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I Look to You Whitney Houston. Virgo World Lil Tecca. New Music See All. EA Monster Young Nudy. Playboy Fireboy DML. Funk Wav Bounces, Vol. Just Ask Siri See All. Apple Music Hits. Apple Music 1. Apple Music Country. Apple Music TV. Apple Music Radio Shows. The Ebro Show. Rocket Hour. Color Me Country. The Bootsy Collins Show. Time Crisis. Celebrating Indigenous Sounds See All. Indigenous Now Apple Music.
Music by Mood. Feel Good. Best New Songs See All. City Charts See All. Top Los Angeles Apple Music. Top Atlanta Apple Music. Daily Top See All. Top Global Apple Music. Daily UK Apple Music. At times there is noise, but no more than from people who come home from the bars downtown.
Imagine transforming a parking lot into a gracious welcome, creating an environment that encourages people rather than demeans them. With the drastic increase of homeless people in Burlington and the time to house unhoused people in motels running out, we need to take a step. The shelter pods could be a step to a more stable life for people in need. Joey Corcoran. Peter Welch D-Vt. The floor-to-ceiling windows behind Moore overlooked the darkening waters of Lake Champlain, adding to the sensation that we were all aboard a victory-bound Democratic Party cruise ship.
Patrick Leahy Four candidates are vying for the Democratic nomination, including Sianay Chase Clifford, a year-old from Essex who grew up in Vermont and recently spent a year as a policy fellow for U.
Ayanna Pressley D-Mass. But Balint and Gray, the presumed front-runners, have the clearest shots at winning the August 9 primary — and in deep-blue Vermont, the Democratic primary winner will almost certainly go on to victory in the general election. In many respects, the contrasts between the two are easy to draw. Her recent television ad features a cameo by Sen. Leahy, for whom she interned as a college student.
Balint, 54, the first openly gay woman to serve in the Vermont Senate, has pitched herself as an experienced policy maker with a record of leadership on the issues she has pledged to champion in Congress.
The litany of progressive reforms she has worked on during her four terms in the chamber — a bill guaranteeing the constitutional right to an abortion in Vermont; an increased. Many of her Statehouse colleagues have lined up behind her, including a former rival in the House primary, Sen. Bernie Sanders I-Vt. As a first-year representative, neither Balint nor Gray would have any real clout in Congress at the outset. The key to getting things done for Vermont, Welch said in an interview before his Hula rally, is to form strategic coalitions.
Gray, who has made clear that she does not support certain progressive agenda items, such as reducing law enforcement budgets, has been playing for the votes of centrist Democrats and moderate Republicans; Balint has more appeal on the left. But campaigns, of course, are not just about issues, and both candidates have made their personal narratives the focus of their pitch to voters. As the primary looms closer, the race has also become a contest of authenticity, or what passes for it in the public relations theater of campaigning.
When Moore summoned Balint and Gray to the stage at Hula, she had another kind of contest in mind. So my thinking. Balint promptly walked to the front of the room and started to groove.
Gray, who took a moment to appear, looked as if she would rather be anywhere else. A few weeks before the Welch fundraiser, the Gray campaign held its own rally at Hula, in the same room where the dance-off between Gray and Balint would ultimately not take place. Gray, who lives in Burlington, operates her campaign out. As lieutenant governor, Gray has few formal duties beyond presiding over the Senate and appearing as a functionary at official events; like many LGs before her, including Dean and Gov.
Phil Scott, she has used the post as a perch from which to cultivate a rapport with the public and launch her political career. Based on her travels, she produced a nine-page report of recommendations on workforce development, housing, childcare and paid family leave, broadband, and mental health.
While Gray may have spent her days in the Senate chamber during the legislative session, they argue, she has never participated in creating or passing legislation.
Gray and her allies have countered that passing bills in D. I know how Congress works. I understand the legislative process. Gray asked if he would meet with her. Dean had been close with her uncle, the late U. So he got together with Gray, he said, and asked her whether she had considered starting her political career with a less ambitious run — say, for the Statehouse.
Dean, who heard the exchange on the radio, was floored. Her superpower, in other words, is her ability to hold her tongue. Is it problematic, I suggested, that Sanders can be grumpy and abrasive and remain beloved, while Gray, a young woman, has to modulate herself so as not to alienate potential voters?
