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Winter 2014 HarrisburgSymphony.org

Harrisburg Symphony Winter FanFare Magazine

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Get information on HSO Musicians, upcoming performance and highlights of our HSO Patrons, Volunteers, Staff and more!

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Page 1: Harrisburg Symphony Winter FanFare Magazine

Winter 2014 HarrisburgSymphony.org

Page 2: Harrisburg Symphony Winter FanFare Magazine

FANFAREHARRISBURG SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA | STUART MALINA, MUSIC DIRECTOR

Winter 2014CONTENTS

HSO STAFF

YOUTH SYMPHONY

The Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra is supported in part by a grant from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency, which is supported by the National

Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

The official registration and financial information of the Harrisburg Symphony Association may be obtained from the

Pennsylvania Department of State by calling toll free, within PA, 1-800-732-0999. Registration does not imply endorsement.

Stuart MalinaMusic Director

Gregory Woodbridge Assistant Conductor

Jeff WoodruffExecutive Director

Susan KlickDirector of Operations and Orchestra Personnel

Darryl HartshorneAssistant Personnel Manager/Librarian

Ted ReeseDirector of Development

Kimberly KellerDevelopment Associate

Kim IsenhourDirector of Marketing, PR and Graphic Design

Alice Anne SchwabDirector of Education and Office Manager

Michael MurrayDirector of Finance

Patrick WallenPatron Services Manager

Tom AcriStage Manager

Pasquale FeraAssistant Stage Manager

Tristan Stasiulis Lighting Designer

James LongIntern

Gregory Woodbridge Music Director/Conductor, HSYO

Krista KrielMusic Director/Conductor, JSYO

Alice Anne SchwabAdministrator, HSYO

800 Corporate Circle, Suite 101Harrisburg, PA 17110Phone: 717.545.5527

HarrisburgSymphony.org

Symphony Society News 3 “The Art of Personal Style” Fashion Show Society Musicale at Messiah

HSO Musician Auditions 4 OctoberAuditionsmakeConcertmasterofficial

Mark Your Calendar 5-7 Upcoming performances with the HSO

Highlights 8-9 HSO Volunteers & Patrons keep the music playing Bill & Beverlee Lehr win Governor’s Arts Award Listen to the HSO on WITF

HSO Musician Updates 10 Susan Aquila & Matt Lehmann have exciting musical experiences

HSO Staff Updates 11 New staffers: Kim Keller & Patrick Wallen

Back Page 12 Concert Parking Stay Connected with us

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Markus Groh Entertains at Society’s January MusicaleThe Harrisburg Symphony Society continued its tradition of presenting a mid-winter “Musicale” on Sunday, January 12. January Masterworks guest artist, pianist Markus Groh, gave an impromptu performance in the intimate setting of Orchard Hill, the campus residence of Messiah College President Kim Phipps. A delicious luncheon was paired with the intimate performance to make a fun gathering hosted by the Harrisburg Symphony Society.

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HSO is Fashionable!Stepping into new territory for Harrisburg, for style shows, for the Symphony:

THE ART OF PERSONAL STYLEA New York Style Runway Fashion Show

And Luncheon Thursday, January 23, 2014

At the Hilton Harrisburg

We will raise the bar for what “Fashion Show” mean in Central PA!

Get tickets for you and all your friends to sit up close and

personal for a look at EMMELLE’s Spring 2014 Collection. Emmelle is featured locally at The Plum in Harrisburg and Camp Hill.

We will gather at tables for an elegant lunch. . . and then move to limited seating along the runway where New York City models will parade the EMMELLE Spring Line. The atmosphere of this fashionable fete will be audacious with anticipation and ripe with excitement. What a perfect cure for the post-holiday, mid-January doldrums. Be part of it!

Mi Jong Lee, Emmelle’s creator and designer, will be with us all afternoon. Arrive early for an Emmelle Trunk Show of the new spring line and for Fabulous Raffle Items (listed on web site, below). Mi Jong Lee will have her new fabrics there so you can order your custom made outfits on the spot. Also, there will be a raffle of My Favorite Things donated by HSS members. Check out who favors what…could it be revealing and surprising? ABC Channel 27 News Anchor Alicia Richards will be our emcee; Susquehanna Style will be there to photograph you as your most fashionable self.

