Musical Masterworks Ends Season With Concert Today Featuring Music of Bach, Schubert & Taneyev

Edward Arron hosts and performs in this weekend’s Musical Masterworks concerts.

This April, renowned, world-traveling Musical Masterworks veterans will present a program of chamber music treasures to conclude our 27th Season.

Violinist Amy Schwartz Moretti and pianist Adam Neiman will begin the program with J.S. Bach’s Sonata No. 4 for violin and keyboard; then violinist Aaron Boyd and violist Dimitri Murrath will join Artistic Director Edward Arron for Schubert’s seldom-performed B-flat String Trio, an unusually intimate and elegant dialogue among three instruments. 

The finale will feature all five performers coming together to conclude the program – and season – with the titanic and soul-stirring Piano Quintet, Opus 30, by the Russian Romantic-era composer, Sergey Taneyev.

Musical Masterworks will be continuing its popular pre-concert talks before both concerts.  Concertgoers are invited to join Edward Arron one hour before each of the April concerts for an in-depth discussion about the composers and music featured that weekend:  Bach, Schubert and Taneyev.

The April concerts will be held on Saturday, April 28, at 5 p.m. and Sunday, April 29, at 3 p.m. at the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme.  Individual tickets are $40 and Student Tickets are $5.

For more information, visit Musical Masterworks at www.musicalmasterworks.org or call 860.434.2252. 

Plow Day Today at Upper Pond Farm

The horses will go to work on Plow Day this Sunday — hopefully!

Today, Saturday, April 28, is Kids’ Day at Upper Pond Farm, 256 Beaver Brook Rd., Lyme, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.  Enjoy an agricultural adventure as you work your way through several stations designed to educate and entertain your whole family.   Snacks and water provided.

Tomorrow, Sunday, April 29, between mid-morning and mid-afternoon, Plow Day will be held — weather permitting.

Enjoy ‘Phoebe’s Brunch Notes’ at Old Lyme Library Today


The Old Lyme-Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library hosts Phoebe’s Brunch Notes this coming Sunday, April 29, from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Library.
There will be a buffet brunch catered by the Old Lyme Ice Cream Shoppe, which can be enjoyed in the library’s intimate setting while listening to The Sound – a locally-based teen jazz band.Tickets are $25 per person.  Click here to purchase online with a credit card or stop by the Library for cash or check purchases.All proceeds benefit the library and MusicNow Foundation, which is sponsoring the band.
A silent auction will also be held featuring prizes from:

  • Bee & Thistle Inn
  • Eugene O’Neil Theater
  • Garde Arts Center
  • Ivoryton Playhouse

The library and MusicNow Foundation express their appreciation to the event sponsors of Old Lyme Ice Cream Shoppe and Angelini Wine, Ltd.

Reynolds’ Subaru of Lyme Donates $30,000 to Middlesex Hospital Cancer Center

Pictured above at the check donation ceremony are (from left to right) Joe Altavilla, District Sales Manager, Subaru of New England; Devin Carney, Connecticut State Representative (R-23rd); Kathryn Wayland, Reynolds’ Subaru; Hayden Reynolds, Reynolds’ Subaru; Laura Martino, Middlesex Hospital; Melissa Ziobron, Connecticut State Representative (R-34th); and Justin Drew, Middlesex Hospital Cancer Center.

Reynolds’ Subaru in Lyme has donated $30,000 to Middlesex Hospital Cancer Center’s new Westbrook location. The generous donation will ensure that cancer patients have access to the best possible treatments and care team.

Reynolds’ donation was made following the conclusion of Subaru of America Inc.’s Share the Love campaign. Reynolds’ Subaru and the Reynolds’ family, however, have been supportive of Middlesex Hospital for many years.

“As a local business, we feel it is important to give back to our community,” says Hayden Reynolds. “We believe that having medical care on the shoreline makes it easier for our customers, neighbors and family members to get the care they need. The Cancer Center is a great addition to what Middlesex already offers on the shoreline, and we are so pleased to help the Hospital’s efforts.”

