From Folk to Baroque With Mozart in Between

So much good music is happening this weekend, you’d think we had skipped ahead to the spring season, which we have, sort of. To begin with, this weekend’s concert by Matching Orange, which is part of the Dewey Hall Folk Music Series in Sheffield, MA. This youthful and relatively new band, just two years old, brings together an appealing mix of traditional Celtic, Appalachian and Cape Breton music, as well as other folk genres.  The New England-based trio consists of Eric McDonald, guitar, mandolin and vocals; Eric Eid-Reiner on piano; and Brendan Carey Block on fiddle. Their arrangements are crisp and kinetic, and their playing is virtuosic. Dewey Hall is at 91 Main St. in Sheffield, MA.  The performance takes place Saturday, March 3, at 7:30 p.m. Suggested donation is $10 for members, $15 for non-members.  For information, go to www.deweyhall.com.  For something farther afield, how would you like to attend a wedding anniversary party? Yes, Wolfgang and Constanze married 220 years ago, and the New Haven Symphony Orchestra is celebrating the Mozarts’ nuptials with a black-tie-optional gala with a buffet dinner, music and actors in the parts of Wolfy, Constanze, and Leopold, Mozart’s stern father.  The party is Saturday, March 10, from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Yale Divinity School Refectory, 409 Prospect St. in New Haven. Tickets start at $100 and can be purchased at www.newhavensymphony.org or by calling 203-865-0831, ext. 10.  RSVP is needed by Friday, March 2. Finally, Friends of the Scoville Library in Salisbury, CT, is presenting a film of a Baroque-period opera, Jean Baptiste Lully’s “Atys,” at 2 p.m., March 3 in the Wardell Community Room. For information, call 860-435-2838.

Latest News

Learning to compost at Kent Memorial Library

Josiah and Everett Newton with Aunt Kathy learned the importance of sorting and separating food scraps recycleables, and trash at Kent Memorial Library as part of a composting class for Earth Day.

Lans Christensen

KENT — The Kent Memorial Library and Kent Conservation Commission joined forces to bring a meaningful and educational program concerning nutrients, recycling and trash April 18.

Carol Franken of the Conservation Commission, the presenter, said one of her main composting concerns was, “How to make it meaningful to preschoolers.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Falls Village looks for wiggle room in budget

FALLS VILLAGE — The Board of Finance will hold a special meeting Wednesday, April 24, at 6 p.m. at Town Hall and on Zoom to discuss how to find some $80,000 in spending cuts from the proposed spending for 2024-25 from the Board of Selectmen.

The finance board requested $130,000 in cuts from the selectmen at their meeting on April 8.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cornwall budget heads to town vote

CORNWALL — Following a short public hearing for the 2024-25 budget Friday, April 19, Cornwall’s combined spending plan has been sent to Town Meeting.

The meeting to vote on the budget will be held at Cornwall Consolidated School Friday, May 17, at 7:30 p.m.

Keep ReadingShow less
Putting the fun in fungi

An example of a giant puffball mushroom found by Dave Paton.

Provided

SALISBURY — Dave Paton, a dedicated hunter of wild mushrooms, went through a list of some of his favorite fungi at the Scoville Memorial Library Saturday, April 20.

Paton’s talk was sponsored by the Salisbury Association Land Trust.

Keep ReadingShow less