More info and tickets are available on the HSO website: www.harrisburgsymphony.org/Emmelle.html.

Page 4: Harrisburg Symphony Winter FanFare Magazine

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Peter Sirotin Named HSO Concertmaster It’s now official - Peter Sirotin is the orchestra’s new concertmaster. The Concertmaster Chair is one of several positions that were filled during recent auditions. Peter joined the Harrisburg Symphony as Assistant Concertmaster in 1996 and then assumed the position of Associate Concertmaster in 2002. He had been serving as Acting Concertmaster since Odin Rathnam retired at the end of the 2011/12 season.

The concertmaster’s most important duties include functioning as the leader of the violins, working with the conductor on determining bowings for the first violins, and on developing a cohesive and consistent string sound. The concertmaster also leads the tuning process at the beginning of rehearsals and performances and plays any solo passages written for the first violin, which are often extensive and demanding.

Peter Sirotin studied at the Moscow Conservatory in Russia and the Peabody Institute at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, where he received a full scholarship for a Graduate Performance Diploma in violin performance and a Graduate Performance Diploma in chamber music. With his wife, pianist Ya-Ting Chang, Mr. Sirotin founded the Mendelssohn Piano Trio in 1997. The group has toured internationally, and its many critically acclaimed recordings can often be heard on classical radio stations in the US and abroad. The Mendelssohn Piano Trio is currently involved in recording the complete Haydn Piano Trios for Centaur Records.

An active educator, Peter is currently artist-in-residence at Messiah College, where he has co-founded a summer chamber music and composition program for young musicians. He gives master classes in the US and abroad and has served as an adjudicator in competitions.

Peter Sirotin is also Artistic Director of the esteemed Market Square Concerts Series in Harrisburg.

Elsewhere in the violins, the following players won auditions:

Associate Concertmaster – Dayna Anderson, Philadelphia, PASection First Violin – Cecee Pantikian and Dawn Wohn, both of New York CityAssistant Principal Second Violin – Adda Kridler, New York CitySection Second Violin – Sarah Zun, New York City

Forty-seven violinists from Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Virginia auditioned for the six violin openings.

Also winning a position in the orchestra is the new Assistant Principal Bass, Nathan Paer. Nate is a native of Fair Lawn, NJ and is currently a fourth year student at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where he studies with Hal Robinson and Edgar Meyer. When not busy at school or performing, Nate enjoys biking, practicing yoga, and hearing live music. He is especially excited to join the HSO to play alongside his mother, Leise Ballou, a member of the HSO horn section.

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Peter Sirotin

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Ann Schein to Perform Chopin Concerto MARCH 22 & 23The pianist Ann Schein has had a distinguished career going back to the early 1960s. She was a student of the legendary Arthur Rubinstein and made her Carnegie Hall debut in 1962. The following year she performed at the White House for President and Mrs. John F. Kennedy. Over the years she has performed with many famous orchestras worldwide, including the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Baltimore Symphony, the London Philharmonic, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Ann Schein is especially noted for performing the music of the early Romantics, including Frederic Chopin. She will join Stuart Malina and the Harrisburg Symphony for performances of Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 on March 22-23.

Also on the program, Stuart Malina will conduct music by the contemporary French composer, Guillaume Connesson, and the gorgeous Third Symphony of Sergei Rachmaninoff.

Disney comes to the Forum!JANUARY 25 & 26

Zuill Bailey Makes His HSO Debut FEBRUARY 8 & 9

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The magic of Disney comes to the Forum on January 25-26. Favorite scenes from blockbuster Disney films, including The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King and others will be projected

Ann Schein

The acclaimed American cellist, Zuill Bailey, will make his HSO debut performing the Dvorak Cello Concerto, by far the most popular of cello concertos, on February 8-9. Bailey is familiar to Harrisburg audiences, having appeared on the Market Square Concerts Series, and is a well traveled soloist and recitalist in the U.S. and abroad. He has recorded extensively and is an exclusive Telarc recording artist. Bailey’s recent recording of the Dvorak Concerto with the Indianapolis Symphony has received rave reviews and Zuill will be on hand to sign copies of his CDs in the Forum lobby.