But Dwyer is backing Gray, she explained, because she believes that Gray possesses the experience in Washington and the interpersonal skills to succeed in a fractured House. She would come across people from all walks of life there. But that same year, a paid family and medical leave bill died on the Senate floor, and Gray was furious. Near a display of Wiffle Ball bats, she chatted with thirdgeneration owner Dan Fraser about the need to invest in water and sewer infrastructure to build more rural housing.
In the checkout line, she discovered, over the course of a two-minute conversation while paying for her iced tea, that she had attended elementary school in the same upstate New York town where the cashier had grown up. A first-time candidate, Chase Clifford grew up in Essex, where her parents, who met in Liberia, moved after the outbreak of the Liberian civil war. After her fellowship in Rep.
The lone man in the race, Meyers, 66, interned for the late Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy as a junior high. He said he thinks he can offer a valuable perspective, as a doctor and an avid reader, in Congress.
However, as an Assistant Attorney General, I witnessed firsthand the impact of firearms in the wrong hands. Chase Clifford has impressed at debates and generated considerable buzz, but her lack of a fundraising apparatus. There was no press release put out about it. She just came because she cared. As Gray has noted countless times on the campaign trail, she was literally born on 4 Corners Farm in South Newbury, a acre vegetable and dairy operation, which has served as the backdrop for both of her television ads.
Welch, whose law office was in Hartland, would occasionally stop by to pick strawberries. As Gray got older, her job was to keep the farmstand stocked with produce and flowers and work the cash register. Molly was like that duck that glides across the pond smoothly but underneath is paddling furiously. Molly was a head-down, get-the-job-done kind of person. Balint was born in Germany, where her father had been stationed as a U. Army captain. Two years later, the family returned to civilian life in upstate New York, where Balint spent her childhood and adolescence.
Their family. Once, a security guard asked them to vacate the grounds of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts when he found them having an unauthorized picnic. In middle school and high school, Balint struggled with the knowledge that she was gay.
She said her father, especially, impressed upon his children that they should do their best to blend in, which Balint now attributes, in part, to the fact that his own father, a Hungarian Jew, was murdered by Nazis in the Holocaust.
In fact, Balint demonstrated a penchant for drawing attention to herself from a young age. One of her longtime friends, Michael Kahan, first met Balint in eighth grade, when the two performed together in a musical called Sing Out, Sweet Land, a piece of midcentury agitprop set to various American folk tunes. Any of youse got one? But underneath that bubbly surface, Balint said, she struggled with crushing, near-suicidal depression. Balint eventually saw a counselor, and before she left for Barnard College, she came out to a small group of friends, including Kahan.
It would take a few more years for Balint to come out to her parents, who, Balint said, are fully supportive of her now. But that aspiration, she said, felt out of reach to her as an openly gay woman.
Following an unhappy year and a half at Barnard, Balint transferred to Smith College, where she found her niche on the crew team. In , the couple bought a house in Brattleboro, where they still live. The same year Balint and Wohl bought their house, Balint gave birth to their first child, Abe. Three years later, when Wohl gave birth to their daughter, Sarah, Balint opted to stay home again — a decision, Balint said, that ultimately boiled down to which partner had better health insurance.
A few years into this arrangement, Balint, who had never imagined herself as a stay-at-home mom, felt existentially adrift. She said she entertained various harebrained schemes — opening a doughnut shop, selling handmade elbow-length mittens for children, bottling homebrewed switchel. None of these possibilities sparked joy. And she answered the whole question. Found in the Solen collection, S. To her astonishment, she won, defeating former Vermont secretary of agriculture Roger Allbee by just over votes.
But she also put in the miles, on her car and pounding the pavement, to get in front of people. She ran a half-marathon in her campaign T-shirt. She went door-to-door. Balint loves to talk to people, a tendency that frequently causes her to fall behind the rest of her campaign team on parade routes.
She has an uncanny ability, he said, to cut to the quick of a situation. And she knew all those details because she knew people on the Hill very well. Upon graduating in , she landed a prestigious clerkship under then-judge Peter Hall on the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, the bench for which Sen. Leahy had nominated her uncle, Bill Gray, before his death in Northern Vermont University offers outstanding academic programs — along with fantastic support for transfer students, and fully online degrees through NVU Online, too.
