| Oct ’09 |
| 30 |
| 7:30 pm |
Burien-based Northwest Symphony Orchestra is presenting their Family & Halloween Concert at 7:30pm on Friday, Oct. 30th at the Highline Performing Arts Center.
Children are welcomed to wear family-friendly costumes.
Here are the details:
WHAT: Northwest Symphony Orchestra’s Family & Halloween Concert
WHEN: Friday, Oct. 30th starting at 7:30pm
WHERE: Highline Performing Arts Center, located at 401 South 152nd Street (next to Highline High School)
INFO: The musical lineup will include:
- Carmen Fantasy, Pablo Sarasate with student soloist Maya Cohon
- The Accursed Huntsman, Cesar Franck
- Ruler of the Spirits, Carl Maria von Weber
- Zampa Overture, Ferdinand Herold
- Overture for Home, Kimberley Blanchard
- Prince Igor Overture, Alexander Borodin
TICKETS: Tickets are $10.00 – $14.00 each, and to purchase them online, click here.
INFO: For more information, visit the Northwest Symphony Orchestra website here.
| Apr ’09 |
| 25 |
| 8:00 pm |

Burien-based Northwest Symphony Orchestra will present its season finale “Reflections of the Northwest” concert featuring acclaimed cello soloist Joshua Roman, Saturday, April 25th at 8pm at the Highline Performing Arts Center.
Here are the details:
WHAT: Northwest Symphony Orchestra season finale “Reflections of the Northwest” concert with Joshua Roman
WHEN: Saturday, April 25th at 8pm
WHERE: Highline Performing Arts Center, located adjacent to Highline High School, at 401 South 152nd Street in Burien.
COST: $10 for students and senior citizens and $14 for adults. Tickets are available on the Web at www.brownpapertickets.com or by calling Brown Paper Tickets at (800) 838-3006. Tickets are available at the box office concert night. Northwest Symphony Orchestra makes complimentary student tickets available to school music programs. Teachers may call the orchestra office at (206) 242-6321.
INFO: Under the baton of Music Director Anthony Spain, the concert is set to include:
- Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra — Glenn Crytzer
- Guest soloist: Joshua Roman, cello
- In Prospect, from Janus — Samuel Jones
- Redwoods Symphony — Jonathan Middleton
- Anniversary Overture — Roger Treece
ABOUT NORTHWEST SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Now in its twenty-second season, Northwest Symphony Orchestra has performed to local, regional, and national acclaim. The orchestra has performed an unprecedented 100 compositions of Northwest composers and has garnered seven national awards for Programming of Contemporary Music from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, including a first place national award in 2007. The orchestra has been featured repeatedly on National Public Radio and has recorded three compact disks.
Dr. Anthony Spain is Music Director.
More information about Northwest Symphony Orchestra is available on the Web at www.northwestsymphonyorchestra.org or by calling (206) 242-6321.
ABOUT JOSHUA ROMAN
“Cellist Joshua Roman has taken this area by storm,” says Anthony Spain, music director, Northwest Symphony Orchestra. “Rarely has there been an outpouring ofenthusiasm of this magnitude about such a musician locally.”
The Seattle Times heralds Mr. Roman’s playing [with] “… heart-stopping beauty” and “… big, succulent tone and impassioned style” while the Seattle Post-Intelligencer declares “He is a musician of imagination and expressive breadth.”
Since winning the section principal chair at the Seattle Symphony in 2006 at the age of 22, Joshua Roman has become a favorite of Seattle music lovers. His pursuit of new challenges led him in 2008 to expand his horizons and embark full-time on his growing solo classical career. As a concerto soloist, he has performed with the Seattle Symphony, Spokane Symphony, Oklahoma City Philharmonic, Cleveland Institute of Music Orchestra, and the Wyoming Symphony. The 2008 – 09 season will include, among others, performances with the Edmonton Symphony, Quad City Symphony, Stamford Symphony, and Northwest Symphony Orchestra. He frequently performs on instruments from the collection of David Fulton.
Dubbed a “Classical Rock Star” by the press, cellist Joshua Roman has earned a reputation for performing a wide range of repertoire with an absolute commitment to communicating the essence of the music at its most organic level. Since winning the Principal chair in the cello section of the Seattle Symphony at the age of 22, he has become a favorite of Seattle music lovers, with sold out solo and chamber performances throughout the city. When not performing in or in front of a Symphony Orchestra, Joshua is likely to be found on the stage of a club, performing music as varied as jazz or rock, as well as chamber music or a solo sonata by Kodaly or Bach.
