Vermont Symphony Orchestra concert tent On a Wednesday in mid-May, I entered the Stowe Community Church to see the first live performance of classical music I had experienced in more than a year: Middlebury pianist Diana Fanning playing works by Maurice Ravel, Fédéric Chopin and Franz Schubert. The formidable entrance requirements included emailing an image of my COVID-19 vaccination card to Stowe Performing Arts, which hosted the concert. Audience members were led to seats spaced six feet apart. But the payoff was hearing those nuances of interpretation and volume that virtual mediums never quite capture. As masks fall away and the weather warms, classical musicians schedules are filling up with live gigs, and festivals are reviving their summer seasons. There s even a new concert series in a Jericho barn. With so many performances cropping up as the state lifts its pandemic restrictions, the following list is only a sample
IPO Reimagined: Illinois Philharmonic s First-Ever Solo Concert Series | 03/19/2021
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Harrisburg’s Whitaker Center reopens to public with limited capacity
Updated Mar 12, 2021;
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The Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts, located at 222 Market St., Harrisburg, celebrated reopening its doors today with a ribbon cutting after having been closed to the public for much of the past year due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Beginning today, the center’s Harsco Science Center and Select Medical Digital Cinema will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 1-4 p.m on Fridays and Saturdays only, with limited capacity. Whitaker Center will use the 30-minute block of time between sessions for cleaning.
2021 will soon start to feel more normal, like before the COVID-19 pandemic. Can we handle it?
Updated Mar 11, 2021;
Posted Mar 11, 2021
Dining on the sidewalk at Arooga s Downtown on Second Street in Harrisburg. People enjoy a March day with temperatures in the mid to upper 60-degree range, March 10, 2021.
Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.com
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There’s no flick-of-the-switch moment for when the pandemic will be over, they say.
And there’s obvious truth to that line of thinking. Different groups of people are getting vaccinated at different times. No vaccines have been approved for most school-age children yet. Some folks will refuse to get the vaccine at all. And above all, the virus isn’t going to just disappear.
Harrisburg’s Whitaker Center to reopen with limited capacity
Updated Mar 02, 2021;
Posted Mar 02, 2021
Whitaker Center, on Market Street, in the city of Harrisburg.
Thursday, February 16, 2017.
Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.com HARHAR
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The Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts, located at 222 Market St., Harrisburg, announced on Monday it will be reopening its doors very soon after having been closed to the public for much of the past year due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Beginning March 12, the center’s Harsco Science Center and Select Medical Digital Cinema will be open from 9 30 to 12 30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m on Fridays and Saturdays only, with limited capacity.
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