Summer Celebration of Jewish Music

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — For the third summer in a row, Berkshire venues will host music that celebrates the rich tradition of Eastern European Jewish culture.

This year, with a choral concert and renowned musician Charles Neville joining the musicians, the celebration is broadening its scope and programming to include other cultures and their influence on Jewish music. All of the concerts are open to the public.

The celebration opens on Tuesday, May 29, at 7:30 p.m. with a concert at Congregation Knesset Israel. Guest artist, saxophonist Neville, of the Neville Brothers, will join co-director Paul Green and friends in a concert showing the deep connections between African-American and Jewish music. A wide variety of music illustrating the interaction between the two cultures will include works from the Yiddish Theater that demonstrate an early fusion of Jewish music and jazz, works from the blues and gospel traditions that have incorporated Jewish elements, and pieces that have Jewish roots, such as Klezmer music, which have incorporated African-American elements. Tickets are $18 and can be reserved in advance by calling 413-442-4360, Ext. 10.

Further exploration continues on Wednesday, May 30, at 7:30 p.m. with a follow-up lecture and performance by Green and Neville at the Taft Recital Hall at the Berkshire Music School. The event, "The Relationship between Jewish and African American Music," traces the complex interaction between the two cultures, and how each has influenced the other. The program will include recordings and live performance. This event is free.

On Wednesday, June 6, at 7:30 p.m. at Hevreh of Southern Berkshire in Great Barrington, the celebration will present a concert of chamber music showcasing important chamber music by Jewish composers. The concert will include the Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano by Paul Schoenfield; the romantic "Trio" by 19th-century Russian-Jewish composer Alexander Zemlinsky; the Suite Hebraique for Violin and Piano by Ernst Bloch; and a special work, “Assimilations” by Robert Sirota, which explores the composer’s Jewish roots in the face of his conversion to Christianity.

Cantor Robert Scherr will be featured in the New England premier of "Yishakeni" by Meira Warshaw, for tenor flute and piano, based on "The Song of Songs." Performers are Paul Green, clarinetist; Robert Scherr, cantor and Jewish chaplain for Williams College; Doris Stevenson, pianist and Williams College faculty member; Joel Pitchon, violinist and Smith College faculty member; Ronald Feldman, cellist and Williams faculty member. Tickets are $12 and will be available  for purchase at the door.

Klezmer music takes the stage as the celebration continues on Tuesday, June 12, at 7:30 p.m. at Temple Anshe Amunim. Green and some of the Berkshires' best Klezmer musicians will perform traditional tunes from the Eastern European Klezmer repertoire, the Sephardic repertoire and the Second Avenue Jewish music scene in New York. Tickets are $12 and will be available for purchase at the door.

New to the celebration will be a choral concert in the context of the Berkshire Jewish Community’s "Shabbat Across the Berkshires."  On Friday, June 15, at 7:30 p.m, at Hevreh of Southern Berkshire, the celebration will join a Sabbath worship augmented by outstanding choral music presented by the Cantilena Singers, under the direction of Andrea Goodman. The repertoire will include classical composers such as Sulzer and Lewandowski, and contemporary composers such as Finkelstein, Friedman and Janowski. Cantor and co-director Robert Scherr will be a featured soloist with the chorale. As this is part of the regular Friday night service, there is no charge; the public is invited.

The celebration wraps up on Sunday, June 17, at 3 p.m. with a reprise of the Klezmer concert at Congregation Beth Israel in North Adams. Tickets are $12 and will be available for purchase at the door.

The third Berkshire Summer Celebration of Jewish Music builds on the success of the first two seasons. In the inaugural season, the classical chamber music concert was repeated at Bargemusic in Brooklyn and garnered a rave review from The New York Times.

These events are co-sponsored by the Jewish Federation of the Berkshires, Hevreh of Southern Berkshire, Congregation Beth Israel, Congregation Knesset Israel, Congregation Ahavath Sholom, Temple Anshe Amunim and The Berkshire Music School. Supported in part by grants from the Harold Grinspoon Foundation and the Pittsfield Cultural Council. The Summer Celebration of Music is also presented in cooperation with the Boston Symphony Orchestra Berkshire Education and Community Program.
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Kennedy Calls BCC Workforce Graduates Inspiring

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The programs ranged from emergency medical technician to computers to commercial drivers. See more photos here. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Community College Workforce and Community Education graduates were encouraged to be all they can be on Wednesday.
 
Graduates, families, friends, and staff gathered in Boland Theatre to celebrate around 100 graduates who completed a variety of courses.
 
They included community health worker, emergency medical technician, phlebotomy technician, registered behavior technician, AI fundamentals, Commercial Drivers License Class A and B, CompTIA Tech-plus, para educator, and English for Speakers of Other Languages.
 
College President Ellen Kennedy said it was amazing that this might be her last public speaking event before her tenure comes to an end.
 
She acknowledged the diverse reasons for their studies including career advancement and personal growth, commending their vulnerability and dedication. 
 
"Some of you explored AI, some of you improved your English speaking in really important ways, and the reason that each of you is here is because you decided to put your heart and soul to get vulnerable to do something that might have felt a little bit uncomfortable," she said. "And you did it, and we are so incredibly proud of you, and so happy to be here tonight, celebrating you."
 
Keynote speaker Shirley Edgerton, founder of Rites of Passage and Empowerment (ROPE) encouraged the graduates to reflect on their accomplishments and look forward to the future.
 
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