Category: Hudson Valley

  • Hudson Valley Live To Serve Up World-Class World Music at Colony Woodstock and White Feather Farm

    Two veteran Hudson Valley-based music promoters have teamed up to create Hudson Valley Live, a venture designed to bring critically-acclaimed world music, edgy jazz, experimental sounds and much more to the region beginning with seven events this summer at Colony Woodstock and White Feather Farm.

    Hudson Valley Live is the brainchild of Danny Melnick and Isabel Soffer.  The Saugerties-based Melnick has produced hundreds of festivals, tours, concerts and special events in more than 30 countries since 1989, efforts accelerated with the 2007 formation of his company, Absolutely Live Entertainment (ALE). A sample of these currently include: The Freihofer’s Saratoga Jazz Festival; tours by the all-star ensemble Artemis and The Joyce and George T. Wein Shape of Jazz Series at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall. Danny also is curating concerts for a criminal justice fundraising organization called JusticeAid and will produce the “Monterey Jazz Festival on Tour” in 2023, among many other projects. 

    A Brooklyn native who has lived and worked in Malden for five years, Isabel Soffer has been at the forefront of globally-centric cultural programming for nearly three decades.  She was instrumental in the development of the American global music and dance scene as Director of the World Music Institute in the ’80s. But Isabel may be better known as Co-founder and Director of the globalFEST, a non-profit that produces this much-anticipated and acclaimed annual music festival and conference in New York City now marking its 20th year. Soffer is also the founder of Live Sounds, a company that curates and produces multi-genre initiatives that connect artists with cultural opportunities.  Live Sounds has been responsible for producing scores of historic concerts and tours by the likes of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and The Masked Dancers of Kerela, as well as the founding of The New York Flamenco Festival, The New York Fado Festival, a Sufi poetry fest and much more.  All totaled, she has orchestrated well over 1,500 concerts, with artists from more than 100 countries.

    “Our goal is to produce an eclectic music series for curious and serious music listeners, with the kind of global sounds that have not been readily available in the region,” says Soffer. “While the Hudson Valley has a wonderfully rich and lively music scene, the greatest and latest in global music has been kind of hard to come by.”

    “This series at the Colony and White Feather Far will fill that gap,” adds Melnick.  “We’re bringing our decades of experience and contacts with world music’s best to bring more of the best to the Hudson Valley.  We’re delighted to partner with these two forward-thinking venues to do events will be truly unique and ear-opening for the Hudson Valley’s discerning music-lovers.”

    The artists featured at the seven forthcoming events span from cutting edge jazz to Afropop, Gypsy, Flamenco and Brazil, Latinx sounds plus regional American traditions. Following are the events scheduled at Saugerties’ White Feather Farm, curated in partnership with Barbes, and The Colony in Woodstock.  More info can be found at http://hudsonvalleylive.co/:    

    Friday, July 15 – Fela Kuti Tribute with Nikhil P. Yerawadekar Living Language 

    White Feather Farm

    Tickets https://www.eventbrite.com/e/a-fela-kuti-tribute-from-nikhil-p-yerawaders-living-language-tickets-369006467277

    Friday, July 22 – Persian Classical Music with Kayhan Kalhor 

    White Feather Farm

    Tickets https://www.eventbrite.com/e/kayhan-kalhor-tickets-369027660667

    Friday, July 29 – Talking Drums meet Afrobeat

    Mamadou’s Fantastic Band featuring members of Afro Beat band Kaleta & Super Yamba Band

    White Feather Farm

    Tickets https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mamadous-fantastic-band-featuring-members-of-super-yamba-tickets-369047409737

    Friday July 29 – Ukraine’s Soulful and Subversive Folk Arts Heroes with DakhaBrakha

    The Colony Woodstock

    Tickets  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dakhabrakha-tickets-338959034597

    August 12 – World Premiere: From Jazz to the American Songbook 

    Bria Skonberg and Elizabeth Goodfellow 

    White Feather Farm

    Tickets https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bria-skonberg-and-elizabeth-goodfellow-tickets-369097790427

    Thursday, August 18 – Colombia’s Meridian Brothers

    The Colony Woodstock

    Tickets https://www.eventbrite.com/e/meridian-brothers-tickets-335739575107

    Friday, August 19 – Cumbia, surf and the B52’s with La Banda Chuska

    White Feather Farm

    Ticketshttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/la-banda-chuska-tickets-369108863547

  • The Whistles Drop EP “I Come From The Future” and Open New Recording Studio

    Singer and songwriter Terrence Brennan of Cousin Earth and BELT and his wife, Wendy LaManque, make up the folk duo The Whistles and recently released their EP I Come from the Future. The project was fully recorded in their newly opened studio space, The Party Farm, in Roscoe.

