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  • OJAILIVE: 2025 Libbey Bowl Concert Replays

    OJAILIVE: 2025 Libbey Bowl Concert Replays

    The 79th Ojai Music Festival, June 5 to 8, 2025, welcomes as Music Director acclaimed flutist Claire Chase. Seven of the more than 20 music events scheduled throughout the beautiful setting of the Ojai Valley will be available at no-cost via live streaming.  Since 2012, the Ojai Music Festival has expanded its global footprint building a worldwide audience with free Live Streaming Broadcasts.

    You can watch free live streams of the Libbey Bowl concerts from the Festival’s homepage which will begin Thu, June 5 at 8pm. Full concert replays and highlights will be available on our website and our YouTube channel, following the Festival. Below is the schedule of concerts to be live streamed.


    For more context, tune into the Ojai Music Festival Podcast:


    THU June 5, 2025

    8:00PM

    Claire Chase flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Dan Rosenboom trumpet | Mattie Barbier trombone Wu Wei sheng | Susie Ibarra, Ross Karre, Steven Schick, and Wesley Sumpter percussion Alex Peh piano | M.A. Tiesenga electronic hurdy-gurdy

    Marcos BALTER Alone
    Annea LOCKWOOD bayou-borne
    Marcos BALTER Pan

    FRI June 6, 2025

    10:30AM

    Alex Peh harpsichord and keyboard | Cory Smythe and Craig Taborn piano

    Terry RILEY (arr. Alex PEH) Pulsing Lifters (World premiere of trio arrangement)
    Anna THORVALDSDOTTIR Impressions
    John COLTRANE/Cory SMYTHE Countdowns
    Craig TABORN and Cory SMYTHE Duo Improvisation for Ojai

    8:00PM

    Claire Chase flute | JACK Quartet: Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman violin, John Pickford Richards viola, Jay Campbell cello | Leilehua Lanzilotti viola Jay Campbell, Katinka Kleijn, Seth Parker Woods cello | USC Cello Ensemble | Steven Schick conductor

    Leilehua LANZILOTTI ko‘u inoa
    Sofia GUBAIDULINA Mirage: The Dancing Sun
    Julius EASTMAN The Holy Presence of Joan d’Arc  
    Terry RILEY from The Holy Liftoff
    A selection of movements adapted for this performance
    Realization by Samuel Clay Birmaher for Density 2036 part xi (2024)

    SAT June 7, 2025

    10:30AM

    Claire Chase flute | JACK Quartet: Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman violin, John Pickford Richards viola, Jay Campbell cello | Katinka Kleijn, Seth Parker Woods cello Cory Smythe piano | Levy Lorenzo electronics

    Marcos BALTER Chambers
    Leilehua LANZILOTTI ahupua‘a
    Anna THORVALDSDOTTIR Ubique (West Coast premiere)
    Part of Density 2036 part x (2023)

    8:00PM

    Wu Wei sheng | JACK Quartet: Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman violin, John Pickford Richards viola, Jay Campbell cello | Festival Artists | Steven Schick conductor

    J.S. BACH Vor deinen Thron, BWV 668 (arr. Samuel Clay BIRMAHER)
    Sofia GUBAIDULINA Meditation on the Bach chorale Vor deinen Thron, BWV 668
    Tania LEÓN Hechizos
    Liza LIM How Forests Think

    SUN June 8, 2025

    10:30AM

    Claire Chase flute | Susie Ibarra and Levy Lorenzo percussion | Wu Wei sheng | Alex Peh piano JACK Quartet: Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman violin, John Pickford Richards viola, Jay Campbell cello

    Christopher OTTO  Angelorum Psalat, after Rodericus
    Austin WULLIMAN Dave’s Hocket: For Guillaume and Arvo
    Susie IBARRA Nest Box (World premiere)
    Commissioned by Ojai Music Festival and Music Director Claire Chase in honor of Steven Schick’s 70th birthday
    Tania LEÓN Rituál 
    Susie IBARRA Sky Islands (West Coast premiere)

    5:30PM

    Claire Chase flute | Festival Artists | Steven Schick conductor

    Leilehua LANZILOTTI ko‘u inoa
    Pauline OLIVEROS The Witness
    Tania LEÓN Singsong (World premiere of new version for solo flute) (arr. for solo flute by Claire CHASE)
    Terry RILEY Pulsefield

  • 2023 Live Stream Replays

    2023 Live Stream Replays

    The 77th Ojai Music Festival, June 8 to 11, 2023, welcomes as Music Director acclaimed musician and composer Rhiannon Giddens. Seven of the more than 20 music events scheduled throughout the beautiful setting of the Ojai Valley will be available at no cost via live streaming.  Since 2012, the Festival has expanded its global footprint building a worldwide audience, and has deepened connections with patrons throughout the year.


    For more context, listen to the Ojai Music Festival Podcast:


    THU June 8, 2023

    8:00PM – Liquid Borders

    Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Attacca Quartet | Steven Schick percussion/director| red fish blue fish percussion

    Kaija SAARIAHO Movement V from Six Japanese Gardens
    Gabriela ORTIZ Liquid Borders
    Franz Joseph HAYDN String Quartet in F major, Op. 77 No. 2 Hob. III:82
    Zakir HUSSAIN Pallavi (arr. Reena Esmail)
    Philip GLASS First Movement from String Quartet No. 3 (“Mishima”)
    Colin JACOBSEN  Beloved do not let me be discouraged
    Geeshie WILEY  Last Kind Words (arr. by Jacob Garchik)
    Rhiannon GIDDENS  Lullaby
    David CROSBY/Nathan SCHRAM  Where We Are Not (arr. Nathan Schram)
    Caroline SHAW  Stem and Root from The Evergreen
    John ADAMS  Judah to Ocean, Rag the Bone from John’s Book of Alleged Dances
    S
    QUAREPUSHER   Xetaka 1

    FRI June 9, 2023

    10:00AM – Vis-A-Vis

    Lara Downes piano | Michi Wiancko violin | Mario Gotoh viola Karen Ouzounian cello |Emi Ferguson flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Gloria Cheng piano | Wu Man pipa | Steven Schick conductor/percussion

    Due to injury, pianist Leonard Hayes has had to reduce his playing commitments and has withdrawn from this concert. We are deeply grateful to Lara Downes for agreeing to step in on short notice. Please note the revised program:

    Shawn OKPEBHOLO  Amazing Grace 
    H.T. BURLEIGH On Bended Knees
    Margaret BONDS Troubled Water (Wade in the Water)  
    Michael ABELS  Iconoclasm 
    Jessie MONTGOMERY  Rhapsody No. 2 
    Nasim KHORASSANI  Growth 
    Nina BARZEGAR  Inexorable Passage 
    Lei LIANG  vis-à-vis 

    8:00PM – Evening with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi

    An intimate concert with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi with music ranging from the Baroque to Appalachian ballads and traditional Black American songs.

    SAT June 10, 2023

    10:00AM – The Willows Are New

    Gloria Cheng piano | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Karen Ouzounian cello | Nathan Schram viola |  
    Wu Man pipa

    Niloufar NOURBAKHSH Veiled
    Lei LIANG Mother’s Songs
    GE Gan-Ru Gong (from Gu Yue)
    CHOU Wen-Chung The Willows are New
    Kayhan KALHOR Solo Improvisation


    8:00PM – Omar’s Journey

    Watch for highlights of Omar’s Journey in the coming weeks. 

    Limmie Pulliam tenor (Omar) | Rhiannon Giddens soprano (Julie) | Cheryse McLeod Lewis mezzo-soprano (Fatima) | Michael Preacely bass-baritone (Abdul/Abe) | Andy Papas bass-baritone (Owen/Johnson) | Emi Ferguson flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Mazz Swift, Michi Wiancko violins | Mario Gotoh viola | Karen Ouzounian cello | Shawn Conley bass | Leonard Hayes piano | Ross Karre, Francesco Turrisi percussion | Justin Robinson fiddle | Seckou Keita kora

    Omar’s Journey World Premiere
    Music by Rhiannon GIDDENS and Michael ABELS and Libretto by Rhiannon Giddens
    and music from Senegal and the Carolinas

    An Ojai-commissioned work for voices and chamber ensemble drawn from the opera Omar, by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, framed by traditional music that traces the journey of the real-life Omar Ibn Said from Senegal to the Carolinas.