Justin Drew, director of the Cancer Center, is very grateful for the support. “We are humbled by the generosity of Reynolds’ Subaru,” he says. “Their support means that Middlesex Hospital Cancer Center patients can access life-saving cancer treatment closer to home, and we thank them for sharing their love with us.”

Florence Griswold Museum Launches Online Learning Portal for Educators

To engage students about the painting process, a video featuring McKenzie West, an art student at the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts was filmed on location at the Museum by the staff of website designer Julia Balfour, LLC.

The Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, Conn., has launched SEE/change, an immersive website that will help equip Connecticut elementary educators with new ways to teach a variety of subjects by tapping into the Museum’s content-rich collection of American art. SEE/change offers multiple tools designed to help teachers draw upon a single work of art for meaning on various relevant topics—from state and national history to geography to ecology. SEE/change challenges students to change the way they SEE paintings.

SEE/change was led by the Museum’s Director of Education and Outreach David D.J. Rau who was inspired by the change that is underway in America’s schools. “Connecticut teachers are being called upon to reboot their entire educational approach—moving away from teaching facts and figures towards inquiry-based instruction that encourages students to think critically and with deepening complexity, states Rau.  “It’s our hope that SEE/change helps educators and students see a change in the way they investigate subjects using primary sources and various points of view.”

The project was funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. It focuses on the Museum’s 1853 painting,Seven Miles to Farmington by Connecticut artist George H. Durrie. The popular genre scene of travelers arriving by sleigh to a rustic country inn on a winter’s day is steeped in historical content.

For over a year, the Museum worked closely with students, educators, and content and curriculum specialists. Staff visited elementary school classrooms to talk about the painting. Students were asked them to describe what they thought was going on in the painting and what kinds of learning activities they would enjoy doing on the computer.

Museum staff sought the council of content and curriculum specialists to develop content that is age-appropriate, applicable to teachers’ needs and concur with specific connections to the state Social Studies Framework. The end result is a dynamic set of web pages designed by Julia Balfour, LLC, that feature visually rich essays about the artist, the painting, the inn in the painting, and the landscape.

Users learn more about the artist, his life in New Haven, and his artistic career. The site features a portfolio of Durrie’s work, a timeline, a visual glossary, and lesson plans. Three engaging videos include a guided tour of the painting, a demonstration featuring Leslie Evans, Director of the Avery-Copp House Museum in Groton, making a pounded cheese from a recipe from the period, and a short painting lesson based on Durrie’s dogs. There is also a fun section of games and learning-to-look activities.

Students can make the scene come alive by pressing buttons that link to things you might hear such as a rooster crowing, crunching snow, or a snoring traveler. Educators praise the learning tool, “SEE/changehas created a stellar one stop workplace for educators to bring their classes to a piece that seamlessly integrates the arts and history, notes Dana Nelson, curriculum team member and 5th Grade Teacher at Tuttle Elementary School in East Haven, Connecticut. “My students can time travel to the 19th century to become one with a painting.”

Although the portal is designed for teachers and students to connect art and history in their classrooms, any virtual visitor can enjoy exploring the mysteries behind this iconic work of American art by logging on to FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org.

The recipient of a Trip Advisor 2016 Certificate of Excellence, the Florence Griswold Museum has been called a “Giverny in Connecticut” by the Wall Street Journal, and a “must-see” by the Boston Globe. In addition to the restored Florence Griswold House, the Museum features a gallery for changing art exhibitions, education and landscape centers, a restored artist’s studio, thirteen acres along the Lieutenant River, and extensive gardens. Its seasonal Café Flo was recognized as “best hidden gem” and “best outdoor dining” by Connecticut Magazine.

The Museum is located at 96 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT.

Visit FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org for more information.