Best classical music festivals in America
Gilmore Piano Festival
Kalamazoo, MI, 24 April – 15 May
Tel. +2 269 342 1166
Web: www.thegilmore.org
Biennial Gilmore sees things in black and white – the keys of the piano, that is! No one could accuse it of narrow-mindedness, though. Igor Levit, Daniil Trifonov and Beatrice Rana might be soaking up Michigan’s hospitality, but the opening night goes to jazz legend Herbie Hancock. Chopin stalks recitals by Rana, Jan Lisiecki and Emanuel Ax; concertos enlist four guest orchestras; and the finale stages a 3:2:1 countdown: Bach’s Triple Concerto BWV1063, Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos, and Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 1 performed by Ingrid Fliter.
Long Play Festival
Brooklyn, NYC, 29 April – 1 May
Tel. +1 718 852 7755
Web: www.bangonacan.org
From Loud Weekend to summer’s two-week festival at MASS MoCA, there’s no stopping the irrepressible Bang on a Can – they introduced themselves back in 1987 with an epic day-long Marathon, after all. Long Play promises ‘more kinds of musicians playing more kinds of music’. The music straddles John Luther Adams and Stockhausen, Brian Eno, Captain Beefheart and Ornette Coleman. Performers include the Attacca Quartet, Noise Saxophone Quartet and, of course, the Bang on a Can All Stars.
May Festival
Cincinnati, OH, 20-28 May
Tel. +1 513 381 3300
Web: www.mayfestival.com
Next year notches up the 150th anniversary of the very first May Festival, and the Festival Chorus remains key to what is styled as the longest continuously running choral festival in the Western Hemisphere. Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 crowns a programme bestriding the Americas, Katharina Wincor makes her festival debut conducting Bernstein’s Candide, and Juanjo Mena heads south to conduct Ginastera, Villa-Lobos and Estévez. To open, it’s beginning to feel a lot like Christmas as John Adams spearheads his Nativity oratorio El Niño.
Spoleto Festival USA
Charleston, SC, 27 May – 12 June
Tel. +1 843 579 3100
Web: www.spoletousa.org
Composer Gian Carlo Menotti knew what he was doing when he alighted on Charleston in which to establish a US answer to his Italian festival in Spoleto. Its old-world elegance delights, especially at festival time. Menotti the opera composer would doubtless cheer on the world premiere of Omar by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, a slave tale close to home; and, in the Gaillard Center, Puccini’s La bohème will be re-imagined. Ligeti’s Piano Concerto is framed by the US premieres of works by Edmund Thornton Jenkins and Anna Thorvaldsdottir; and the Spoleto Festival USA Chorus takes an inaugural bow with works by Bruckner, Brahms and Britten.
Ravinia Festival
Highland Park, IL,
June – September (dates TBC)
Tel. +1 847 266 5100
Web: www.ravinia.org
Marin Alsop returns to Ravinia as chief conductor at the head of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. And she’s bringing a compact ‘Breaking Barriers’ Festival this year celebrating women conductors – as well as music such as Michael Daugherty’s Time Machine for three conductors and Bernstein’s ‘Kaddish’ Symphony. Elsewhere, Alsop conducts Beethoven, Richard Strauss, and, featuring soprano Yeree Suh and baritone Matthias Goerne, Brahms’s German Requiem.
Come As You Are
Atlanta, Georgia, 2-19 June
Tel. +1 404 881 8801
Web: www.atlantaopera.org
Whoever said opera is a museum culture hasn’t told Atlanta Opera. In the run up to its Come As You Are festival, Mason Bates’s The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs lifts the lid on the founder of Apple. And in the Big Tent, bolstered by panel discussions and talkbacks, the musical Cabaret is interleaved with Laura Kaminsky’s transgender chamber opera As One. Baritone Lucia Lucas is ‘Hannah Before’, and mezzo-soprano Blythe Gaissert is ‘Hannah After’.
