Profile Rock on Pigeon Hill in Rockport

I need to post this now before we lose the smokestack at Cape Ann Tool as the landmark in the background. I have this postcard in the mail but this is off the website I bought it from:

profilerockon pigeonhill

A weird ghostly face of a woman sticking out of the ground high above Pigeon Cove. This must have been taken prior to 1930 or so when the trees on top of Pigeon Hill had not grown back yet. With a little bit of exploring and lining up of the smokestack Rubber Duck found it:

profilerock

I think the town needs to clear the brush just a little bit around the rock so we can get a good look at it.  The postcard is taken from a little more to the left and back but the overgrowth is too much and you would not see the profile if I stood in the same place as the old photographer. I spoke to a Cover who remembers playing on the rock as a kid when it stood in a cleared field.

BIIIIIIIIIIIIIGGGGGG Weekend in Little Rockport!

Saturday, August 10th

Rockport Farmers Market from 9 am to 1 pm

This week’s vendors: Seaview Farm, Prides Osteria, Sullivan’s Sugarhouse, Wally’s Blackburn Bistro, Brothers’ Brew, First Light Farms, Home Grower’s Wheelbarrow, Rockport Festivals Market booth, Sea Biscuit Bakery, Batter Up Bakery

Rockport Rotary Club’s Lobsterfest

Lobsterfest will be held on Saturday, August 10, 2013 from 3-7pm. Tickets will be available and include a hot-boiled lobster, home-made clam chowder, corn-on-the-cob, roll, watermelon, and soda or water. There will be a cash menu with hot dogs, hamburgers, and beer, wine, and desserts. Tickets will be on sale from any Rockport Rotarian, at the Legion Hall on the day of the event, or from Granite Savings Bank, John Tarr Store, Rockport National Bank, Village Silversmith, or Bearskin Neck Leathers.
This event will be held rain or shine and is handicapped accessible.

ILLUMINATION NIGHT at 9:30 from Granite Pier (Rockport’s first official fireworks show! Say WHAT?)

Sunday, August 11th

The annual Rockport Acoustic Music Festival! Here’s the lineup & some info:

34th Annual Rockport Acoustic Music Festival
Sunday August 11, 2013
Millbrook Meadow (across from Front Beach)
Noon to 6PM
Blues, Rock, Jazz, Folk, World, Fun!
FREE (thanks to all the volunteers!)
More info and videos at www.RockportFestival.com
Performers this year…
Noon – Jackson Ally
12:30 –  Eastern Standard
1:00 – Will Diehl
1:30 – Wicked Pickers
2:00 –  Mari Martin and Friends
2:30 –  Deb Hardy
3:00 –  Quentin Callewaert
3:30 –  Fireplace Ten
4:00 – Baze Band with Greg Dann
4:30 – The Dejas
5:00 – Jake Pardee and Friends
5:30 – Alek Razdan and A-Train Orchestra

Preparing The 4th Bonfire. Rockport, Ma. photo by Anthony Marks

Preparing The 4th Bonfire. Rockport, Ma. photo by Anthony Marks

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Pics from Saturday’s Rockport Farmers Market!

Fresh produce, smoked fish, grass-fed beef, award-winning pesto, baked goods, fresh doughnuts and coffee, plus Marvin Roberts, an expert in botany, discussing how to grow rhubarb and asparagus as part of the Garden Talks series…with all of this, Saturday proved to be a great opening to the Rockport Farmers’ Market in Harvey Park. An added bonus was the traditional Midsommer Fair, sponsored by Spiran Hall in Rockport, which featured traditional Scandinavian food, a real maypole, and Scandinavian folk singers. Check out the slideshow for more…and we’ll see you at the upcoming Rockport Farmers’ Market, this Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.!

Rubber Duck Quick Tip: Rockport Goings On

I’m not listing stuff here because I can’t keep up but Rubber Duck has found someone else who updates several times a day. Follow BearskinNeck.Net on Facebook. <<<Click.

That’s it. OK, I’ll give you three examples why BearskinNeck.Net is awesome. Today Rubber Duck found out:

1) The Rockport Dump is open on Sunday from 8AM to 11:45 AM until Nov 10. Huge news. This is why I love Rockport and gladly pay my town taxes. Now those fish guts and lobster shells from the Saturday festivities do not fester in the garage until God knows when.

