Mozart concert is a rare treat, Mary Kunz Goldman, Buffalo News
A big crowd turned out Saturday for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, never mind the warnings about snow and ice. And why not? The concert was all Mozart.
A big crowd turned out Saturday for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, never mind the warnings about snow and ice. And why not? The concert was all Mozart.
The musicians of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra have a long tradition of celebrating the January 27 birthday anniversary of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra’s latest financial numbers are music to the ears.
Kleinhans Music Hall enters its 75th anniversary on a high note.
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra’s home is replacing all its seats this summer in time for the start of the 2015-2016 season.
The last time Kleinhans Music Hall had new seats installed, the Beatles had yet to record “Hey Jude” and Lyndon Johnson was still president.
If you are unfamiliar with Bartók’s Suite No.1, then a pleasant surprise – an uplifting treat – awaits you
Sgt. Katie Bauman, who had not seen her family since she went to Afghanistan a year ago, stole the show when she surprised her mother onstage at Kleinhans Music Hall during the concert.
Her mother was called to the stage where she was told a special gift had arrived for her. That’s when Bauman came around the corner.
One family’s musical tradition became a memory of a lifetime when an Army sergeant who was stationed abroad for years appeared at a Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra concert Saturday night.
“I wanted to surprise my family. It worked out a lot better than I could have planned.” Katie Bauman talks about surprising her family.