Applications for fall for transfer and NVU Online students still accepted — meet with us and apply by August In a display of the ambition for which she has been both criticized and praised, Gray, who had passed the bar just two years earlier, applied for the job. In September , Gray was named cocounsel in a controversial murder case against Aita Gurung, a man who killed his wife with a meat cleaver in Burlington.
Then-attorney general T. Gray told me that she asked to be removed from the case because of a philosophical disagreement. She declined to elaborate on this point. Her task was to comb through historical records and work with a consultant on a restorative justice process for the victims. House race. Between and , Gray did not vote in four national elections.
During her lieutenant governor campaign, her. Gray has continued to rebuff the suggestion that she misled voters at that debate. Gray responded with what has become her mantra on the subject.
The biggest controversy in the race so far has revolved around super PAC spending that has yet to materialize. The Gray camp has accused Balint of red-boxing, a tactic used by some campaigns to skirt laws against communication between candidates and super PACs, which can spend unlimited sums in elections. Red-boxing generally involves the creation of a public page on a campaign website that signals to super PACs the kind of messaging a candidate would want in an ad.
Balint has denied the claim. She would say words to the same effect in a press release after Sanders endorsed Balint. For most voters, said Christina Deeley, who met Gray through Emerge and is now running for state representative in the Chittenden-4 House district, the decision comes down to how a candidate makes them feel. There will always be one more firehouse or farmers market or brewery to visit in the choreographed dance to the halls of power, even though most people, whether they realize it or not, have already made up their minds.
Champ Tells All! Not the googly eyes or the mullet of spiky scutes on his head or the gleaming Gatorade-green of his dino dermis. Your eyes go to the paws: quite nimble but lacking the human complement of digits. That Champ signature salute? High four, baby! For nearly three decades, Champ has been the mascot of the Vermont Lake Monsters baseball team and its precursor, the Vermont Expos.
With that milestone in mind, Seven Days sought out the longest-serving Champ, a fixture for more than 20 years until handing the bat in to the current Champ, his brother-in-law. Refreshingly candid in our interview, Champ was coy on one subject: a rumored autobiography, Dancing on Dugouts: My Life as a Mascot, detailing his mastery of mascotery after being discovered off Shelburne Point by promoter JeanClaude Tremblay.
Champ emphasized that the views expressed are purely his own and not those of the Lake Monsters organization. For me, making a few stealth appearances to support the legend of a monster living in Lake Champlain was so limiting. Luckily, Mr. Tremblay came along and recognized my potential. SD: That sounds a bit critical of your relative in Scotland. SD: What do you do when fans offer you food? Except for popcorn.
One of my gags is to spot a kid with popcorn, grab some, tilt my head back and toss it to my gullet. Some bounces away, but the fans love it. Gets a lot of laughs. SD: What other stuff do they give you? They do lots of drawings of me. It really gets to me. So we would hang some stuff up in the team office. And a lot of homemade birthday cards. SD: What was the hardest skill to master? Learning not to hurt people. Kids like to grab it, pull it — one wiseacre even tried to tie it in a knot.
Middle school kids are the worst, and sometimes Bryan has to tell them to knock it off. If someone is hanging on, I will sit down hard. That usually does the trick. SD: So were you worried about falling off the dugout? I was very careful to always hold their hands. You put out one hand and then the other, wave your fingers, and then turn and show them your caboose and shake it.
Never knew whether it really worked. SD: What were some of your trademark moves? SD: You said you enjoyed signing autographs. CHAMP: The thing I learned was to try to keep moving while signing your name; otherwise you could get trapped in a goat rodeo. My person always carried a Sharpie. SD: Back in the day, you did more skits than the new Champ does now.
Describe some that you liked doing. A fan favorite was when I would come out before the game and notice that the flag was missing on the pole. Then an intern would come up and raise the flag. He refuses, and I argue and start kicking dirt on his shoes. He tosses me out of the game, but I come roaring back on my fourwheeler, just missing him.
Love that one! SD: You also liked taunting the other team, grabbing their hats and stomping on them. Did they ever try to retaliate? The crowd went nuts. I sped up to get away from them when all of a sudden I felt this massive. SD: What kinds of things did you teach your successor? But when Champ is meeting with little kids, you have to do the opposite — make yourself a bit small, bend down and whatnot.