2) The Red Skiff has several Specials including Crab Cake Benedict and Corn Beef Benedict. Make mine a double!

3) Brothers’ Brew is open at 7AM every single day all summer With a fresh made Butternut Crunch Doughnut with my name on it.

4) Why stop at three? Forgot the Farmers Market 9am-1pm at Harvey Park on Saturday! Harvey Park? End of Broadway if you hit the lighthouse in the middle of the street because you saw a large rabbit named Harvey you should park.

BearskinNeck.Net one stop shopping so you don’t spend more than three minutes on a computer every day. Today is the first day of summer! Get off that goddamn computer and go bite someone in the butt!

tickles

I don’t want to be one of those people who’s on his death bed and says, “I didn’t spend enough time on the Internet.”  -Andy Borowitz

32nd Annual Rockport Chamber Music Festival

PRESS RELEASE
32nd Annual Rockport Chamber Music Festival
At the Shalin Liu Performance Center


Rockport Music’s 32nd Annual Rockport Chamber Music Festival opens on Friday, June 7 with wonderful chamber music offerings for all.


On
Thursday, June 13 at 8 pm, Rockport Music presents Wagner at 200 (and Bruckner at 189).  Primarily known for his operas, Richard Wagner’s 200th anniversary of his birth marks the tremendous influence his work had on the development of classical music.  His Tristan und Isolde is often described as the start of modern music.  His Wesendonck Lieder was inspired by Mathilde Wesendonck who provided the poetry for the five songs, two of which Wagner subtitled as “studies for Tristan und Isolde.”

This program features several outstanding young musicians including highly-acclaimed mezzo-soprano Naomi O’Connell who was recently hailed as “…a radiant mezzo-soprano” by the New York Times and is a 2011 Concert Artists Guild Victor Elmaleh Competition First Prize Winner. In this program, she performs Wagner’s Wesendonck Lieder.  Other works in the program include Wagner’s Piano Sonata No. 3 in A-flat major performed by Cristian Budu, Siegfried Idyll (arr. for piano duet) performed by George and Andrew Li, and Bruckner’s String Quintet in F major highlighting violinists Joana Genova and Heather Braun, violists Ariel Rudiakov and Scott Woolweaver, and cellist Sophie Shao (winner of both Rostropovich and Tchaikovsky competitions).  Tickets: $39-$58

On Friday, June 14 at 8 pm, celebrate the 200th anniversary of Giuseppe Verdi’s birth with a performance of his singular string quartet and Lady Macbeth’s Sleepwalking Aria from his popular opera Macbeth.  Mezzo-soprano Naomi O’Connell received rave reviews for her performance of this aria during her leading role in Master Class, opposite Tyne Daly.  Hailed by the New York Times as, “a radiant mezzo-soprano,”  she will also perform three additional Verdi songs: La seduzione, Stornello, and Brindisi.

The program includes Vittorio Giannini’s Quintet for Piano and Strings performed by pianist Adam Neiman, violinists Joana Genova and Heather Braun, violist Ariel Rudiakov, and cellist Sophie Shao.  At age 19, Shao won the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant and won top prizes at both the Rostropovich and Tchaikovsky competitions. The New York Times called her interpretations “eloquent, powerful.”   Concert preceded by lecture at 7 pm.  Tickets: $39-$58

On Saturday, June 15, 8 pm, violinist Anne Akiko Meyers and pianist Anton Nel perform a tremendous program including Mozart’s Sonata in F major, K. 377, Arvo Part’s Spiegel im Speigel, Ravel’s Sonata No. 2 in G major, as well as works by Piazzolla and de Falla.  Meyers performs around the world as a recitalist and soloist with major orchestras and her 2012 Air-The Bach Album debuted at #1 on Billboard charts.  An incredibly diverse musician, Meyers has collaborated with pop singing sensation Il Divo, as well as top jazz artists Chris Botti and Wynton Marsalis.  She performs on one of the most iconic violins ever made—the “Ex-Vieuxtemps” Guarneri Del Gesu (1741). The American Record Guide hails that, “through her peerless mastery and vivid imagination there seems to be no limit to the colors she can draw from her instrument.” 

