Ethos Percussion Group to perform at MCLA

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Ethos Percussion Group will perform on Monday, Sept. 4, in the Church Street Center at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts at 1 p.m. The concert will be presented in conjunction with a lecture by Elizabeth Royte, author of “Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash,” this year’s summer reading project for first-year students. The event is free and open to the public. For more than 15 years, Ethos members Trey Files, Eric Phinney, Yousif Sheronick and David Shively have created diverse percussion music. Each are accomplished classical and world music artists with distinctive backgrounds and musical perspectives. Their programming integrates global instruments and playing styles into the conventions of Western chamber music to create a visual and aural experience. The ensemble’s critically acclaimed performances regularly feature numerous commissions and world premieres, traditional rhythms from India, West Africa and the Middle East, and works by composers such as John Cage, Lou Harrison and Steve Reich. Individually, Ethos members have performed with Philip Glass, Branford Marsalis, Yo-Yo Ma, New World Symphony, New Music Consort, Manhattan Chamber Orchestra, Ensemble Sospeso, New York City Ballet, De La Guarda and Mabou Mines. Since its founding in 1989, Ethos has remained committed to advancing the percussive arts in education, as well as performance. In addition to presenting clinics and master classes at institutions such as The Julliard School, Eastman School of Music and Berklee College of Music, Ethos has worked with thousands of students in New York City’s public schools through concert and classroom activities. Over the past few years, Ethos concerts have included those across the United States and the United Kingdom, with major engagements at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater, the Bermuda Festival, London’s Wigmore Hall and the Percussive Arts Society International Convention. Recent collaborations include those with the Kansas Symphony, Grammy-winning frame drummer Glen Velez and Indian tabla master Pandit Samir Chatterjee.
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Pittsfield Council Endorses 11 Departmental Budgets

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council last week preliminarily approved 11 department budgets in under 90 minutes on the first day of fiscal year 2025 hearings.

Mayor Peter Marchetti has proposed a $216,155,210 operating budget, a 5 percent increase from the previous year.  After the council supported a petition for a level-funded budget earlier this year, the mayor asked each department to come up with a level-funded and a level-service-funded spending plan.

"The budget you have in front of you this evening is a responsible budget that provides a balance between a level service and a level-funded budget that kept increases to a minimum while keeping services that met the community's expectations," he said.

Marchetti outlined four major budget drivers: More than $3 million in contractual salaries for city and school workers; a $1.5 million increase in health insurance to $30.5 million; a more than  $887,000 increase in retirement to nearly $17.4 million; and almost $1.1 million in debt service increases.

"These increases total over $6 million," he said. "To cover these obligations, the city and School Committee had to make reductions to be within limits of what we can raise through taxes."

The city expects to earn about $115 million in property taxes in FY25 and raise the remaining amount through state aid and local receipts. The budget proposal also includes a $2.5 million appropriation from free cash to offset the tax rate and an $18.5 million appropriation from the water and sewer enterprise had been applied to the revenue stream.

"Our government is not immune to rising costs to impact each of us every day," Marchetti said. "Many of our neighbors in surrounding communities are also facing increases in their budgets due to the same factors."

He pointed to other Berkshire communities' budgets, including a 3.5 percent increase in Adams and a 12 percent increase in Great Barrington. Pittsfield rests in the middle at a 5.4 percent increase.

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