Northern Berks Patriot Item

Berks Jazz Fest to bring live music to area.

Reading area set to buzz with live musical collaborat­ion

- By Brian Bingaman bbingaman@21st-centurymed­ia.com @brianbinga­man on Twitter

Thanks to the Berks Arts Council, Berks County becomes a regional hotbed for music each year with the Berks Jazz Fest.

“I think it’s got a wonderful reputation. John Ernesto, who runs the festival, is a real people person,” said smooth jazz saxophonis­t and syndicated and satellite radio host Dave Koz, adding that there’s an excited energy inside and outside each venue because the audiences are “real music fans.”

“On the Berks stage, you’re getting things that do not happen anywhere else,” Koz said, referring to his opening night show with his “Summer Horns” side project partner Rick Braun, and the April 8 “Rememberin­g Chuck Loeb” jam, which so many musicians have committed to that Koz commented that it’s like two nights of entertainm­ent crammed into a single night.

Ironically Koz will not be a part of the “Heart and Soul of Sax” event April 13 because of his schedule. He said that’s a good thing because he’d be too nervous to play on stage with Maceo Parker, whom he looks up to. “Classic Berks concert — it sounds like a show I’d wanna see,” he said.

Among the multitude of festival concerts is one that jazz purists might complain doesn’t belong — Coopersbur­g guitarist Craig Thatcher’s Eric Clapton tribute show on April 7 at the Reading Country Club. “They’re trying to attract people from different demographi­cs, so they open things up,” Thatcher said, noting that his band has previously performed an Allman Brothers tribute show at Berks Jazz Fest. “The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival this year is going to have Jimmy Buffet, so go figure.”

Thatcher performs his hybrid blues/funk/jazz electric guitar style in a much different, spontaneou­s setting April 12, with brothers Matt and David Cullen, bassist Chico Huff (known for his work with James Taylor, Carly Simon, John Belushi and Charlie Mussle-

HERSHEY » Berks Catholic’s dream of a state championsh­ip came up one step shy, to an old familiar foe.

The Saints hung tough with Lancaster Catholic for a half on Wednesday before fading after the break, suffering a 51-36 defeat at the hands of the unbeaten Crusaders in the PIAA 4A championsh­ip game at Giant Center.

The state title clash was a reprise of the District 3 gold medal game on the same floor nearly a month earlier. Lancaster Catholic won that encounter 58-47 on March 1 to claim district gold.

Berks Catholic (25-6) was playing in its first state championsh­ip game Wednesday as that entity. BC head coach Bob Birmingham had led Holy Name to the 1993 2A championsh­ip game, a 57-55 loss to Cranberry, in a contest held at Hersheypar­k Arena across the lot from and nearly a decade before Giant Center was built. Holy Name merged with Reading Central Catholic in 2011 to form Berks Catholic.

“It’s like I told them in the locker room: ‘you were in the state championsh­ip’. A couple of weeks, months or years down the line, they’ll realize how special this was,” Birmingham said. “It’s a great group. we haven’t had a single issue all year with anybody on this team. They were a pleasure to coach and they wanted to be with each other. They’re going to have friendship­s that will last for a lifetime because of this and the way they bonded this year.”

Lancaster Catholic completed a perfect season, a 32-0 run past all competitio­n, to garner its first state gold since 1996. The rematch with BC was a different beast than the D-3 title game – in that one, the Crusaders trailed entering the fourth quarter before rallying. This had none of that high drama.

Shortly after Molly Duncan’s buzzer-beating halfcourt heave found twine for BC to give the Saints an 1110 lead after one, the Crusaders establishe­d control of the contest with a 10-0 run – the largest for either club – to forge ahead 21-13 and establish a cushion that held up somewhat comfortabl­y for the rest of the game.

Berks Catholic needed to reignite the engines to start the third quarter after departing the floor down 29-21 at halftime, but it never happened. The Saints did not score for the first 3:29 of the second half; when Abbey Gaffney ended that dry spell with a layup, the Crusaders responded with an 8-0 run to push it to 40-26.

“I thought we got some good shots, too,” Birmingham said of the dry spell opening the second half. “First two possession­s we got backdoor cuts and we fumbled chances. It was huge, because that can’t happen in the state championsh­ip against a team that’s 31-0.”

Lancaster Catholic closed its perfect campaign with a game befitting its suffocatin­g MO. Every time BC got a nudge toward life, the Crusaders snuffed it out.

Kiki Jefferson was jet fuel for Lancaster Catholic. The potent junior forward scored 24 of her club’s 51 points – no teammate scored more than eight (Zaniah Banks) – and proved to be every bit the matchup headache she was down the stretch in that March 1 encounter. Duncan drew the assignment for BC and performed valiantly, at nearly five inches shorter, before running low on gas toward the end.

Dejah Terrell, Jefferson’s style mate in stature and game, struggled a bit during the first half – at one point with four points booked opposite two fouls. Terrell ended her high school career with 12 points, second behind Gaffney’s team-high 14.

Terrell was upbeat and appreciati­ve of the experience despite not coming away with the championsh­ip.

“I’m going to remember all the good times and bad times,” she said, “but most of all I’m going to remember the bond we created as a team.

“Every game win or lose was a step closer to the ending,” Terrell said. “It kind of hurt at the end when I was getting subbed out because I knew this was the end. But it also felt good because we were in Hershey at the (Giant) Center in the state finals. There are 706 girls teams and we were one of the final 12 . ... Whether it’s bronze, silver or gold, it’s a trophy and that means we did something right.”

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Pictured here performing with his Eric Clapton tribute band, Craig Thatcher will be performing April 12 with Cullen & Company at the Berks Jazz Fest.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Pictured here performing with his Eric Clapton tribute band, Craig Thatcher will be performing April 12 with Cullen & Company at the Berks Jazz Fest.
 ?? PHOTO BY IRVAN RISNANDAR ?? Dave Koz is scheduled to perform at the Berks Jazz Fest April 6 and 8.
PHOTO BY IRVAN RISNANDAR Dave Koz is scheduled to perform at the Berks Jazz Fest April 6 and 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States