Pianist Anton Nel is the 1987 first prize winner of the Naumburg International Piano Competition and a top prizewinner at the 1984 Leeds International Piano Competition.  An acclaimed Beethoven interpreter, Nel performs around the world as both a soloist and collaborator with the finest classical musicians of today.   Currently on faculty at University of Texas at Austin, he “…is a pianist of exceptional sensitivity and stylistic discrimination.”  Los Angeles Times  Concert preceded by lecture at 7 pm.  Tickets: $45-$65

On Sunday, June 16, 5 pm, The Boston Trio–Heng-Jin Park, piano; Irina Muresanu, violin; Denise Djokic, cello—perform Schumann’s Fantasy Pieces for Piano Trio, Op. 88, John Musto’s Piano Trio, and Brahms’s Piano Trio in C major, Op. 87. Acclaimed for their superb sense of ensemble and wondrous balance, these virtuosic and profound musicians are committed to creating exceptional and daring performances of standard and contemporary repertoire.  The Boston Globe hails that, “whenever this trio plays, drop everything and go hear them!” Tickets: $45-$65

With an international reputation for groundbreaking work reviving Baroque opera masterpieces, the Boston Early Music Festival, under the direction of Paul O’Dette and Stephen Stubs, brings the glamorous world of Baroque opera to life, complete with an internationally-acclaimed cast of operatic stars, the Grammy-nominated Boston Early Music Festival orchestra, lavish period sets and costumes, astonishing special effects, and fantastic Baroque dance on Monday, June 17 at 8 pm.  The BEMF will present two stunning works of Marc-Antoine Charpentier—La Descente d’Orphèe aux Enfers and La Couronne de Fleurs. Tickets $45-$78


The
Calder String Quartet will perform two concerts during the Festival—Thursday,June 20, and Saturday, June 22, both at 8 pm.  Hailed by the New York Times as “outstanding…superb,” the Calder Quartet defies boundaries through performing a broad range of repertoire and always striving to communicate the true intention of the composer.  The group’s distinctive approach and musical curiosity has brought them recognition for the discovery, commissioning, and recording of some of today’s best emerging composers.    Thursday evening’s concert will feature Salonen’s Homunculus, Bartok’s String Quartet No. 5, and Ravel’s String Quartet in F major. 

The Calder Quartet’s Saturday evening concert (June 22) will feature clarinetist John Bruce Yeh and pianist David Deveau performing  Mozart’s Kegelstatt Trio in E-flat major, K.498 for clarinet, viola, and piano; Aaron Jay Kernis’s Perpetual Chaconne (2012) for clarinet and strings; and Beethoven’s String Quartet in C-sharp minor, Op. 131. 

A prize-winner at the 1982 Munich International Music Competition and the 1985 Naumburg Clarinet Competition, John Bruce Yeh is director of the Grammy® Award winning ensemble Chicago Pro Musica and Assistant Principal Clarinetist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.  David Deveau is an avid chamber musician internationally acclaimed for his expressive and poetic interpretations.  Having performed with members of the Juilliard, Borromeo, Kronos, Orion, and St. Lawrence string quartets, as well as many others, he has also performed numerous premieres of composers such as John Harbison and Scott Wheeler.  Tickets: $45-$65

The Gotham Early Music Scene (NY)’s critically-acclaimed production of The Play of Daniel: A Twelfth-Century Music-Drama is performed at the Shalin Liu Performance Center on Friday, June 21, at 8 pm.  In the twelfth century, this production celebrated the Feast of Fools. Performing in full costume and sung in Latin, this moving drama incorporates lively music on medieval instruments and dance to tell the story of the prophet Daniel interpreting the handwriting on the wall and his miraculous delivery from the lion’s den.  “…charming production of this austerely beautiful work…”  (The New York Times).  Tickets: $45-$78

On Sunday, June 23, at 5 pm, baritone Mischa Bouvier, cellist Jay Campbell, and pianist Daria Rabotkina perform in a showcase of Concert Artist Guild Competition winners.  Pianists Yegor Shevtsov and Jacob Greenberg perform with Mischa Bourvier and Jay Campbell, respectively.  This NYC international competition has launched the careers of countless major artists over the past 50 years.

