Mark Wesling Guitarist
Guitar Lessons
Mark offers lessons in his studio in York, PA and at-home lessons in Neighboring cities of Harrisburg, Hershey and Lancaster, in addition to online lessons.Special Events
Mark offers music for weddings, anniversaries, concerts, gallery openings and special events.Original Music
Mark offers original music for Classical guitar, childrens concerts and contemporary guitar and vocals.Paintings
Mark offers original art in oil, watercolor and pen & ink
Who am I
Biography
Mark Wesling, Classical Guitarist, is a native of St. Louis, Missouri. Mark has been living and making music in south-central Pennsylvania since 1996. He teaches classical, acoustic, and electric guitar lessons (in-person and online) from his studio located in York, PA and throughout Hershey, Harrisburg and Lancaster (at-home lessons). He performs throughout Pennsylvania and surrounding areas for weddings, corporate events, festivals, and concerts and composes and publishes music for the guitar. Mark is also an active artist who works with oils and watercolors; his work has found homes in private collections throughout the United States.
In 2000, Mark received a MTNA Teachers Enrichment Grant funded by the Gibson Musical Instruments company for continuing education. In 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2002, he received grants from the Pennsylvania Partners in the Arts/Jump Street to conduct guitar lessons for at-risk inner city youths at the Danzante Community Arts Center in Harrisburg. The Pennsylvania Partners in the Arts (PPA) program is a partnership initiative between local arts organizations and the Pennsylvania Council of the Arts (PCA), a state agency. PPA is administered in this region by Jump Street (formerly MetroArts) of the Capital Region.
In 2008, Mark received the Arpeggio Award from Progressive Education of Children in the Arts Network, Inc. This reward recognizes a person who has helped bring harmony to children’s lives through musical composition.
Mark has been producing his own CD’s since 2000. They include original compositions and soothing sounds to enjoy at work, in your car, while entertaining guests or just relaxing.
What I do
Services
30 (or 60) minute lessons (York Studio, At-Home or online)
Individual guitar lessons (Classical, electric and acoustic) are offered at York studio, at-home (York, Harrisburg, Hershey and Lancaster) and online.
Price: Studio/online $30 (30 minutes), $60 (hour), for at-home, same plus additional costs for mileage (if significant).
Weddings, corporate events, anniversaries, gallery openings, school/daycare concerts and special events
A high quality Bose system is used for amplification when necessary.
Price: Price varies but generally $275 (Wedding) and for special events ($200 first hour, $100 each additional hour) plus travel (if significant).
Classical guitar, children's and contemporary music
Original music is free provided copyright is followed by giving composer's/writer's credit and royalties for distribution or professional use. (more compositions to follow)
Price: Free
Paintings
Original oil, watercolors and pen & ink paintings/drawings by Mark Wesling.
Price: Varies, see listings in gallery (coming)
Flexibility
As a professional musician and music educator, I offer flexible scheduling (in studio, at-home and online) to accommodate the needs of my client's families.
Experience
With over 20 years of experience in teaching and performing for special events, I can provide a customized educational plan or event program to meet your needs.
Peace of mind
Hiring a professional musician or music educator ensures you will always be treated as a valued client in a professional manner.
Insured/Clearances
As a professional musician and music educator, I can provide proof of insurance and education/child clearances.
Articles
What people are saying
His key to success? ‘Think the music’
By T.W. Burger, The Patriot News (5/13/2009)
Meet Mark Wesling. As a young man, he studied engineering and business. Today, he teaches and plays classical guitar, produces music and paints. And, he says, he can’t imagine doing anything else.
Mark Wesling sits on a chair in his apartment and makes magic with a wooden box. The box is of bearclaw spruce and Brazilian rosewood. A box, yes, but not square. It is shaped elegantly into sort of an hourglass. A set of six nylon strings are stretched at perfect tensions down across the spruce top and along a fretted board jutting from one end of the box. Wesling’s fingers move easily, teasing the strings, his left hand dancing almost as an independent being along the neck of the guitar. From the box of polished wood and perfect tensions arises “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring,” one of Johann Sebastian Bach’s 200 surviving cantatas. The piece is nearly 300 years old.
This is what Mark Wesling is all about: the music that goes into and out of the very exactingly built wooden box, playing it and teaching others to play. He also paints. He produces CDs. But all those things are satellites in orbit around the music of that box of arched and gleamed wood. He plays professionally and shepherds about 100 students, six days a week, through the rigors of coaxing the magic out of their own wooden boxes. This is not just an art form. It’s a business.
