Hopkins Medical Orchestra Plans Winter Concert at Turner Auditorium
The Hopkins Medical Orchestra will present a Winter Concert on the evening of Dec. 12 at Turner Auditorium on the Johns Hopkins East Baltimore campus, offering free public admission and a program that includes Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 and selections from Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker. The concert advances campus community engagement, channels proceeds and goodwill into local outreach, and provides Baltimore residents an accessible cultural event adjacent to a major medical institution.

The Hopkins Medical Orchestra, an ensemble composed of medical students, graduate students, faculty, staff and community members, will perform a Winter Concert on the evening of Dec. 12 at Turner Auditorium on the East Baltimore campus. The event is free and open to the public, and organizers say proceeds and goodwill from the orchestra's activities support community engagement and celebrate the role of the arts within the Hopkins community.
The program will feature large scale orchestral repertoire including Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 alongside seasonal selections from Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker. Presenting core symphonic works together with familiar holiday music is likely to broaden the concert appeal for hospital staff, students, neighborhood residents and visitors from across the city. Free admission reduces financial barriers and creates an opportunity for people who might not otherwise attend a formal concert to experience live orchestral performance.
This event sits at the intersection of culture and civic life in East Baltimore. A university sponsored musical performance on a medical campus serves several local functions. It offers practical benefits for staff morale and student life, while signaling institutional investment in neighborhood cultural programming. Organizers have framed proceeds and the intangible benefits of the concerts as contributions to community engagement, a point that speaks to how campus institutions can extend their civic presence beyond clinical and research missions.

For Baltimore residents the concert is a direct chance to engage with the campus outside of medical or educational transactions. Free events on campus can build bridges between the institution and surrounding communities, and may encourage ongoing attendance at cultural programming or other public meetings. Organizers encourage the public to attend and to take advantage of a rare campus event that pairs major orchestral literature with seasonal repertoire, reinforcing arts access during the holiday season.