Praised by San Francisco Classical Voice for his “immensely sympathetic, soulful voice,” Bouvier is known for his tremendous communication skills and musicality.  Hailed as an “astonishing cellist” (Seen and Heard International) and for his performances which “conveyed every nuance” (The New York Times),Jay Campbell has earned awards from BMI and ASCAO Foundations which led to collaborations with such artists as Elliott Carter and Pierre Boulez to members of Radiohead.  Winner of the 2007 Concert Artists Guild International Competition, Daria Rabotkina’s earned both Bachelor’s and Master’s of Music degrees from Mannes College of Music and is completing her doctorate from the Eastman School of Music. “…a display of breakneck piano virtuosity…” San Francisco Chronicle

The evening’s program includes Mischa Bouvier performing Rachmaninoff’s In the Silence of the Secret Night and I Was with Her, Paul Bowles’s Blue Mountain Ballads, and selected songs by Charles Ives. Campbell performs Wuorinen’s An Orbicle of Jasp and Stravinsky’s Suite Italienne and Rabotkina performs Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Suite for solo piano, Op. 75.  Tickets: $39-$58


On Thursday, June 27, at 8 pm, the Boston Symphony Chamber Players perform with pianist David Deveau.

The 2012 Rockport Chamber Music Festival collaboration of Boston Symphony Chamber Players with pianist David Deveau was hailed by Keith Powers of the Cape Ann Beacon, “There were far too many musical highlights to spot individually; suffice to say, the trio sounded as if they had played together for years.”  This year’s program includes Mozart’s Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K. 493, Martinu’s Nonet, Carter’s Figment III, and Brahms’s Clarinet Trio in A minor, Op. 114.  Tickets: $55-$85

Performing on Friday, June 28, at 8 pm, the Vega String Quartet, Quartet-in-Residence at Emory University, is on the cutting edge of the new generation of chamber music ensembles.  After their Lincoln Center debut in 2001, the New York Times raved about their “playing that had a kind of clean intoxication to it, pulling the listener along…the musicians took real risks in their music making…”   They perform Haydn’s Quartet in B minor, Op. 33 No.1, David Kirkland Garner’s i ain’t broke (but i’m badly bent), Zhou Long’s Song of the Ch’in, and Beethoven’s Quartet in B-flat major, Op.130.  A Pre-Concert Talk is at 7 pm by Dr. Elizabeth Seitz.  Tickets: $45-$65 

Performing on Saturday, June 29, at 8 pm, Gold Medalist Winner of the 2007 International Tchaikovsky Cello Competition Sergey Antonov and pianist Ilya Kazantsev, 1998 Gold Medal Winner of the Artur Rubinstein International Competition in Paris, come together for a special evening of spectacular chamber music.  Antonov is known for his expressive playing and rich, warm tone.  He performs throughout Europe, Japan, and the US, and even performed a work specifically commissioned for him to perform with the Moscow Philharmonic.  Rhode Island’s Journal Arts hailed that his was, “…a performance with soaring phrases and a tone to die for.”  The evening’s program includes Grieg’s Sonata for cello and piano, Op. 36, Paul Creston’s Suite for cello and piano, Op. 66, and Rachmaninoff’s Sonata in G minor for cello and piano, Op. 19.  A Pre-Concert Talk is at 7 pm by Dr. Elizabeth Seitz. Tickets:  $45-$65 

Performing Sunday, June 30, at 5 pm, the celebrated Slovenian pianist Dubravka Tomšič performs a program of Scarlatti sonatas, Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 17 in D Minor, Op. 31, No. 2 (Tempest), Chopin’s Andante Spianato and Grande Polonaise Brillante, and works by Debussy and Liszt.  She is the only protégé of legendary pianist Artur Rubinstein, who considered her “a perfect and marvelous pianist.”  She has performed with the greatest orchestras and conductors in modern time and with more than 80 CD recordings released since 1987, Tomšič won the Grand Prix du Disque of the Franz Liszt Society for her all-Liszt CD in 2003.  Tickets: $55-$85