Ojai Festival
Ojai, CA, 9-12 June
Tel. +1 805 646 2094
Web: www.ojaifestival.org
John Adams oversaw last year’s 75th- anniversary edition – relocated to September. And AMOC (American Modern Opera Company) is in the driving seat as June normality returns. Not that ‘normality’ is the word where the ever-dynamic, re-inventing Ojai is concerned. Newly composed works include Family Dinner by Matthew Aucoin and the echoing of tenses, a specially commissioned song cycle by Anthony Cheung. Soprano Julia Bullock stars in a semi-staging of Messiaen’s Harawi, and early music ensemble Ruckus reinvigorates the Baroque.
Music Academy of the West
Santa Barbara, CA, 13 June – 6 August
Tel. +1 805-969-4726
Web: www.musicacademy.org
Otto Klemperer and Lotte Lehmann were early supporters of a summer school and festival that’s in celebratory mood. For its 75th birthday, Santa Barbara parties in style with a ‘Welcome Concert’ in the Bowl, not to mention a gala featuring three-times Grammy Award winner, mezzo Isabel Leonard. Opera returns to the Festival with Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin; and among those California dreamin’ are conductors Stéphane Denève and Hannu Lintu, plus composers Nico Muhly and Tom Cipullo.
Tanglewood
Lenox, MA, 17 June – 4 September
Tel. +1 617 266 1200
Web: www.tanglewood.org
Tanglewood’s backstory can be traced in the names of its concert halls, from the orchestral focus of the Koussevitzky Music Shed to Seiji Ozawa Hall, award-winning home to much of the summer’s chamber music. Ringo Starr fires the starting pistol and, under Andris Nelsons, the Boston Symphony’s opening night acknowledges a towering Tanglewood stalwart – Leonard Bernstein. Among eight world and US premieres are works by Helen Grime and Caroline Shaw, Mozart’s Don Giovanni issues a deadly dinner invitation and pianist Emanuel Ax and friends pursue ‘Pathways from Prague’ while Garrick Ohlsson readies himself for the complete piano works of Brahms.
Oregon Bach Festival
Eugene, OR, 17 June – 5 July
Tel. +1 541 346 5666
Web: www.oregonbachfestival.org
There’s a gladiatorial frisson as OBF returns to live performance. Three contenders are in the frame for the artistic directorship, and each will conduct a major work and be put through their chamber music paces. The B minor Mass and the John and Matthew Passions are the Bachian pillars anchoring the likes of The Musical Offering directed by Monica Huggett. But Bach isn’t the only composer in town. Paola Prestini’s Let Me See The Sun receives its premiere; Tyler Duncan sings Schubert’s Winterreise; and Akoka ‘reframes’ Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time.
Caramoor Festival
Katonah, NY, 18 June – 7 August
Tel. +1 914 232 1252
Web: www.caramoor.org
From intimate beginnings, Caramoor has grown, its ambitions consummated in the creation of an airy Venetian Theater and atmospheric Spanish Courtyard to complement the Music Room’s opulence. Summer ’22 should go with a bang as Michael Gordon’s site-specific Field of Vision for 40 percussionists is premiered. Yo-Yo Ma and The Knights signal the off; soprano Dawn Upshaw and the Brentano Quartet collaborate on Melinda Wagner’s monodrama Dido Reimagined; and Marc-André Hamelin ends the season royally with Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Concerto.
Bard Summerscape and Music Festival
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, 23 June – 14 August
Tel. +1 845 758 7900
Web: www.fishercenter.bard.edu
Sheltering beneath Summerscape’s cross-disciplinary umbrella, the 32nd Bard Music Festival is devoted to ‘Rachmaninov and his World’. The ‘Whose century?’ concert provocatively sets Piano Concerto No. 4 in the context of Respighi, Grofé, Shostakovich and Messiaen; and the Vespers should apply balm to the soul. Richard Strauss’s comic opera Die schweigsame Frau, conducted by Leon Botstein and directed by Christian Räth, lightens the mood, while Molière’s 400th is not forgotten.
Bravo! Vail
Vail, CO, 23 June – 4 August
Tel. +1 877 812 5700
Web: www.bravovail.org
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra returns to augment the reigning Bravo triumvirate of the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Dallas Symphony. Six weeks of full-on music making follows, and a new commissioning project yields three world premieres to add to the tally of eight local premieres. Paired with wine-tasting, ‘classically uncorked’ toasts ear-opening juxtapositions, while from New York hails Mahler’s ‘Resurrection’ Symphony; Philadelphia humours Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben; and choice chamber music implicates artists-in-residence Hélène Grimaud and Nikolaj Szeps-Znaider.