    SUN June 11, 2023

    10:00AM – Early Music

    Francesco Turrisi curator and keyboards | Attacca Quartet |Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Karen Ouzounian cello | Wu Man pipa |Joshua Stauffer theorbo

    This concert challenges the idea of late Renaissance and early Baroque music and reinterprets it as a universal language that can connect the 17th century to today through an imagined historical and geographical journey.

    5:30PM – Strings Attached

    Amy Schroeder violin | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Seckou Keita kora | Rhiannon Giddens vocals/multi-instrumentalist Wu Man pipa | Francesco Turrisi multi-instrumentalist | Mazz Swift, Michi Wiancko violins | Mario Gotoh viola |Karen Ouzounian cello | Shawn Conley bass | Joshua Stauffer theorbo

    A musical summit of Festival artists and a jam session featuring solos and collaborations bringing together bowed and plucked string instruments from the Americas, Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. An exuberant finale celebrating the many musical stories featured at this year’s Festival!

  • Join Our Community of Volunteers

    Join Our Community of Volunteers


    Vision: To provide Ojai Music Festival patrons a splendid concert going experience.
    Mission: By proactive, hospitable action, assure patrons satisfaction in safe, comfortable and accommodating surroundings while providing exemplary and enthusiastic customer service for all.

    Our Festival volunteers are the heart and soul of the Festival community. Thanks to our combined team efforts, we provide an exceptional setting for all to enjoy the immersive Ojai experience.

    Volunteer opportunities include: ushering at concerts, assisting at special events and receptions, office support, working the retail and concessions booth, load-in and load-out for front of house and back of house, and housing artists and production team!

    As a volunteer, there are perks for dedicating time and talent! These include Festival commemorative t-shirt, complimentary tickets based on number of shifts, invites to special receptions, and being a part of a warm and wonderful community!

    To volunteer for the 77th Festival, June 8 to 11, 2023, complete the application here >

     

  • Announcing The 2023 Ojai Festival Schedule

    Announcing The 2023 Ojai Festival Schedule

    2023 Music Director Rhiannon Giddens and Festival Artistic Director Ara Guzelimian Announce the 77th Ojai Music Festival: June 8 to 11, 2023

     “I am so excited to get to work with the Ojai Music Festival as Music Director for 2023. With Ojai, I am able to sit at the crossroads of all that I am artistically and feel fully supported by the Festival team and by Ojai’s audiences. With the artists that we’re bringing out next June, the future is in celebration of how we come together as humans – despite boxes, boundaries, and borders thrown up with the intent to keep us apart.” – Rhiannon Giddens, 2023 Ojai Festival Music Director

    Ojai welcomes new and returning artists to the 2023 Festival: Kayhan Kalhor (kamancheh/composer), Steven Schick (conductor/percussion), Wu Man (pipa), Francesco Turrisi (multi-instrumentalist), Attacca Quartet, Rodney Prada (viola da gamba), Justin Robinson (fiddle), members of Silkroad Ensemble: Mazz Swift (violin/viola), Mario Gotoh (viola), Karen Ouzounian (cello), Shawn Conley (double bass), and red fish blue fish (percussion ensemble)
    Highlights of the 2023 Festival programming:
    • World Premiere of Omar’s Journey, an Ojai commissioned suite for voices and chamber ensemble drawn from the opera Omar by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels. The new work, placed in the context of the journey of Omar ibn Said (1770-1864), is contextualized by the music of Senegal and the Carolinas
    • A reimagining of Tan Dun’s pioneering Ghost Opera for pipa and string quartet
    • An acoustic concert with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi featuring music ranging from Baroque to Appalachian ballads and traditional Black American songs
    • Carlos Simon’s Between Worlds, four string works placed directly in the visual context of the work of the self-taught artist Bill Traylor whose lived experience (1853-1949) spanned the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the Great Migration
    • “Strings Attached” concert – a festive finale of bowed and string instruments from cultures in the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East
    • An “Early Music” concert curated by Francesco Turrisi with music spanning from ancient pipa music to works of Dowland and Monteverdi
    Featured works by Michael Abels, Philip Glass, Lei Liang, Gabriela Ortiz, Chou Wen-Chung, Edgard Varèse, and by composers of the Iranian Female Composers Association throughout out the Festival

    Download 2023 Ojai Music Festival and Rhiannon Giddens Announcement.111022

    OJAI, California — November 10, 2022— The 77th Ojai Music Festival, June 8 to 11, 2023, welcomes as Music Director acclaimed musician and composer Rhiannon Giddens. Along with Festival Artistic Director Ara Guzelimian, Giddens shares initial programming highlights for the upcoming Festival which will include more than 18 music events in the beautiful setting of the Ojai Valley.

    “Rhiannon Giddens has an extraordinarily wide embrace of music, history, and culture. She uses her art to tell essential stories, to illuminate, and to create deeper understanding, dissolving false boundaries between people and cultures,” adds Guzelimian. “Rhiannon’s programs for the 2023 Ojai Festival touch on so many of her interests across musical genres, from Baroque music to Black traditions in American roots music, from classical music from China and Persia to the influence of non-Western music on American contemporary works. I am thrilled to be working with her and bringing her range of musical interests to Ojai audiences.”

    One of the 2023 Festival program anchors will be Omar’s Journey, an Ojai-commissioned suite for voices and small chamber ensemble drawn from the recently premiered opera Omar by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels. For Ojai, this intimate concert version of Omar will be placed in the context of the journey of Omar ibn Said (1770-1864), a Muslim scholar who was captured from his native Senegal and enslaved in North and South Carolina. Omar’s Journey will pair the new Giddens/Abels suite with the musical traditions of Senegal and the Carolinas of his lifetime.

    During this 77th edition of the Ojai Music Festival, additional music centerpieces include a reimagining of Tan Dun’s pioneering Ghost Opera performed by Wu Man and Attacca Quartet that evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music; a complete performance of Carlos Simon’s Between Worlds, a quartet of string works placed directly in the visual context of the art of Bill Traylor (1853-1949), whose lived experience spanned the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, Jim Crow and the Great Migration, to be performed by members of the Silk Road Ensemble; “Strings Attached” — a musical summit and jam session featuring solos and collaborations among the bowed and plucked string instruments from cultures in the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East; works by members of the Iranian Female Composers Association; and “Early Music” concert, curated by Francesco Turrisi, with a program to ancient pipa music to works of Dowland and Monteverdi.

    In honor of what would have been his 100th birthday, the Festival will also feature works of Chinese-American composer Chou Wen-Chung coupled with music of Edgard Varèse who was Chou Wen-Chung’s mentor, friend, and collaborator. The Festival will also present music by Michael Abels, Philip Glass, Gabriela Ortiz, and Lei Liang throughout the weekend.

    Rhiannon Giddens’ 2023 collaborators will include a mix of Festival debuts and returning artists. Audiences will be introduced to Kayhan Kalhor (kamancheh/composer), Rodney Prada (viola da gamba), Justin Robinson (fiddle), along with members of the Silkroad Ensemble including Mazz Swift (violin/viola), Mario Gotoh (viola), Karen Ouzounian (cello), and Shawn Conley (double bass).

    Making welcome returns to Ojai will be conductor/percussionist Steven Schick, who was Music Director for the 2015 Festival and pipa player Wu Man who last appeared with Schick. From the 2021 Festival will be multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi, and the Attacca Quartet (violinists Amy Schroeder and Domenic Salerni, violist Nathan Schram, and cellist Andrew Yee).

    Additional programming will be announced in spring 2023.

    Community Offerings
    An integral part of the immersive Ojai Festival experience are the free community activities that occur in the Libbey Park and throughout Ojai. This will include Morning Meditations, Music Pop-Ups, and a Family Concert.

    Beyond Ojai: Online Offerings
    The Ojai Music Festival lives beyond the flagship four-day festival in June, allowing further engagement with audiences worldwide. These include the Festival’s state-of-the-art live streaming and archived library of concerts; Virtual Ojai Talks with featured Festival artists and alum leading up to the Festival; and OjaiCast, the podcast series that provides insights on upcoming programming. The Festival’s digital projects are available at OjaiFestival.org.

