MILLBROOK SUMMER SUNSET CONCERT SERIES

UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, ALL CONCERTS ARE OUTDOORS AT 7PM AT THE THORNE BAND SHELL ON FRANKLIN AVENUE IN MILLBROOK, NYJune 28: Too Blue“Dynamic Acoustic Bluegrass that Swings”July 5: The Big Band Sound“Favorites from the Big Band Era”(Sponsored by Millbrook Lions Club)July 19: The Greyhounds “Rockabilly, Rhythm & Blues, and Roots Rock 'n' Roll from the 50s and 60s"August 2: Thunder Ridge“Kickin’ Top 40 Country”August 16: Lonely Heartstring Band"Acoustic Bluegrass Quintet Playing Beatles Favorites"August 30: The Chain Gang “Classic Rock Tribute Band”September 6: Stolen Heart“Contemporary & Classic Country Music”**Held on Village Green at 5pm**Please check https://millbrookartsgroup.blogspot.com/ for latest concert statushttps://millbrookartsgroup.org/mag_events.html

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Crescendo launches 22nd season
Christine Gevert, artistic director of Crescendo
Steve Potter

Christine Gevert, Crescendo’s artistic director, is delighted to announce the start of this musical organization’s 22nd year of operation. The group’s first concert of the season will feature Latin American early chamber music, performed Oct. 18 and 19, on indigenous Andean instruments as well as the virginal, flute, viola and percussion. Gevert will perform at the keyboard, joined by Chilean musicians Gonzalo Cortes and Carlos Boltes on wind and stringed instruments.

This concert, the first in a series of nine, will be held on Oct. 18 at Saint James Place in Great Barrington, and Oct. 19 at Trinity Church in Lakeville.

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Robin Crofut-Brittingham brings bird art to life in new book and show
Robin Crofut-Brittingham in her studio.
Provided

Robin Crofut-Brittingham, a native of East Canaan, is an established artist living in Montreal. Her new book, “TheIlluminated Book of Birds” will be published Oct. 21 by Timber Press, and there is an accompanying art show at Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge, “Flock: Watercolor Paintings by Robin Crofut- Brittingham,” on view from Oct. 18 through Nov. 30.

The paintings in the book look as if they are from a 19th century book. In a phone interview with Crofut-Brittingham, the artist said the traditional look is intentional.

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The real measure of a home? How it makes you feel

A room that felt breezy in July can seem stark in October. Adding layers — pillows, rugs, curtains — grounds a space.

Kerri-Lee Mayland

They are hard to miss — eye-popping mansions so large it takes a few seconds just to drive by as your eyes try to take it all in. Commanding? Absolutely. But the measure of a home’s success isn’t square footage. It’s the feeling a space creates.

I was reminded of that during a visit to a friend’s home in Ottawa last fall. He and his wife invited us over for what turned out to be one of the most memorable evenings of the season.

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