[Read about the events that our other critics have chosen for the week ahead.]

PAUL JACOBS at Paul Recital Hall (Sept. 10, 7:30 p.m.). That the organ of Notre-Dame Cathedral survived the fire in April is little short of a miracle, so it’s a good time for Jacobs, one of our leading organists, to celebrate the culture that this instrument still represents. In the first of three concerts this month under the rubric of “The Great French Organ Tradition,” Jacobs plays works by Marcel Dupré, Nadia Boulanger, César Franck, Jehan Alain, Naji Hakim, Camille Saint-Saëns and Alexandre Guilmant.

212-769-7406, juilliard.edu

METROPOLIS ENSEMBLE at 1 Rivington Street (Sept. 7, 7:30 p.m.). Now in its 13th year, this vibrant collective opens its season with a concert that takes in music from the French Baroque, the Swedish folk tradition and the contemporary era, in the shape of works by Gabriella Smith and Paul Wiancko. Alexi Kenney, Ayane Kozasa, Gabriel Cabezas and Wiancko play strings, under the artistic director Andrew Cyr.

metropolisensemble.org

NOVUS NY AND THE CHOIR OF TRINITY WALL STREET at St. Paul’s Chapel (Sept. 12, 7 p.m.). In the 10 seasons that the conductor and composer Julian Wachner has been director of music at Trinity Wall Street, he has turned its artistic programming into a genuine cultural force, as adept in Baroque music as it is in the most modern sounds. I am not sure there is a more valuable musical institution at work in New York today. As part of a celebratory weekend, Wachner leads a concert looking back at just some of the contributions he and his forces have made, whether downtown, elsewhere in the city or on record, with music by Paola Prestini, Julia Wolfe, David Lang, Jessie Montgomery, Ellen Reid, Edward Thomas, Trevor Weston, Du Yun, Philip Glass and Wachner himself. As is the norm, the concert is free.

212-602-0800, trinitywallstreet.org