    The Party Farm in Roscoe, NY.

    The duo began making music together under the name The Whistles a few years ago and started recording their newest EP in the winter of 2021. Both Brennan and LaManque are equally responsible for the songwriting on the album, and Brennan engineered, mixed, and mastered the record right in their brand-new recording studio.

    The time-travel-themed EP I Come from the Future is some of the couple’s best work with a surprise release on Tuesday, June 21. With elements of alt-rock, country, metal, dance music, and more, the album takes listeners on a journey through genres. The music video for The Whistle’s country ballad, “Hay,” features a beautiful violin solo from Michael Hunter and can be seen below.

    The Party Farm, nestled in the Catskills, offers a peaceful mountain environment for any recording artist to take advantage of. The space includes many amenities, including a bowling alley, bar, and walking trails not far off.

    Brennan acts as the studio’s mixing engineer, with 20 years of experience as a recording artist and producer. The recording studio also offers photography and video editing for those who wish to share the work they may do in the studio with the outside world.

  • Specialists Return to NY With Summer Tour Starting on July 1

    The NYC-based funk and rock collective Specialists are set to perform across New York as they kick off their summer tour on July 1. The band completed a Southeast US tour in January of 2022 and returns to the Northeast with 6 shows across NY and PA.

    The summer performance schedule coincides with the band’s release of their upcoming full-length record. Other Specialists releases include Too Easy (2020), Specialists (2019), and No Need to Explode (2018). With irresistible groove, crafty arrangement, witty lyrics, and catchy hooks, the band’s sound will get any audience up on their feet.

    Specialists initially consisted of duo Billy Harden (guitar) and Mikey Rotunno (bass) before adding Christian Hickey (drums) and Pete Harden (keys) to the mix. Their newest single, “I Got You,” released in March of 2022, gives listeners a taste of their newest sound.

    After the band’s Brooklyn Made performance on July 1, they will head off to Syracuse’s Funk N Waffles on July 2. The Specialists will then take their sound to the Sterling Stage Ameribeat on July 3 before eventually finishing their tour in Peekskill. To listen before their upcoming tour dates, the band’s music is available on Apple Music or Spotify.

    Specialists Summer Tour Dates

    July 1 – Brooklyn Made – Brooklyn, NY

    July 2 – Funk N Waffles – Syracuse, NY

    July 3 – Sterling Stage Ameribeat (4pm – 5:10pm) – Sterling, NY

    July 22 – Deutschtown Music Festival – Pittsburgh, PA

    July 29 – Tigh Mhary – Lancaster, PA

    August 26 – Peekskill Brewery – Peekskill, NY

  • Follow the Arrow: Marco Benevento’s Celebration of The End Or The Beginning?

    Marco Benevento and family held applause for the positive at the cozy single day music festival Follow the Arrow, held at Arrowood Farms Micro Brewery and Distillery in Accord, NY. The full embrace of creative expression combined with an organized yet relaxed atmosphere made for an ideal pre-solstice celebration.

    follow the arrow accord
    Marco Benevento and Friends – photo by Em Walis

    Deciphering The Map

    The landscape for live music is changing. Many that have remained sheltered are beginning to emerge. Bigger festivals lure us in with extensive setlists at locations worthy of wanderlust. Despite the inviting notion of clear air and open spaces, logistics like shuttles and multiple stages converge with the perception of crowd density might all just be too much for some at this time. The push and pull of compulsory desire for experience, the reality of life circumstance and anchors which prevent last minute flights. The consolation prize of a livestream. Like many loves in life, our relationship with music we have had and what the evolution might look like can get complicated.

    follow the arrow accord
    So many rails, so little time – photo by Em Walis

    Which Way?

