutheran in Fargo.

Cyrus M. Running

Running came to Concordia in 1940 to head the fledgling art department. He had an interest in both art and music and began creating a backdrop for the Christmas Concerts his very first year.

The first backdrop was a large blue sheet of sateen behind a single suspended star. He simulated stained glass windows to cover the church’s choir and organ lofts.

Increasing Demand

In 1943, the concert venue was moved to the Moorhead Armory to accommodate the ever-increasing public demand.

After the war, with gas rationing no longer a deterrent to travel, people began coming from even greater distances. The Forum newspaper once took a survey and discovered that the Concordia Christmas Concert was the single event that attracted the greatest number of out-of-town visitors and generated the greatest economic impact on local businesses.

By 1946, three performances were held and within six years five were required to handle the demand. In 1952, Memorial Auditorium was completed and has since been the home of the Moorhead concerts.

On the Road

In 1975, the college took its show to Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis. This was an effort to broaden Concordia’s outreach and to strengthen its ties with a large Twin Cities constituency of alumni and friends.

Changing Hands

Running’s final Christmas Concert mural was in 1973. He died on Christmas day in 1976 at the age of 62. Christiansen continued with the Christmas Concerts through 1985.

Running was replaced on the art faculty by Paul Allen, who designed the Christmas Concert murals from 1974 to 1977.

David J. Hetland took responsibility for the art from 1978 to 2005, working first with Christiansen and, after 1986, with Dr. René Clausen, who succeeded Christiansen on the music faculty and as conductor of The Concordia Choir.

A Lasting Legacy

After dedicating 34 years to The Concordia Choir, Clausen retired in 2020 and Dr. Michael Culloton took over the role of artistic director for the Christmas Concert.

Present Day

In 2009, newly commissioned artist Paul Johnson designed and printed the mural digitally for the first time in the concert's history. This is how the mural is created today.

The Concordia Christmas Concerts now include four choirs and a full orchestra. There are four performances in Moorhead and two in Minneapolis. The concert is broadcast on regional radio stations.

Approximately every five years, the event is recorded for airing on public and commercial television stations across the country.