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Two Schoo Middle School students play their violins in the rotunda of the State Capitol during an orchestra concert. They are holding their instruments with their left hands and their bows with their right hands.

Schoo Middle School students used violins, violas, cellos and basses to make majestic memories inside the heart of the Nebraska State Capitol.
 
Thirty Schoo musicians traveled to the seat of Nebraska government for the Nebraska Music Education Association’s Capitol Concert Series. The seventh and eighth graders filled the Nebraska Rotunda with sweet-sounding scores from five orchestral songs. It was the first time a Schoo ensemble was selected to perform in the annual NMEA event.

Schoo eighth graders Karson and Alicia said the experience would be a lifelong memory for everyone in the group.
 
“It was just an amazing space,” Karson said. “The echo and everything. It really filled the room and it was so vibrant. It was just great.”

“It was really cool,” Alicia said. “It’s definitely a different space that we’re not used to, like the sound. We have a really good orchestra room, but just having a different space where it travels so much farther was really cool.”

Rob Salistean has taught music classes at Lincoln Public Schools for 20 years and leads orchestra ensembles at both Schoo and Northwest High School.
 
“It lived up to my expectations and beyond, because you don’t really know until you experience it just how live this space is,” Salistean said. “It sounded incredible in the Rotunda.”
 
The NMEA began hosting the Capitol Concert Series in 1998 for elementary, middle and high school students. The event aims to raise awareness of the importance of music education for Nebraska students.
 
The Skyhawks began practicing in earnest after learning they had been selected for the honor. They celebrated after Schoo Principal Allysa Diehl walked into the orchestra practice room and told them they would be traveling to the downtown landmark.
 
“When Ms. Diehl came in and told us the news, we were just so excited,” Karson said. “Everybody was going crazy.”
 
Alicia said the news felt even better because of the friendships she has formed in orchestra.
 
“I really like the community,” Alicia said. “We have lots of fun in that class with Mr. Salistean and all of his jokes. We just love playing together.”

The Skyhawks prepared for the acoustics of the high-vaulted Rotunda by playing on Schoo’s stage and in different areas of their practice room. Salistean also chose five songs – “American Horizons,” “Gaelic Trilogy,” “Turning Point,” “Wild West Hoedown” and “Fire in the Bow” – that he felt would work well in the large space.
 
“It was just so full in the room,” Karson said. “I had no idea how it would sound, and it was just amazing how big it was.”
 
Salistean said it was important to reinforce the essential nature of music-based activities outside the front door of the legislative chambers.
 
“Music education is a vital component to education, and it’s nice to bring a spotlight to it right here in the Capitol Rotunda, right by where the legislature meets,” Salistean said.
 
“It felt really cool to have all this work pay off in a different space,” Alicia said.
 
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The full Schoo Middle School orchestra is pictured in the rotunda of the Nebraska State Capitol. They are performing a concert with their orchestra instruments.Eight Schoo Middle School students are playing their orchestra instruments during a concert in the rotunda of the Nebraska State Capitol.