Berkshire Bach Society Harpsichord Festival Concludes

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The Berkshire Bach Society (BBS) concludes its 2025-2026 Harpsichord Festival with a solo recital by harpsichordist Peter Sykes on Oct. 25, 3pm, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Stockbridge. 
 
"Berkshire Bach is delighted to present Peter Sykes in a program of French Baroque music for keyboard," said Terrill McDade, executive Director of BBS.  "The Baroque repertoire by French composers is extensive and dominated by the Couperin dynasty, just as the German tradition was dominated by the Bach family.  But there are numerous others, from Marin Marais to Elisabeth Jacquet to Jean-Henri d'Anglebert to Jean-Philippe Rameau.  Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France was the center of cultural Europe, and Peter Sykes has chosen a program that shows the beauty, elegance, and mystique of the music that was an integral part of court life—but completely different from music by composers on the other side of the Rhine.  His recital is a great opportunity to hear the difference."
 
Peter Sykes is principal instructor of harpsichord in the Historical Performance Department of the Juilliard School in New York City, a lecturer at Boston University, and one of the most distinguished and versatile keyboard performers active today.  He is familiar to BBS audiences for his masterful performances on the great Roosevelt Organ at the First Congregational Church in Great Barrington, but his first love was the harpsichord.  When he was 15, he and his father built an instrument from a Frank Hubbard harpsichord kit and he played it in performance for many years.  Over the course of his career, he has acquired several fine harpsichords and clavichords and performs for BBS on a two-manual instrument from his collection.  Peter Sykes last performed for Berkshire Bach in the period ensemble that accompanied tenor Nicholas Phan in his Bach 52 project at Tanglewood's Linde Center for Music and Learning.
 
Join BBS for a special recital of French Baroque music for keyboard by Peter Sykes on Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025, 3pm, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Stockbridge.  For more information and to purchase tickets visit www.berkshirebach.org/events.
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Connecticut Man Killed in Otis Tractor-Trailer Crash

OTIS, Mass. — Thursday's collision between two tractor-trailers on Route 8 killed one of the drivers. 
 
Antonio Luis Marcucci, 32 of Waterbury, Conn., was northbound at about 9 a.m. Thursday when he apparently lost control of the truck and veered into the southbound lanes, colliding head-on with a southbound tractor trailer, according to police. 
 
According to the Berkshire District Attorney's Office, police dispatched to 1322 South Main Road found the truck with Connecticut plates in the northbound lane and a truck bearing Oklahoma plates lodged in a snowback on south side. 
 
The officer began rendering aid to the northbound driver, identified as Marcucci. He was pinned inside the cab of his truck. He was extracated and transported to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield by Otis EMS, where he was pronounced dead.
 
The driver of the Oklahoma tractor trailer in the southbound lane did not receive serious injuries.
 
Early investigation, including dash camera footage captured by one of the tractor trailers, shows the Oklahoma tractor trailer was traveling in the southbound lane and the Connecticut tractor trailer was traveling in the northbound lane, according to the DA's Office. The Connecticut tractor trailer lost control veering off the other side of the road ultimately ending on the southbound lane. Shortly after the two tractor trailers collided in a head on collision.
 
The investigation remains ongoing.
 
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