Through a business association, he joined LeTip of the West Shore, a networking outfit of about 70 business owners. There he received help learning the kinds of accounting and legal support he needed. He believes that doing business locally is a way to prevent massive swings in the economy.
“Small businesses are the only ones who can cure the economy,” he says. “Hire your neighbor and your neighbor will hire you, everyone’s busy, everyone’s eating and everyone’s happy.”
Wesling has his own 401(k) plan and health insurance and juggles a busy schedule of professional gigs at wedding, corporate events and other happenings. He manages his own CD sales, and still finds time to create and sell paintings. He said he has sold 6,000 to 7,000 CDs.
Wesling, 41, has played for nearly three decades. He says part of the craft is getting to the point where the music goes from the page through the fingers and strings without him having to think specifically about each step in the process.
“You fall into this thing where you minimize your movement and play more efficiently,” he says. “It almost becomes as though I think the music. It becomes almost intuitive.”
“I try to teach my students that playing a chord is no more difficult than turning a door knob,” Wesling says. “That is a fairly complex movement involving a lot of muscles, bones and joints, but you don’t have to think about it when you do it.”
Wesling says he became interested in the guitar when he was 13, and in eighth grade in his native St. Louis. “My first guitar teacher played electric guitar in a band, but he exposed me to classical,” he says. “The earliest music was sort of primitive, but then Bach came along and sort of solidified everything, sort of set the rules. Now the twelve-tone scale is sort of the standard for western music.”
Wesling started out playing for a hobby. He went to engineering school, then business school. When he was 24, he moved to Cleveland and started painting. He came to Harrisburg four years later and played for friends. They encouraged him to go out and play at receptions and at open houses.
“When I was 30, after two years of working for Tyco, I suddenly decided to do this full-time. I started out with four students. I now have 98,” Wesling says.
Matthew Weschler, 18, was one of Wesling’s students for eight years. He is now a student at the Philadelphia Academy of Music, and recently won the high school division of the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society competition. Weschler says Wesling is encouraging to the youths under his tutelage.
“He was very definitely influential in getting me started on a path I’ll probably follow for the rest of my life,” Weschler says. “Right now, I’m enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh. I plan to major in bioengineering, but there is no doubt for me that I will never stop playing the guitar.”
Mark Wesling sits on a chair in his apartment and makes magic with a wooden box. The box is of bearclaw spruce and Brazilian rosewood. A box, yes, but not square. It is shaped elegantly into sort of an hourglass. A set of six nylon strings are stretched at perfect tensions down across the spruce top and along a fretted board jutting from one end of the box. Wesling’s fingers move easily, teasing the strings, his left hand dancing almost as an independent being along the neck of the guitar. From the box of polished wood and perfect tensions arises “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring,” one of Johann Sebastian Bach’s 200 surviving cantatas. The piece is nearly 300 years old.
This is what Mark Wesling is all about: the music that goes into and out of the very exactingly built wooden box, playing it and teaching others to play. He also paints. He produces CDs. But all those things are satellites in orbit around the music of that box of arched and gleamed wood. He plays professionally and shepherds about 100 students, six days a week, through the rigors of coaxing the magic out of their own wooden boxes. This is not just an art form. It’s a business.
Through a business association, he joined LeTip of the West Shore, a networking outfit of about 70 business owners. There he received help learning the kinds of accounting and legal support he needed. He believes that doing business locally is a way to prevent massive swings in the economy.
“Small businesses are the only ones who can cure the economy,” he says. “Hire your neighbor and your neighbor will hire you, everyone’s busy, everyone’s eating and everyone’s happy.”
Wesling has his own 401(k) plan and health insurance and juggles a busy schedule of professional gigs at wedding, corporate events and other happenings. He manages his own CD sales, and still finds time to create and sell paintings. He said he has sold 6,000 to 7,000 CDs.
Wesling, 41, has played for nearly three decades. He says part of the craft is getting to the point where the music goes from the page through the fingers and strings without him having to think specifically about each step in the process.
“You fall into this thing where you minimize your movement and play more efficiently,” he says. “It almost becomes as though I think the music. It becomes almost intuitive.”
“I try to teach my students that playing a chord is no more difficult than turning a door knob,” Wesling says. “That is a fairly complex movement involving a lot of muscles, bones and joints, but you don’t have to think about it when you do it.”
