Free Concert

Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Free Concert

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall

Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Free Concert

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall


Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Mozart & Schumann’s Spring Symphony

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall

Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Mozart & Schumann’s Spring Symphony

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall


Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Mozart & Schumann’s Spring Symphony

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall

Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Mozart & Schumann’s Spring Symphony

  • March 19 at 7 PM
  • Hudson Hall


Artists

Andrés Rivas conductor

Tickets

 

FREE
Advance RSVP suggested
Health & Safety Requirements

Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson


Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


Shostakovich & Dawson



Artists

Leon Botstein conductor

Tickets

  • Live in-person Tickets start at $25
  • Saturday evening livestream – Pay what you wish

5-Concert series 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Health & Safety Requirements


TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Bram Margoles violin
Sean Flynn viola
Katelyn Hoag viola
Leanna Ginsburg flute
Guillermo García Cuesta trumpet

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Bram Margoles violin
Sean Flynn viola
Katelyn Hoag viola
Leanna Ginsburg flute
Guillermo García Cuesta trumpet

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Bram Margoles violin
Sean Flynn viola
Katelyn Hoag viola
Leanna Ginsburg flute
Guillermo García Cuesta trumpet

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Bram Margoles violin
Sean Flynn viola
Katelyn Hoag viola
Leanna Ginsburg flute
Guillermo García Cuesta trumpet

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Live In-Person tickets start at $15
  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.


BUY TICKETS
Create Your Own Series
Feb 8 Tickets

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.


BUY TICKETS
Create Your Own Series
Feb 8 Tickets

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

TEMPLATE


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.



Click here


Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.



Click here


Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall



Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall




Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Crosscurrents: Salon and Concert Hall


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Event Template

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Event Template


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Event Template

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Event Template


Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

Event Template

Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Rebecca Miller

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Rebecca Miller

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Rebecca Miller

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Artists

Rebecca Miller

Tickets

  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream Tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Tickets

  • Livestream tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Tickets

  • Livestream tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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  • Livestream tickets $10

In-person tickets: Due to changing health and safety guidelines, the Fisher Center’s ticketing process begins with a waitlist sign-up this season.

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Presented by the Bard Music Festival

 

Salons were a haven for the Parisian avant-garde, especially those of Boulanger’s colorful friend and patron, the sewing machine heiress Winnaretta Singer, Princesse Edmond de Polignac. It was there that many ensemble pieces first came to life, including Lipatti’s neo-Baroque Concertino.

 

Boulanger also led the first performance of Stravinsky’s “Dumbarton Oaks” Concerto, having instigated its creation; it was her idea for Washington’s Bliss family to commission the composer to write a Brandenburg-inspired piece for their private salon at the D.C. estate that gave the work its name.

 

Composed during the Nazi occupation of Paris and notable for the triumphant trumpet solo of its Finale, Honegger’s Second Symphony for Strings premiered at the Collegium Musicuum in Zurich.

Program

Program

Program

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

  • Livestream Tickets $10


The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

  • Livestream Tickets $10

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

  • Livestream Tickets $10

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The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

  • Livestream Tickets $10

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

  • Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano
  • Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks”
  • Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D
  • Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil
  • Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

  • Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano
  • Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks”
  • Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D
  • Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil
  • Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

  • Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano
  • Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks”
  • Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D
  • Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil
  • Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

  • Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano
  • Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks”
  • Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D
  • Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil
  • Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

BUY TICKETS

Saturday Tickets
Sunday Tickets

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Nadia Boulanger Three Pieces, for cello and piano

Concert Notes

Igor Stravinsky Concerto in E-flat, “Dumbarton Oaks” ​

Concert Notes

Arthur Honegger Symphony No. 2 in D ​

Concert Notes

Peggy Glanville-Hicks Prelude for a Pensive Pupil ​

Concert Notes

Dinu Lipatti Concertino in the Classical Style, Op. 3​

Concert Notes

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

Brief remarks by Joshua DePoint bass

Galina Ustvolskaya Symphonic Poem No. 1
U.S. Premiere

20 min

Brief remarks by Batmyagmar Erdenebat viola

Richard Strauss Four Songs, Op. 27
Paulina Swierczek soprano
Sung in German; English translation projected
13 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by Anita Tóth trumpet

Aaron Copland Symphony No. 3
42 min

The concert will last approximately 2 hours. All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Copland Symphony No. 3

The Bard Music Festival

The Bard Music Festival returns for its 31st season with an exploration of the life and work of Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), the pioneering Parisian pedagogue, composer, conductor, pianist, organist, and indomitable personality who shaped more than a generation of American musicians. Through a series of themed concert programs, lectures, and panel discussions, Nadia Boulanger and Her World pays tribute to one of the most important female figures in the history of classical music.

The festival will present examples of Boulanger’s own, little-known oeuvre alongside music by her teachers and mentors, including Gabriel FauréLouis Vierne and Charles Marie Widor; her Parisian contemporaries, like Claude DebussyOlivier MessiaenFrancis PoulencMaurice RavelErik Satie and expats George GershwinCole Porter and Igor Stravinsky; her male students, including Jean FrançaixAstor Piazzolla, and illustrious Americans Marc BlitzsteinElliott CarterAaron CoplandPhilip GlassWalter Piston and Virgil Thomson; her female students, like Marcelle de ManziarlyThea MusgraveJulia Perry and Louise Talma; other women composers, Germaine Taillefaire and Lili Boulanger, Nadia’s celebrated sister, among them; and some of the bygone composers whose music she vociferously championed, like MonteverdiBach and Brahms.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

32 min

Intermission

20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony
32 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony
32 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony
32 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad
70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony
32 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad
70 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

William L. Dawson Negro Folk Symphony

Shostakovich Symphony No. 7, Leningrad

William L. Dawson photo via Tuskegee University Archives

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee

Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlGEKYYxLm4

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nicOlryiZSw

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Lk2V6YOcIc

Photo by David DeNee


Program

The concert will last approximately 2 hours.

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds
30 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra
16 min

Intermission
20 min

Brief remarks by a TŌN musician

Robert Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring
32 min

All timings are approximate. Program and artists subject to change.

Sample the Music

Mozart Sinfonia concertante for Four Winds

Ernő Dohnányi Concertino for Harp & Chamber Orchestra

Schumann Symphony No. 1, Spring

Photo by David DeNee