    Wouldn’t it be nice to have an oracle appear to gently guide in the direction towards a more positive relationship with live music? A figure that shares family values and the importance of grounding might be the answer. There has got to be some all-knowing upbeat individual that knows where to enjoy music that does not require a post-binge sense of shame for kicking responsibilities to the curb in order to experience that one night of euphoric, attention consumption of music; the paralysis of decision.

    Marco Benevento – photo by Em Walis

    This Way!

    Cue Marco Benevento: artist, musician, family man and Hudson Valley resident arriving like cavalry to the rescue on Saturday, June 18. His inaugural “Follow The Arrow” [FTA] festival could not have been more aptly named. Meaning in the name dives far beyond the venue being located at Accord’s Arrowood Farms. Those that followed the arrow were guided to an oasis filled with reminders of all that is valued.

    follow the arrow accord
    Hudson Valley Kid – photo by Em Walis

    Arrowood Farms provided a pseudo-lagoon in the form of a beautiful field filled with delicious beverages brewed and distilled on site. Attendees wearing merchandise featuring geese and goats blended perfectly with the actual chicken coup to the left of the stage quite well. Despite the production of intoxicants, the survival instinct never kicked in that anyone was behaving out of line or taking things too far. One stage, one corral. Security presented with an upbeat, passionate attitude without sacrificing professionalism or sense of safety provided. This presence combined with the ability to see the entire production within one field of view allowed for families to attend with young kids worry-free.

    Hudson Valley Serenity

    The weather happened to fall on what is jokingly referred to as one of the four days in the year where the Hudson Valley is the best place on earth to enjoy a day outside.

    follow the arrow accord
    Karina’s hair moving in rhythm with the trees – photo by Em Walis

    Karina Rykman brought the energy to the point where it seemed the breeze-swept trees behind the stage rocked out as hard as the crowd.

    Cheers for the sun – photo by Em Walis

    Dark clouds and afternoon sun mesmerizingly dipped in and out of the crowd at rhythms mimicking the swaying upbeat ambiance pulsing from the stage with Antibalas.

    follow the arrow accord
    Sunset bubbles – photo by Em Walis

    Nature’s light show built up to a colorful golden sunset during Marco’s set. Illuminated bubbles glowed as they floated gently during their precious and short lifespan. These micro crystal balls provided a reminder of how delicate these precious moments are, and those we experience them with can be.

    follow the arrow accord
    Coat game strong – photo by Em Walis

    Royal Potato Family

    The well-established culture surrounding FTA and the Royal Potato Family (RPF) record label lived in the details. Expressive up-cycled fashions worn; accessorized by jewelry that held a story. Excellent coats appeared as the temperatures dropped.

    follow the arrow accord
    Family values by Em Walis

    The Benevento family band hosted three generations. While The Slip played, the drummers son could be seen with drumsticks standing behind his dad, rocking out. Most importantly, as the day progressed, chosen family members made appearances on stage, as well as converged in the crowd.

    Hudson Valley Kids Pt. 2 – photo by Em Walis

    Quintessential “Hudson Valley kids” held a space in such a way that can only exist when New York City influences a worldview , outlook and attitude earlier than most. The atmosphere was family friendly without sacrifice of artistry or musicality. FTA was a place to celebrate values and emphasize the importance of self expression for generations to come.

    Happy to support by Em Walis

    Joyful Tokens

    Merchandise sold included records, CDs, cassette tapes. Shirts screen printed and produced at home by Marco’s wife were the big hit. The only top obviously showing Marco’s name is one that started boldly, “Who The Fuck Is Marco Benevento?” This spoke to the low key tip of the hat that will occur out in the world between those that know. In true pseudo-sibling satirical spirit, harpist Mikaela Davis proudly displayed her “Who the Pluck is Mikaela Davis?” shirt right next to Marco’s after her beautiful set entranced us all.

    One for my head – photo by Em Walis

    The love and support not only felt, but shown by attendees spoke volumes for the relationship RPF has with those involved. The merchandise was reasonably priced and attendees were cleaning house by acquiring three and four shirts at a time, returning for more later and after the show being sure to leave with a stack of records. It was clear that everyone not only wanted to support, but celebrate.

