NORTH ADAMS, Mass.—The Berkshires' Academy for Advanced Musical Studies nonprofit will be having its 4th Berkshires' Summer Jazz Band Day Camp the week of Aug. 15.
This week-long summer program guides students, between the ages of 12 and 18, along a path that not only influences them musically but also personally.
Students will be able to learn and network with world-class performers as they compose, improvise, and express their experiences and emotions through sound.
This year's faculty includes musical leaders who have earned multiple Grammy Awards and have toured and recorded with performers or bands including Miles Davis, Mick Jagger, the Saturday Night Live Band, and more. Some are faculty members of the Juilliard School and Berklee College of Music.
The academy is welcoming students from the Berkshires, Southern Vermont, and eastern New York State.
Learning music helps children build a better understanding of themselves, and their environment, improving every aspect of their life, said founder and Executive Director Richard Boulger this week at the academy's new home in Western Gateway Heritage State Park.
"We have found that when a student learns how to hear directly, and how to think and focus and even feel emotions, and put this into their music, improvised solos, into original music, eventually, there's direct carryover into the rest of their lives," he said.
Director of Communications & Development Jane Forrestal said it has been shown that children who learn music perform better in school and form deeper connections with their peers.
"When you're learning music, you're using, obviously, both hemispheres of the brain. You're building, you're increasing your neuronal connections, which spills over into other areas of learning and cognitive growth and development," Forrestal said.
"So students who play music typically perform better on school achievement, see improved test scores. They're great team members, because anybody, any kid who's worked in a band, learns how to listen and connect with other people and be aware of what's going on."
Boulger said a big part of what makes BAAMS unique is the teaching system they use, which demonstrates that an instrument is a tool that amplifies what the student is hearing, thinking, and feeling.
Other teaching academies often teach students using the instrument, a book, and a music stand from day one, he said, which builds the mindset that the source of the music is coming from something outside of them, rather than from themselves.
"So that is something that our kids will learn during the week, playing and learning by ear, and understanding ideas — and then they'll be able to really express that much more because the music is coming from within each of themselves," Boulger continued.
"And to Janie's point, we are teaching kids to work as a unit, as a team. To get one sound, we will compose an original piece, which I have no idea what it's going to be."
This teaching method has given the students the opportunity to understand and overcome the obstacles they face in life, he said. This was especially true during the COVID-19 pandemic.
For instance, recent Drury High School graduate and BAAMS student Braden Collins collaborated with Boulger to create the song "These Four Walls," which portrayed the lonely experience of being in lockdown.
They produced the song into a video that featured other students and faculty members and premiered it online at their 2021 winter solstice celebration.
Boulger said they have seen great results with their teaching method in giving a student the opportunity to create original music and work with a team brings them out of their shell and creates a spark in them.
"We have one student who first came into our jazz camp in 2018. And he walked in the room and he was, very, very reserved, and kind of pulled away from the group, and within a matter of 30 minutes, he met our drum instructor Victor Jones," Boulger said.
"Victor showed him a few things and you could see, these lights are going on inside the student, quite remarkable. And now in 2022, that same student is if you saw him in this instance, he's a complete extrovert, very confident, and he's going to the music school of his choice.
Berkshires' Summer Jazz Band Day Camp costs $400 for the week but there are scholarships for those who qualify. Families can register for the camp here.
Boulger said no child will be denied music education because of financial considerations. They want to provide this resource to anyone who is interested, which is why they offer scholarships to qualifying families, and tuition is already reduced to begin with.
It is recommended that the student have at least some experience playing an instrument to get the most success out of the Jazz Camp.
In the fall, however, BAAMS offers an After School Music Academy to all Berkshire County children ages 12 to 18, which has the same opportunities and does not require any music experience.
Boulger said he and his colleagues are very passionate about providing this opportunity to anyone and changing their lives for the better.
"I've worked in a lot of what are known as underserved communities such as Brownsville, Brooklyn, where you could clearly see that music had a pronounced change in kids' lives. You get kids out of gangs, you get them into playing music. And once they begin to learn musically, their whole being can change," Boulger said.
"So now those kids, so many years later, have become accountants, [Certified Public Accountants,] they've become ministers, they've become educators themselves. It grows positive stories."
To help fund this programming, BAAMS is also seeking donations. Support and donate to BAAMS here.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
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Healey, Driscoll Talk Transportation Funding, Municipal Empowerment
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
The governor talks about a transportation bond bill filed Friday and its benefits for cities and towns.
BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll were greeted with applause by municipal leaders on Friday as they touted $8 billion in transportation funding over the next decade and an additional $100 million in Chapter 90 road funds.
Those were just a few of the initiatives to aid cities and towns, they said, and were based what they were hearing from local government
"We also proposed what, $2 1/2 billion the other day in higher education through investment in campuses across 29 communities statewide," the governor said.
"Really excited about that and with those projects, by the way, as you're talking to people, you can remind them that that's 140,000 construction jobs in your communities."
The governor and Driscoll were speaking to the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association's conference. Branded as Connect 351, the gathering of appointed and elected municipal leaders heard from speakers, spoke with vendors in the trade show, attended workshops and held their annual business meeting this year at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center.
Healey and Driscoll followed a keynote address by Suneel Gupta, author, entrepreneur and host of television series "Business Class," on reducing stress and boosting energy, and welcomes from MMA Executive Director Adam Chapdelaine, outgoing MMA President and Waltham councilor John McLaughlin, and from Boston Mayor Michelle Wu via her chief of staff Tiffany Chu.
"We know that local communities are really the foundation of civic life, of democracy. We invented that here in Massachusetts, many, many years ago, and that continues to this day," said Healey. "It's something that we're proud of. We respect, and as state leaders, we respect the prerogative, the leadership, the economy, the responsibility of our local governments and those who lead them, so you'll always have champions in us."
Those were just a few of the initiatives to aid cities and towns, they said, and were based what they were hearing from local government
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MCLA is significantly enhancing its arts curriculum by developing a new teaching center through a gift from artist and author Carolyn Mary Campagna Kleefeld.
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The National Weather Service is also predicting bitter cold temperatures early in the week, with wind chills between 0-10 degrees Fahrenheit on Monday through Wednesday night.
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