Wesling says he became interested in the guitar when he was 13, and in eighth grade in his native St. Louis. “My first guitar teacher played electric guitar in a band, but he exposed me to classical,” he says. “The earliest music was sort of primitive, but then Bach came along and sort of solidified everything, sort of set the rules. Now the twelve-tone scale is sort of the standard for western music.”
Wesling started out playing for a hobby. He went to engineering school, then business school. When he was 24, he moved to Cleveland and started painting. He came to Harrisburg four years later and played for friends. They encouraged him to go out and play at receptions and at open houses.
“When I was 30, after two years of working for Tyco, I suddenly decided to do this full-time. I started out with four students. I now have 98,” Wesling says.
Matthew Weschler, 18, was one of Wesling’s students for eight years. He is now a student at the Philadelphia Academy of Music, and recently won the high school division of the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society competition. Weschler says Wesling is encouraging to the youths under his tutelage.
“He was very definitely influential in getting me started on a path I’ll probably follow for the rest of my life,” Weschler says. “Right now, I’m enrolled at the University of Pittsburgh. I plan to major in bioengineering, but there is no doubt for me that I will never stop playing the guitar.”
— T. W. Burger
A Shining Showcase for Classical Guitarist
by John Chambless, Daily Local News (West Chester), (1/19/2001)
As a showcase for his thoughtful, uncompromising musicianship, Mark Wesling’s “Dream Dance” is certainly an effective marketing tool. You could not listen to this impeccably recorded CD and not be impressed.
Wesling, who has performed extensively in the Harrisburg area, moved to West Chester recently and is beginning to make himself known here. “Dream Dance” is a lovely introduction to his reserved, respectful approach to classical guitar repertoire, spanning the instantly recognizable “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring” by Bach to new selections by Fernando Sor (Opus 35 No. 22 and Opus 35 No. 18) and Andew York (“Snowflight” and “Willow”).
His originals are similar in style. Nothing here runs longer than about three minutes, with the exception of the closing track, “Listening: Improvisation,” which proves Wesling’s amazing familiarity with his instrument.
Only his solo acoustic guitar is heard, and it needs no ornamentation. Beethoven is quoted on the CD cover: “The guitar is a miniature orchestra in itself.” Wesling proves that here, with 22 tracks of subtle melodies that establish a mellow mood and richly reward close inspection. Without resorting to the florid playing and overdubs that can mar acoustic music by Windham Hill artists, for instance, Wesling never overplays his hand or detours in distracting directions.
“Dream Dance” could be picked up by Windham Hill just as it is, and Wesling would hold his own with guitarists who have PR agencies and big-budget recording studios. His “Morning Song” makes the most of a lovely melody, and his eight-part “Divertimento for Guitar: Blessings of a Broken Heart” takes the listener on a meandering journey with a sure and steady hand.
“Dream Dance” is available at Chester County Books and Music, the Mad Platter and on Wesling’s website, www.markwesling.com.
As a showcase for his thoughtful, uncompromising musicianship, Mark Wesling’s “Dream Dance” is certainly an effective marketing tool. You could not listen to this impeccably recorded CD and not be impressed.
Wesling, who has performed extensively in the Harrisburg area, moved to West Chester recently and is beginning to make himself known here. “Dream Dance” is a lovely introduction to his reserved, respectful approach to classical guitar repertoire, spanning the instantly recognizable “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring” by Bach to new selections by Fernando Sor (Opus 35 No. 22 and Opus 35 No. 18) and Andew York (“Snowflight” and “Willow”).
His originals are similar in style. Nothing here runs longer than about three minutes, with the exception of the closing track, “Listening: Improvisation,” which proves Wesling’s amazing familiarity with his instrument.
Only his solo acoustic guitar is heard, and it needs no ornamentation. Beethoven is quoted on the CD cover: “The guitar is a miniature orchestra in itself.” Wesling proves that here, with 22 tracks of subtle melodies that establish a mellow mood and richly reward close inspection. Without resorting to the florid playing and overdubs that can mar acoustic music by Windham Hill artists, for instance, Wesling never overplays his hand or detours in distracting directions.
“Dream Dance” could be picked up by Windham Hill just as it is, and Wesling would hold his own with guitarists who have PR agencies and big-budget recording studios. His “Morning Song” makes the most of a lovely melody, and his eight-part “Divertimento for Guitar: Blessings of a Broken Heart” takes the listener on a meandering journey with a sure and steady hand.
“Dream Dance” is available at Chester County Books and Music, the Mad Platter and on Wesling’s website, www.markwesling.com.
— John Chambless
Get in touch
Contact
Monday - Sunday9:00 AM - 1:00 PM