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  • Pittsfield CityJazz Festival

    Rescheduled From Mid-October to Late April.

    By: Ed Bride - Sep 13th, 2021

    The long hiatus from indoor concerts has given Berkshires Jazz, Inc. an opportunity to reflect on the many aspects of our programming. As a result, we have re-scheduled the Pittsfield CityJazz Festival from mid-October to late April which is celebrated nationally as Jazz Appreciation Month.

  • Jazz Entrepreneur George Wein at 95

    It Started With Storyville in Copley Square

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 13th, 2021

    A native of Newton and Boston University graduate the career of jazz entrepreneur, George Wein, started with the club Storyville in Copley Square. With the Lorrilards as backers he founded the Newport Jazz Festival and later the Newport Folk Festival. He went on to the the world's foremost jazz promoter. He died today at 95 in New York.

  • Boston Pops Holiday Concerts

    Return to Live Music at Symphony Hall

    By: BSO - Sep 15th, 2021

    The Boston Pops announces the return of the ever-popular Holiday Pops season at Symphony Hall, December 2 through 24. Under the direction of Boston Pops Conductor Keith Lockhart, the 2021 Holiday Pops season celebrates the reunion of the Pops with its devoted patrons, while the orchestra also welcomes new audience members to experience the sights and sounds of these special concerts with the one-and-only Boston Pops Orchestra.

  • Iphigenia at MASS MoCA

    Composer Wayne Shorter, Librettist and Performer esperanza spalding

    By: MoCA - Sep 15th, 2021

    In Iphigenia, two of the most visionary and daring musical voices of our time—composer Wayne Shorter and librettist and performer esperanza spalding—have created a modern operatic re-imagining of the ancient tale of a daughter sacrificed to the gods. The set is designed by luminary architect Frank Gehry. Performances in the Hunter Center are Friday, November 5, 8pm & Saturday, November 6, 8pm

  • The Ojai Music Festival Is Now

    John Adams Mixes a Potent Broth

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 22nd, 2021

    The annual Ojai Music Festival is arguably the most exciting music event in this country.  It “monitors the everchanging mood and directions of our musical atmosphere.” A challenge to be sure. A challenge which is richly met and then some.

  • Young Composers at the Ojai Festival

    Free to Be an Individual in Sound

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 23rd, 2021

    John Adams writes about his release from the shackles binding  him as a Northeastern composer in the US.  Coming to California as a young man, he was at last able to write the music he heard, whatever shape it took.  He was free to be an individual. Each of the young composers featured prominently in Ojai 2021 has clearly benefited from Adams’ experience.

  • Shout! The Mod Musical

    At South Bay Musical Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 28th, 2021

    “Shout! The Mod Musical” is a musical revue of the ‘60s shown through the experiences of five young adult women living in London, as conceived and curated by three American men (of course)!  The songbook draws from tunes of the era, predominantly those popularized by English songbirds, especially Dusty Springfield and Petula Clark (“Wishin’ and Hopin’” and “Downtown” for starters.)  

  • Gateways Inn in Downtown Lenox

    Announces Jazz Series

    By: Gateways - Oct 01st, 2021

    The Gateways Inn in downtown Lenox has announced a new jazz series, starting in October and running Thursdays through Saturdays, with a special concert on Sunday, Oct. 24. Presented in association with Berkshires Jazz, Inc., the series underscores the venue’s ongoing dedication to live music.

  • Yehuda Hanani and Close Encounters Return

    Classic, Jazz, Whimy and Bee Bop in One Splendid Evening

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 30th, 2021

    An invitation to a close encounter with very special music.  Paul Schoenfield’s runaway classical hit, Café Music for piano trio, sets the tone for a celebratory re-opening. Combining elements of classical, jazz, klezmer and whimsy, Café Music is caffeine-fueled and irresistible.

  • A Crossing: A Dance Musical

    Barrington Stage Presents Powerful New Work for All of America

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 02nd, 2021

    While focused on a group of migrants this is the story of all of us. It conveys an America rooted in exclusion, violence and intolerance. This is a stunning new musical for all Americans.

  • The Porch at Windy Hill

    At Ivoryton Playhouse

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 11th, 2021

    Blue grass and Appalachian music usually isn’t my thing, but my toes were tapping while enjoying the play-with- music, The Porch at Windy Hill now at Ivoryton Playhouse through Sunday, Oct. 17.

  • Mahagonny, Komische Oper, Berlin

    Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny

    By: Angelika Jansen - Oct 11th, 2021

    What startet 1930 as the first opera cooperation between the playwright Bertolt Brecht and the composer Kurt Weill may well turn out to be the last big opera in the 2021/22 season. Mahagonny is being presented at the Komische Oper Berlin with Barrie Kosky as director. 

  • Letter to the Editor

    Re: "Miroirs" by Wataru Iwata

    By: Erica H. Adams - Oct 13th, 2021

    This is Wataru Iwata emailing from Japan. I’ve been working as a pianist, music composer, visual artist and recently putting more time into digital art.  