Aspen Music Festival and School
Aspen, CO, 30 June – 21 August
Tel. +1 970 925 3254
Web: www.aspenmusicfestival.com
It’s just as well that Aspen stakes a claim on the Benedict Music Tent, intimate Joan and Irving Harris Concert Hall and the Wheeler Opera House. With over 400 concerts spread across eight weeks, it doesn’t let the grass grow under its feet. Renée Fleming sings Kevin Puts’s The Brightness of Light; Bryn Terfel heads the cast for Verdi’s Falstaff; and Scriabin’s Poem of Ecstasy preoccupies Vasily Petrenko. To end, there’s a sacred showstopper like no other: conceived for a huge orchestra corralling four offstage brass groups, Berlioz’s Grande Messe des morts is conducted by Robert Spano.
Colorado Music Festival
Boulder, CO, 30 June – 7 August
Tel. +1 303 440 7666
Web: www.coloradomusicfestival.org
Hunkering down in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, the Chautauqua Auditorium has been welcoming visitors for well over a century. In summertime it convenes members of over 40 national and international orchestras, who assemble under conductor Peter Oundjian for a festival that matches its spectacular surrounds. John Adams is this year’s composer-in-residence and his Beethoven-inflected Absolute Jest for string quartet and orchestra falls to artists-in-residence the Takács Quartet on the first night. Jan Lisiecki undertakes a complete Beethoven piano concerto cycle, and the Colorado premiere of a fanfare by Wynton Marsalis heralds Mahler’s Symphony No. 5.
Santa Fe Opera
Santa Fe, NM, 1 July – 27 August
Tel. +1 505 986 5900
Web: www.santafeopera.org
Love is in the air, and with fatal consequences as a new production of Carmen launches another summer of opera under a New Mexico sky. Love can contrive a happy ending, however, or so insists Rossini’s The Barber of Seville; and there’s guile aplenty in Verdi’s Falstaff, directed by David McVicar. But love is writ large and tragically as Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde makes its belated House debut. Simon O’Neill and Tamara Wilson take the title rolls and the staging, conducted by James Gaffigan, is by Zack Winokur and Lisenka Heijboer Castañón. Completing the line-up is Madam Butterfly, Huang Ruo’s operatic take on David Henry Hwang’s Tony Award-winning play.
Maverick Concerts
Woodstock, NY, 1 July – 11 September
Tel. +1 845 241 7721
Set in dappled woodland, Maverick’s iconic barnlike concert hall has been dispensing chamber music (and, latterly, jazz and contemporary music) for over a century. The name isn’t worn lightly. This year’s theme is ‘Freedom and Joy’, making bedfellows of Duke Ellington and Haydn. ‘Voices of colour’ is also part of the characteristically eclectic remit. The Nexus ensemble celebrates its half-century, and to a roster of string quartets – including the Escher, Harlem and Borromeos – are added oud virtuoso Simon Shaheen and jazzers including Jerome Jennings. And César Franck’s bicentenary does not go unremarked.
Blossom Music Festival
Cuyahoga Falls, OH, 2 July – 4 September
Tel. +1 216 231 1111
Web: www.clevelandorchestra.com
Since 1968, the Cleveland Orchestra has spent summers in the bucolic Cuyahoga National Park, opening the Blossom Pavilion with Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. The Ninth returns, conducted by Jahja Ling, as the Festival nears its midpoint. Copland’s Symphony No. 3 and John Adams’s Harmonielehre share the season with the Paul Simon Songbook and a salute to ‘Broadway Legends’, while visiting pianists namecheck Daniil Trifonov, Cédric Tiberghien and Benjamin Grosvenor.
Grand Teton Music Festival
Jackson Hole, WY, 3 July – 27 August
Tel. +1 307 733 3050
Web: www.gtmf.org
‘Opera is one of my greatest passions’ declares artistic director Donald Runnicles. No surprise there. Since 2007 he’s been Generalmusikdirektor of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, and Puccini’s La bohème inaugurates an ongoing opera initiative – a new venture for the Festival Orchestra which announces itself
with Beethoven’s five piano concertos performed by Garrick Ohlsson over two nights. Mahler’s ‘Resurrection’ Symphony and the US premiere of Detlev Glanert’s Idyllium complement chamber music from the St Lawrence Quartet and a new piano recital series.
