Eagles Band's Free Concert Has Military Theme

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Eagles Concert Band is bringing a free concert at the Colonial Theatre on Friday, Nov. 7.
 
This is the band's 18th year performing at the Colonial. New principal conductor David Diggs said he has decided to perform music from composer John Philip Sousa, but not his famous marches. 
 
"One of the ones that I think is very unique to the program is we're going to be playing Sousa, but we're not going to be playing a Sousa march. Sousa wrote a lot of other pieces for his band, but they're generally not played because they're very hard to get rehearsed and put together as a piece. They're not as easy as the marches," Diggs said.
 
He was appointed as principal conductor over the summer, taking over from Carl Jenkins. Jenkins, who also lead the Drury High School band for many  years, retired from the Eagles after 11 years.
 
Diggs started choosing the music in March for the annual concert and selected "Beneath the Southern Cross."
 
"It's from a suite called the 'Looking Upward Suite,' where the other movements are talking about celestial things, as well as the Southern Cross," he said.
 
The concert is the weekend before Veterans Day and most of pieces represent the military, especially from World War II, as it is the 80th anniversary of the end of that war.
 
"Because our concert comes so close to Veterans Day, we always try to do something to honor the veterans," Diggs said. "And so this year, I've chosen three pieces that have sort of their genesis within World War II."
 
That includes a piece by the late composer British composer John Addison, a BAFTA and Oscar-winning composer of soundtracks, including for "A Bridge Too Far."
 
Diggs said this piece will start the second half of the concert.
 
"I chose this one because this is a term we're hearing a lot right now, and most people are probably not aware of where that term came from, but that's out of Operation Market Garden in 1944," he said. "And one of the generals when they were talking about the plans said, 'Well, I'm not sure this will work, because this seems like a bridge too far.' Now we have this phrase, and you hear it all the time."
 
Also on the playlist is "Victory at Sea" by Richard Rodgers, who composed the music for the 1952 NBC documentary focused on the U.S. Navy during World War II.
 
"We're doing 'Victory at Sea,' which was a mammoth project that NBC did, and I've been studying what went into the logistics of it — 60 million miles of film that got boiled down to 13 hours of television time. It was a great project," said Diggs. "And Richard Rodgers, who at the time was the premier Broadway composer, was commissioned to write the music for the show. And it deals with, it's just a wonderful piece, and it deals with the various scenes that are in 'Victory at Sea.'"
 
Lastly, they plan to do "Hymn to the Fallen" by John Williams with a video featuring Veterans Day events around the county that were taken by many of the band members and some pictures from Normandy that Diggs traveled to get last summer.
 
"It's very moving, and it's so the entire concert just going to be fantastic," he said.

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PHS Community Challenges FY27 Budget Cuts

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee received an early look Wednesday at the proposed fiscal year 2027 facility budgets, and the Pittsfield High community argued that $653,000 would be too much of a burden for the school to bear. 

On Wednesday, during a meeting that adjourned past 10 p.m., school officials saw a more detailed overview of the spending proposal for Pittsfield's 14 schools and administration building.  

They accepted the presentation, recognizing that this is just the beginning of the budget process, as the decision on whether to close Morningside Community School still looms. The FY27 budget calendar plans the School Committee's vote in mid-April.

Under this plan, Pittsfield High School, with a proposed FY27 budget of around $8.1 million, would see a reduction of seven teachers (plus one teacher of deportment) and an assistant principal of teaching and learning, and a guidance counselor repurposed across the district.  

The administration said that after "right-sizing" the classrooms, there were initially 14 teacher reductions proposed for PHS. 

"While I truly appreciate the intentionality that has gone into developing the equity-based budget model, I am incredibly concerned that the things that make our PHS community strong are the very things now at risk," PHS teacher Kristen Negrini said. "Because when our school is facing a reduction of $653,000, 16 percent of total reductions, that impact is not just a number on a spreadsheet. It is the experience of our students." 

She said cuts to the high school budget is more than half of the districtwide $1.1 million in proposed instructional cuts. 

Student representative Elizabeth Klepetar said the "Home Under the Dome" is a family and community.  There is reportedly anxiety in the student body about losing their favorite teacher or activities, and Klepetar believes the cuts would be "catastrophic," from what she has seen. 

"Keep us in mind. Use student and faculty voice. Come to PHS and see what our everyday life looks like. If you spend time at PHS, you would see our teamwork and adaptability to our already vulnerable school," she said. 

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