Singing since 1793

Audience members clap sitting at the back of the light-filled Westerlo Reformed Church, during a concert on Sunday, Sept. 22.

 Wally Jones, who directed the Westerlo Reformed Church concert, plays "Prelude No. 1 in C Major" from The Well-Tempered Clavier by J. S. Bach on organ, accompanying Michelle Cenci on violin.

Pat Viglucci, left, brought jazz and Latin sounds to the Sunday concert on his alto saxophone. Michelle Cenci, right, listens, with her violin in her lap. 

Audience members danced and clapped as Peggy Hart played with the Squeezeplay Accordion Band.

Michelle Cenci played a melody by Charles Gounod on violin, accompanied by the Westerlo Reformed Church music director Wally Jones on organ. The two played Ashokan Farewell, composed by Jay Ungar and made popular in The Civil War film by Ken Burns. Before them, the audience heard readings from the Gettysburg Address and Union Army Officer Sullivan Ballou's last letter to his wife. 

The music in the Westerlo Reformed Church on Sunday afternoon had people clapping, laughing, crying, and pondering with eyes closed, watered, or wide. The pews creaked beneath the mostly silent but enthusiastic congregation. Pale pink light shone through stained glass windows on Sept. 22 as more than a dozen skilled musicians played in various combinations and genres on stage, celebrating 220 years of the church.

Over $1,500 was collected to benefit the Hilltown Community Resource Center food pantry open to families five days a week in the church's annex.

More Hilltowns News

  • It’s been two-and-a-half months since three of the Berne Town Board’s five members resigned suddenly over concerns about the town’s supervisor, Dennis Palow, yet there’s been no meaningful updates about when the board will resume functioning, even as time runs out on the year’s budget cycle. 

  • Executive Director for the New York State Association of Towns Chris Koetzle laid out for The Enterprise how Berne may be able to go about enacting its current draft budget for 2025 without a board to authorize it, or vote to override the 2 percent tax cap. However, he warned that the situation was unprecedented and that it’s up to the comptroller’s office to determine how to proceed. 

  • A Lamborghini worth more than $200,000 was destroyed in Clarksville when, during a joyride that the Albany County Sheriff described as something out of the street-racing franchise “Fast and Furious,” one of the drivers failed to negotiate a turn and the car wound up in flames on the side of the road. There were no injuries.

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