    New this year is Ojai on the Air with WQXR/New Sounds with host John SchaeferThe series of programs connects audiences and artists who engage deeply with adventurous new music. The first program, which debuted in October and is archived and available on WQXR, featured discipline colliding collective AMOC, Ojai’s 2022 Music Director. Ojai on the Air will announce additional ongoing programs leading up to and during the 2023 Festival with Music Director Rhiannon Giddens.

    Series Passes for 2023 Ojai Music Festival
    2023 series passes are available and may be purchased online at OjaiFestival.org or by calling (805) 646-2053.  Festival series passes range from $205 to $965 for reserved seating.  Lawn seating series passes start at $80. Single tickets will go on sale in the spring.

    See Full 2023 Schedule 

    RHIANNON GIDDENS, MUSIC DIRECTOR OF THE 2023 OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The acclaimed musician Rhiannon Giddens uses her art to excavate the past and reveal bold truths about our present. A MacArthur “Genius Grant” recipient, Giddens co-founded the Grammy Award- winning Carolina Chocolate Drops. She most recently won a Grammy Award for Best Folk Album for They’re Calling Me Home and was also nominated for Best American Roots Song for “Avalon” from They’re Calling Me Home, which she made with multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi. Giddens is now a two-time winner and eight-time Grammy nominee for her work as a soloist and collaborator.

    They’re Calling Me Home was released by Nonesuch last April and has been widely celebrated by the NY Times, NPR Music, NPR, Rolling Stone, People, Associated Press and far beyond, with No Depression deeming it “a near perfect album…her finest work to date.” Recorded over six days in the early phase of the pandemic in a small studio outside of Dublin, Ireland – where both Giddens and Turrisi live – They’re Calling Me Home manages to effortlessly blend the music of their native and adoptive countries: America, Italy, and Ireland. The album speaks of the longing for the comfort of home as well as the metaphorical “call home” of death.

    Giddens’s lifelong mission is to lift people whose contributions to American musical history have previously been erased, and to work toward a more accurate understanding of the country’s musical origins. Pitchfork has said of her work, “few artists are so fearless and so ravenous in their exploration,” and Smithsonian Magazine calls her “an electrifying artist who brings alive the memories of forgotten predecessors, white and black.”

    Among her many diverse career highlights, Giddens has performed for the Obamas at the White House and received an inaugural Legacy of Americana Award from Nashville’s National Museum of African American History in partnership with the Americana Music Association. Her critical acclaim includes in-depth profiles by CBS Sunday Morning, the New York Times, the New Yorker, and NPR’s Fresh Air, among many others.

    Giddens was featured in Ken Burns’s Country Music series, which aired on PBS, where she spoke about the African-American origins of country music. She is also a member of the band Our Native Daughters with three other black female banjo players, Leyla McCalla, Allison Russell, and Amythyst Kiah, and co- produced their debut album Songs of Our Native Daughters (2019), which tells stories of historic black womanhood and survival.

    Giddens is in the midst of a tremendous 2022. She recently announced the publication of her first book, Build a House (October 2022). Lucy Negro Redux, the ballet Giddens wrote the music for, had its premiere at the Nashville Ballet (premiered in 2019 and toured in 2022), and the libretto and music for Giddens’ original opera, Omar, in collaboration with Michael Abels, based on the autobiography of the enslaved man Omar Ibn Said, premiered at the Spoleto USA Festival in May. Giddens is also curating a four-concert Perspectives series as part of Carnegie Hall’s 2022–2023 season. Named Artistic Director of Silkroad Ensemble in 2020, Giddens is developing new programs for that ensemble, including one inspired by the history of the American transcontinental railroad and the cultures and music of its builders.  As an actor, Giddens had a featured role on the television series Nashville.

    Rhiannon Giddens last appeared at the Ojai Music Festival in September 2021 with Music Director John Adams.

     ARA GUZELIMIAN, ARTISTIC AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
    Ara Guzelimian is Artistic and Executive Director of the Ojai Music Festival, having begun in that position in July 2020. The appointment culminates many years of association with the Festival including tenures as director of the Ojai Talks and as Artistic Director from 1992–97. Guzelimian stepped down as Provost and Dean of the Juilliard School in New York City in June 2020, having served in that position since 2007. At Juilliard, he worked closely with the president in overseeing the faculty, curriculum, and artistic planning of the distinguished performing arts conservatory in all three of its divisions: dance, drama, and music. He continues at Juilliard as Special Advisor, office of the president.

    Prior to the Juilliard appointment, he was Senior Director and Artistic Advisor of Carnegie Hall from 1998 to 2006. Guzelimian serves as artistic consultant for the Marlboro Music Festival and School in Vermont. He is a member of the steering committee of the Aga Khan Music Awards, the artistic committee of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust in London, and a board member of the Amphion and Pacific Harmony Foundations. He is also a member of the music visiting committee of the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City. In 2020, Guzelimian was appointed to the advisory panel of the Birgit Nilsson Foundation in Sweden.

    Previously, Guzelimian held the position of Artistic Administrator of the Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado, and he was long associated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the beginning of his career, first as producer for the orchestra’s national radio broadcasts and, subsequently, as Artistic Administrator. Guzelimian is editor of Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (Pantheon Books, 2002), a collection of dialogues between Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said. In September 2003, he was awarded the title Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government for his contributions to French music and culture.

    OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The Ojai Music Festival represents an ideal of adventurous, openminded, and openhearted programming in the most beautiful and welcoming of settings, with audiences and artists to match its aspirations. Marking its 75th anniversary season last year, the Festival remains a creative laboratory for thought-provoking musical experiences, bringing together innovative artists and curious audiences in an intimate, idyllic outdoor setting. Each Festival’s narrative is guided by a different Music Director, whose distinctive perspectives shape programming — ensuring energized festivals year after year.

    Throughout each year, the Ojai Music Festival contributes to Southern California’s cultural landscape with in-person and online Festival-related programming as well as robust educational offerings that serve thousands of public-school students and seniors. The organization’s apex is the world-renowned four-day Festival, which takes place in Ojai, a breathtaking valley 75 miles from Los Angeles, which is a perennial platform for the fresh and unexpected. During the immersive experience, a mingling of the most curious take part in concerts, symposia, free community events, and social gatherings. During the intimate Festival weekend, considered a highlight of the international music summer season, Ojai welcomes up to 5,000 patrons and reaches 35 times more audiences worldwide through live and on- demand streaming of concerts and discussions throughout the year.

    Since its founding in 1947, the Ojai Music Festival has presented broad-ranging programs in unusual ways with an eclectic mix of new and rarely performed music, as well as refreshing juxtapositions of musical styles. Through its signature structure of the Artistic Director appointing a different Music Director each year, Ojai has presented a “who’s who” of music including the multi-disciplinary colliding collective AMOC* (American Modern Opera Company) Vijay Iyer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and Barbara Hannigan in recent years; throughout its history, featured artists have included Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kent Nagano, Pierre Boulez, John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Robert Spano, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, David Robertson, Eighth Blackbird, George Benjamin, Dawn Upshaw, Leif Ove Andsnes, Mark Morris, Jeremy Denk, Steven Schick, Matthias Pintscher, and Peter Sellars.

    Programs and artists are subject to change.

    ****

    2023 FESTIVAL SCHEDULE

    THU JUNE 8, 2022

    2:30PM
    OJAI TALKS
    Ojai Presbyterian Church

    Two-part session with Music Director Rhiannon Giddens and featured collaborators, hosted by Ara Guzelimian and John Schaefer of WQXR New Sounds.

    8:00PM
    OPENING NIGHT: LIQUID BORDERS
    Libbey Bowl

    Rhiannon Giddens, vocals
    Steven Schick, conductor/percussion
    Attacca Quartet
    red fish blue fish
    The Festival opens with Gabriela Ortiz’s Liquid Borders performed by red fish blue fish conducted by Steven Schick. The second half welcomes back the Attacca Quartet performing a curated playlist made especially for Ojai audiences.