Homeschooled until the age of 16, when he left to pursue his musical studies at the Cleveland Institute of Music, Joshua received his Bachelor Degree in Cello Performance in 2004 studying with Richard Aaron. In 2005 he also received his Masters Degree from the CIM, studying with Desmond Hoebig, Principal Cellist of the Cleveland Orchestra. Joshua frequently performs on cellos from the collection of David Fulton.
Here are some videos featuring Joshua in action (our fave is the first, a rockin’ symphonic rendition of “Stairway to Heaven,” with Joshua on lead cello on the left):
And here are some websites for Joshua Roman:
Here’s some fan-captured video of the halftime jam session between Burien’s Northwest Symphony Orchestra and Seattle grunge legends Alice in Chains (drummer Sean Kinney is a B-Town resident) doing their version of Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir”:
Here’s another angle with far superior audio:
http://myspacetv.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=42879864
| Sep ’08 |
| 14 |



Burien’s own Northwest Symphony Orchestra today announced its 2008 – 2009 season will open this Sunday, Sept. 14th with a special halftime appearance with legendary Seattle band “Alice in Chains” at the Seattle Seahawks opening regular season home game.
You read that right folks – B-Town’s very own Orchestra is going to jam with grunge legends “Alice In Chains” during halftime at Sunday’s Seahawk game!
And it might look/sound something like this (doing Led Zep’s “Kashmir“), which was shot when AIC played w/NW Symphony Orchestra at Benaroya in 2007:
This is the second time the Northwest Symphony and AIC have appeared together, after a sold out Children’s Hospital benefit appearance at Benaroya Hall in November 2007.
The orchestra and legendary grunge band will be under the baton of Hollywood composer and Seattle native Mateo Messina (Juno).
The orchestra’s entire season schedule will include:
- Seattle Seahawks Halftime Special Appearance With Seattle rock band Alice in Chains on Sunday, September 14, 2008 at Qwest Field, Seattle
- Concert #1: “Family Concert” – “Dance and the Dueling Violins” on Saturday, October 25, 2008 at 7:30pm at Highline Performing Arts Center, Burien
- Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical Center Benefit Concert: “An American Symphony” — World Premiere, with Mateo Messina, composer, Friday, November 7, 2008 at 7:00pm at Benaroya Hall, Seattle
- Concert #2: “Valentine’s Concert”, Friday, February 13, 2009 at 8:00pm at Highline Performing Arts Center
- Concert #3: “Spotlight on the Orchestra” on Saturday, March 7, 2009 at 8:00pm at Holy Rosary Catholic Church, West Seattle
- Concert #4: “Reflections of the Northwest” on Saturday, April 25, 2009 at 8:00pm at Highline Performing Arts Center
ABOUT NORTHWEST SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Now in its 22nd season, Northwest Symphony Orchestra has performed to local, regional, and national acclaim. The orchestra has performed an unprecedented 100 compositions of Northwest composers and has garnered seven national awards for Programming of Contemporary Music from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, including a first place national award in 2007. The orchestra has been featured repeatedly on National Public Radio and has recorded three compact disks. Dr. Anthony Spain is Music Director. Northwest Symphony Orchestra makes complimentary tickets available to local school music programs. Teachers may call the orchestra office at (206) 242-6321.
More information about Northwest Symphony Orchestra is available on their website: http://www.northwestsymphonyorchestra.org, or by calling (206) 242-6321.
Each year, the 21-year-old Northwest Symphony Orchestra plays its traditional Valentine’s Day Concert, with founding conductor Anthony Spain on the podium, and you can never tell what you’ll find (the orchestra has won several national awards for adventuresome programming).
This year the theme is “Latin Love,” a Valentine’s Day concert including works of Chabrier (the colorful “España Rhapsody”), Rimsky-Korsakov (an equally colorful Russian nod to Spain with “Capriccio Espagnol”), Ravel (the well-known Piano Concerto in G Major) and Northwest Composer Dell Wade (“Rumbaclav”).
FREE TICKETS are available to kids in local school-music programs; teachers should call the orchestra office at 206-242-6321.
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 14th
COST: $10-$14, or FREE to local school-music students (music teachers call 206-242-6321)
CONTACT: (206-292-ARTS in advance or at the door)
WHERE: Highline Performing Arts Center, 401 S. 152nd St., Burien:















































