The Classical Beat: Tanglewood, Sevenars, Taconic Music this Week

By Stephen DanknerSpecial to iBerkshires
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Tanglewood enters its second week, and the glories are many; indeed, every concert will be memorable. Here's a listing of the outstanding scheduled performances and related events – all highlights for this weekend and into
next week, Friday through Monday, July 8-11.
 
Be sure to also consider the marvelous and diverse programs listed below at Sevenars Music Festival in Worthington, Mass, and by the Taconic Music Festival in Manchester, Vt.
 

Tanglewood

Four Shed Concerts with the Boston Symphony and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra
 
 
Friday, July 8, at 8:00 p.m.: Boston Symphony Orchestra Music Director Andris Nelsons leads the BSO in a spectacular opening night program of Leonard Bernstein's "Opening Prayer" and his jazz-inflected Symphony No. 2 ("The Age of Anxiety") and Igor Stravinsky's perfervid, atavistic 'pictures of pagan Russia' paean ("The Rite of Spring") with featured guest pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet and baritone Jack Canfield.
 
• Saturday, July 9, at 8:00 p.m.: Maestro Nelsons leads the BSO in a program of Carlos Simon, and Samuel Barber's nostalgic ("Knoxville: Summer of 1915") with soprano Nicole Cabell; Duke Ellington ("New World A-Coming") for piano and orchestra, with pianist Aaron Diehl and closing with George Gershwin's scintillating "An American in Paris."
 
• Sunday, July 10, 2:30 p.m.: The program will feature the American premiere of Helen Grime's Trumpet Concerto ("Night-Sky Blue") with the virtuoso soloist Håkan Hardenberger, and will open and conclude with two works of Sergei Rachmaninoff - "Vocalise" and the exuberant Symphony No. 3, all under the baton of BSO maestro Andris Nelsons.
 
• Monday, July 11, at 8:00 p.m.: Andris Nelsons and TMC Conducting Fellows lead the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra in Maurice Ravel's neoclassic "Le Tombeau de Couperin," Richard Strauss' profoundly
philosophical "Death and Transfiguration," Schubert's Symphony No. 8, steeped with dark foreboding and Strauss' "Dance of the Seven Veils" from his great and Orientalist-tinged opera "Salome"; this program will also be available as a BSO NOW video-on-demand offering July 28–September 30 at bso.org/now.
 

Ozawa Hall concerts - the reopening of the Hall since summer 2019

• Thursday, July 7, 8:00 p.m.: Program One of "Pathways from Prague," curated by Emanuel Ax and including performances by Mr. Ax, Paul Appleby, the Lorelei Ensemble, and the Dover String Quartet performing
music by Leos Janá?ek and Antonin Dvo?ák.
 
Tanglewood Music Center (TMC) and Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI) Activities in Studio E of the Linde Center:
 
• Wednesday, July 6, 1:30-3:30 p.m.: TLI Open Vocal Workshop with mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe and Fellows of the Tanglewood Music Center (TMC).
 
• Thursday, July 7, 1:00-2:00 p.m.: TLI In Conversation with soprano Nicole Cabell.
 
For tickets for all Tanglewood/BSO concerts (lawn and Shed seating) and for special events call (617) 266-1200 or 888-266-1200. TDD/TTY: (617) 638-9289. For local information, call (413) 637-1600. Online: tanglewood.org.
 

Sevenars Music Festival

Founded in 1968, Sevenars Concerts, Inc., is pleased to announce its 54th anniversary season of summer concerts, held at the Sevenars Academy.
 
The Music Festival will be presenting six concerts at the Sevenars Academy - Sundays, July 10 - August 14 at 4:00 p.m. Sevenars Academy is located at 15 Ireland Street, just off Route 112 in the historic Village of South Worthington, Mass.
 
The 2022 season continues to be true to Sevenars roots as a family festival, with featured Schrade and James family members performing, while also presenting distinguished guest composer-performers and touring artists. 
 
• Sunday, July 10, at 4:00 p.m.: This will be the opening summer festival concert, presenting the Schrade and James Family and friends. Schrade and James family members will perform the music of Chopin, Schubert, and Liszt, and will be joined by special guests Anita Anderson Cooper (composer/soprano) and Clifton Noble (composer/pianist). The concert will also showcase premieres of new works by these two outstanding American composers. Concert dates and times: Concerts are presented on six consecutive Sundays at 4:00 p.m., from July 10-August 14. For tickets, call (413) 238-5854 (please leave a message for a return call), or go online at www.sevenars.org .
 
Admission is by donation at the door (suggested $20). Refreshments will be available.
 

Taconic Music Festival

The exhilarating Taconic Music Festival concludes its summer agenda of great concerts with three consecutive marvelous programs.
 