    FRI JUNE 9, 2022

    8:00AM
    OJAI DAWNS
    Zalk Theater, Besant Hill School

    red fish blue fish
    CHOU WEN-CHUNG Echoes from the Gorge
    Works by composers of the Iranian Female Composers Association

    10:00AM
    MORNING CONCERT: VIS-À-VIS
    Libbey Bowl

    Kayhan Kalhor, kamancheh
    Wu Man, pipa
    Steven Schick, percussion
    LEI LIANG Vis-À-Vis
    Works by Michael Abels and others

    3:30PM
    GHOST OPERA
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man, pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    A new staging of Tan Dun’s Ghost Opera for pipa and string quartet evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music.

    8:00PM
    AN EVENING WITH RHIANNON GIDDENS AND FRANCESCO TURRISI
    Libbey Bowl

    An intimate acoustic concert with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi with music ranging from the Baroque to Appalachian ballads and traditional Black American songs.

    SAT JUNE 10, 2022

    8:00AM
    MORNING MEDITATION
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Artists to be announced

    Free and open to the public.

    10:00AM
    MORNING CONCERT
    Libbey Bowl

    Kayhan Kalhor and friends

    Program to be announced

    2:30PM
    GHOST OPERA [Repeat Performance]
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man, pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    A new staging of Tan Dun’s Ghost Opera for pipa and string quartet evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music.

    8:00PM
    OMAR’S JOURNEY    World Premiere
    Libbey Bowl

    Rhiannon Giddens, singer/instrumentalist
    Justin Robinson, fiddle
    Francesco Turrisi, instrumentalist
    Ojai Festival Ensemble
    An Ojai-commissioned work for voices and chamber ensemble drawn from the opera Omar, by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, paired with the musical traditions of Senegal and the Carolinas.

    SUN JUNE 11, 2022

    8:30AM
    MORNING MEDITATION
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Artists to be announced

    Free and open to the public.

    10:00AM
    EARLY MUSIC
    Libbey Bowl

    Kayhan Kalhor, kamancheh
    Rodney Prada, viola da gamba
    Francesco Turrisi, multi-instrumentalist
    Wu Man, pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    Curated by Francesco Turrisi, a program of morning music spanning from ancient pipa music to works of Dowland and Monteverdi.

    2:30PM
    BETWEEN WORLDS
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Members of the Silkroad Ensemble:
    Mazz Swift, violin/viola
    Mario Gotoh, viola
    Karen Ouzonian, cello
    Shawn Conley, double bass
    A complete performance of Carlos Simon’s cycle Between Worlds, four solo string works placed in visual context by the remarkable paintings of Bill Traylor (ca. 1853-1949), chronicling nearly a century of Black American life.

    4:00PM
    COMMUNITY CONCERT
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    The tradition continues! A community concert fun for all ages and families. Program to be announced.

    Free and open to the public.

    5:30PM
    FINALE: STRINGS ATTACHED
    Libbey Bowl

    Rhiannon Giddens, singer/instrumentalist
    Kayhan Kalhor, kamancheh
    Rodney Prada, viola da gamba
    Justin Robinson, fiddle
    Francesco Turrisi, multi-instrumentalist
    Wu Man, pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    A musical summit and jam session featuring solos and collaborations among the bowed and plucked string instruments from cultures in the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.

    Programs and artists are subject to change. Please check the website at OjaiFestival.org.

     

     

     

     

  • 2023 Festival Schedule

    2023 Festival Schedule

    View the 2023 program book here

    FULL SCHEDULE

    THU, June 8

    2:30PM   OJAI TALKS – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    2:30-3:15pm Ara Guzelimian with Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels
    3:30-4:30pm WQXR’s New Sounds John Schaefer with Festival artists and composers 

    6:00PM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composers Gabriela Ortiz and Aida Shirazi with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds. 

    6:30PM   MOON VIEWING MUSIC – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    Join Steven Schick in this solo performance of Peter Garland’s Moon Viewing Music (Inscrutable Stillness Studies #1) described as a quiet and introspective six-movement work for three large Thai-style gongs and large tam-tam.

    8:00PM   LIQUID BORDERS
    Libbey Bowl

    Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Attacca Quartet | red fish blue fish percussion ensemble with Steven Schick director

    Gabriela ORTIZ Liquid Borders
    Franz Joseph HAYDN String Quartet in F major, Op. 77 No. 2 Hob. III:82
    Zakir HUSSAIN Pallavi (arr. Reena Esmail)
    Philip GLASS First Movement from String Quartet No. 3 (“Mishima”)
    Colin JACOBSEN  Beloved do not let me be discouraged
    Geeshie WILEY  Last Kind Words (arr. Jacob Garchik)
    Rhiannon GIDDENS  Lullaby
    David CROSBY/Nathan SCHRAM  Where We Are Not (arr. Nathan Schram)
    Caroline SHAW  Stem and Root from The Evergreen
    John ADAMS  Judah to Ocean, Rag the Bone from John’s Book of Alleged Dances
    S
    QUAREPUSHER   Xetaka 1

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    FRI, June 9

    8:00AM   OJAI DAWNS
    Zalk Theater, Besant Hill School

    Emi Ferguson flute | Ross Karre percussion | Niloufar Shiri kamancheh | Aida Shirazi electronics |Steven Schick percussion | red fish blue fish

    Golfam KHAYAM 
    Lost Wind
    Aida SHIRAZI  and Niloufar SHIRI  Yearning, Every Dawn  New Work   World Premiere
    Edgard VARÈSE  Density 21.5 
    CHOU Wen-Chung  Echoes From The Gorge

    The Ojai Dawns is a benefit for Festival Family Donor Circles.  Learn more here>
    Subscribers receive priority to purchase single tickets before going on sale to the general public beginning March 31.

    10:00AM   VIS-À-VIS
    Libbey Bowl

    Lara Downes piano | Michi Wiancko violin | Mario Gotoh viola | Karen Ouzounian cello |Emi Ferguson flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Gloria Cheng piano | Wu Man pipa | Steven Schick conductor/percussion

    Due to injury, pianist Leonard Hayes has had to reduce his playing commitments and has withdrawn from this concert. We are deeply grateful to Lara Downes for agreeing to step in on short notice. Please note the revised program:

    Shawn OKPEBHOLO  Amazing Grace 
    H.T. BURLEIGH On Bended Knees
    Margaret BONDS Troubled Water (Wade in the Water)  
    Michael ABELS  Iconoclasm 
    Jessie MONTGOMERY  Rhapsody No. 2 
    Nasim KHORASSANI  Growth 
    Nina BARZEGAR  Inexorable Passage 
    Lei LIANG  vis-à-vis 

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    11:30AM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composers Nina Barzegar and Nasim Khorassani with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds

    3:30PM   GHOST OPERA – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man pipa | Attacca Quartet
    PeiJu Chien-Pott dancer/choreographer | Jon Reimer director | Nicholas Houfek lighting designer 

    TAN Dun  Ghost Opera

    Tan Dun’s Ghost Opera evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music. A new production, created especially for the Ojai Music Festival, brings dance into the work and re-imagines it for a new generation. 

    Ghost Opera is an add-on event, not included in the Libbey Bowl Series Pass. Purchase here >

    6:00PM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with Lei Liang and Wu Man with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds

    8:00PM   AN EVENING WITH RHIANNON GIDDENS AND FRANCESCO TURRISI – SOLD OUT
    Libbey Bowl

    An intimate concert with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi with music ranging from the Baroque to Appalachian ballads and traditional Black American songs.

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    SAT, June 10

    8:00AM   MORNING MEDITATION – FREE
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Niloufar Shiri kamancheh | Mario Gotoh violin

    11:30AM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composers Niloufar Nourbakhsh and Carlos Simon with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    10:00AM   THE WILLOWS ARE NEW
    Libbey Bowl

    Karen Ouzounian cello | Wu Man pipa | Nathan Schram viola | Gloria Cheng piano | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh 

    Niloufar NOURBAKHSH  Veiled 
    Lei LIANG  Mother’s Songs 
    GE Gan-Ru  Gong 
    CHOU Wen-Chung  The Willows are New 
    Kayhan KALHOR  Solo Improvisation

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    3:30PM   GHOST OPERA – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man pipa | Attacca Quartet
    PeiJu Chien-Pott dancer/choreographer | Jon Reimer director | Nicholas Houfek lighting designer 

    TAN Dun  Ghost Opera

    Tan Dun’s Ghost Opera evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music. A new production, created especially for the Ojai Music Festival, brings dance into the work and re-imagines it for a new generation.

