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  • Michael Tilson Thomas at Tanglewood

    Mozart and Stravinsky Launch the Weekend

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 17th, 2010

    Stepping in for the ailing James Levine, the sprightly and masterful Michael Tilson Thomas is becoming a familiar presence at Tanglewood. For the second weekend he conducted Stravinsky and Mozart on Friday night and returns on Saturday with more Mahler. On Sunday afternoon Pops features Alec Baldwin and Arlo Guthrie as guest artists. In one of the most anticipated concerts of the season Audra McDonald appears in Ozawa Hall on Sunday evening.

  • Maureen McGovern: at the Colonial July 23

    A Long and Winding Road: The Concert

    By: Heather Greenfield - Jul 14th, 2010

    This eclectic concert at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield, on July 23, is an entertaining and introspective look at the songs that inspired Maureen McGovern before her Academy Award-winning hit “The Morning After.” Her repertoire includes selections of iconoclastic singer-songwriter material including “The Circle Game,” “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?” “The Moon’s A Harsh Mistress,” “Imagine,” “Fire and Rain” and many others.

  • Opening Night at Tanglewood

    Michael Tilson Thomas Conducts Mahler’s Symphony No.2

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 10th, 2010

    The opening night of Tanglewood saw the transformation of adversity into triumph. There was concern over the announcement that yet again maestro Jame Levine would miss the entire season due to chronic health issues. As the opening night of Mahler's Symphony No. 2 in C minor amply demonstrated Michael Tilson Thomas proved to be far more than a substitute. He brought his unique vision and passion to the complex, eclectic and visceral symphony. With this performance the season in Lenox has been launched with magnificent confidence.

  • Viva Quetzal at the Clark Art Institute

    Performing on the Lawn July 27

    By: Heather Greenfield - Jul 08th, 2010

    Viva Quetzal, playing contemporary North American jazz and rock and the indigenous rhythms of Latin America, will perform on the lawn of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute on Tuesday July 27 at 6:00 pm. The public is invited to bring family, friends, lawn chairs and a picnic to this high-energy, multi-cultural concert. Barbeque fare is available for purchase and museum exhibitions Picasso Looks at Degas and Juan Muñoz are open until 6:00 pm. In the event of rain, the concert will be held in the auditorium. Concert admission is free.

  • Tanglewood Season Opens July 9

    Michael Tilson Thomas Conducts Mahler's Resurrection

    By: Ariel Petrova - Jul 06th, 2010

    Although Tanglewood had some 60,000 visitors last weekend for Pops followed by three sold out concerts by James Taylor and Carole King the season officially opens this weekend. Which means that the Boston Symphony Orchestra is in residence until the end of August. Michael Tilson Thomas will conduct the orchestra in the absence of the ailing James Levine. Thomas was a Tanglewood Music Fellow in 1968 and 69. He will be joined by two other TMC fellows soprano Layla Claire and mezzo soprano Stephanie Blythe.

  • Getting More Out of Tanglewood Concerts

    Lenox Library Lectures by Jeremy Yudkin

    By: Heather Greenfield - Jul 05th, 2010

    For the past few years I have been getting a lot more out of Tanglewood concerts by attending the lectures at the Lenox Library. On Friday and Saturday afternoons, from 2:30 to 4 PM, the music to be performed is discussed with recorded intervals by Professor Jeremy Yudkin. He brings zest, charm and enthusiasm to the experience. It allows me to listen more attentively and enjoy the concerts by a world class orchestra and its renowned conductors.

  • James Taylor and Carole King at Tanglewood

    Spectacular July 4th Musical Fireworks

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 05th, 2010

    The Berkshire season was launched in a sensational manner with three sold out Tanglewood performances by James Taylor and fellow singer/ songwriter, the legendary Carole King. They shared music, memories and intimate moments during concerts that averaged two and a half hours. Fans who bought lawn tickets last winter were rewarded by a gorgeous summer evening under the stars.

  • EnlightenNext Free Jazz Concert

    At Foxhollow in Lenox July 30

    By: Jaclyn Stevenson - Jul 03rd, 2010

    A jazz concert headlined by Israeli guitarist Oz Noy and five-time Gibson Female Jazz Guitarist of the Year Leni Stern - Noy wrote the soundtrack for Tommy Chong's AKA Tommy Chong documentary, and Stern has a new album out Now called sa belle sa ba. Berkshire-based Unfulfilled Desires will also perform fresh off a Paris engagement at Sunset-Sunside.