Glimmerglass Festival
Cooperstown, NY, 8 Jul – 21 August
Tel. +1 607 547 2255
Web: www.glimmerglass.org
Glimmerglass took to its lawns to maintain an al fresco season last summer, but this year the Alice Busch Opera Theater opens its lakeside doors once more. Artistic director Francesca Zambella stands down when the final curtain falls, but she takes her leave with a new production of The Sound of Music; and, proving there’s life in the old pasticcio genre yet, she co-directs the premiere of Tenor Overboard, a frothy confection stuffed with some of Rossini’s best tunes. Briana Hunter stars in a new staging of Carmen.
Music@Menlo
Menlo, CA, 14 July – 6 August
Tel. +1 650 330 2030
Web: www.musicatmenlo.org
Founded by cellist David Finckel and pianist Wu Han, Menlo has taken its mission to explain exuberantly to heart for 20 summers now, and the anniversary edition trains its forensic expertise on Haydn. Wrapped around a core concert programme that makes ‘Hunt’ Quartet conspirators of Haydn and Widmann, and tackles humour in Ives, Schnittke and Shostakovich, the festival’s signature Overture Concerts, Encounter Lectures, Carte Blanche recitals and morning sessions establish an illuminating backstory.
Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music
Santa Cruz, CA, 24 July – 7 August
Tel. +1 831 426 6966
After nearly a quarter of a century at the helm as artistic director, Marin Alsop passed the baton to Christian Mãcelaru in 2016, and Cabrillo remains a byword for its vibrant championship of the new (John Adams and Copland are past occupants of the hot seat). 2022’s premieres includes works by Jake Heggie, Stacy Garrop and Ivan Enrique Rodriguez; guests include mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke, violinist Benjamin Beilman and vocal ensemble Roomful of Teeth.
Sun Valley Music Festival
Sun Valley, ID, 24 July – 18 August
Tel. +1 208 622 5607
How better to end a festival inhabiting Idaho’s answer to the Alps than Strauss’s Alpine Symphony? And having assembled the requisite horn players, why wouldn’t you round up 16 of them for a chamber concert ‘Hornucopia’! Leila Josefowicz plays Stravinsky’s Violin Concerto; Daniil Trifonov, the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2; and, paired with Ravel’s complete Mother Goose ballet, Nicholas Phan sings Britten’s Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings.
Best Canadian classical music festivals
Domaine Forget International Festival
Sainte-Irénée, Québec, Canada, 25 June – 20 August
Tel. +1 418 452 8111
For nearly half a century, festival goers have been making their way to the heights of Saint-Irénée, overlooking the St Lawrence River. Some 12,000 visitors flocked last year, attracted by the open vistas, the famous Sculpture Garden, and a feast of music and dance enriched by the superlative Academy. Helping to shape a Québécois summer this year are conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin, flautist Emmanuel Pahud, pianist Louis Lortie and Les Violons du Roi.
Ottawa Chamberfest
Ottawa, Canada, 21 July – 4 August
Tel. +1 613 234 6306
Web: www.chamberfest.com
It started as a modest event slaking a classical music thirst during the drought days of summer – and how it’s grown! Chamberfest’s outreach Buzz strand includes ‘Chamber Pint’, one initiative among many in a year-round programme. But the summer festival remains central with some 120 concerts across churches, museums, galleries and heritage sites. It even has its own Fringe – check the website for details.
Festival D’Opéra de Québec
Québec, Canada, 24 July – 4 August
Tel. +1 418 529 4142
Web: www.festivaloperaquebec.com
The city’s opera festival launched in 2011 with an expanded take on Stravinsky’s The Nightingale, and it continues to do things a little differently – this year a chariot of singers criss-crosses the city revisiting moments in the company’s history. Gounod’s Faust crowns a literary thrust to the programme, which fashions a children’s operetta from three Andersen fairy tales and premieres Eric Champagne’s music theatre piece on the life of writer Marguerite Yourcenar.