    This is a repeat performance. Ghost Opera is an add-on event, not included in the Libbey Bowl Series Pass. Purchase here >

    6:00PM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composer Michael Abels with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    8:00PM   OMAR’S JOURNEY – SOLD OUT
    Libbey Bowl

    Limmie Pulliam tenor (Omar) | Rhiannon Giddens soprano (Julie) | Cheryse McLeod Lewis mezzo-soprano (Fatima) | Michael Preacely bass-baritone (Abdul/Abe) | Andy Papas bass-baritone (Johnson/Owen)

    Emi Ferguson flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Mazz Swift, Michi Wiancko violins | Mario Gotoh viola Karen Ouzounian cello | Shawn Conley bass | Leonard Hayes piano | Francesco Turrisi, Ross Karre percussion

    Justin Robinson fiddle | Seckou Keita kora

    Music from Senegal and the Carolinas
    Music by Rhiannon GIDDENS/Michael ABELS  Omar’s Journey    World Premiere
    Libretto by Rhiannon Giddens

    An Ojai-commissioned work for voices and chamber ensemble drawn from the Pulitzer-Prize winning opera Omar, by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, framed by traditional music that traces the journey of the real-life Omar Ibn Said from Senegal to the Carolinas.

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    SUN, June 11

    8:00AM   MORNING MEDITATION – FREE
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Seckou Keita kora

    10:00AM   EARLY MUSIC
    Libbey Bowl

    Francesco Turrisi curator and keyboards | Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Wu Man pipa 
    Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Joshua Stauffer therobo | Attacca Quartet  

    A program imagined specifically for the magical atmosphere of Sunday morning in Libbey Bowl, playing on the two ideas of very old music and music for the first hours of the day. Francesco Turrisi curates and introduces music ranging from thousand-year-old works for solo pipa, to Renaissance consort music, from ancient Persian melodies to modal jazz improvisations. 

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    11:30AM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with Francesco Turrisi with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    1:00PM    STONES AND STARS: LISTENING TO (AND BEYOND) THE WORLD – FREE
    Libbey Park

    Steven Schick percussion  

    Make music with us! Join in on this interactive community performance led by Steven Schick.  

    2:30PM   BETWEEN WORLDS
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Mazz Swift violin   Mario Gotoh viola | Karen Ouzounian cello | Shawn Conley bass
    Ross Karre projection designer 

    Carlos SIMON  Between Worlds  

    A complete performance of Carlos Simon’s cycle Between Worlds, four solo string works placed in visual context by their source of inspiration: the remarkable paintings of Bill Traylor (ca. 1853-1949), chronicling nearly a century of Black American life.

    Text related to Bill Traylor and the project title “Between Worlds” are borrowed from, and organized in relation to, Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor, by Leslie Umberger for the Smithsonian American Art Museum, (book and exhibition), 
    2018.

    Festival Family Donor Circle Members receive first priority seats. Learn more here>
    Subscribers receive priority to purchase single tickets before going on sale to the general public beginning March 31.

    4:00PM   BUILD A HOUSE – FREE FAMILY EVENT
    Libbey Park

    A special free family event – Rhiannon Giddens does a reading and special musical performance based on her new children’s book, Build A House

    5:30PM   FINALE: STRINGS ATTACHED
    Libbey Bowl

    Amy Schroeder violin | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Seckou Keita kora | Rhiannon Giddens singer/instrumentalistWu Man pipa | Justin Robinson fiddle | Francesco Turrisi multi-instrumentalist | Members of Silkroad Ensemble

    Michael ABELS   Isolation Variation
    Duo Improvisation with Kayhan Kalhor and Seckou Keita
    Nassim KHORASSANI  Lullaby 
    Followed by a selection of music announced from the stage — an exuberant finale celebrating the many musical stories featured at this year’s Festival!

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    THU, June 8

    2:30PM   OJAI TALKS – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    2:30-3:15pm Ara Guzelimian with Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels
    3:30-4:30pm WQXR’s New Sounds John Schaefer with Festival artists and composers

    6:00PM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composers Gabriela Ortiz and Aida Shirazi with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    6:30PM   MOON VIEWING MUSIC – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    Join Steven Schick in this solo performance of Peter Garland’s Moon Viewing Music (Inscrutable Stillness Studies #1) described as a quiet and introspective six-movement work for three large Thai-style gongs and large tam-tam.

    8:00PM   LIQUID BORDERS
    Libbey Bowl

    Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Attacca Quartet | red fish blue fish percussion ensemble | Steven Schick director 

    Gabriela ORTIZ Liquid Borders
    Franz Joseph HAYDN String Quartet in F major, Op. 77 No. 2 Hob. III:82
    Zakir HUSSAIN Pallavi (arr. Reena Esmail)
    Philip GLASS First Movement from String Quartet No. 3 (“Mishima”)
    Colin JACOBSEN  Beloved do not let me be discouraged
    Geeshie WILEY  Last Kind Words (arr. Jacob Garchik)
    Rhiannon GIDDENS  Lullaby
    David CROSBY/Nathan SCHRAM  Where We Are Not (arr. Nathan Schram)
    Caroline SHAW  Stem and Root from The Evergreen
    John ADAMS  Judah to Ocean, Rag the Bone from John’s Book of Alleged Dances
    S
    QUAREPUSHER   Xetaka 1

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    FRI, June 9

    8:00AM   OJAI DAWNS
    Zalk Theater, Besant Hill School

    Emi Ferguson flute
    Ross Karre
    percussion
    Niloufar Shiri kamancheh
    Aida Shirazi electronics
    Steven Schick percussion
    red fish blue fish


    Golfam KHAYAM  Lost Wind
    Aida SHIRAZI and Nioufar SHIRI   Yearning, Every Dawn   New Work   World Premiere
    Edgard VARÈSE  Density 21.5 
    CHOU Wen-Chung  Echoes From The Gorge

    The Ojai Dawns is a benefit for Festival Family Donor Circles. Learn more here>

    10:00AM   VIS-À-VIS
    Libbey Bowl

    Lara Downes piano | Michi Wiancko violin | Mario Gotoh viola | Karen Ouzounian cello |Emi Ferguson flute | Joshua Rubin clarinet | Gloria Cheng piano |Wu Man pipa | Steven Schick conductor/percussion 

    Due to injury, pianist Leonard Hayes has had to reduce his playing commitments and has withdrawn from this concert. We are deeply grateful to Lara Downes for agreeing to step in on short notice. Please note the revised program:

    Shawn OKPEBHOLO  Amazing Grace

    H.T. BURLEIGH  On Bended Knees
    Margaret BONDS  Troubled Water (Wade in the Water)  
    Michael ABELS  Iconoclasm 
    Jessie MONTGOMERY  Rhapsody No. 2 
    Nasim KHORASSANI  Growth 
    Nina BARZEGAR  Inexorable Passage 
    Lei LIANG  vis-à-vis 

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    11:30AM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    LIBBEY PARK GAZEBO

    In-depth conversation with composers Nina Barzegar and Nasim Khorassani with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.
    FREE. Open to the public. 

    3:30PM   GHOST OPERA – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    PeiJu Chien-Pott dancer/choreographer
    Jon Reimer director 
    Nicholas Houfek lighting designer 

    TAN Dun  Ghost Opera

    Tan Dun’s
    Ghost Opera evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music. A new production, created especially for the Ojai Music Festival, brings dance into the work and re-imagines it for a new generation. 

    Ghost Opera is an add-on event, not included in the Libbey Bowl Series Pass. Purchase here >

    8:00PM   AN EVENING WITH RHIANNON GIDDENS AND FRANCESCO TURRISI – SOLD OUT
    Libbey Bowl

    An intimate concert with Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi with music ranging from the Baroque to Appalachian ballads and traditional Black American songs as well as excerpts from Songs of Flight by Shawn Okpebholo.

