Roomful of Teeth to Perform Non-Traditional Vocal Music at MASS MoCA

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. - Roomful of Teeth is an eight-voice vocal ensemble that embraces the full spectrum of vocal practices and, through an ongoing commissioning project, develops new compositions. Founded in 2008 by Brad Wells, conductor, singer, and music educator at Williams College, Roomful of Teeth is built on the premise that the membranes that separate one vocal technique or style from another are permeable and that any singer can learn any "non-native" singing language.

The ensemble incorporates an ever-widening circle of singing styles and invites composers to develop new works of vocal music for this new model of vocal ensemble. After a three-week residency at Williams College and MASS MoCA, Roomful of Teeth will perform a work-in-progress concert on Friday, June 26, at 8pm in Club B-10.

Eight classically trained Western singers will embark on a journey to learn the techniques of culturally diverse manners of singing.  Brad Wells calls singing styles "audible fingerprints," the markers of the human Diaspora on the world's original instrument: the voice. The vocal techniques required to create these diverse types of singing can be taught to anyone no matter what their cultural, ethnic and musical background. Wells hopes to "bring the full range of human voice back together for a family reunion" by incorporating and overlapping varied singing techniques from around the world into one ensemble performance. Beyond this residency, Roomful of Teeth's areas of exploration will include theatre and chamber opera, multimedia performance, and community music-making. The group's outreach efforts will include workshops to teach and combine vocal styles and focused symposia with choirs of different age and skill levels in which repertoire, singing styles, and cultural histories are shared.

Roomful of Teeth has a two-part residency. The singers will gather first at Williams College to receive training in three distinct, non-classical vocal techniques by an international field of experts: throat singers from Tuva, belting coaches from New York, and master yodeler Kerry Christensen. In the second and third weeks the project will move to MASS MoCA for work with composers who will create new work with the singers. Three composers, including Judd Greenstein of NOW Ensemble and New Amsterdam Records, and Rinde Eckert, composer and finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in drama, will be commissioned by Roomful of Teeth to create music particularly suited to this wider range of vocal colors. The collective will perform these new compositions at MASS MoCA and plans to record them in the future. Roomful of Teeth will convene regularly thereafter, rehearsing, performing and holding annual residencies, working with an ever-widening circle of teachers and composers and, in the process, forging a new repertoire of vocal music.

Roomful of Teeth founder Bradley Wells has built a thriving choral program at Williams College recognized for its quality of performances and breadth of repertoire. Wells has held conducting positions at Yale University, Trinity College (Hartford, CT), University of California at Berkeley and California State University, Chico. He is in frequent demand as a guest clinician and conductor. Wells has directed choirs of all ages, and his ensembles have performed throughout the U.S., Mexico and Europe. As a singer he has performed and recorded with such ensembles as Paul Hillier's Theatre of Voices, Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra and the California Choral Company. Also an active composer and arranger, Wells holds degrees in music from Yale University, University of Texas at Austin, and Principia College.

Tickets for Roomful of Teeth are $10. MASS MoCA members receive a 10% discount. Tickets are available through the MASS MoCA Box Office located off Marshall Street in North Adams, open from 11 A.M. until 5 P.M., closed Tuesdays. Tickets can also be charged by phone by calling 413-662-2111 during Box Office hours or purchased on line at www.massmoca.org.
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North Adams Police Block Houghton Street for Crisis Intervention

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Houghton was blocked off between North and School streets, frustrating neighbors trying to get home. 

Update: Early this morning, the Police Department posted that the situation "has been resolved" and the road reopened. Officers may still be in the area to complete their investigation.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The upper section of Houghton Street was blocked off for hours on Wednesday night as authorities sought to deal with an individual reportedly having a mental health issue. 

 
In a Facebook post, police described it as a "critical incident" unfolding in the area and alerted people to avoid the upper Houghton "and allow first responders the space they need to safely manage the situation."
 
It started at about 9 p.m., said Police Chief Mark Bailey, speaking at about 12:30 a.m. He said no neighbors were evacuated and that mediators had been conversing with the individual. He declined to go into detail. 
 
He said further information would be provided either through him or through the mayor's office later in the morning. 
 
Members of the Berkshire County Special Response Team, including officers from Lenox and Pittsfield, were staged along the top of Brooklyn Street and Houghton was closed between School Street and North Street. 
 
Two ambulances were staged at the intersection with Brooklyn and Houghton, though one left before midnight. State Police stepped in to help patrol the city. 
 
Drones could be seen hovering over; Bailey said, "everything in the sky is ours at this time." 
 
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