  • Richie Havens at Mass MoCA

    A Winter Lion on a Summer's Eve

    By: Ien Nivens - Jul 03rd, 2010

    An often perplexed, if forgiving, crowd seemed relieved when he and his accompanist, Walter Parks (whom Havens never mentioned, whose presence he never acknowledged) negotiated their way back to coherence in the language of music. Richie Havens’ artistry has mellowed but not lost much of its power and none, really, of its sweetness. His rhythms drive like a locomotive through the mists and downpours of yesteryear, spanning a generation and, as it were, a continent, undergirded all the while with a steady and persistent optimism that charms even as it meanders, disengaged, from song to song.

  • Idina Menzel Sizzles with Pops

    Doc Severinsen and Beatles at Tanglewood

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 03rd, 2010

    On Friday night of the Fourth of July weekend, with three sold out concerts by James Taylor and Carole King, Tanglewood got off to a slow start with Pops. There was a relatively sparse turnout. Too bad for those who missed the Tanglewood debut of the Tony Award winning singer Idina Menzel. She thrilled the audience with hits from Rent and Wicked. Doc Severinsen was typically attired in an outlandish outfit as he squeaked a few toots on trumpet. Keith Lockhart conducted a 125th anniversary salute to Pops.

  • Tom Rush at Natick Center for the Arts

    TCAN Performance Delights Audience

    By: David Wilson - Jul 01st, 2010

    Fifty years ago when he came to Cambridge to attend Harvard, the popularity of folk music was just blossoming and Tom began his involvement as host of a weekly show on the Harvard campus radio station, WHRB. It was wonderful to attend his sold out performance at the Natick Center for the Arts.

  • Rosanne Cash Packs the Colonial

    Featuring the List and Black Cadillac

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 30th, 2010

    Country music star, Rosanne Cash, the eldest daughter of the legendary Johnny Cash, utterly captivated the audience last night at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield. In every sense, emotionally and artistically, Cash demonstrated how she has distanced herself from the dominance of the Country Music World in Nashville. Her easy, charming manner, memory gaps and screw ups, only further conveyed her charm, passion, humanity and vulnerability. It was a stunning evening.

  • Beeline Ramblers

    Berkshire Musicians Summer Schedule

    By: Fran Mandeville and Lisa Burnstine Mandeville - Jun 27th, 2010

    Fran Mandeville and Lisa Burnstine Mandeville live in North Adams but they make sweet music all over the Berkshires. Here is a schedule of the Beeline Ramblers for the summer season. If you catch them at the Dreamaway Lodge in Becket be sure to enjoy dinner. Tell em we sentyah.

  • The New York Philharmonic in Lindberg and Beethoven

    A Triumpant Season Ends with Something New, Something Old

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 26th, 2010

    Alan Gilbert, in his inaugural season with the Philharmonic has been daring and provocative is his programming. He has also conducted traditional repertory with great flare. He has made it clear that he is going to lead his audience into the 21st century and help us get there. But not without moving us. He shares Beethoven's expressed desire in the subtitle to the Missa Solemnis: This is for the heart, not the brain.

  • Roomful of Teeth

    Mass MoCA's Club B-10

    By: Ien Nivens - Jun 22nd, 2010

    Roomful of Teeth is an ambitious work-in-progress with the stated intent of bringing the full range of human vocal potential to bear upon the aesthetic experience. Friday’s performance at Mass MoCA showcased works by Caleb Burhans, Caroline Shaw, Eric Dudley, William Brittelle, Judd Greenstein, Rinde Eckert and Avery Griffin. The play of a cappella sound waves against bone, tooth, beam and brick in a high-ceilinged, sold-out room pulsed with energies that seemed unearthly but were firmly rooted in the human.

  • The New York Philharmonic Blasts Off at Avery Fisher

    Alan Gilbert Gives Us Horns

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 21st, 2010

    While onductor Gilbert declares that his penultimate program of the season is about Vienna, it was clearly all about the trumpet, in Wagner and Mozart and an end of the 20th century concerto for the trumpet by HK Gruber, a madman who deserves his own story. But this was trumpeter Hakan Hardenberger's evening, even though the composer saddled him with three horns. Saddled is a bit unfair. The audience was intimdated but the trumpterer wasn't. He even sang into his trumpet.