Because I can seem a little scary to the small fry. SD: What was your favorite thing as a mascot? Just thinking about it makes me want to stomp my leg and have a long, cold one. SD: What was the thing you liked least about performing? I did four or five extra gigs every weekend. One group thought I was there to do magic tricks! That sucked. SD: Do you miss being a mascot? And I definitely miss it. Just interacting with a 4- or 5-year-old kid is pretty fun. That was a doozy.
I think that pitcher got in a bit of hot water. Lucy and her grandpa, Papa Jerry, look for me despite forces opposing them. I think it could be Oscar worthy.
SD: Sounds great. Any parting words for your fans? At Northfield Savings Bank we live and work where you live and work. He bought the place in — 10 acres with the barn, a farmhouse and a stream out back — because it was on the AT and he wanted to run a hostel for hikers.
He was sitting on the deck of his house, which overlooks his yard and gardens. Trail angels give hikers rides to the post office and laundromat. They cut their hair, offer Snickers bars and potable water, and let them roll out a sleeping bag in an outbuilding and use the privy. About 3 million people hike on the AT each year, according to the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, the nonprofit that was established in to protect and manage the trail.
More than 3, people attempt to hike the entire trail in a single year; about a quarter of them, known as through-hikers, complete the journey.
For of those miles, the white-blazed AT and Long Trail coincide. Together, the paths traverse the 4,foot summit of Killington before separating north of that peak.
Some hikers, accustomed to living outside during their months on the trail, opt to pitch a tent on his lawn. Hikers can take an outdoor shower in the facility he rigged up under his porch, hang out at his firepit and shoot the breeze with Quinn.
As he climbed to the top of the steeple to restore it — feet in the air — he prayed to the wood and wrought iron ornament that was affixed to the spire. The object is not only decorative but functional, too. Through-hikers walking in that direction have about 1, miles to go. At his house, Quinn has two rules for guests: No smoking or building a fire indoors, and be respectful. They held poetry readings, told stories by the fire, made music, and cooked and ate two pound lasagnas.
The hikers helped Quinn with gardening, carpentry projects and wood splitting. Trail in Killington for a Guinness and a burger. Both men said they forged a lasting friendship during the hiking stopover. Others hear about Quinn by word of mouth, sometimes indirectly from Quinn himself. Hikers find other ways to contribute, too. During the pandemic, a year-old girl from Massachusetts, through-hiking with her mother, told Quinn she liked to paint.
He gave her a piece of a plaster wall. Quinn has lived in Woodstock since , when he was hired to repair and restore the collapsed white oak ceiling of the First Congregational Church. In a matter of months, he bought the house and big barn by the trail.
He cleared hay from the loft to make a woodshop for fabricating a new church ceiling and welcomed AT hikers. I was meant to be here. Stephen Foley, 48, a throughhiker from Ireland, was ahead of the rush this year.
Quinn took Foley to the Inn at Long. For customers, the fresh batch of mobile kitchens that sprouts every year delivers new, delicious ways to support local culinary entrepreneurs. Go forth and eat. In Vermont, we all know that the proverbial six degrees of separation is sliced at least in half. Case in point: the connections between Shoppe Food Truck co-owners Adam Fontaine and Matthew Ely, as well as between them and the truck they launched this spring in Burlington.
A tattoo artist, she is also a co-owner of the Shoppe and designed its look and logo. The truck even has a familial connection.
After a few years out of the fold, the food truck has returned to the extended family. Freshly painted bright red and aquamarine, the Shoppe serves a succinct roster of crowd-pleasers with a retro touch during regular Thursday and Saturday hours in front of Foam Brewers and at the Friday night ArtsRiot Truck Stop. During the pandemic, Ely, 45, who also owns a construction business, helped Fontaine build his home kitchen.
Fontaine, in turn, assisted Ely with an addition to his house. They also spent a lot of time cooking together on a woodstove, which prompted their collaboration. The Shoppe is inspired by diners, lunch counters and old-school soda shops.
