Tag: Bard Music Festival

  • Bard Music Festival Review A Listener’s Take

    As always, the Bard Music Festival is almost too much of a good thing. I’m not complaining – I wouldn’t have it any other way – but it sure is a lot to take in, and between all the travel and the intensive listening, the day after should be a day of rest!

    I’ll probably post about it in more detail soon (I’m writing an article about it), but for now, here’s a piece in the New York Times, if you missed it, about the first weekend’s concerts. I sat directly across the aisle from the writer as he scribbled in his program.

    While I more or less agree with his general impressions, I had a totally different experience of the Saturday night concert, which featured “Job, A Masque for Dancing,” the Concerto for Two Pianos, and the Symphony No. 4. Have I heard more shattering performances of the symphony? Yes, I have, but this one came at the end of a very demanding evening. I myself left the hall feeling somewhat bedraggled. That Leon Botstein and his orchestra acquitted themselves so well in three very difficult pieces (both for performers and, cumulatively, for listeners), by juxtaposing them to such provocative effect, is a testament to what this festival does best.

    More importantly, I don’t know when I will ever encounter “Job” or especially the concerto again in concert. Everyone involved with the festival has my sincerest gratitude. There are a couple of photos in the Times article at the link.

    Next year at Bard? Berlioz and His World!

    @[100063807330266:2048:Fisher Center at Bard]

  • Bard Music Festival Finale: Vaughan Williams & Falstaff

    Bard Music Festival Finale: Vaughan Williams & Falstaff

    My long visit with Uncle Ralph is winding down. But still two concerts to go!

    The final chamber concert of this year’s Bard Music Festival will commence at 11:00 this morning (with a pre-concert talk at 10:30). “Vaughan Williams’ Legacy” will include works by Ruth Gipps, Michael Tippett, Samuel Barber (who Vaughan Williams met while lecturing at Bryn Mawr), Peggy Glanville-Hicks, and Constant Lambert. RVW himself will be represented by his last major instrumental work, the Violin Sonata in A minor.

    The festival will conclude this afternoon with a semi-staged performance of the Falstaff opera “Sir John in Love,” after Shakespeare’s “The Merry Wives of Windsor.” That’s the one for which RVW set “Greensleeves.” The opera begins at 3:00 (with a pre-concert talk at 2:00). “Sir John” will be livestreamed. If you’re interested, you’ll find information at the link.

    https://fishercenter.bard.edu/events/program-eleven-vaughan-williams-and-shakespeare-sir-john-in-love/

    More thoughts soon. Last night’s concert, with the “Sinfonia Antartica” [sic], was a stunner!

    Fisher Center at Bard

  • Bard Music Festival Serendipity: Vaughan Williams & More

    Bard Music Festival Serendipity: Vaughan Williams & More

    Another serendipitous reunion at the Bard Music Festival: for Saturday night’s concert, who else should be sitting in my row, but Warren Cohen, music director of the MusicaNova Orchestra!

    The orchestra is based in Phoenix, Arizona, but Warren makes his home in New Jersey, which is why he was able to make the trip down to the studios of Princeton University’s WPRB, to share with me his experiences with English composer Richard Arnell and his works (of which he has conducted many), for Arnell’s centenary in 2017. It was an all-Arnell morning, which featured several of Warren’s recordings with his orchestra. I feel comfortable stating that Warren is a huge advocate of unusual and neglected repertoire, with a special fondness for English music. Remind you of anyone?

    Anyway, here we are during intermission on Saturday, Warren, holding a copy of the lavish Bard Music Festival program, and me, with this year’s tie-in volume of scholarly essays, “Vaughan Williams and His World,” published by University of Chicago Press.

    The concert itself was a Vaughan Williams enthusiast’s dream, featuring “Job, A Masque for Dancing” (with projections of William Blake’s artwork), the Concerto for Two Pianos (with soloists Danny Driver and Piers Lane), and the turbulent Symphony No. 4. Leon Botstein conducted The Orchestra Now (TŌN). Good luck ever hearing “Job” in the United States, or the concerto anywhere!

    The Bard Music Festival will resume this weekend at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, with a couple of special supplementary events taking place at Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck on Thursday evening and Friday afternoon.