Zuill Bailey performs on a 1693 Matteo Gofriller Cello, formerly owned by Mischa Schneider of the Budapest String Quartet. While not concertizing, Bailey is the Artistic Director of El Paso Pro Musica, Artistic Director of the Sitka Music Festival, and Professor of Cello at the University of Texas at El Paso.

Also on the February Masterworks program, the Maestro will conduct a new work, The Gift, by Steve Rudolph (see accompanying article) and the Fourth Symphony of Beethoven.

overhead while the HSO and four leading vocalists perform the immortal music that Mousketeers of all ages know by heart. Tickets are selling fast for these concerts.

Sunday’s performance is SOLD OUT and Saturday will be soon!

Don’t be disappointed! Go to HarrisburgSymphony.org or call 717-545-5527 while tickets last. Candice Nicole & Terron Brooks

Zuill Bailey

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Steve Rudolph’s The Gift to be Premiered by HSOFEBRUARY 8 & 9

Mardi Gras!MARCH 1 & 2Celebrate the spirit of Mardi Gras (March 4 this year) with a night of hot, steamy New Orleans jazz. The good times will roll with music made famous by New Orleans superstars Al Hirt, Pete Fountain, Mahalia Jackson and Louis Armstrong. Join the festivities as the Forum is transformed into an unforgettable Mardi Gras celebration with trumpeter Byron Stripling leading the way.

Join us as we party in the Forum! Mardi Gras beads will be provided to all patrons attending, courtesy of Dauphin County Parks and Recreation!

Byron Stripling

A new orchestral piece entitled The Gift by local jazz legend Steve Rudolph will be given its world premiere by the HSO on February 8-9. The work was commissioned by the Harrisburg Symphony Board of Directors a year ago in honor of Stuart Malina’s 50th birthday. This is not the first time that the HSO has performed Steve’s music. In September 2011 his orchestral work Remembrance was performed as part of the orchestra’s 9/11 10th Anniversary concert.

Steve Rudolph is well known in Central Pennsylvania as a pianist and leading light of the midstate’s jazz scene. When he’s not performing he stays busy as the Executive Director of Central Pennsylvania Friends of Jazz.

Steve provided the following insight about his new piece…

The Gift – a tribute to Stuart Malina When I was asked by the Board of the Harrisburg Symphony to write a piece in honor of the 50th birthday of my friend, master musician Stuart Malina, the main thought that went through my mind was “How can I aptly pay tribute to this talented man?” Stuart is an artist of diversified interests who exudes positive energy, humor, and conveys a genuine love of music. He is devoted to his faith, his beautiful family, and his work with the Harrisburg Symphony. I hope that this composition will portray the complexity, wit, and spirituality that Stuart shares with all of us. We are fortunate to have him in our midst and value his priceless contributions to our artistic community. The Gift is a work based on themes that were derived from the spelling of Stuart’s name and his family’s names, Marty, Sara and Zev. This practice has been used for generations by composers who have hidden the names of their benefactors, families or even lovers in their musical works. By writing the diatonic or chromatic scales under the alphabet we get patterns of notes to utilize as melodic themes or harmonic progressions: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZA B C D E F G A B C D E F G A B C D E F G A B C D EA A# B C C# D D# E F F# G G# A A# B C C# D D# E F F# G G# A A# Using this method, the letters: S T U A R T M A L I N A became diatonically: E F G A D F F A E B G A & chromatically: D# E F A D E A A G# F A# A

The challenge for the composer is to take these themes and their variations and mold them with rhythmic and harmonic ideas into a complete musical soundscape. The short opening movement of The Gift, entitled Fanfare, features the brass section introducing the themes you will hear in the second, third, and fourth movements. The second movement, Humoresque, opens with the bassoons stating the chromatic STUART theme that evolves into an amusing showcase for the woodwinds and full orchestra. Movement three, Romance, is a slow waltz that was derived from a combination of Stuart’s and Marty’s diatonic and chromatic themes. Movement four, Finale, is an orchestra fantasy that ends with cascading brass and strings. It was an honor and a privilege to be chosen to compose a work for Maestro Malina and also to have it performed by the esteemed Harrisburg Symphony. This commission was a gift for me as well.