American cheese was a must. The broccoli Reuben stacks thick slabs of hickory-smoked broccoli with housemade caraway sauerkraut and Swiss cheese. Milkshakes are not offered at the Foam location. Fontaine is also proud to offer Moxie, a historic New England-born root beer variant, another fixture from his youth. It took moxie of another kind, Fontaine noted, to quit a steady job and launch a food truck.
I [was] ready to do something different. Tiffany Perkins got the name for her food cart from a bag of chips. The raw bar will include a selection of oysters, shrimp or crab cocktails, and a rotation of seafood crudos and ceviches.
They will be shining sides that go with our chicken but also stand alone. The small wine list will pair well with both fried chicken and oysters. Across the Winooski rotary, Misery Loves Co. It will reopen in late July for daytime hours with a menu of soups, salads, quiches and sandwiches, such as the Good Egg breakfast sandwich and Rough Francis fried chicken sandwich.
In addition to offering. Melissa Pasanen. Clockwise from bottom left: Snap pea salad, barbecue falafel burger, crispy potatoes and veggie burger from Mister Foods Fancy. Perkins moved out on her own at 17 and started working to put herself through high school — sometimes at three or four different jobs.
The idea of a food cart appealed to her due to its low overhead cost. She started building the business in February and launched at Lost Nation Brewing on June 21 of this year. She started working in the kitchen there last winter and loved the job, but she let the Lost Nation team know that she planned to run her food cart this summer.
Right before the pandemic shutdown, a sous chef was making bao buns by hand for a special — and they stuck with her. The menu also features salty-sweet, elaborately topped Korean corn dogs, which Perkins learned about from her sister. The classic K. It was the summer after they finished eighth grade when Adam Weinstein and Shea Smith first bonded over their love of food and cooking.
The Richmond teenagers, now 17, held a cook-off. And it was the summer of , after 10th grade, when the friends launched GloryBurger at their hometown farmers market. We thought, We could maybe sell these. Weinstein estimated that the biz has sold an average of burgers per market this year, twice what it sold last year.
At the July 4 parade in Richmond, the team cranked out a record Now 42, Trombly is bringing that approach to the first food biz of his own. He started Mister Foods Fancy last fall with pop-up events and hit the road with his renovated former ArtsRiot food truck in June.
The burger itself is vegan, gluten-free and nut-free and can be served on a gluten-free, vegan bun. A peek into the trailer on a recent busy market Friday revealed the trio plus one other teen at the order window working smoothly together. The co-owners have all had local restaurant jobs. Weinstein and Smith worked their way up from dishwashing to salads and prep at the nowclosed Kitchen Table Bistro. The teens precook the bacon and crisp it on the griddle before serving. The silken grilled onions that grace every burger absorb some of that bacon fat.
Glory Sauce benefits from a hit of pickle juice, and the garlic mayo served with Glory Fries owes its rounded flavor to touches of honey and lemon juice. I would hire any one of them to cook for us. The food was free, but Trombly always made sure to garnish it.
It incorporates 25 ingredients, including black lentils, quinoa, sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, chickpea miso and harissa, bound with gluten-free flour and potato starch. The substantial, structurally sound burger is topped with a spicy feta-herb. The potatoes come smothered in tahini ranch, green goddess dressing or vegan caper mayo, finished with Turkish pickled peppers and fresh dill.
Contact us today for more information and to get your free estimate! The all-American fare was flying out of the kitchen at a record pace, making its way to customers through the walk-up window, where workers alerted people to their orders. He and his global coworkers aim for perfection in name pronunciation. The group is composed of college students or recent graduates here on J-1 work and travel visas.
That program Summer is also a tough time to hire local workers, according to owner Charlie Menard. He employs high school students, but family vacations and sports schedules often conflict with summer. The restaurant also ran out of food, which prompted its closure on July 5. That gave everyone an unexpected day off and a trip to Burlington to see Light-. The J-1 program solves that dilemma, Menard explained.
Menard arranged rental housing at a local ski lodge for his international employees. He got them bicycles to ride around town and takes them on sightseeing trips to the Vermont Statehouse, Warren Falls, Church Street Marketplace.
Then they went to Burger King — nothing new for people from the other side of the world but the only place they found open. Late-night dining options in Hong Kong are far greater than those in Vermont, and fast-food places never close, she explained. During the holiday week, some ski club members who typically visit Waitsfield in the winter stayed at the lodge. The young workers joined the much older ski club members for a cookout and dance party. Patricia Costa-Giomi, 65, a club member from Summit, N.
