The Roundtable

The 33rd Bard Music Festival: Vaughn Williams and His World

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Founded in 1990, the Bard Music Festival has established its unique identity in the classical concert field by presenting programs that, through performance and discussion, place selected works in the cultural and social context of the composer’s world.

This year’s festival – the 33rd – will present an exploration of the life and work of English composer, Ralph Vaughan Williams.

This coming weekend’s programs, August 4-6, are on the theme “Victorians, Edwardians, and Moderns.” Next week, August 10-13, the umbrella for the programming ends in a question mark: “The New Elizabethan Age?”

Ralph Vaughan Williams was one of the most innovative and creative figures in twentieth-century music, whose symphonies stand alongside those of Sibelius, Nielsen, Shostakovich, and Roussel.

Byron Adams is emeritus professor of musicology at the University of California, Riverside. He is an associate editor of the Musical Quarterly and lends his expertise to the Bard Music Festival as a consultant. He’s co-edited the companion book for this year’s festival, as well.

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Sarah has been a public radio producer for over fifteen years. She grew up in Saranac Lake, New York where she worked part-time at Pendragon Theatre all through high school and college. She graduated from UAlbany in 2006 with a BA in English and started at WAMC a few weeks later as a part-time board-op in the control room. Through a series of offered and seized opportunities she is now the Senior Contributing Producer of The Roundtable and Producer of The Book Show. During the main thrust of the Covid-19 pandemic shut-down, Sarah hosted a live Instagram interview program "A Face for Radio Video Series." On it, Sarah spoke with actors, musicians, comedians, and artists about the creative activities they were accomplishing and/or missing.