Pianist Seymour Lipkin at Williams College

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. - The Williams College Department of Music presents virtuoso Seymour Lipkin in a Bösendorfer Concert on Monday, Nov. 30, at 8 p.m. in Chapin Hall on the Williams College campus. He will also provide a master class for Williams College students on Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 4:15 p.m. in Brooks Rogers Recital Hall.

These free events are open to the public and do not require tickets.

Listeners of this concert and participants in Mr. Lipkin’s master class have the rare opportunity to share the music of a man whose career and experience encompass an entire era of classical music. It is difficult to say what aspect of his life’s work is most remarkable or most impressive: his work as a concert pianist, having performed, for instance, with the major symphony orchestras of Boston, New York, Cleveland, Philadelphia and Chicago, or as an educator presently with the Curtis Institute and Juilliard, or as a conductor serving as the New York Philharmonic's assistant conductor, and  Music Director of the Long Island Symphony from 1963 to 1979, as well as the Joffrey Ballet company from 1966 to 1979.

It is customary to drop names when introducing an artist of this caliber and with these credentials, but Mr. Lipkin is one of the few musicians for whom this is not just a gratuitous exercise. A student of Rudolf Serkin and Mieczyslaw Horszowski at the Curtis Institute of Music, Mr. Lipkin won the prestigious Rachmaninoff competition at age 20. Conductors with whom he has collaborated include Serge Koussevitzky, Fritz Reiner, Charles Munch, Leonard Bernstein, Eugene Ormandy, William Steinberg, George Szell, and Christoph von Dohnanyi, and more recently with Kenneth Schermerhorn, Gerard Schwarz and George Cleve.

Extremely active in chamber music, since 1988 he has been artistic director of the Kneisel Hall Chamber Music Festival; he has performed with Jascha Heifetz (60 concert tour), Oscar Shumsky, Uto Ughi, Arnold Steinhardt, Aaron Rosand, William Primrose, David Soyer and Lawrence Lesser, and toured the U.S., Europe and South America with the Guarneri Quartet. He performed a ten city European tour with the Juilliard String Quartet in 1999 and appeared again with them at the Library of Congress in 2001. He has recorded sonatas with Shumsky, Rosand and Steinhardt (complete duos of Schubert).

He performs in Chapin Hall on the 9’ Bösendorfer concert grand piano in a program that reflects his devotion to chamber music. Featured works include the Sonata in A-flat major, Hob. XVI/46 by Haydn, Beethoven: Sonata No. 23 in F Minor, opus 57, “Appassionata”, Chopin: Barcarolle in F-sharp Major, opus 60; Rachmaninoff: Variations on a theme by Corelli, opus 42, Two Etudes by Debussy, and Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No. 15 in A Minor, S. 244, “Rakoczy March”.
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Williamstown Yarn Store Bringing the Hobby Closer to Home

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Gather sources some of its yarn from regional producers. 

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — If you knit, crochet, or want to pick up a new hobby with yarn, a new space is open to get your supplies.

On March 18, owners and friends Ashley Cart and Geraldine Shen opened Gather on Spring Street.

The two teach knitting classes at Williams College and thought it would be great to bring their hobby to life.

"We have always been avid knitters, and we've spent a lot of time together doing that, and find it to be for ourselves like this really wonderfully calming hobby," Shen said.

Shen said they see many people starting to take up the hobby and thought it would be great to open in location convenient for students and to give them a space to curate their work.

"We're finding a lot of interest amongst people to learn how to knit. Young people who want to get off their screens, find something that they can do with their hands, and so we have always talked about, like, wouldn't it be cool to one day do this," Shen said.

Shen said there aren't many options to buy yarn in the area, and often they're a long drive away. While they opened an online shop before finding a storefront, they recognized that for some knitters buying, online was not ideal.

"Yarn is one of those things that you do, at least the first time, want to see it in person, and like touch it, and look at it against your skin, or you know, color combinations, if you knit or crochet, just like to squeeze the yarn, and feel how squishy and soft it is, and so it is one of those things that you can't just easily buy online," she said.

Their new space is at 57 Spring St. on the third floor. An elevator at the Bank Street entrance can be taken straight to their door, it is especially readily accessible to the college students.

"We've sort of been working with Williams students, and we wanted to be accessible to them, because we really feel as though there's a renewed interest in this craft from younger folks, and that it can be a really good thing for them, and so we wanted to make it easy for Williams students to access the store, and they don't all have cars, they don't all leave campus much, so being on Spring Street was important to us," Shen said.

The store offers a variety of yarn and supplies, and a sit and stitch room where anyone can come in and hang out and work on their projects with others.

They buy yarn from local producers and offer other products as well.

"When people come through, like tourists and stuff, often they ask us what can you get here that you can't get anywhere else," said Shen. "So we have some yarns from local farms, we have some handspun by a local artist who's based in Lanesborough, we've got yarn from this woman who dyes it up in Brattleboro [Vt.], and so we're trying to highlight some of the really cool farms that we have around here."

One of the main opportunities they hope to expand on is being able to go into schools and teach children how to knit. They recently were awarded a grant to teach WIlliamstown Elementary School  fourth graders how to knit. Each child was able to make a square and Shen and Cart put all of the squares together and it is now hanging in their space when you walk in.

"We want to go into more schools and teach kids how to knit, because there's some really cool research that talks about, like, the benefits of teaching younger children how to knit. It helps them concentrate, it helps them calm down, and gives them a sense of accomplishment," Shen said.

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