When Costa-Giomi asked Catena what he missed from home, he named two things: olive oil and parties. After retiring from professional cycling and moving to Vermont, Tyler Wren realized just how much cyclists and local farmers cross paths.
Because they spend so much time riding along rural roads, often surrounded by farmland, Wren said, cyclists have a responsibility to support the farming community. Eight years ago, Wren, 41, launched Farm to Fork Fitness Adventures to help cyclists meet farmers and learn about their challenges. Up to 1, participants will gather at Snow Farm Vineyard at Crescent Bay in South Hero to partake in various events, including a gourmet farm dinner on Saturday, guided bike tours with a post-ride barbecue on Sunday, and a weekend getaway package that includes a Friday warm-up ride.
The Farm to Fork Fondo offers four guided routes of differing mileage — 67, 41, 28 and 12 — for cyclists with different levels of experience. Cyclists may alternatively take a self-guided tour anytime before October All four tours stop at Dreamwalker Farm, an egg and meat producer in Grand Isle.
Dreamwalker Farm will serve up freshly made quiche, for example. While the tour does not pay the farms for participating, it connects them with the generally affluent cycling population, said Cy Kupersmith, director of sales and sustainability at Sunset Lake CBD.
This fall, 60 miles south, on Lake Champlain in Shoreham, the Addison County Relocalization Network ACORN , an organization devoted to revitalizing local land and food systems, will hold its 14th annual bike tour in support of local farms. Held on Sunday, September 18, the Tour de Farms has The tour finishes at the annual Shoreham Apple Fest with apple pie, apple cider and pulled pork on the town green.
Cyclists will receive featured foods at each stop, and they may purchase additional items from the farms and guest vendors, Berk said. The organization pays a stipend to each farm, and, through the tour, farmers have the opportunity to market their products to cyclists. Capped at people, the event typically attracts families and experienced cyclists. Last summer, Canteen Creemee served retrieve his chocolate-maple twist. It had been nonstop; a few dozen people had even been waiting in line before the snack bar opened.
One employee, Vermonter Quinn von Recklinghausen, was too tired to eat. Restaurant management announced on social media that July 1 would be its last night open, thanking regulars and staff for their support during its year-and-a-half run at 85 South Park Drive. The Hideaway offered big portions and a selection of steaks, including tomahawk rib eyes that measured nearly two feet from end to end. Jordan Barry. His world is spun on its axis when he meets Camae, the motel housekeeper.
When Camae reveals who she truly is, MLK must confront those fears and face his own mortality. JULY 13— But, until recently, the eastern edge of the state — Norwich in Vermont and Hanover and Lebanon in New Hampshire — had no such events. Leah Kohn, a Los Angeles resident, Hanover native and bassoonist, set out to do something about that.
Named for a nature area in Hanover that Kohn frequented in childhood, the inaugural festival encompasses three concerts in the span of four days, held in churches in Lebanon and Norwich. The Oak Hill Music Festival will pack a punch in that short time, with three radically different programs. Each showcases little-known composers, both historical and contemporary.
We share anecdotes about the piece, why we like it. We get to know the audience, and they get to know the musicians. Ashkenazi was 2 and a half when, while visiting family in Tel Aviv, he stopped to hear a busker on the street and made his parents stay until the performer had finished. In third grade at the Bernice A. Ray School in Hanover, she heard a wind trio and fell.
Many of the Oak Hill musicians are alumni of the latter program. After Juilliard, the two decamped west, where Kohn earned a doctorate in musical arts from the University of Southern California.
They plan to continue to live in LA during the year and return to Hanover each summer for the festival, which they hope to expand over time. Kohn and Ashkenazi are not the first young musician couple to launch a chamber music series in the area. In , the Northfield-based husband-and-wife duo of double bassist and composer Evan Premo and soprano Mary Bonhag founded Scrag Mountain Music, a year-round series that is still going strong.