    A little helop from friends – photo by Em Walis

    Arrow Explorations

    Target identified. Aim set. Redirecting an arrow after it has been released would be a tall order. Non-negotiable direction. The relief that comes when deliberation ends and movement begins. Occasionally presenting as a cairn or colored dot on trees and stones, arrows act as trail markers and remind us that we are on the correct path. Arrows scribbled on top of class notes or in books provide emphasis on the important and worthy to be logged as memory. When arrows appear, a sense of calm washes over because scrutiny and sifting of all information can be skipped, time saved and getting to the point of it all arrives quickly.

    Moments in time by Em Walis

    Bubbles Filled With A Moment In Time

    Arguably, and in true RPF spirit, the bubble machine was the ultimate target of the arrow Marco had us follow. To take a moment and appreciate the child-like joy that emerged in attendees of all ages from such a simple sphere held the power to make all of the distress experienced over the last segment in time disappear with a single pop.

    Bring the light by Em Walis

    Marco Benevento Setlist: At The Show, Dropkick, At The End Or The Beginning, Send It On A Rocket, Intro: The Story Of Fred Short ->Seven Twenty Two ->Walking With Tyrone, The Shape I’m In (The Band), Such A Night, The Real Morning Party, Right Down The Line, The Catskills Stole My Heart, Limbs Of A Pine

    For More Check out Marco’s new album Benevento.

  • monarch. Release Heartfelt Debut EP “Sweet Little Things”

    The Hudson Valley based band, monarch. release their EP, Sweet Little Things, on June 17, a stunning debut with five tracks sure to get you dancing. The project comes after the release of the single “Faces In Crowded Places,” in November 2021.

    Comprised of Sarah Hartstein (vocals), Johnny Lu (drums), Nick Pappalardo (guitar), and Jesse Hartstein (bass), the band pulls inspiration from multiple genres and influential artists, like Fiona Apple and Amy Winehouse. The group began Sweet Little Things in the summer of 2021 and is currently touring throughout New York.

    monarch. originally formed in 2017 and consisted of just Sarah Hartstein and Lu. As the duo started writing this most recent project, they knew they needed more, and the band’s debut EP represents that full evolution.

    The EP is sonically cohesive without being repetitive, as monarch. explores a range of tempos, instruments, and melodies. Themes of love, passion, growing up, and letting go of hardships make up the EP, the lyrics honest and relatable for any listener.

    With a strong start on vocals from Sarah Hartstein on “Morning Coffee,” the opening track on the EP grabs your attention and then keeps it with catchy lyrics and upbeat instrumentation.  The introspective lyrics over a bubbly tune make it easy to get swept away in the music.

    The title track slows things down, at first.  Soulful, the track drives the group to explore their blues roots and encompasses the overall theme for the project. Guitarist Pappalardo shines with an engaging solo over an energetic drum track. 

    Overall, the EP showcases the immense growth of the band, expanding on their talents and experimentation in their first single, “Faces In Crowded Places.” Energy and spirit intertwine throughout the EP, making it a joy to listen to. 

    The last of the five tracks, “Naive,” reminds audiences we can easily get lost in harmful relationships. Heart-wrenching lyrics from Hartstein pull you in, and intense instrumentation builds up for a passionate ending to the debut EP. 

    monarch. shines on this project, and certainly warrants one dancing around screaming the lyrics on repeat. The band has shows across NY in the promotion of their newest project, with dates well into the summer.

    Key Tracks: Morning Coffee, Sweet Little Things, Naive

    @monarchtheband.ny

    POV: you’re listening to our song NAIVE which will be on our debut EP “Sweet Little Things” being released in one week from today 🥺💗 #sweetlittlethings monarch. #music #musiciansoftiktok #hudsonvalleyband #hudsonvalleynightlife #nycband #nycmusician #brooklyn #newyork #newyorkcity

    ♬ Naïve – monarch.
  • Woodsist Festival Announces 2022 Dates/Lineup

    Woodsist Records has announced the return of its festival for 2022 at Arrowood Farms in the Hudson Valley town of Accord, with 15 acts across two days from September 24 to 25.

    In addition to music played between two different stages during the weekend, the event will also include craft beer along with food from local Hudson Valley-based vendors. The gates open at noon both days, with activities closing 9:30 PM on the 24th and 9 PM on the 25th.

    Promotional poster for the Woodsist festival. (art credit: Gabe Schneider)

    Prominent acts from the 24th include Ohio indie rock icons Guided By Voices and Brooklyn folk band Woods, which is led by Jeremy Earl, the man behind Woodsist. The day also features Les Filles De Illighadad, Myriam Gendron, Pachyman, The Reds, Pinks, and Purples, as well as DJ Jocelyn Romo.

