Herrera struck out 13 in five innings of work to lead the Pittsfield Little League American Division 12-year-old All-Stars to a 9-0 win over Longmeadow in the Section 1 tournament. Christian Barry reached base three times, scored three times and drove in three runs with a fifth-inning moonshot over the fence in left center as Pittsfield stayed in the winner’s bracket in the double-elimination tournament and earned a day off on Friday. Herrera was the star, allowing two hits and stranding six runners, including a man on second in the fifth by ending the starter’s night with K No. 13. “I can’t say enough about the job that he did,” Pittsfield Americans Manager Ty Perrault said. “He battled. I mean, the strike zone was tough out there today. It was the toughest zone he’s see.
Barry retired three straight to stop a sixth-inning rally and preserve a 6-2 win for the Pittsfield Little League American Division 12-year-olds in Thursday’s Don Gleason District 1 title game. Barry ended the game with his second strikeout in 1-⅔ innings of relief work to make a winner of Sebastian Herrera and send the Pittsfield Americans into next week’s sectional playoffs on the road to Williamsport, Pa. Great Barrington registered its only three hits of the game back-to-back-to-back with its back to the wall in the sixth to score a run. And it had runners at the corners with just one out with a four-run deficit.
New music: Mythos celebrates 25th anniversary with the release of album XXV Vancouver New Age duo Mythos featuring Bob D Eith and Paul Schmidt celebrates 25 years of music making.
Author of the article: Stuart Derdeyn
Publishing date: Apr 09, 2021 • 1 day ago • 4 minute read • Bob D Eith. MLA Maple Ridge-Mission and Parliamentary Secretary for Arts and Film celebrates 25 years of his band Mythos with a new album, XXV. Photo by Handout /jpg
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Bring up the music of the 1990s and you’ll hear about a wide range of music, including New Age sounds.
Key Track: Sister Flower.
Itâs hard to decide where to start discussing KÃzisâ new album. With over 50 collaborators on 36 songs, the album spans nearly four hours. So it might not be one of those play from front to finish records.
Instead, this work of incredible depth from the Montreal-based Algonquin two-spirited composer/singer is best consumed in parts to fully appreciate both the immediacy and joy of the effort. It doesnât really come as any surprise that collaborators include composer Owen Pallett, groundbreaking vocalist Beverly Glenn-Copeland and Cub Sportsâ Tim Nelson, to name a few. Kìzis is the kind of artist who you would expect to be working with equally distinct and unique creators.