Used to always have #samAdams Boston Lager around. Then I found #stout and as I look back I haven’t had one since August of ‘24!

As lagers go it’s a good one. As stocks go, it’s been a bumpy ride $SAM

#lager #notAstout #craftBeer

Fermented Friday – 17 Public Square

I feel like I was just here. Oh, wait! I WAS HERE LAST WEEK! Honestly, the food is really good here. ​

https://medi-nerd.com/2026/01/23/fermented-friday-17-public-square-2/

Alma Quartet joins forces with Dominique Vleeshouwers for an exciting musical adventure

The Amsterdam-based Alma Quartet fosters varied audiences and adventurous collaborations. They play in packed night clubs with top DJs, premiere daring new works by experimental composers, or simply perform the standard repertoire at top notch level. On 28 April they join forces with the Dutch percussionist Dominique Vleeshouwers in the Concertgebouw for a concert showcasing Samuel Adams.

Sam Adams (San Francisco, 1985) had been named composer in residence of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw in 2020-2021, which capacity he would spend three months in the city. Inspired by the Dutch capital he was to compose a new work for the Alma Quartet, but due to the pandemic, his residency was postponed until the next season.  – When covid once again threw a spanner in the works. The blog underneath is an adaptation of my article for Preludium, the joint magazine of Concertgebouw and Concertgebouw Orchestra.

Alma Quartet left to right: Benjamin Peled, 2nd violin; Jeroen Woudsta, viola; Marc Daniel van Biemen, 1st violin; Clément Peigné, cello

The commissioned work fell prey to the pandemic as well. Instead, the deferred programme now includes two Dutch premieres: ‘Field’ for solo percussion and Sundial for string quartet and percussion. Despite the various mishaps, Marc Daniel van Biemen, first violinist of the Alma Quartet looks forward to the concert: ‘We put together our programme in close consultation with Sam, who I became friends with at the Yale School of Music.’

HIGH ENERGY

The concert opens with ‘Field’ for percussion solo, the third movement from Adams’ full-length ballet Lyra, which premiered in October 2021 and recently appeared on CD. Inspired by the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice the five-minute fragment is set for vibraphone, snare drums, bongo and bass drum. Repetitive motifs in the high registers of the vibraphone in particular are interspersed with field recordings of creaking and abrasive sounds that evoke an African atmosphere.

In transit by the Dutch composer Joey Roukens is set for string quartet and percussion. Repetitive patterns create a hallucinatory atmosphere that abruptly turns into a sonorous lament. Then again the musicians take an unexpected new turn, working up to a climax of furious strokes on the strings and ferocious blows on a snare drum. Roukens’ grooving syncopation excellently matches Adams’ energy.

Just when you think it’s finished, Roukens serves up a sweet-voiced chorale that seems to float weightlessly in space. ‘We love it that In transit occasionally seems to take a wrong turn’, says Van Biemen, ‘we like to put the audience on the wrong track.’ It was his suggestion to programme Roukens: ‘It was a great shame to only play along with Dominique Vleeshouwers in Sam’s piece.’

REVOLUTION CAPTURED IN SOUND

Carrot Revolution by Gabriella Smith was proposed by Adams, though. Van Biemen: ‘Sam was very enthusiastic about her quartet and when I listened to it, I had a euphoric response myself. What a splendid performance piece!’

Smith often draws inspiration from the environment. She was interested in nature conservation as a teenager and spent five years volunteering at a songbird research project in Point Reyes, California. She started playing the violin when she was seven and began composing shortly afterwards. – One of her teachers was John Adams, Sam’s father.

Gabriella Smith’s Carrot Revolution is an irrepressibly propelling tangle of fierce bowing, sweeping outbursts, splashing pizzicati and wild drumming on the cello; a revolution captured in sound.

Smith’s quartet is one long, irrepressibly propelling tangle of fierce bowing, sweeping outbursts, splashing pizzicati and wild drumming on the cello; a revolution captured in sound. After about eight minutes, both the energy and volume decrease, with descending lines creating an uneasy atmosphere. As if flowers are hanging their heads for lack of water. Like a laboriously starting engine, the cello resumes its percussive drumming, taking the other players in tow. Their frenetic screeching glissandi arrive at a swirling, fortissimo climax which ends abruptly in nothingness.

HYPER RESONANCE

The odd piece out seems to be Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings, but Van Biemen thinks otherwise: ‘A concert inspired by America simply wouldn’t be complete without the ultimate work for string quartet’, he says. ‘Everyone knows it, this second movement of Barber’s String Quartet from 1936 is one of the most played classical works ever.’

Sam Adams

With its melancholy tone and drawn-out melodies, Adagio for Strings points forward to the ‘new spiritual music’ of composers such as Arvo Pärt and John Tavener, with whom Barber shares his love for a rich tonal sound world. This connects seamlessly with Adams’ Sundial for string quartet and percussion.

Adams concurs: ‘Harmony plays an important role in all my music. In Sundial I treat the five voices somewhat like the reverb pedal of a piano; the strings extend the percussion sounds and vice versa, creating a kind of “hyper-resonance”. The percussion only consists of metal instruments: vibraphone, crotales and cowbells. Their somewhat out of tune sound is perhaps best known from Mahler’s Sixth Symphony, and combines beautifully with the precise, almost sterile sound of the vibraphone.’