  • Diversity at The Metropolitan Opera

    Composer Terrence Blanchard's Fire Shut Up In My Bones

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 14th, 2021

    The Metropolitan Opera got a public relations boost when they mounted Terrence Blanchard’s ""Fire Shut up in My Bones" as their season opener. An unusually packed theater sweetened the Met's premiere. No question "Fire" is a wonderful piece of orchestral work. Elements of black folk music like gospel, jazz, and stepping, fit seamlessly into the overall scheme.

  • Mussorgsky's Original Boris Godunov at the Met

    How Do we Assess Versions

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 18th, 2021

    Alternate versions of an opera arouse controversy.The multiple versions of Verdi’s grand opera Don Carlos (Don Carlo) were a response to different productions. Terrence Blanchard adapted his opera Fire Shut up in My Bones for the Metropolitan Opera’s stage. Now we have the magnificent, original Boris Godunov.

  • Fidelio by Ludwig van Beethoven

    Presented by San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 19th, 2021

    San Francisco Opera’s current production maximizes the values of the piece through excellent casting, fine musical direction by Eun Sun Kim, and the addition of what amounts to another character, the stunning scenic design by Alexander V. Nichols, under the purview of Director Matthew Ozawa.

  • Die Dreigroschenoper at the Berliner Ensemble

    By Bertold Brecht, Music by Kurt Weill

    By: Angelika Jansen - Oct 19th, 2021

    It turned into a shocking success, the opening of the Dreigroschenoper (Three Penny Opera) in November 1928 at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin. Now, almost 100 years later, Bertolt Brecht's work with the music by Kurt Weill, is back at its original showing, now called the Berliner Ensemble at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin.

  • Jazz at the Gateways Inn

    Music in Lenox Starts October 21

    By: Berkshire Jazz - Oct 20th, 2021

    A special concert will cap this weekend on Sunday, Oct. 24, when pianist Ted Rosenthal performs his unique interpretations of George Gershwin compositions. Highlighted by his innovative treatment of the legendary Rhapsody in Blue, Ted’s repertoire for this first “tea time jazz special,” is collectively known as Rhapsody in Gershwin.

  • Todd Haynes Documentary Evokes The Velvet Underground

    Is There More to the Story of Lou Reed and His Band

    By: Steve Nelson - Oct 21st, 2021

    Steve Nelson was the foremost producer/promoter of concerts by The Velvet Underground in the period 1967-1970. He managed the legendary rock club The Boston Tea Party and produced shows in western Mass. at his club The Woodrose Ballroom and at the Paramount Theater in Springfield. He also designed several of the posters promoting those shows. He was an Archival Consultant to the Haynes film and provided visual materials for it.

  • Faure's Consoling Requiem at Greenwood Cemetery

    Angel's Share Concludes Its Season

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 22nd, 2021

    Andrew Ousley has just the right touch as he presens music from all time and places in surprising venues across the city of New York.  Earlier concerts at the Greenwood cemetery in Brooklyn took place in catacombs. For the performance of Gabriel Faure’s Requiem by Cantori, Ousley moved outside. The audience sits among the dead, consoled by a requiem at peace.

  • M. Butterfly, the Opera, to Premiere in Santa Fe

    Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang Join Forces

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 25th, 2021

    The world premiere of M. Butterfly, the opera, will take place on July 30,2021 at the Santa Fe Opera. We got a taste of its music, its story and the sound of the delicious man/girl Song. Kangmin Justin Kim is a countertenor with special tremulos and vibratos which suggest the feminine voice.  Many layers weave through the new telling to the tale made famous in its first iteration as a Tony and Pulitzer-finalist play by David Henry  Hwang. He is the librettist for the new work by composer, Huang Ruo.  

  • Berkshire Jazz, Dawning and Jeff Holmes

    Saint James Place, Great Barrington, Saturday, Nov. 27

    By: Berkshire Jazz - Oct 28th, 2021

    Known for her impassioned ballads and exciting up-tunes, vocalist Dawning Holmes was first heard in the Berkshires during the 2017 tribute to Buddy Rich. She returned the following year to perform with her husband Jeff Holmes' big band at the Berkshire Gateway Jazz Weekend in Lee.

  • Thomas Wilkins Conducts the BSO

    Coleridge-Taylor, Victor Wooten and Duke Ellington At Symphony Hall

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 31st, 2021

    Across the country arts organizations are making a concerted effort to include Americans of color in their presentations.  The concert at Symphony Hall in Boston this week was a highly successful concert of  inclusion.

  • Metropolitan Museum of Art Presents Arvo Part

    The Temple of Dendur is a Location Favored by the Composer

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 03rd, 2021

    Arvo Pärt has celebrated birthdays at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His music is often performed at the Temple of Dendur where one wall dances with reflections from a pool of water, reflections that seem to move with the beat of the music. They soothe and elevate, a mood captured by the Nile River in the temple’s original Egyptian location.

  • Iphigenia at MASS MoCA

    An Opera by Wayne Shorter and esperanza spalding

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 07th, 2021

    Iphigenia, an opera is a cross generational collaboration between 88-year-old jazz legend, Wayne Shorter and the much younger and widely acclaimed performer/ composer esperanza spalding. It was an eight year project that was particularly intensive this past year. After a residence it was presented as "an open rehearsal and work in progress" at MASS MoCA over two nights. It's debut will occur in Boston at ArtsEmerson on November 12 and 13. It will travel from there.

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