I hope you enjoy the music. Steve Rudolph

Steve Rudolph

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Harrisburg Symphony YOUTH OrchestraFEBRUARY 10The Harrisburg Symphony is proud of its many educational programs, most notably the two amazing orchestras that make up the Harrisburg Symphony Youth Orchestras. These two inspiring ensembles will warm up the Forum with their annual mid-winter concert on Monday, February 10 at 7:00 pm. Krista Kriel conducts the middle school-age Junior Youth Strings and Gregory Woodbridge will lead the high school-age Harrisburg Symphony Youth Orchestra. Here are the programs:

Junior Youth Strings Mussorgsky – HopakDvorak – BagatelleSoon Hee Newbold – Fantasia EspagnolaVivaldi – Allegro from Concerto in G, Opus 3, No. 3

Harrisburg Symphony Youth OrchestraSuppe – “Poet and Peasant” OvertureHanson – Symphony No. 2 “Romantic”

The Hanson symphony, by the way, gained wider recognition and acceptance beyond the concert hall when excerpts from it were used (without the composer’s permission!) in the final credits of the 1979 film, Alien. Tickets for Youth Symphony concerts are only $10 for adults, $5 for students. Visit www.HSYO.org

Bring a Group to the Symphony and SAVE!There are many advantages to attending the Symphony as part of a group. If you have ten or more people, you qualify for all the perks that come with group sales, including…

• A generous discount on ticketprices. Plus, with the purchase of at least ten tickets, we include an additional FREE ticket for the group coordinator.

• No processing fee on group sales.

• If we know about your group,we’ll welcome you on a slide projected above the stage prior to the concert.

• Groups of 30 or more may usethe backstage Green Room for a pre-concert reception (Green Room reservation based on availability, group must provide their own refreshments).

• Personalized service – just call the HSO marketing office at 717-612-4966 for help organizing your visit.

__7Krista Kriel Gregory Woodbridge

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HSO Patrons keep the music playing…“Jean and I were born in Harrisburg and began our business

career here. The citizens of the greater Harrisburg area were a big part of our success and over the years we

have learned that, for a community to prosper

and grow, it has to support arts and cultural assets like the Symphony. The citizens of Harrisburg

have helped to create one of the finest orchestras in the

country. What better way is there to say thank you to the people of Harrisburg, than to financially help the Symphony continue to provide quality music for

years to come? We are proud to have included the Harrisburg Symphony in our wills so that we can continue our support for many years after our

passing.”

James E. Grandon, Jr.

We are thankful to have patrons like the Grandons… and YOU! Do you remember the first time you attended a Harrisburg Symphony

Orchestra concert? Are you especially proud of your friendship with the HSO? Your support means the world to the HSO staff, musicians and Maestro Stuart

Malina and we’d love to hear your story!

Please share your comments with Ted Reese at [email protected].

Congratulations to Bill and Beverlee Lehr, recipients of the coveted Patron’s Award at the annual Governor’s Arts Awards, held this year at the Whitaker Center on October 22. Mr. Lehr has served on numerous nonprofit boards, many of them as Chairman, and is currently the Chairman of the Harrisburg Symphony Board of Directors. The Lehrs have been generous supporters of the arts and other educational and cultural

institutions for many years.

Bill & Beverlee Lehr Receive

Governor’s Arts Award

HSO Chairman of the HSO Board of Directors Bill Lehr and wife Beverlee

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HSO ON THE AIR:Harrisburg Symphony concerts can be heard

at 8:00 pm on the first Sunday of each month on WITF’s Center Stage program. Here’s the upcoming schedule:

Sunday, February 2 - “Tantalizing Tales”Rebecca Kauffman, HarpDvorak – Othello OvertureDebussy – Sacred and Profane Dances for Harp and StringsRavel – Introduction and Allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet & StringsRimsky-Korsakov – Scheherazade

Sunday, March 2 - “La Traviata”A concert performance of Verdi’s most popular opera

Sunday, April 6 - “Symphonic Splendor”Respighi – The Pines of RomeMahler – Symphony No. 5

Sunday, May 4 - “Pastoral Symphony”Jeffrey Biegel, PianoZwilich – Millennium Fantasy for Piano & OrchestraLiszt – Piano Concerto No. 1Beethoven – Symphony No. 6 “Pastoral”

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Jim and Jean Grandon

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Helga Rist is 85. She’s been volunteering at the HSO for about 8 years. When Helga first started volunteering at HSO concerts, she taught German at Wilson College in Chambersburg. Prior to that, she taught German for 33 1/2 years at Lower Dauphin High School. In this photo of Helga, she’s at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. Helga is not only a fan of the Harrisburg Symphony, but she’s also an opera aficionado. She volunteers as an usher at nearly every HSO concert and also helps out in the office, doing mailings and other administrative tasks.