• Saturday, July 9, at 7:30 p.m. Faculty Concert IV: TMF faculty/artists Joana Genova, Heather Braun, Ariel Rudiakov, Hannah Holman and Drew Petersen will perform works by Caroline Shaw, Maurice Ravel and César
Franck. The concert will be held at the Riley Center for the Arts, 143 Seminary Avenue, Manchester, Vt. Admission: Adults $25/Kids free.
 
• Sunday, July 10, at 4:00 p.m. "Sundays on the Hill": TMF mentor/artists will perform works by the young and gifted composer Sato Matsui, Reinhold Gliere, Antonin Dvo?ák and Jesse Montgomery. The performance venue is the Weston Community Church, 37 Lawrence Hill Road, Weston, Vt. 05161.
 
• Monday, July 11, at 7:00 p.m. Young Artists Coneert II: This final Taconic Music Festival concert will showcase the talents of the TMF students-in-residence, performing the music of Maurice Ravel, Beethoven, Chen Yi, and Robert Schumann. The concert will be held at the Riley Center for the Arts, 143 Seminary Avenue, Manchester, Vt. Suggested
concert admission: Adults $15/Kids free.
 
For specific repertoire information, including tickets, and Taconic Music's year-round programs, call (802) 362-7162 or visit online at directors@taconicmusic.org.
 

Tags: classical music,   Tanglewood,   

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Sheffield Craftsman Offering Workshops on Windsor Chairs

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Andrew Jack uses hand tools in his wood working shop. 

SHEFFIELD, Mass. — A new workshop is bringing woodworking classes and handmade items.

Andrew Jack specializes in Windsor chairs and has been making them for almost 20 years.

He recently opened a workshop at 292 South Main St. as a space for people to see his work and learn how to do it.

"This is sort of the next, or latest iteration of a business that I've kind of been limping along for a little while," he said. "I make Windsor chairs from scratch, and this is an effort to have a little bit more of a public-facing space, where people can see the chairs, talk about options, talking about commissions.

"I also am using it as a space to teach workshops, which for the last 10 years or so I've been trying to do out of my own personal workshop at home."

Jack graduated in 2008 from State University of New York at Purchase, and later met woodworker Curtis Buchanan, who inspired him.

"Right after I finished there, I was feeling a little lost. I wasn't sure how to make the next steps and afford a workspace. And the machine tooling that I was used to using in school." he said, "Right after I graduated, I crossed paths with a guy named Curtis Buchanan, and he was demonstrating making really refined Windsor chairs with not much more than some some flea market tools, and I saw that as a great, low overhead way to keep working with wood."

Jack moved into his workshop last month with help from his wife. He is renting the space from the owners of Magic Flute, who he says have been wonderful to work with.

"My wife actually noticed the 'for rent' sign out by the road, and she made the initial call to just see if we get some more information," he said. "It wasn't on my radar, because it felt like kind of a big leap, and sometimes that's how it's been in my life, where I just need other people to believe in me more than I do to, you know, really pull the trigger."

Jack does commissions and while most of his work is Windsor chairs, he also builds desks and tables, and does spoon carving. 

Windsor chairs are different because of the way their backs are attached into the seat instead of being a continuous leg and back frame.

"A lot of the designs that I make are on the traditional side, but I do some contemporary stuff as well. And so usually the legs are turned on a lathe and they have sort of a fancy baluster look to them, or they could be much more simple," he said. "But the solid seat that separates the undercarriage from the backrest and the arms and stuff is sort of one of the defining characteristics of a Windsor."

He hopes to help people learn the craft and says it's rewarding to see the finished product. In the future, he also hopes to host other instructors and add more designs for the workshop.

"The prime impact for the workshops is to give close instruction to people that are interested in working wood with hand tools or developing a new skill. Or seeing what's possible with proper guidance," Jack said. "Chairs are often considered some of the more difficult or complex woodworking endeavors, and maybe less so Windsor chairs, but there is a lot that goes into them, and being able to kind of demystify that, or guide people through the process is quite rewarding."

People can sign up for classes on his website; some classes are over a couple and others a couple of weekends.

"I offer a three-day class for, a much, much more simple, like perch, kind of stool, where most of the parts are kind of pre-made, and students can focus on the joinery that goes into it and the carving of the seat, again, all with hand tools. And then students will leave with their own chair," he said.

"The longer classes run similarly, although there's quite a bit more labor that goes into those. So I provide all the turned parts, legs and stretchers and posts and things, but students will do all the joinery and all the seat carving the assembly. And they'll split and shave and shape their own spindles, and any of the bent parts that go into the chair."

His gallery is open Wednesday through Sunday 10 a.m to 2 p.m., and Monday and Tuesday by appointment.

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