PTSO featured in Business Insider

The Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra (PTSO) recently joined the Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce. The PTSO and its Artistic Director Tigran Arakelyan were featured in the December 2023 Business Insider newspaper insert. An image of the article is shown here. The article was written by PTSO members Jay Bakst and Pamela Roberts.

PTSO 30-Year Members Honored

PTSO has a group of musicians who have completed 30 years with our organization. We want to honor the dedication and commitment they have shown to building the Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra to the vibrant organization it is today. They are shown in the photo below:

Front row (l. to r. ): Pat Yearian, Carl Hanson, Sally Scholz.

Back row (l. to r.): Kristin Smith, Pat Kenna, Nancy Miskimins, Vidya Speck, Steve Ricketts, Chuck Easton.

Port Townsend Community Orchestra History

Photo by Port Townsend Leader newspaper.

by Stephen R. Ricketts, Orchestra Historian

September 2019

It was February of 1987. An article in the Port Townsend Leader proclaimed, “Cellist Launches Solo Effort to Create County Orchestra”. Michael Ann Burnett, organizer and director of a new Port Townsend amateur orchestra said, “I really want to hear from people who are using the barrels of their clarinets as match holders”. The call went out to closet musicians to bring your instrument to the Port Townsend High School orchestra room on Thursday evening, February 19. It was off the ground. The orchestra was put together as a non-profit organization, with tuition from participants and a promise that concerts would always be free.

The first concert of the Port Townsend Community Orchestra was during the Port Townsend Rhododendron Festival on May 14, 1987, at the Fort Worden Theater. The orchestra was composed of 46 performers being directed by Michael-Ann Burnett. The music was high school level arrangements.

To be honest, we did sound like some of us had been using our instruments for match holders over the years. Some of us had last played 20 years before in school. A few had started learning an instrument as an adult and had never played in a concert, and the timpanist had never played one before. We were held together by a few much more accomplished musicians, including local band teachers and retired and professional musicians. We also didn’t have a very balanced instrumentation as our 9 flutes could attest. Much of the first audience was made up of our families and friends…but we had an orchestra.

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The Port Townsend Community Orchestra’s Humble Beginnings

by Carl Hanson July 2019

The Port Townsend Community Orchestra began when an Advertisement was placed in the local Port Townsend Leader urging area musicians to pull their instruments out of the attic, dust them off, and come together on Tuesday evenings to begin rehearsing music to be shared with the community. To support the orchestra, players were asked to pay a tuition fee of $25 per concert. The continued generous support of our area communities has eliminated the tuition though members are still encouraged to donate. The original board members behind this effort were Sandy Barker, Helen Bonny, Janel Carlson, Kathy Hill, Dott Kelly, and Bob Marriott. The orchestra began in the Spring of 1987 under the direction of Michael-Ann Burnett — a cello player who offered cello lessons at her local music studio — with the premiere performance held at the Wheeler Theater at Fort Worden State Park, May 24, 1987.

Once rehearsals began preparatory to the premier performance, I was asked to serve on the board as a representative for the playing members. Among the first to respond to my request for volunteers to assist with various tasks was Joanie Hendricks who began serving for many years as Orchestra Librarian and Historian. By the time we entered our first full season, I began serving as Vice President of the board.

With rehearsals held at Port Townsend High School, performances continued at the Wheeler Theater at Fort Worden State Park until the audience seating was surpassed in 1991. Performances then moved to Port Townsend High School and then eventually to Chimacum High School with some alternating between the two schools.

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Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra announces 2019-2020 concert season with a new name, mission statement, logo and website

The Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra board shows off an enlarged version of the group’s new logo. Pictured in front row, from left, are Kristin Smith, Tigran Arakelyan and Robert Nathan; standing, from left, are Denise Sample, Miles Vokurka, Vicki Mansfield, Tom Berg, Lesa Barnes, Arianna Golden, Nan Toby Tyrrell, Pat Yearian, Nancy Miskimins and graphic artist James Sample.

The Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra (PTSO) has announced the schedule for its 2019-2020 concert season with a new name, mission statement, logo and website.

Formed in 1987 and known for 32 years as the Port Townsend Community Orchestra, the orchestra board and its members recently decided to change the name to Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra to reflect the important strides they have made since their inception. The orchestra now performs a wide range of works, including symphonies, works by minority and living composers, as well as scores from movies, television, and operas. Featured soloists, both local and visiting artists, further enhance the symphonic experience.

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