Sundial works exactly like its namesake’, explains Adams: ‘The five instruments project a series of musical shadows that, in constant motion, reveal the passage of time in the shape of an arc. And like a sundial, when the music is warmest, the shadows are least transparent.’  

In Sam Adams’ Sundial the string quartet and percussion project a series of musical shadows that, in constant motion, reveal the passage of time in the shape of an arc.

‘Most of the work is made of two distinct types of music: “rocking” music of fast, pulsing dual harmonies swaying back and forth, and “cyclic” music of slightly off-kilter contrapuntal figurations that blossom over long stretches of time. Only in the final minutes does the music break out of these two types of material, ascending to a ringing, intensely bright conclusion.’

DAUNTING BUT EXCITING

The programme is definitely interesting, but is the combination of strings and percussion not daunting? Van Biemen: ‘Of course it is a  challenge to find the right balance in dynamics. Also, we must play lyrically while performing fairly rhythmic music. However, I find this combination particularly attractive because the overall timbre is totally different from that of regular quintet line-ups.’

Van Biemen concludes with gusto: ‘I really look forward to taking the audience along on an exciting musical adventure!’

#DomniqueVleeshouwers #GabriellaSmith #JoeyRoukens #MarcDanielVanBiemen #SamAdams

Our latest sensory review brought together two extraordinary creations—Utopias 2025 by Boston Beer Company and Utopica by Deeper Roots Coffee—in a pairing that turned out to be as surprising as it was unforgettable. We dove into the complexity of both the coffee and the latest edition of Utopias, exploring layers of aroma, texture, and flavor that unfolded in unexpected harmony. The bold, contemplative depth of Utopias and the vibrant, nuanced character of Utopica danced together in a way that made every sip feel like a discovery.

And honestly? We had an absolute blast with this review. From the moment we opened the bottle and brewed the coffee to the final reflections, the session was filled with curiosity, laughter, and that energizing spark that happens when you’re tasting something truly special. This pairing pushed our palates, sparked great conversation, and reminded us why we love doing sensory deep-dives in the first place.

This is one collaboration of flavors you don’t want to miss—rich, playful, and just as fun as the experience we had reviewing it.
Read more here: https://www.northwestbeerguide.com/home/2025-bostonbeer-utopicavutopias
#coffee #beer #boston #massachusetts #cincinnati #ohio #deeperrootscoffee #samadams

Today in Labor History November 17, 1747: The Knowles Riot occurred in Boston, with hundreds of sailors, laborers and free blacks rising up against British Navy Press Gangs. Commodore Knowles routinely had Bostonians kidnapped and forced to work on his ships. Those who were impressed were forced to work on the ship for three years, or until they escaped or died. The reason why press gangs were needed in the first place was because the work on ships was so dangerous, repressive, and poorly paid. Furthermore, it was often in the furtherance of colonial wars that benefitted the wealthy, but not working-class people. Additionally, the Trade to America Act 1707 supposedly exempted those living in the American colonies from impressment. Consequently, irate workers rampaged through Boston, kidnapping several of Knowles’ officers, and a sheriff, holding them hostage until all Bostonians were freed from his ships. The Knowles Riot was the most serious uprising in Colonial America prior to the Stamp Act protests of 1765. No one died, but eleven people were arrested. Few days later, an anonymous writer published a pamphlet praising the rioters for defending their natural rights. Many believe it was Samuel Adams.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #boston #Knowles #riot #colonialism #britain #navy #samadams

Five years ago, I had a stereotypical New England dinner: Sam Adams and a lobstah. This particular lobstah was caught by hand by yours truly in Glostah (Gloucester, MA).

#lobster #dinner #SamAdams #beer #NewEngland #freshcaught #Boston

🚨 New Song Alert 🚨 I wrote a toast to Alex Bregman’s new Samuel Adams collab, Bregman’s Beer! 🍺⚾ Give it a listen 👉 https://adamsweet.bandcamp.com/track/bregmans-beer

#BregmansBeer #AlexBregman #SamAdams #RedSox #Fenway #NewMusic #Bandcamp

Bregman's Beer, by Adam Sweet

track by Adam Sweet

Adam Sweet

Ok, hot AF today and not a #stouturday choice on the local menu, so let’s keep it light

#samAdams Summer Ale is a pale wheat beer that’s light and a bit fruity, a good cooler when it’s hot out 🥵

#beer @beersofmastodon

And my usual wort shot. Looks lighter out of the hose in a thin stream than it does in the flask for the starter

#beer #HomeBrew #CraftBeer #SamAdams #SamuelAdams #BostonLager #Lager

Inspired by my trip back to the US to visit mom and drinking some Sam Adams Boston Lager I decided to brew a clone. Color looks perfect. Mittelfruer and Tettnang hops into a mash of Ale, Munich, Vienna and a bit of Crystal malt. Going to ferment with Anchor Steam yeast I harvested from my last California Common

#HomeBrew #beer #CraftBeer #SamAdams #Lager