Pat Martino Quartet at the Troy Music Hall

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Photo Courtesy of Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
Troy, NY – Experience one of the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall’s most inspiring performances as The Pat Martino Quartet takes to the stage on Friday, April 27 at 8 p.m. The quartet is comprised of Martino on guitar, pianist Rick Germanson, bassist Gregory Ryan and drummer Scott Allan Robinson. Pat Martino began playing guitar when he was 12-years-old. He left school in tenth grade to devote himself to music and by age 15 he was a professional jazz guitarist. Martino entered Philadelphia’s early rock scene, playing with music icons Bobby Rydell, Chubby Checkers and Bobby Darin. By 18, he was considered an icon himself and at age 20, Pat was signed to Prestige Records where he produced albums Strings!, Desperado, El Hombre and Baiyina, one of jazz’s first successful ventures into the psychedelic genre. “The guitar is of no great importance to me,” claims Martino. “The people it brings to me are what matter. They are what I’m extremely grateful for, because they are alive. The guitar is just an apparatus.” In 1980, Martino underwent surgery as the result of a near fatal brain aneurysm. The surgery left him with severe amnesia having no memory of his family, career or guitar. Martino remembers feeling as if he had been “dropped cold, empty, neutral, cleansed…naked.” Through the help of his friends, fellow musicians, determination and computers Martino made a miraculous recovery. Martino released his comeback CD The Return in 1987 and later recorded Interchange and then The Maker. and has received numerous dedication awards, Grammy nominations and Downbeat Magazines 2004 Reader’s Poll for Guitar Player of the Year. In January, 2007, JazzWeek announced its Top 100 recordings of 2006 and Pat Martino’s tribute to Wes Montgomery “Remember” came in at Number One. He is currently on the adjunct faculty at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. “Mr. Martino is Back,” said The New York Times. “He is plotting new musical directions, adding more layers to his myth.” Front man Pat Martino and his Quartet are delivering a “a blistering performance that’s so unrelenting that the break between the two 45-minute sets is almost a necessity to give the members of the crowd a few moments to catch their breath,” said allaboutjazz.com. Tickets for The Pat Martino Quartet are $28 and $25, and may be purchased through the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall Box Office by calling (518) 273-0038 or online at www.troymusichall.org. The Music Hall Box Office opens 90 minutes prior to the performance. Otherwise, Box Office operations are handled at its business office at 30 Second Street, Monday through Friday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The Troy Savings Bank Music Hall’s full season schedule can be viewed at www.troymusichall.org. The Troy Savings Bank Music Hall, named a National Historic Landmark in 1989, is in use over one hundred and fifty days a year. Since it opened its doors in 1875, the Hall has hosted performances by numerous world-renowned artists including Marion Anderson, Dizzy Gillespie, Peter Seeger, Ella Fitzgerald, Isaac Stern, Yo-Yo Ma, Henri Vieuxtemps, Ignace Jan Paderewski, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Jose Iturbi, Vladimir Horowitz, Yehudi Menuhin, and Artur Rubenstein, among many others.
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Pittsfield Housing Project Adds 37 Supportive Units and Collective Hope

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— A new chapter in local efforts to combat housing insecurity officially began as community leaders and residents gathered at The First on to celebrate a major expansion of supportive housing in the city.

The ribbon was cut on Thursday Dec. 19, on nearly 40 supportive permanent housing units; nine at The First, located within the Zion Lutheran Church, and 28 on West Housatonic Street.  The Housing Resource Center, funded by Pittsfield's American Rescue Plan Act dollars, hosted a celebration for a project that is named for its rarity: The First. 

"What got us here today is the power of community working in partnership and with a shared purpose," Hearthway CEO Eileen Peltier said. 

In addition to the 28 studio units at 111 West Housatonic Street and nine units in the rear of the church building, the Housing Resource Center will be open seven days a week with two lounges, a classroom, a laundry room, a bathroom, and lockers. 

Erin Forbush, ServiceNet's director of shelter and housing, challenged attendees to transform the space in the basement of Zion Lutheran Church into a community center.  It is planned to operate from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. year-round.

"I get calls from folks that want to help out, and our shelters just aren't the right spaces to be able to do that. The First will be that space that we can all come together and work for the betterment of our community," Forbush said. 

"…I am a true believer that things evolve, and things here will evolve with the people that are utilizing it." 

Earlier that day, Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Ed Augustus joined Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll and her team in Housatonic to announce $33.5 million in federal Community Development Block Grant funding, $5.45 million to Berkshire County. 

He said it was ambitious to take on these two projects at once, but it will move the needle.  The EOHLC contributed more than $7.8 million in subsidies and $3.4 million in low-income housing tax credit equity for the West Housatonic Street build, and $1.6 million in ARPA funds for the First Street apartments.

"We're trying to get people out of shelter and off the streets, but we know there are a lot of people who are couch surfing, who are living in their cars, who are one paycheck away from being homeless themselves," Augustus said. 

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