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    SAT, June 10

    8:00AM   MORNING MEDITATION – FREE
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Niloufar Shiri kamancheh
    Mario Gotoh violin

    10:00AM   MORNING CONCERT
    Libbey Bowl

    Karen Ouzounian cello
    Wu Man pipa
    Nathan Schram viola
    Gloria Cheng piano
    Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh


    Niloufar NOURBAKHSH Veiled
    Lei LIANG  Mother’s Songs
    GE Gan-Ru  Gong
    CHOU Wen-Chung  The Willows are New
    Kayhan KALHOR  Solo Improvisation

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    11:30AM  OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composers Niloufar Nourbakhsh and Carlos Simon with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    3:30PM   GHOST OPERA – SOLD OUT
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Wu Man pipa
    Attacca Quartet
    PeiJu Chien-Pott dancer/choreographer
    Jon Reimer director
    Nicholas Houfek lighting designer

    TAN Dun  Ghost Opera

    Tan Dun’s Ghost Opera evokes the spirits of Bach and Shakespeare, standing with the ancient folk traditions of traditional shamanistic Chinese music. This new production, created especially for Ojai, introduces dance into the work and re-imagines this landmark piece for a new generation. 

    Repeat performance. Ghost Opera is an add-on event, not included in the Libbey Bowl Series Pass. Purchase here >

    6:00PM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with composer Michael Abels with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    8:00PM   OMAR’S JOURNEY – SOLD OUT
    Libbey Bowl

    Seckou Keita kora 
    Justin Robinson fiddle
    Rhiannon Giddens soprano
    Cheryse McLeod Lewis mezzo-soprano 
    Limmie Pulliam tenor
    Michael Preacely bass-baritone
    Ojai Festival Ensemble

    Music from Senegal and the Carolinas
    Rhiannon GIDDENS/Michael ABELS  Omar’s Journey   World Premiere

    An Ojai-commissioned work for voices and chamber ensemble drawn from the opera Omar, by Rhiannon Giddens and Michael Abels, framed by traditional music that traces the journey of the real-life Omar Ibn Said from Senegal to the Carolinas.

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    SUN, June 11

    8:00AM   MORNING MEDITATION – FREE
    Chaparral Auditorium

    Seckou Keita kora  

    10:00AM   EARLY MUSIC
    Libbey Bowl

    Francesco Turrisi curator and keyboards | Rhiannon Giddens vocals | Wu Man pipa 
    Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Joshua Stauffer therobo | Attacca Quartet  

    A program imagined specifically for the magical atmosphere of Sunday morning in Libbey Bowl, playing on the two ideas of very old music and music for the first hours of the day. Francesco Turrisi curates and introduces music ranging from thousand-year-old works for solo pipa, to Renaissance consort music, from ancient Persian melodies to modal jazz improvisations. 

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

    11:30AM   OJAI CHATS – FREE
    Libbey Park Gazebo

    In-depth conversation with Francesco Turrisi with host John Schaefer of WQXR’s New Sounds.

    1:00PM   STONES AND STARS: LISTENING TO (AND BEYOND) THE WORLD – FREE
    Libbey Park

    Steven Schick percussion  

    Make music with us! Join in on this interactive community performance led by Steven Schick.  

    2:30PM   BETWEEN WORLDS
    Greenberg Center, Ojai Valley School lower campus

    Mazz Swift violin 
    Mario Gotoh viola
    Karen Ouzounian cello
    Shawn Conley bass
    Ross Karre projection designer  

    Carlos SIMON  Between Worlds  

    A complete performance of Carlos Simon’s cycle Between Worlds, four solo string works placed in visual context by their source of inspiration: the remarkable paintings of Bill Traylor (ca. 1853-1949), chronicling nearly a century of Black American life.

    Text related to Bill Traylor and the project title “Between Worlds” are borrowed from, and organized in relation to, Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor, by Leslie Umberger for the Smithsonian American Art Museum, (book and exhibition), 2018.

    Festival Family Donor Circle Members receive first priority seats. Learn more here>

    4:00PM   BUILD A HOUSE – FREE FAMILY EVENT
    Libbey Park

    Rhiannon Giddens does a reading and special musical performance based on her new children’s book, Build A House 

    5:30PM   FINALE: STRINGS ATTACHED
    Libbey Bowl

    Amy Schroeder violin | Kayhan Kalhor kamancheh | Seckou Keita kora | Rhiannon Giddens singer/instrumentalistWu Man pipa | Justin Robinson fiddle | Francesco Turrisi multi-instrumentalist | Members of Silkroad Ensemble

    Michael ABELS   Isolation Variation
    Duo Improvisation with Kayhan Kalhor and Seckou Keita
    Nassim KHORASSANI  Lullaby 
    Followed by a selection of music announced from the stage — an exuberant finale celebrating the many musical stories featured at this year’s Festival! 

    Free live stream of this concert will be available.

  • 2023 Festival Highlights

    2023 Festival Highlights

    Rhiannon Giddens Named Music Director of 77th Ojai Music Festival: June 8 to 11, 2023
    “I am so excited to get to work with the Ojai Music Festival as Music Director for 2023. My experience as a performer there last year was one of the best festival experiences I’ve had – I was able to sit at the crossroads of all that I am artistically and feel fully supported by Ara and the staff and audience of Ojai each time. I look forward to building on that feeling with the artists that we’re bringing out next year; the future is in celebration of how we come together as humans – despite boxes, boundaries, and borders thrown up with the intent to keep us apart.  – Rhiannon Giddens, 2023 Ojai Festival Music Director
    “I am so thrilled that Rhiannon Giddens accepted my invitation to become Music Director of the 2023 Ojai Music Festival. I have boundless admiration for Rhiannon as both a compelling musician and as an extraordinary artistic catalyst bringing together musical worlds towards important philosophical, cultural, and social goals. The openness and flexibility of the Ojai Festival is an ideal forum for such an artist to have complete freedom to imagine and explore.” – Ara Guzelimian, Artistic and Executive Director 

    ARTISTIC COLLABORATORS INCLUDE
    Kamancheh/composer Kayhan Kalhor will make his first Ojai appearances at the 2023 Festival.  Pipa player Wu Man returns to Ojai for the first time since the 2015 Festival, where she partnered with then Music Director Steven Schick. Multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi and the Attacca Quartet previously joined Rhiannon Giddens in Ojai during the 2021 Festival in September with Music Director John Adams.

    CLICK HERE FOR SERIES PASSES FOR THE 2023 FESTIVAL

    RHIANNON GIDDENS, MUSIC DIRECTOR OF THE 2023 OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The acclaimed musician Rhiannon Giddens uses her art to excavate the past and reveal bold truths about our present. A MacArthur “Genius Grant” recipient, Giddens co-founded the Grammy Award-winning Carolina Chocolate Drops. She most recently won a Grammy Award for Best Folk Album for They’re Calling Me Home, and was also nominated for Best American Roots Song for “Avalon” from They’re Calling Me Home, which she made with multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi. Giddens is now a two-time winner and eight-time Grammy nominee for her work as a soloist and collaborator.

    They’re Calling Me Home was released by Nonesuch last April and has been widely celebrated by the NY Times, NPR Music, NPR, Rolling Stone, People, Associated Press and far beyond, with No Depression deeming it “a near perfect album…her finest work to date.” Recorded over six days in the early phase of the pandemic in a small studio outside of Dublin, Ireland – where both Giddens and Turrisi live – They’re Calling Me Home manages to effortlessly blend the music of their native and adoptive countries: America, Italy, and Ireland. The album speaks of the longing for the comfort of home as well as the metaphorical “call home” of death.

    Giddens’s lifelong mission is to lift people whose contributions to American musical history have previously been erased, and to work toward a more accurate understanding of the country’s musical origins. Pitchfork has said of her work, “few artists are so fearless and so ravenous in their exploration,” and Smithsonian Magazine calls her “an electrifying artist who brings alive the memories of forgotten predecessors, white and black.”

