Williams College Department of Music Presents Brahms’s Violin Sonatas

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass – Joanna Kurkowicz, violin and Doris Stevenson, piano will give a concert of all three of Brahms’s violin sonatas on Friday, Dec. 5, at 8 p.m. in Brooks-Rogers Recital Hall on the Williams College campus. This free event is open to the public.

The masterful sonatas composed in 1879, 1886, and 1888 contain some of Brahms’s most personal and expressive music. “As long as the West wants to uphold the deepest, broadest, and the finest part of its musical tradition, Brahms will be with us. For that long, we will know the Brahms Effect: music at once warmly, lyrically, Romantically expressive and at the same time remote, Olympian.” -Jan Swafford

Praised in GRAMOPHONE Magazine for “disciplined virtuosity” violinist Joanna Kurkowicz, Artist in Residence at Williams College enjoys an active and versatile career as an award-winning soloist, recitalist, chamber musician and concertmistress.

She has performed worldwide in such venues as Carnegie Hall, New York, Jordan Hall, Boston and the Grosse Saal, Salzburg, and has appeared as a soloist with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, Boston Philharmonic Orchestra, Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra, the Jefferson Symphony, the San Luis Obispo Symphony, the New England String Ensemble, the Berkshire Symphony, the Poznan Philharmonic, the Polish National Radio Orchestra in Katowice and others. She has received awards from the Samuel Chester, Presser, Saint Botolph, Kosciuszko, and Olevsky Foundations, the Harvard Musical Association, the Irving McKlein International Competition, the Carmel and Coleman Chamber Music Competitions, and in Poland, the Henryk Wieniawski and Tadeusz Wronski International Competitions.

Ms. Kurkowicz currently serves as concertmistress of the Boston Philharmonic and the Berkshire Symphony  Orchestra. She holds the position of Artist in Residence at Williams College and is on the faculty at Tufts University. Joanna Kurkowicz is a strong advocate of contemporary music and has premiered many works by living composers. Miss Kurkowicz has recorded for Chandos, Bridge, Centaur, Neuma, Albany, CRI, New World  and Archetype Records. For more information please visit www.joannakurkowicz.com.

Pianist Doris Stevenson, Artist in Residence at Williams College, leads a busy life as recitalist and chamber musician in addition to teaching at Williams.  She has played on many of the great stages of the world including Carnegie Hall and Alice Tully Hall in New York, the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., Suntory Hall in Tokyo, Salle Pleyel in Paris and Symphony Hall as soloist with the Boston Pops Orchestra. She has played with Jascha Heifetz and  Gregor Piatigorsky, Ruggiero Ricci and Paul Tortelier, great artists of the past. The list of distinguished artists she has performed with includes cellists Andre Navarra, Leslie Parnes and Gary Hoffman, violinists Mark Peskanov and Elmar Olivera, violist Walter Trampler and singers Kaaren Erickson, Robert Hale and Catherine Malfitano.

She is a founding member of the Sitka Summer Music Festival in Alaska and has appeared in many other chamber music festivals including the Grand Canyon festival, Steamboat Springs Strings in the Mountains, Marin Music Fest, Chamber Music/LA and the Park City International Music Festival. She served for ten years on the piano faculty of the University of Southern California where she was also pianist for the master classes of famed cellist, Gregor Piatigorsky.

Her many recordings include David Kechley's Winter Branches with Douglas Moore, a work for two pianos and percussion of Ileana Perez Velazquez on her new CD released last week by Albany Records, the Brahms Sonatas for cello and piano with Nathaniel Rosen, the Saint Saens violin sonatas with Andres Cardenes and Mendelssohn complete works for cello and piano with Jeffrey Solow. A Stravinsky CD with Mark Peskanov received a Grammy nomination.
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Prospect Meadow Farm Opens New Vocational Barn

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

A charcuterie board at the event displays fare from some of the regional producers.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Prospect Meadow Farm last week officially opened a new barn to sell plants and other goods it produces.

Prospect Meadow Farm Berkshires is an expansion of ServiceNet's first farm in Hatfield that has provided meaningful agricultural work, fair wages, and personal and professional growth to hundreds of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities since opening in 2011. 

The Berkshires farm opened on Crane Avenue two years ago and has now introduced a new vocational and unwinding space for the more than 25 farmhands who get paid a minimum wage.

"This is a facility for our folks who work on the farm to learn additional skills and do additional work," said Vice President of Vocational Services Shawn Robinson at the Friday event. "So we have a food packaging space, we've got a walk-in cooler space, we've got a floral design space, we've got a farm store room for staff, lunch room, and then a meditation room that we're standing in now, which is when you're having those hard moments and you need to get away from everything.

"This is going to be a peaceful place you can find and sort of find some comfort, and then hopefully get back to work."

The barn was built by funds from the state Executive Office of Economic Development and the state Department of Agricultural Resources that equated to around $600,000, with ServiceNet contributing around the same amount. The structure took over a year to build.

The state's Department of Developmental Services Commissioner Sarah Peterson spoke on how meaningful this farm and ServiceNet is to her and that this place is important to those who need it.

"Places like this are so crucial because they create opportunities for people living with disabilities that aren't plentiful," she said. "People living with developmental and intellectual disabilities have an unemployment rate over 25 percent five times the rate for people without disabilities, even more jarring is under appointment, which is at 80 percent. That means that four out of every five people with disabilities earn below market rate wages and have limited upward mobility.

"The building itself is really impressive, but what you're really seeing here is the result of vision. It's about opportunity, it's about community, and it's founded in the belief that every person deserves the chance to learn and work and contribute to thrive under the leadership of ServiceNet."

One aspect of the barn will be the market where produce from the farm and other local growers will be sold as well as keeping the tradition of Jodi's Seasonal, which previously occupied the location, alive with plant sales. The market will be open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

"Everything you see in terms of the tomatoes, the fresh produce, that's all done with the hands of our farm hands here, individuals with disabilities who get out every single morning, get in those greenhouses, put their hands in the dirt, and make all of this happen, and this is just the start," said Robinson. "This farm is a little over a year old at this point, but give it another two years, and we hope to be growing enough food to share throughout the Berkshires."

Robinson said the farm is focused on local food security, recently partnering with the Hatfield Council on Aging and planning to work toward making enough food to partner with places in the Berkshires.

He said the barn serves the Hatfield farm and what the employees here needed.

"We've been able to learn the needs of the farm hands who work there and so we have learned that they need a comfortable break space for those times where it's hard to be out in the fields, we've learned that a quiet space for when you're going through something you need to be away from people are key, and then also we have a small farm store in Hatfield, but we've seen increasing interest in retail work from our participants, so we thought it was time for a larger-scale farm store," he said.

Robinson noted that Prospect Meadow Farm has helped the individuals working there feel valued and head.

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