Like that musical duo, Kohn and Ashkenazi are enriching the repertoire with an unusual combination of instruments. In , Ashkenazi recorded an album called Niv Ashkenazi: Violins of Hope, produced by Kohn and released on Albany Records, that was named one of the 10 best classical recordings that year by the Chicago Tribune. That experience led Kohn and Ashkenazi to research 20th-century Jewish composers who endured persecution, some of whose works they feature in the festival.
Outdoor Performance. He survived to attend the premiere of his String Quartet No. Fortunately, they said, the festival is now fully funded, including a rental house where the musicians will stay. We already knew what and why we wanted to do it.
He helped us verbalize that in the right way. So this monthly feature is our way of introducing you to a handful of books by Vermont authors. To do that, we contextualize each book just a little and quote a single representative sentence from, yes, page Our quote describes longtime Lake Champlain angler Ray Giddings, who appears in a collection of newspaper and magazine articles assembled into a book by their author, Vermont journalist Ed Barna. He dedicated his latest selfpublished novel to his immigrant grandfather.
Determined to end such separations, Phoebe and Abidiah found an organization called Salva La Familia. Their efforts will bring them up against the forces behind the January 6 insurrection. While the novel is heavily didactic, Dooley has done extensive research into the history of American immigration, and his argument packs a punch. That is, until her father passed away in a tragic riding accident when Knoll was in her twenties.
Founded in and open to Vermonters and non-Vermonters alike, the society promotes poetry through events, contests and the journal. This issue includes new and previously published works of many forms, including prose, haiku and sonnets, touching on everything from nature and gardening to relationships and loss. It celebrates Ann B. A former society president, Day has written more than poems and hosted many events at Knoll Farm, the Fayston business she owned for decades.
Stevenson, Rootstock Publishing, pages. I nodded sadly, wishing I had been able to see Mrs. Goodwin lately. As automobiles replace horses in post-World War I England, and with once-stately Willingford Hall crumbling toward bankruptcy, stable boy Harry Green is about to be out of a job. His best hope: to prove his mettle by solving the murder of the Willingford Hall steward, whose body Harry discovered in a nearby dell. So begins the mystery at the core of Laura C. All attendees must buy tickets in advance.
Please request a link to buy tickets at:. Help the Kelly Brush Foundation inspire and empower people with spinal cord injuries to lead active and engaged lives. Join us by riding either a 10, 20, 50, or mile course through scenic Vermont or Ride from Anywhere on the route of your choice!
For more information visit ride. Almanza and Wiseman married in In April, Almanza finally received his green card, which allowed him to spend a few weeks in Burlington, give a talk and attend the opening; this is the first of his exhibitions outside Cuba that he has been able to attend.
The show is like a portal to another world. Almanza left home at age 15 to pursue an arts education in Las Tunas and Havana, and his family later moved, so the place is now a memory for the artist. Many of the paintings explore light and shadow in a style of realism blended with symbolism. Weightier shadows characterize the larger, inch-square paintings in the show. A grinning man with red eyes, an exposed rib cage and a rotting heart.
The couple poses against a fecund, shadowy background of flowers and plants that reveals more the longer one looks: three small, dark, gargoyle-like faces peering out at the viewer; a mass of crawling worms; scurrying beetles.
Animals observe the standoff from a shadowy border realm, some of whom become apparent only after a moment: a turtle, an owl. Whether the painting references a political situation in which a native-grown movement prevails against evil is unclear.
One submerged figure mirrors a woman floating above, while another regards her face in an oval mirror in the foreground. Memory, in this case, appears to evoke an environment utterly lacking in self-consciousness or fear.
Almanza is relatively new to painting. He trained in sculpture and then printmaking, learning the latter at the Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana. After graduation, he stayed in town to work as a studio assistant to the painter Carlos Quintana from to ; his focus on painting dates from that time.
In a mere seven years, Almanza has managed to sell his paintings to private. His work has been shown in group exhibitions in Mexico and in Brooklyn, N. During the visit with Seven Days, the artist credited his wife with spurring him to recall his childhood in the countryside. He began each painting by writing out a memory, sometimes on the wall of their Havana house, and then deciding how to depict it — including, crucially, the time of day.
The latter dictates his color choices: blues and grays for evening, ocher for midday, greens and yellows for morning. Embassy is located — he was only able to sketch. Almanza painted them while staying with Wiseman in her hometown of Salem, Ore. The work exhibits a lucid brush technique not used in the memory paintings. His work at Soapbox is a must-see before this emerging artist becomes an established one.