Helga’s history is riveting. Born in Germany, Helga was arrested at the end of the War and held by the Soviets in a concentration camp for seven years. Having lived through unthinkably difficult conditions, Helga emerged from captivity with a goal of completing her academic pursuits, and studied Linguistics at Frankfurt University in Germany. One of the requirements for her degree was to engage in fluent and constant conversation with an English speaker. Through a girlhood acquaintance from Germany who had moved to Wormleysburg, Helga became the “pen pal” of a Camp Hill man. After significant correspondence, she visited her childhood friend in Central Pennsylvania and finally got to meet her pen pal. Helga will be the first to say that it was not love at first sight on her part, but he was instantly smitten and, after a summer of persistent pleading - “He pestered me!”, Helga notes - she agreed to marry Karl Rist. After her marriage, Helga returned to Germany to obtain her Masters degree and to complete a teaching assignment there. Six months later, in February of 1961, the new bride emigrated to the United States and she says she has never regretted that decision.

Finding employment in Central Pennsylvania was challenging for the new German immigrant. After many rejections, Helga was hired to work at Quality Cleaners in Lemoyne. There she was welcomed by the Lederer family, who had also experienced the horror of life in concentration camps in Europe during the war. Helga remembers Freda Lederer, who passed away this past November, as a dear and devoted friend who helped her get her American start.

Helga still lives in the same house that she and Karl purchased and lovingly renovated. She still has a few of the possessions that came with her from Germany: her Singer vacuum and Singer sewing machine. She sews nearly all of her beautiful clothes, “babysits” the dogs of friends and neighbors, sings in the Trinity Lutheran Church choir, and volunteers at Hospice of Central Pennsylvania. Helga is a true Harrisburg Symphony treasure, always a smiling presence at Harrisburg Symphony concerts and a volunteer who is always willing to contribute in any and every way she can.

HSO Volunteers keep the music playing…

HSO volunteer Helga Rist

For the sixth year in a row the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra will be one of more than 300 orchestras participating in the “Orchestras Feeding America” National Food Drive sponsored by the League of American Orchestras. During March, concertgoers at both the Capital BlueCross Pops Concerts on March 1-2 and the Masterworks Concerts on March 22-23 are encouraged to bring non-perishable food items to the Forum. No glass containers please. The food will be distributed locally by Channels Food Rescue.

Bring Your Canned Goods in March

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Get to Know our HSOQuite often we are asked what our musicians do when they’re not performing with the HSO. The answers are as varied and diverse as the players themselves. Virtually all of them play with other orchestras (including majors like the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra, the National Symphony and the Baltimore Symphony, among many others), most teach and perform a variety of other “gigs” (weddings, social functions, church services), many play chamber music when they get the chance, and some even perform in their own band in styles far removed from the classical world.

Take violinist Susan Aquila. When she’s not on the Forum stage with the HSO, she trades in her acoustic violin for a Viper Six String Electric Violin. She has appeared in concert and on recordings with artists such as Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Elton John, Led Zeppelin, Metallica, Whitney Houston, Britney Spears, Kanye West, Steven Tyler, Robert Plant, Alicia Keys, John Mayer, Tony Bennett, Andrea Bocelli, kd lang, Josh Groban, Barry Manilow, Michael Buble, Deep Purple,

Johnny Mathis, and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Her charisma and crossover style have garnered her appearances on Good Morning America, Live With Regis and Kelly, Late Night with David Letterman, The View and The Today Show. Most recently, she was featured on America’s Got Talent at Radio City Music Hall. Her Broadway credits include Wicked, The Lion King, Annie Get Your Gun, and Rockers on Broadway.

