Everybody Loves A Good Barge Play

New York is known for staging theatrical performances in unusual locations – think how strange Shakespeare in the Park must have sounded when first proposed – but a musical on a barge? That can’t be easy to pull off. The opening performance “will be the culmination of a yearslong odyssey from concept to performance that involved surmounting death and bureaucracy, illness and poverty, logistical challenges and timing foul-ups in steadfast dedication to a creative vision.”

Sgt. Luthier

Deciding what to do with your life after serving a tour of duty as a soldier in a war zone can be a tricky (and costly) process. Not so, though, for Sgt. Geoffrey Allison, who spent his down time in Iraq strengthening his skills as a violin maker. “Nearing retirement, Allison has begun turning his passion into his profession. He’s already sold some of his violins, and with his military pension he plans to support himself as a violin maker when he retires from the Army next spring.”

Recirculating The Classics

Despite all the talk of a classical recording glut, enthusiasts know that many of the greatest recordings from decades past are all but lost, unavailable to the public at any price. “ArkivMusic, an online retailer that launched in 2002, is out to reverse that trend and restore as much of the deep catalog as possible. In addition to stocking every classical CD in print, it now offers what it calls ArkivCDs: reissues of out-of-print CDs produced on demand for the consumer.”

Summer Of The Woman In The Berkshires

The Massachusetts-based Berkshire Theatre Festival has roots that stretch far and wide around New England, but the most striking thing about its history is how female-centered it is. “The festival has its roots in expressions of female ingenuity,” was founded by a woman looking to preserve a prized local building, and this season, is focusing squarely on plays that highlight “social aspiration and the cost of women’s advancement.”