Community and Education Events

HD Broadcasts

Tuesday, June 17, 7 PM— Helen Mirren stars as Queen Elizabeth II in the National Theatre of London’s The Audience.  The play directed by Stephen Daldry imagines discussions between Her Majesty the Queen and various prime ministers in their weekly private meetings.  “Helen Mirren, brilliantly reprising her Oscar-winning role.”  The Independent    Tickets: $22 Adults, $15 Seniors & Students

Community and Education Events

Saturday, June 15, 10 AM-Strings ‘N Things
A free community concert fun for people of all ages!
Generously supported by a grant from the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation

On Thursday, June 20, at 2 pm, come by the Shalin Liu Performance Center for an Open Rehearsal.  Observe the creative and collaborative process of a masterful group of musicians—the Calder Quartet!  Free and open to the public.

On Saturday, June 29, at 10 am, David Coffin delights audiences both young and old in performing on a wide array of early wind instruments.  Hear the history of the recorder from the primitive ocarina through the medieval gemshorns and the recorders of the Renaissance and Baroque periods.  This Family Concert is free and open to the public.

On Saturday, June 22, at 2 pm, watch a master clarinetist and teacher coach aspiring young musicians. John Bruce Yeh is an accomplished performer and teacher as well as a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He has taught master classes at top universities and conservatories across the nation.

The Rockport Chamber Music Festival concludes on July 14, but other concerts and events continue throughout the year.  For ticket information and details on these and other 2013 Summer offerings, please visit our website at www.rockportmusic.org or gimmesound.com  Tickets are also available through the Box Office at 978-546-7391 or visiting 35 Main Street, Rockport, MA.  The Box Office is open Monday-Friday, 10am-4 pm.

RUNA At Old Sloop Coffeehouse June 7

RUNA

Have you ever heard a Celtic version of our national anthem?  Phildelphia-based contemporary Celtic ensemble RUNA recently performed their unique rendition to open a Phllies game.  You can see a video of the performance at http://wapc.mlb.com/play/?content_id=27218189&c_id=mlb.

RUNA will appear at Old Sloop Coffeehouse this Friday, June 7, at 7:30PM, with local Celtic favorites Bob and Jen Strom opening.  RUNA draws on the diverse musical backgrounds of its band members and offers a contemporary and refreshing approach to traditional and more recently composed Celtic material. Through their repertoire of both highly energetic and graceful, acoustic melodies, along with their fusion of music from Ireland, Scotland, Canada, and the United States, this vocal and instrumental ensemble gives its arrangements of traditional songs and tunes a fresh sound.  RUNA consists of vocalist and step-dancer, Shannon Lambert-Ryan of Philadelphia, Dublin-born guitarist Fionán de Barra, Cheryl Prashker of Montreal, Quebec on percussion, Dave Curley of Galway, Ireland on mandolin, vocals, bodhrán, and step-dancing, and Maggie Estes of Louisville, Kentucky on the fiddle. The band often performs with world-renowned guest musicians, including Isaac Alderson on the uilleann pipes, flutes, and whistles. Members of RUNA have played with Solas, Riverdance, Slide, Clannad, Fiddlers’sBid, Moya Brennan, Eileen Ivers, Hazel O’Conner, Full Frontal Folk, Keith & Kristyn Getty, Barcó, Téada, and the Guy Mendilow Band.

Bob and Jen Strom are active session players on the North Shore and have played at the First Saturday Contra Dance in Salem, the Irish Connections Festival, New Year’s Rockport Eve, The Boston Celtic Music Festival, the Salem Maritime Festival, and the Salem Arts Festival. Bob and Jen organized a benefit concert, Shamrock for HAWC, in support of HAWC (Healing Abuse Working for Change) for four years running, featuring some of the North Shore’s finest Celtic musicians.

The performance will be in the handicap-accessible Fellowship Hall of the First Congregational Church of Rockport at 12 School Street.  Tickets can be purchased in advance for $12 from the coffeehouse web site at oldsloopcoffeehouse.org, at Gloucester Music, and at Toad Hall Bookstore in Rockport.  The suggested donation at the door is $14 for adults, $9 for those 65 and older, $5 for those younger than 18, and $28 for a family.