Susan is a featured artist on CDs and film scores for Columbia Records, A&M Records, and Silvercup Studios. She has recently released a hit single entitled “Intervention” and will soon release a CD entitled “Broken Angel.” We invite you to visit her website at SusanAquilaMusic.com.

HSO Assistant Concertmaster Matt Lehmann to Tour Asia with the New York PhilharmonicWe are frequently asked, What do HSO players do when they’re not performing in Harrisburg?

In the case of Assistant Concertmaster Matthew Lehmann, he’ll be spending a good part of February on tour with the New York Philharmonic. That venerable orchestra will be performing in South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan from February 6 through February 19 under the direction of their music director, Alan Gilbert. This is not the first time that Matt has toured with the Philharmonic, having gone on tours to Europe in 2013 and the U.S. in 2009. He has played as a sub in the Philharmonic since 2000 and has also performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, and the Israel Philharmonic, among others.

Matt also plays regularly in the pit orchestra for various Broadway shows, including The Book of Mormon, Wicked, Matilda, Cinderella, Motown, and Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark.

Matt joined the Harrisburg Symphony in 2003. He lives with his wife, Ann (a member of the MET Orchestra), their daughter Evelyn (4) and son James (2) in Harrington, NJ.

Susan Aquila

Matthew Lehmann

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New faces working behind the scenes at the HSO OfficeKimberly Keller is the new Development Assistant at the HSO. Growing up in Lebanon County, she could usually be found singing, dancing, or playing whatever instrument she could get her hands on. While attending Elizabethtown College Kimberly was an active performer, but favored her time as a jazz soloist. She graduated this past May with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Music, focusing on Vocal Performance. After graduation, she

took part in a trip that bridged cultural gaps through music with students in Salvador, Brazil. Last summer she completed an internship with Gretna Music.

Also joining the HSO staff is our new Patron Services Manager, Patrick Wallen. The former financial advisor and business consultant commented, “I’m thrilled. I consider myself

fortunate to be able to work for such a fine arts organization and lend my skills to the continued success of the Symphony.” Patrick studied piano, voice, and trumpet at what is now

Otterbein University in Ohio and has served on the board of numerous non-profit arts organizations ranging from choral ensembles to dance and theatre companies. Before joining the HSO staff, Patrick worked in administration at Open Stage of Harrisburg.

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New Life for an Old FriendSitting in the audience you may not notice but there is a new “face” on the Forum Stage this season. Well, it’s a new face on an old friend. Our music stands were getting really scratched and tattered-looking from being moved on and off the Forum stage so often. Thanks to a generous gift of time and resources from Faulkner Body Works (part of Faulkner Hyundai at 2060 Paxton Street Harrisburg), the stands have been repainted and they now they have a brand-new look about them! Thank You Faulkner Body Works!

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Stay Connected with the HSO!You can stay connected with the HSO through a variety of our online social media tools. Social media provides a platform from which content transforms into community, and we invite you to join ours. The tools we use allow us to share information with you quickly, and some, such as Twitter and Facebook, give you the option to engage in a real-time conversation with us.

“Like” HSO on FacebookSearch: Harrisburg Symphony Orchestrawww.facebook.com/HarrisburgSymphony

“Follow” HSO on TwitterSearch: Harrisburg Symphony Orchestrahttps://twitter.com/harrisburgsymph

“Check in” at the HSO on FourSquareSearch: Harrisburg Symphonyhttps://foursquare.com/harrisburgsymph

“Follow” HSO on PinterestSearch: Harrisburg Symphonyhttp://pinterest.com/hbgsymphony/

Check out our HSO Bloghttp://harrisburgsymphonyblog.blogspot.com

Maestro Malina’s Blogwww.stuartmalina.com

Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra | 800 Corporate Circle, Suite 101, Harrisburg, PA 17110 | 717.545.5527 | www.HarrisburgSymphony.org

Easy...Close...Dry HSO Concert ParkingONLY $5 in the Forum Place Garage!Save yourself the frustration of lapping the Forum/Capitol Complex and walking from as far away as Front Street...Park in the FORUM PLACE GARAGE (entrance on the RIGHT side of 5th Street), between Market & Walnut streets for only $5 per car!

Easy and close! Park, take the elevator/stairs and cross the street to the Forum! Best $5 you’ll spend on a Harrisburg Symphony weekend!