    Impending highlights from Bard’s marathon programs will include Vaughan Williams’ “Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus,” “Flos Campi,” and “The Lark Ascending” (alongside works by Edward Elgar, Grace Williams, Peter Warlock, Frederick Delius, and Gustav Holst, on Friday evening), the String Quartet No. 2 (alongside works by Gordon Jacob, Robert Müller-Hartmann, Egon Wellesz, Arnold Bax, Howard Ferguson, Béla Bartók, Edmund Rubbra, and a Bach transcription by Harriet Cohen, on Saturday afternoon), the Symphony No. 8 and “Sinfonia Antartica” (alongside works by Elizabeth Maconchy, William Walton, and Jean Sibelius, on Saturday evening), the Violin Sonata in A minor (alongside works by Ruth Gipps, Michael Tippett, Samuel Barber, Peggy Glanville-Hicks, and Constant Lambert, on Sunday morning), and the Falstaff opera “Sir John in Love” (Sunday afternoon).

    Some of the concerts will be livestreamed. You’ll find the complete schedule here:

    https://fishercenter.bard.edu/whats-on/programs/bard-music-festival/

    Fisher Center at Bard


    Warren Cohen conducts Richard Arnell’s Symphony No. 4:

    Warren joins me in 2017 to talk about Arnell on WPRB:

    MusicaNova’s website:

    https://musicanovaaz.org/

    Who else will I encounter at Bard?

  • Vaughan Williams at the Bard Music Festival

    Vaughan Williams at the Bard Music Festival

    When Byron Adams caught sight of me during intermission at the opening concert of this year’s Bard Music Festival, he took my hand and said, “Well, we finally did it!” – suggesting we had been co-conspirators. Which in a sense is true. I knew immediately what he meant, as we had both been lobbying for Vaughan Williams to be the focus of the festival for years.

    For his part, Byron, a longtime scholar of English music, had the ear of his colleague, festival co-artistic director Leon Botstein. For my part, I made it a point to suggest the composer whenever I happened to see or interview Botstein.

    Byron paid me a terrific compliment when he told me that it was I that had made this year’s Bard Music Festival possible. I asked him why, and he said it was because of an email I had written. However, when I inquired if my name specifically had been mentioned, he confessed it had not – but it was because of people like me, who presumably pushed for it, that Vaughan Williams was made the subject of this year’s festival. Well, okay, I’ll take that, even if it’s manufactured glory. It will give me my moment to humble brag about it on Facebook.

    Byron, emeritus professor of musicology at University of California, Riverside – as well as scholar in residence and regular advisor at the Bard Music Festival – is co-editor (with Daniel M. Grimley of Oxford University) of this year’s tie-in book of essays, “Vaughan Williams and His World,” published by University of Chicago Press.

    Last week, Byron was interviewed about the festival for WAMC Northeast Public Radio. He beautifully encapsulates who Vaughan Williams was, and the composer’s significance, and manages to give a concise overview of the festival in only 11 minutes! Kudos also to host Sarah LaDuke for this intelligent conversation:

    https://www.wamc.org/podcast/the-roundtable/2023-08-03/the-33rd-bard-music-festival-vaughn-williams-and-his-world?fbclid=IwAR15hcZLgsxLOXoDvDtkd3MYeLU_g-rtd6jLQQgAbPlCwq69XR2KHDi9JYU

    The Bard Music Festival will resume this weekend at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, with a couple of special supplementary events taking place at Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck on Thursday evening and Friday afternoon. Some of the concerts will be livestreamed. The complete schedule is posted here:

    https://fishercenter.bard.edu/whats-on/programs/bard-music-festival/

    Fisher Center at Bard

  • Bard Music Festival Friends & Vaughan Williams

    Bard Music Festival Friends & Vaughan Williams

    Always an unexpected pleasure of attending the Bard Music Festival: chance encounters with old, likeminded friends.

    Here I am, between concerts on Saturday, with two of my former WWFM colleagues: Marjorie Herman, creator of “Sounds Choral” and music director of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, and Israel “Buzz” Herman, creator of “On the Wind” and music director of the Bloomfield Symphony Orchestra. Note that they are wearing the official t-shirt of last year’s festival, “Rachmaninoff and His World.” By Sunday, they had switched to the official Vaughan Williams T, with its lark ascending.

    “Vaughan Williams and His World” will resume this weekend at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, with a couple of special supplementary events taking place at Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck on Thursday evening and Friday afternoon. Some of the concerts will be livestreamed. See the complete schedule here:

    https://fishercenter.bard.edu/whats-on/programs/bard-music-festival/

    Fisher Center at Bard

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