    Bigger names from the 25th include Waxahatchee, the project of indie artist Katie Crutchfield, and The Sun Ra Arkestra, the eponymous longtime band of the late experimental jazz artist which has been active for over 60 years. Other performers of the day are Medeski & Martin, Laraaji, Mind Maintenance, Mary Lattimore, Bonny Doon, and Tubby’s DJs.

    Information regarding tickets, parking, and more for the June 2022 event can be found on the Woodsist Festival website.

  • Spaghetti Eastern Music Shifts to Singer-Songwriter Mode on “I Believe in Love”

    Spaghetti Eastern Music, the solo venture of genre-fluid NYC/Hudson Valley guitarist Sal Cataldi has released “I Believe in Love, a stripped-down, all-acoustic ballad previewing the spare narrative style of his forthcoming song-centric EP, Turpentine Valentines.

    i believe in love

    With “I Believe in Love,” Cataldi serves up his hard-earned take on romance: the pain it can cause and the beauty too… if one is willing to throw his/her heart back into the ring for another go-round after heartbreak.  Two crystalline acoustic guitars and a solitary voice carry the tune whose narrative arc is reflected in the below, the first and concluding verses of the song:

    I believe in love but not everlasting love
    Life has shown me, it’s just a temporary disease
    Attacks the heart, breaks it in two and does something funny to your knees
    But I believe in love…
    I believe in love but not everlasting love
    If you can accept these terms, maybe we can get the disease
    Warms the heart and make its whole
    At least that’s what life has shown me so
    I believe in love

    “I Believe in Love”

    The song comes with a counterpart video featuring some of the great screen kisses from the classic film era, seen below. It was recorded and engineered by Cataldi at his studios in Woodstock and a floating studio aboard his Houseboat Garlic Knot in Port Washington.

    Critics from The New York Times, Time Out New York and Huffington Post have praised Cataldi’s debut album under the Spaghetti Eastern Music moniker, Sketches of Spam.  This 16-track, 69-minute surf through a slew of contrasting moods, with largely guitar-driven instrumentals inspired by the acid funk of 70’s Miles, Krautrock, Ennio Morricone’s Spaghetti Western movie soundtracks as well as Fripp & Eno ambience and the sound of ECM guitar god Terje Rypdal.

    These contrasted bare-bones acoustic vocal songs are reflective of the influence of John Martyn and Nick Drake, the mode showcased on his latest single. The discs’ acoustic titles included originals like “Wild One” and “Mama Called,” an instrumental cover of the Zappa rarity “Sleep Dirt” and a DADGAD-tuned, ballad paced reinvention of the Beatles’ “Ticket to Ride.”

    I have never understood the desire to shove musicians into tiny boxes, the belief that you only get to be and play in one genre. I love all sorts of styles – straight-ahead and avant jazz, post-rock, prog, metal and funk, world music, electronic experimentation and, yes, quiet acoustic ballads like my new single, something that is definitely a 360-turn from my recent releases.

    I love it all equally, listen to it all and want to perform it all – and that’s what I do with Spaghetti Eastern Music, at gigs and on recordings.  That might make it hard for the algorithms that govern everything in the music world these days, so I guess my genre is best stated as iPod Shuffle.

    Sal Cataldi – Spaghetti Eastern Music

    The new single is available as of June 7 as a digital download via Spaghetti Eastern Music’s Bandcamp site, iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, CD Baby and other online stores.  

  • Bardavon Announces Shows for 2022 Juneteenth Celebration

    Bardavon will present performances from Resistance Revival Chorus and Imani Perry to celebrate Juneteenth at the Old Dutch Church in Kingston and the Bardavon Opera House in Poughkeepsie.

    The Old Dutch Church was often referred to as “The Cathedral of Kingston,” which was originally built in 1660 in the colony of New Netherland. While the Bardavon 1869 Opera Houseowns and operates a 944-seat historic theater in Poughkeepsie and it is operated by the Bardavon.