  • Simon and Garfunkel Cancel Tanglewood

    Tour Postponed Because of Illness

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 17th, 2010

    The scheduled appearance by Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel at Tanglewood on July 27 has been cancelled. Art Garfunkel continues to recover from a vocal paresis. The tour was originally planned to start in April. It was then shifted to July. Now it is postponed indefinitely. Garfunkel is expected to recover but not in time for the summer concerts. With James Levine out for the season this is the second Tanglewood cancellation in less than a week. There is speculation about how these cancellations will impact tourism and the hospitality industry.

  • Barbara Cook at Mahaiwe August 15

    Elaine Stritch Postponed

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 16th, 2010

    In a bit of musical chairs, Tony award winner Barbara Cook replaces a scheduled appearance by Elaine Stritch at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington. The much anticipated concert will occur on August 15. The Stritch appearance has been postponed because she is joining the Broadway cast of Sondheim's A Little Night Music. This season Cook appeared on Broadway in Sondheim on Sondheim.

  • The Metropolitan Opera Encore HDs

    Local Theaters Show Opera Performances

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 15th, 2010

    If you missed some of the Met's wonderful HD broadcasts over recent seasons, this is a good time to catch up. A list of dates and times follows. We have included the Met's precis for each opera and excerpts from commentary which appeared on this site.

  • James Levine Withdraws from Tanglewood

    Slots Filled by Renowned Conductors

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 14th, 2010

    In April James Levine, the artistic director of Boston Symphony Orchestra and Metropolitan Opera, underwent back surgery. While he planned a season for Tangelwood he has now withdrawn from the program. It is hoped that he will recover in time for the fall seasons of the BSO and Met. This is a repeat of his absence from Tanglewood following surgery after the opening concerts in 2008. Given chronic health issues there is speculation about his long term role in Boston and New York. Renowned conductors will fill the vacant slots in Lenox this season.

  • TCAN - The Center for Arts in Natick

    A Metro-West Treasure

    By: David Wilson - Jun 14th, 2010

    In 2003, having rescued from demolition, and renovated, a 19th century firehouse, they opened an intimate performance site with professional quality lighting and sound and seating almost 300. Within two years, the Massachusetts Historical Commission acknowledged their efforts with a Preservation Award.

  • Mengelberg and Mahler by Daniel Klein

    Robert Lohbauer in World Premiere at Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 14th, 2010

    Berkshire based playwright Daniel Klein has collaborated with Emile Fallaux, who directs, on the the world premiere of Mengelberg and Mahler, a one person play, at Shakespeare & Company. It stars company veteran Robert Lohbauer. While Mahler fans may find much to like about this intimate performance it left us unmoved. The script while well crafted was not adequately conveyed by the actor. On opening night, however, Lohbauer was given a standing ovation by some of the audience.

  • Rosanne Cash at the Colonial June 29

    Performing the List Johnny Cash Gave Her

    By: Uriah Pennington - Jun 12th, 2010

    The genesis of Rosanne Cash’s new album The List dates back to a day in 1973 when Cash’s father, the incomparable Johnny Cash, discovered some gaps in her knowledge of American roots music. He spent the rest of the day making a list on a legal pad, and at the top he put “100 Essential Country Songs” handed it to her and said, “This is your education.” She will perform this material at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield on June 29.

  • A Cole Porter Tribute

    You're the Tops at the Pops

    By: Barbara Brilliant - Jun 11th, 2010

    .The music of Cole Porter bubbled like champagne at Symphony Hall. Keith Lockhart conducted in a thoroughly enjoyable evening of Pops. He was joined by Broadway stars including Kelli O’Hara, Jason Danieley and Matthew Anderson.

  • Stephanie Blythe Sings at Town Hall, New York

    Performs at Tanglewood on July 9

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 10th, 2010

    Free concerts in New York with A list talent can be found if you look, and one of the best venues to scour is Town Hall's. Here on Sunday, for free, lucky listeners got to hear Stephanie Blythe accompanied by Warren Jones. Blythe opens Tanglewood's season in Mahler's Second Symphony on July 9th.

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