    Among her many diverse career highlights, Giddens has performed for the Obamas at the White House and received an inaugural Legacy of Americana Award from Nashville’s National Museum of African American History in partnership with the Americana Music Association. Her critical acclaim includes in-depth profiles by CBS Sunday Morning, the New York Times, the New Yorker, and NPR’s Fresh Air, among many others.

    Giddens was featured in Ken Burns’s Country Music series, which aired on PBS, where she spoke about the African American origins of country music. She is also a member of the band Our Native Daughters with three other black female banjo players, Leyla McCalla, Allison Russell, and Amythyst Kiah, and co-produced their debut album Songs of Our Native Daughters (2019), which tells stories of historic black womanhood and survival.

    Giddens is in the midst of a tremendous 2022. She recently announced the publication of her first book, Build a House (October 2022),  Lucy Negro Redux, the ballet Giddens wrote the music for, had its premiere at the Nashville Ballet (premiered in 2019 and toured in 2022), and the libretto and music for Giddens’ opera, Omar, along with collaborator Michael Abels, based on the autobiography of the enslaved man Omar Ibn Said, premiered at the Spoleto USA Festival in May 2022. Giddens is also curating a four-concert Perspectives series as part of Carnegie Hall’s 2022–2023 season. Named Artistic Director of Silkroad Ensemble in 2020, Giddens is developing a number of new programs for that ensemble, including one inspired by the history of the American transcontinental railroad and the cultures and music of its builders.

    As an actor, Giddens had a featured role on the television series Nashville.

    Read full press release announcement here 

    OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The Ojai Music Festival represents an ideal of adventurous, open-minded, and open-hearted programming in the most beautiful and welcoming of settings, with audiences and artists to match its aspirations. Marking its 75th anniversary, the Festival remains a creative laboratory for thought-provoking musical experiences, bringing together innovative artists and curious audiences in an intimate, idyllic outdoor setting. Each Festival’s narrative is guided by a different Music Director, whose distinctive perspectives shape programming — ensuring energized festivals year after year.

    Throughout each year, the Ojai Music Festival contributes to Southern California’s cultural landscape with in-person and online Festival-related programming as well as robust educational offerings that serve thousands of public-school students and seniors. The organization’s apex is the world-renowned four-day Festival, which takes place in Ojai, a breathtaking valley 75 miles from Los Angeles, which is a perennial platform for the fresh and unexpected. During the immersive experience, a mingling of the most curious take part in concerts, symposia, free community events, and social gatherings. During the intimate Festival weekend, considered a highlight of the international music summer season, Ojai welcomes up to 7,000 patrons and reaches 35 times more audiences worldwide through live and on-demand streaming of concerts and discussions.

    Since its founding in 1947, the Ojai Music Festival has presented broad-ranging programs in unusual ways with an eclectic mix of new and rarely performed music, as well as refreshing juxtapositions of musical styles. Through its signature structure of the Artistic Director appointing a different  Music Director each year, Ojai has presented a “who’s who” of music including the multi-disciplinary colliding collective AMOC* (American Modern Opera Company) Vijay Iyer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and Barbara Hannigan in recent years; throughout its history, featured artists have included Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kent Nagano, Pierre Boulez, John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Robert Spano, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, David Robertson, Eighth Blackbird, George Benjamin, Dawn Upshaw, Leif Ove Andsnes, Mark Morris, Jeremy Denk, Steven Schick, Matthias Pintscher, and Peter Sellars.

  • 2023 Ojai Festival Announcement

    2023 Ojai Festival Announcement

    Rhiannon Giddens Named Music Director of 77th Ojai Music Festival: June 8 to 11, 2023
    Joining composer/musician Giddens, 2023 Festival artists will include kamancheh player/composer Kayhan Kalhor, multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi, pipa player Wu Man, and the Attacca Quartet
    “I am so excited to get to work with the Ojai Music Festival as Music Director for 2023. My experience as a performer there last year was one of the best festival experiences I’ve had – I was able to sit at the crossroads of all that I am artistically and feel fully supported by Ara and the staff and audience of Ojai each time. I look forward to building on that feeling with the artists that we’re bringing out next year; the future is in celebration of how we come together as humans – despite boxes, boundaries, and borders thrown up with the intent to keep us apart.  – Rhiannon Giddens, 2023 Ojai Festival Music Director

    Download PDF version

    OJAI, California — May 26, 2022 — The Ojai Music Festival’s Artistic and Executive Director Ara Guzelimian announces Rhiannon Giddens as the Festival’s next Music Director for the 77th Festival, June 8 to 11, 2023.  The initial list of guest artists for the 2023 Festival include kamancheh player/composer Kayhan Kalhor, pipa player Wu Man, as well as multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi, and the Attacca Quartet, composed of violinists Amy Schroeder and Domenic Salerni, violist Nathan Schram, and cellist Andrew Yee.  Additional artists, projects, and programming for the 2023 Ojai Music Festival will be announced in the coming months.

    “I am so thrilled that Rhiannon Giddens accepted my invitation to become Music Director of the 2023 Ojai Music Festival. I have boundless admiration for Rhiannon as both a compelling musician and as an extraordinary artistic catalyst bringing together musical worlds towards important philosophical, cultural, and social goals,” said Artistic and Executive Director Ara Guzelimian.

    “The openness and flexibility of the Ojai Festival is an ideal forum for such an artist to have complete freedom to imagine and explore. Rhiannon created a special bond with Ojai and our audiences when she made her debut at the 2021 Festival. She and the Attacca Quartet found an immediate connection when they first met last year in Ojai, and she invited the quartet to join her for Ojai 2023, to grow and explore that partnership.  Francesco Turrisi brings such boundless musical fluencies, from early music to jazz, from the traditional music of multiple cultures to new music by emerging composers. We have spoken about Rhiannon’s extraordinary embrace of so many musical languages as a thread in the 2023 Ojai Festival, with particular focus in the deep traditions of a classical music in non-Western cultures and the encounter of like-instruments from very different cultures. We are so happy that the Persian kamancheh player/composer Kayhan Kalhor and the great pipa player Wu Man will join us next June in these explorations. These plans are a work-in-progress at this early stage, and we look forward to being joined by a number of great collaborators and composers, who will be announced in the coming months.”

    Kamancheh/composer Kayhan Kalhor will make his first Ojai appearances at the 2023 Festival.  Pipa player Wu Man returns to Ojai for the first time since the 2015 Festival, where she partnered with then Music Director Steven Schick. Multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi and the Attacca Quartet previously joined Rhiannon Giddens in Ojai during the 2021 Festival in September with Music Director John Adams.

    The Festival shares this news as artists and audiences anticipate gathering in Ojai for the upcoming 76th Festival (June 9-12, 2022) with the discipline-colliding collective AMOC* (American Modern Opera Company) as Music Director.  Please visit OjaiFestival.org for 2022 Festival details.

    Series Passes for 2023 Ojai Music Festival
    Advance 2023 series subscriptions will be available for purchase during the 2022 Festival and online at OjaiFestival.org.

    Single Tickets for the June 9-12, 2022 Ojai Music Festival with Music Director AMOC* are available and may be purchased online at OjaiFestival.org or by calling (805) 646-2053. Ojai Music Festival ticket prices range from $50 to $150 for reserved seating, and lawn tickets are $20. Student and group discounts are available.

    Live video streaming of the 2022 Ojai Music Festival
    The Ojai Music Festival continues to draw thousands of curious and engaged music enthusiasts from across the globe. Ojai offers free access to the Festival experience through live and archived video streaming online at OjaiFestival.org. This year’s live streaming runs June 9-12, 2022.

    RHIANNON GIDDENS, MUSIC DIRECTOR OF THE 2023 OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The acclaimed musician Rhiannon Giddens uses her art to excavate the past and reveal bold truths about our present. A MacArthur “Genius Grant” recipient, Giddens co-founded the Grammy Award-winning Carolina Chocolate Drops. She most recently won a Grammy Award for Best Folk Album for They’re Calling Me Home, and was also nominated for Best American Roots Song for “Avalon” from They’re Calling Me Home, which she made with multi-instrumentalist Francesco Turrisi. Giddens is now a two-time winner and eight-time Grammy nominee for her work as a soloist and collaborator.