An evening in Rockport

On Friday evening I went to Rockport for the (amazing) concert by “What Time Is It Mr. Fox?” and the Rockport High School Madrigal Choir at the Shalin Liu center.  Here are a few photos I snapped with my phone to try to capture some of the magic.

 

 

 

Fr. Matthew Green

Grand Re-Opening at The Art Nook’s New Location

Last Saturday, The Art Nook had an opening reception at it’s new location at 58 Bearskin Neck in Rockport.

 

It features a variety of work by local artists, including Kathleen Miller, Stefan Mierz and Larry Martin-Bittman and Micheal Foley.

Kathleen Miller with one of her landscape paintings

 

Stefan Mierz next to one of his works
Larry Martin-Bittman with some of his paintings
Michael Foley at a recent presentation at the Cape Ann Museum - some of these works are being sold at the gallery
Michael Foley at a recent presentation at the Cape Ann Museum – some of these works are being sold at the gallery

Of course, the reception offered delicious food!  As we circulated through the gallery, many of us took a moment to admire the sunset from the gallery’s back patio.

Fr. Matthew Green

Chickity Check It! “New England: a perfect break on the ‘other’ cape”

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New England: a perfect break on the ‘other’ cape

Cape Ann, home to the most oft-painted building in the US – celebrated in a festival on May 18 – deserves to be better known in Britain, says Paul Wade.

 

Mentioned-Rocky Neck, Cape Ann Museum, Hammond Castle, HA Burnham Boatyard, Thomas E Lannon, Motif No1, Bearskin Neck, Lobster Pool Restaurant, Duckworth’s Bistrot, The Franklin, Blue Shutters In, Emerson Inn, Beech Tree Bed and Breakfast, My Place By The Sea, Cape Pond Ice, 7 Seas Whale Watch, North Shore Kayak

Love’s Labour’s Lost – don’t lose out on it!

Cape Ann Shakespeare Troupe’s production of Love’s Labour’s Lost is playing May 11, 17, 18 @ 8 PM and May 12 & 19 @ 3 PM, Rockport Community House 58 Broadway.  It’s a fun show!

Here’s a more complete slideshow:

Fr. Matthew Green

Ann Kennedy Gets Her Pile Driver On In Rockport

Had a wonderful early a.m. lesson on how a pile driver works.  I appreciate the patience with which my questions were answered  as well as the opportunity to see a perfect demonstration.

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Exploring Rockport yesterday…

Ann Kennedy Submits-

Exploring Rockport yesterday…

Waiting to become an art rock?  A stony silence? Waiting for the boat to Easter Island?

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Patricia Conant Digs The Blue Lobster In Rockport

Patricia writes-

Awesome breakfast at the Blue Lobster.  Light fluffy omelets, crispy home fries and a view to die for!!  They are open for breakfast, lunch and dinner!

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Chronicle producer’s new book cover is Motif #1

You may know Ted Reinstein from the award-winning TV show Chronicle on Channel 5.

I’ve been a fan for years and  was lucky enough to meet Ted when he produced Chronicle’s feature of Gloucester in 2007 right after Celebrate Gloucester and the opening of Cruiseport.

After covering every corner of New England for 16 years, Ted has made good on his claim, “I have enough stories to fill a book!” Now he’s about to release what National Geographic Traveler has named one of “The Best Travel Books of Spring.”  And look at what’s on the cover!

Ted sent me a pre-release copy of his chapter on Cape Ann, which he aptly titled The Other Cape.  Here’s how it begins:

ReinsteinObviously written from the heart, Ted describes Gloucester as “America’s most authentic, enduring working waterfront.”  The chapter is filled with quotes by–and stories about–local fishermen, artists, photographers and others along with some excellent photos.

This captivating, well-written book isn’t just a travelogue.  It’s a gem that everyone who lives here and cares about this place would want to own.  New England Notebook hasn’t been released yet, but you can pre-order a copy now — right here.

Ted tells me he’s planning to come to The Other Cape to do a reading at some point.  We’ll be sure to let you know when and where as soon as it’s scheduled.  Perhaps you can get your book signed!