    The Resistance Revival Chorus — June 18th at 7pm at Old Dutch Church, Kingston

    The Resistance Revival Chorus

    The Resistance Revival Chorus (RRC) is a collective of more than 60 womxn, and non-binary singers who enjoy singing and express themselves with the music. The singers are in various occupations including not only professional singer and Broadway performers, but also political activists, educators, and more. They aim to be intersectional in our feminism and reveal that all social justice issues overlap heavily with woman’s issues. Tickets start at $20

    Imani Perry — June 19th at 5pm at Bardavon

    Imani Perry

    The Princeton University African American Studies professor and author Imani Perry will speak on her new book South to America, followed by a Q & A and a book signing in the Bardavon lobby. She also wrote 6 other books, including Looking for Lorraine: The Radiant and Radical Life of Lorraine Hansberry, May We Forever Stand: A History of the Black National Anthem, Breathe: A Letter to My Sons, etc., which are renowned for the prizes they won.

    Free tickets available at Poughkeepsie’s Adriance Memorial Library & Bardavon or UPAC box offices.

  • Bard SummerScape 2022 Performance Lineup Announced

    Bard SummerScape returns in 2022 summer with eight weeks of live music, opera, dance, and theater at the Fisher Center, located on the campus of Bard College in New York’s Hudson Valley, from June 23 to August 14. Fisher Center supports artists, students, and audiences in the development and examination of artistic ideas, offering perspectives from the past and present, as well as visions of the future.

    Highlights include the 32nd Bard Music Festival, Rachmaninoff and His World; a new production of Strauss’s The Silent Woman, directed by Christian Räth; a World Premiere commission from Pam Tanowitz and David Lang; a new adaptation of Molière’s Dom Juan, directed by Ashley Tata; and more.

    Theater

    Molière’s Dom Juan

    SummerScape Commission/World Premiere Production
    New translation by Sylvaine Guyot and Gideon Lester
    Conceived and directed by Ashley Tata

    Amelia Workman (Dom Juan). Photo by Maria Baranova

    A glittering and ferocious study of lust and power, Molière’s portrait of the libertine Dom Juan combines slapstick comedy with the taut psychology of a thriller. In this bold new adaptation, director Ashley Tata (whose digital production of Mad Forest astonished Fisher Center audiences in 2020) sets the story in a fantasy world where 17th-century France meets late-1970s America, raising pertinent questions about class, faith and gender. Casting both the titular libertine and her sidekick as women, Tata’s production literally recasts this subversive and brilliant tragicomedy in a contemporary light—celebrating Molière’s 400th anniversary with a Dom Juan for the 21st century. Commissioned as the opening production of Bard SummerScape 2022, and marking this year’s global celebrations of Molière’s 400th anniversary, Dom Juan makes its world premiere June 23–July 17. 

    Dance

    Song of Songs

    SummerScape Commission/World Premiere
    Choreography by Pam Tanowitz
    Music by David Lang


    Spiritual and erotic, playful and mysterious, The biblical Song of Songs (also known as The Song of Solomon ) is perhaps the greatest of all love poems—a hymn of yearning, steeped in images from the natural world. The poem’s unforgettable images of the natural world have inspired artists and lovers for millennia – indeed some scholars argue that the entire tradition of Western love poetry springs from its glorious verses. Now, composer David Lang and Fisher Center resident choreographer Pam Tanowitz join forces to create a major new dance-theater performance based on this radiantly beautiful text. A collage of sound, song, and movement that reimagines ancient rituals of love and courtship, Song of Songs holds the sacred and profane threads of the Song in perfect balance. The performance is making its world premiere July 1-3 as part of the 2022 edition of the Bard SummerScape festival.

    “Tanowitz has long been one of the most formally brilliant choreographers around.”

    New York Times

    Opera

    The Silent Woman (Die Schweigsame Frau)

    By Richard Strauss
    The American Symphony Orchestra
    Conducted by Leon Botstein
    Directed and designed by Christian Räth

    Jana McIntyre (Aminta) and David Portillo (Henry). Photo by Maria Baranova

    Considered Strauss’s only true comic opera, this rarely performed work is by turns elegiac and incisively witty. The brilliantly written libretto by Stefan Zweig (loosely based on the Renaissance play by Ben Jonson) features a madcap cast of characters in a variety of guises. The imaginative and colorful production by Christian Räth (Das Wunder der Heliane, SummerScape 2019) featuring a stellar group of performers will be sung in German with English supertitles.  Räth’s colorful, fast-paced new staging runs for five performances on July 22, 24, 27, 29 and 31.

    a stentorian bass … with impressive focus, carrying power and quiet charisma

    New York Times

    Bard Music Festival

    Rachmaninoff and His World

    The Bard Music Festival returns for its 32nd season with an exploration of the life and work of Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), perhaps the last great exponent of Russian Romanticism, who nevertheless embodied many contradictions.

    Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Rachmaninoff and His World explores such themes as composition during the Cold War, virtuoso pianists and their public, and America’s ongoing love affair with Rachmaninoff’s music.

    An edifying mix of academic and aesthetic delights.

    – New Yorker

    Through the prism of his life and career, Weekend One traces the complex course the composer navigated between Russia and Modernity (Aug 5–7), and Weekend Two investigates his relationship with the New Worlds he went on to conquer (Aug 12–14).

    Spiegeltent

    After a two-year absence, a magnificent Spiegeltent returns to SummerScape for a celebratory 15th year. Highlights include your first chance to experience new performances from Ms. Lisa Fischer and The Badass & Beautiful Band; the return of Black Roots Summer, a celebration of Black roots music curated by Michael Mwenso and Jono Gasparro; and returning favorites Mx. Justin Vivian Bond, Nona Hendryx, Susanne Bartsch, and more!

    Gala: “Summer Enchanted Evening”

    On July 16, Bard’s Montgomery Place Campus plays host to “Summer Enchanted Evening,” a special gala celebration to benefit the Fisher Center and Bard Music Festival.

    SummerScape tickets

    Tickets for mainstage events go on sale on March 9, starting at $25, and Spiegeltent tickets go on sale in April. For complete information regarding tickets, series discounts and more, visit fishercenter.bard.edu. or call Bard’s box office at (845) 758-7900.

    Schedule

    Molière’s Dom Juan

    June 23–25, & 30, July 1, 3, 7–9, 14, & 15 at 7:30 pm

    July 2 at 7pm; June 26, 29, July 6, 9, 10, 13, 16, & 17 at 2pm

    July 2 at 1pm

    opening night reception for members on July 2

    post-performance conversation on July 10

    pre-performance conversation on July 13. 

    Songs of Songs

    July 1 at 8:00 pm

    July 2 at 5:00 pm

    July 3 at 2:00 pm

    The Silent Woman

    July 22 at 6:30 pm

    July 24 at 2:00 pm

    July 27 at 2:00 pm

    July 29 at 4:00 pm

    July 31 at 2:00 pm

    32nd Bard Music Festival: “Rachmaninoff and His World”

    Weekend One
    Russia and Modernity • August 5–7
    Weekend Two
    New Worlds • August 12–14

    Spiegeltent

    June 24 – August 6

    Summer Enchanted Evening

    July 16 at 6:00 pm

    Bard Music Festival Opening Night Social

    August 5 at 5:30 pm

  • Newburgh Illuminated 8 Annual Festival Announced

    Newburgh Illuminated in Newburgh, NY, has announced its 8 annual festival happening on June 4. Named Hudson Valley Magazine’s “Best of Hudson Valley,” the festival has grown from a few thousand to over 40,000 proud Newburghers and delighted visitors.

    Newburgh illuminated

    The Newburgh Illuminated Festival is a free event from Noon-10 P.M. that celebrates the best of Music, Art, Fashion, Drama, and Dance in the Hudson Valley. This year the festival will feature five stages with over 30 street performers, more than 40 bands, 50 dance troupes, and 175 vendors.

    Notably, singer-songwriter Rachael Sage will be performing at the festival. She is a 6-time Independent Music Awards winner who has released over a dozen albums over her career. Her latest album Character charted high on the Billboard charts. At the festival, she will also be celebrating the release of her new Revelation Ground maxi-single and video.

    Newburgh is a town with less than 30,000 people, and has a very bad economy, with the median household income estimated to be less than $40,000. However, the festival has boosted the economy and has allowed five new restaurants, four new clothing boutiques, a bicycle museum, a French
    bakery, a new hair salon, and more to all be open.

    The Newburgh Illuminated Festival will be happening on June 4 on Liberty Street in Newburgh, NY, and there will be a lot of free different activities, food, and live music to enjoy.