Reception: Thursday, July 14, p. July September Info, Safe and Sound Gallery in Burlington. Local residents and businesses are encouraged to get involved in supporting vibrant public places.
Community paint day and celebration: Saturday, July 23, 4 p. July Info, director thecurrentnow. Stowe Recreation Path. July August Sparrow Art Supply in Middlebury. Reception: Friday, July 15, p. July September 5. Brandon Artists Guild. Through July Village Wine and Coffee in Shelburne.
Seagull, Burlington, Friday, July 15, p. Proof of vaccination required. RSVP at wishbonecollectivevt. Wishbone Collective, Winooski, Wednesday, July 13, p. Art supplies provided. Adult artists who have lived experience with mental health challenges or substance-use disorder are welcome to join.
Expressive Arts Burlington, Monday, July 18, p. Info, artscollective howardcenter. She discusses her multimedia and participatory work. Through September University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington. Reception: Wednesday, July 13, p. Fletcher Free Library in Burlington. Through August Karma Bird House Gallery in Burlington.
Curated by Burlington City Arts. Through October Mascoma Bank in Burlington. Reception: Wednesday, July 20, 5 p. Lorraine B. Good Room. Through October 8. BCA Center in Burlington. The Maltex Building in Burlington. Third floor. Through December Info, , cbarrett historicnewengland. Community Center in Burlington.
Westphalen is deeply attuned to landscape, whether humble or majestic, natural or human built. Originally from Long Island, he moved to Vermont in and has pursued a bifurcated career in both commercial and fine art photography. So fine are his images, in fact, that they could be mistaken for paintings.
Exploring that intangible lure of the land of many faces. Enjoy the trip. Soapbox Arts in Burlington. Burlington City Hall. Through August 6. Info, christyjmitchell gmail. The S. Gallery in Burlington. Info, nicolechristmanart gmail. The Green Door Studio in Burlington. The collection can also be viewed online. Info, legacy winooskivt. Visitors are encouraged to add personal memories of the space to the community recollections. Heritage Winooski Mill Museum.
Through May Info, radiate. Richmond Town Hall. Burlington International Airport in South Burlington. Pierson Library in Shelburne. Through October 5. Through February 9. Shelburne Museum. Meet-the-artists reception: Thursday, July 14, p. Birds of Vermont Museum in Huntington. Through October 2. Info, contact artsswonderful. Shelburne Vineyard. Reception: Sunday, July 17, p. Emile A. Gruppe Gallery in Jericho. Espresso Bueno in Barre. Vermont Supreme Court Gallery in Montpelier.
Info, dpeeples vermont artscouncil. Spotlight Gallery in Montpelier. Bethany United Church of Christ Montpelier. Info, jeromelipani gmail. Plainfield Co-op. Through August 5. Center for Arts and Learning in Montpelier. AR Market in Barre. Main Gallery. Art Social: Thursday, July 21, p. Second Floor Gallery. PAUL A.
Quick Change Gallery. Third Floor Gallery. Studio Place Arts in Barre. The Front in Montpelier. Montpelier City Hall. Susan Calza Gallery in Montpelier. Vermont History Museum in Montpelier. Through September 5. Bryan Memorial Gallery in Jeffersonville. Vermont Ski and Snowboard Museum in Stowe. Through August 2.
The Current in Stowe. By appointment only. Info, marcie marciescudder. Photographers Workroom in Stowe. Reception: Friday, August 12, p. By appointment. Through October 9. The Bundy Modern in Waitsfield. Through January 7. Reception: Saturday, July 16, p. Through August 7. Middlebury College Museum of Art. Enjoy sidewalk shopping, grab-and-go food, scenic views, and great entertainment! Rokeby Museum in Ferrisburgh.
Through August 9. Edgewater Gallery on the Green in Middlebury. Northern Daughters in Vergennes. Edgewater Gallery at Middlebury Falls. Info, cmm csc. Castleton University Bank Gallery in Rutland.
Info, info chaffeeartcenter. Chaffee Art Center in Rutland. Grand Isle Art Works. Artist talk and panel discussion: Saturday, July 16, p.
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