    They’re Calling Me Home was released by Nonesuch last April and has been widely celebrated by the NY Times, NPR Music, NPR, Rolling Stone, People, Associated Press and far beyond, with No Depression deeming it “a near perfect album…her finest work to date.” Recorded over six days in the early phase of the pandemic in a small studio outside of Dublin, Ireland – where both Giddens and Turrisi live – They’re Calling Me Home manages to effortlessly blend the music of their native and adoptive countries: America, Italy, and Ireland. The album speaks of the longing for the comfort of home as well as the metaphorical “call home” of death.

    Giddens’s lifelong mission is to lift people whose contributions to American musical history have previously been erased, and to work toward a more accurate understanding of the country’s musical origins. Pitchfork has said of her work, “few artists are so fearless and so ravenous in their exploration,” and Smithsonian Magazine calls her “an electrifying artist who brings alive the memories of forgotten predecessors, white and black.”

    Among her many diverse career highlights, Giddens has performed for the Obamas at the White House and received an inaugural Legacy of Americana Award from Nashville’s National Museum of African American History in partnership with the Americana Music Association. Her critical acclaim includes in-depth profiles by CBS Sunday Morning, the New York Times, the New Yorker, and NPR’s Fresh Air, among many others.

    Giddens was featured in Ken Burns’s Country Music series, which aired on PBS, where she spoke about the African American origins of country music. She is also a member of the band Our Native Daughters with three other black female banjo players, Leyla McCalla, Allison Russell, and Amythyst Kiah, and co-produced their debut album Songs of Our Native Daughters (2019), which tells stories of historic black womanhood and survival.

    Giddens is in the midst of a tremendous 2022. She recently announced the publication of her first book, Build a House (October 2022),  Lucy Negro Redux, the ballet Giddens wrote the music for, had its premiere at the Nashville Ballet (premiered in 2019 and toured in 2022), and the libretto and music for Giddens’ original opera, Omar, based on the autobiography of the enslaved man Omar Ibn Said, premiered at the Spoleto USA Festival in May. Giddens is also curating a four-concert Perspectives series as part of Carnegie Hall’s 2022–2023 season. Named Artistic Director of Silkroad Ensemble in 2020, Giddens is developing a number of new programs for that ensemble, including one inspired by the history of the American transcontinental railroad and the cultures and music of its builders.

    As an actor, Giddens had a featured role on the television series Nashville.

    ARA GUZELIMIAN, ARTISTIC AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
    Ara Guzelimian is Artistic and Executive Director of the Ojai Music Festival, having begun in that position in July 2020. The appointment culminates many years of association with the Festival, including tenures as director of the Ojai Talks and as Artistic Director 1992–97. Guzelimian stepped down as provost and dean of the Juilliard School in New York City in June 2020, having served in that position since 2007. At Juilliard, he worked closely with the president in overseeing the faculty, curriculum, and artistic planning of the distinguished performing arts conservatory in all three of its divisions: dance, drama, and music. He continues at Juilliard as Special Advisor, Office of the President.

    Prior to the Juilliard appointment, he was senior director and artistic advisor of Carnegie Hall from 1998 to 2006. Guzelimian serves as artistic consultant for the Marlboro Music Festival and School in Vermont. He is a member of the steering committee of the Aga Khan Music Awards, the artistic committee of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust in London, and a board member of the Amphion and Pacific Harmony Foundations. He is also a member of the music visiting committee of the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City.  In 2020, Guzelimian was appointed to the Advisory Panel of the Birgit Nilsson Foundation in Sweden.

    Previously, Guzelimian held the position of artistic administrator of the Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado, and he was long associated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the beginning of his career, first as producer for the orchestra’s national radio broadcasts and, subsequently, as Artistic Administrator. Guzelimian is editor of Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (Pantheon Books, 2002), a collection of dialogues between Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said. In September 2003, he was awarded the title Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government for his contributions to French music and culture.

    OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The Ojai Music Festival represents an ideal of adventurous, open-minded, and open-hearted programming in the most beautiful and welcoming of settings, with audiences and artists to match its aspirations. Marking its 75th anniversary, the Festival remains a creative laboratory for thought-provoking musical experiences, bringing together innovative artists and curious audiences in an intimate, idyllic outdoor setting. Each Festival’s narrative is guided by a different Music Director, whose distinctive perspectives shape programming — ensuring energized festivals year after year.

    Throughout each year, the Ojai Music Festival contributes to Southern California’s cultural landscape with in-person and online Festival-related programming as well as robust educational offerings that serve thousands of public-school students and seniors. The organization’s apex is the world-renowned four-day Festival, which takes place in Ojai, a breathtaking valley 75 miles from Los Angeles, which is a perennial platform for the fresh and unexpected. During the immersive experience, a mingling of the most curious take part in concerts, symposia, free community events, and social gatherings. During the intimate Festival weekend, considered a highlight of the international music summer season, Ojai welcomes up to 7,000 patrons and reaches 35 times more audiences worldwide through live and on-demand streaming of concerts and discussions.

    Since its founding in 1947, the Ojai Music Festival has presented broad-ranging programs in unusual ways with an eclectic mix of new and rarely performed music, as well as refreshing juxtapositions of musical styles. Through its signature structure of the Artistic Director appointing a different  Music Director each year, Ojai has presented a “who’s who” of music including the multi-disciplinary colliding collective AMOC* (American Modern Opera Company) Vijay Iyer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and Barbara Hannigan in recent years; throughout its history, featured artists have included Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kent Nagano, Pierre Boulez, John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Robert Spano, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, David Robertson, Eighth Blackbird, George Benjamin, Dawn Upshaw, Leif Ove Andsnes, Mark Morris, Jeremy Denk, Steven Schick, Matthias Pintscher, and Peter Sellars.

    ###

    Press contacts:
    Ojai Music Festival: Gina Gutierrez, ggutierrez@ojaifestival.org (805) 646-2181
    National/International: Nikki Scandalios, nikki@scandaliospr.com (704) 340-4094

     

    Programs and artists are subject to change.

     

  • 2022 Live Stream Archive

    2022 Live Stream Archive

    The Ojai Music Festival offers
    the world beyond Ojai’s Libbey Bowl
    to experience the music and
    conversations through its
    free live streaming
    of Libbey Bowl concerts.

    For additional information, view the Full 2022 Festival Schedule.

     

    ____

    2022 Stream Archive

    To watch full screen, click in the bottom right of the player.

    Full Concerts

    Opening Night
    THU 6.9 @ 8:00pm

    EASTMAN
    FRI 6.10 @ 11:00am

    the echoing of tenses
    FRI 6.10 @ 5:00pm

    Recital No. 1: MASS
    FRI 6.10 @ 8:00pm

    About Bach
    SAT 6.11 @ 11:00am

    Little Jimmy + Family Dinner
    SAT 6.11 @ 8:00pm

    The Book of Sounds
    SUN 6.12 @ 10:00am

    Festival Finale
    SUN 6.12 @ 5:30pm

    Selected Pieces from Concerts

    Rebonds B by Iannis XENAKIS

    The Rose Once Blown by Kate SOPER
    the power of moss by Celeste ORAM

    Shaker Dance by Matthew AUCOIN

    scars plummet to the corners XIX and XX by Michael HERSCH

    Gay Guerilla by Julius EASTMAN

    Siciliano from Sonata in E major, BWV 1035 by J.S. BACH


    Book of Sounds (Part I) by Hans OTTE

    Stay On It by Julius EASTMAN

  • Relive the 2021 Live Stream Concerts

    Relive the 2021 Live Stream Concerts

    The Ojai Music Festival offers the world beyond Ojai’s Libbey Bowl to experience the music and conversations through its free live streaming.

    As we wait in anticipation of the 2022 Ojai Music Festival, June 9-12, with Music Director AMOC,  enjoy 2021 Libbey Bowl concerts and interviews with featured artists. Also check out the 2021 Program Book and Full Festival Schedule.

    2021 Stream Archive

    To watch full screen, click in the bottom right of the player.

    Full Concerts

    Ojai Mix: Prelude to a Festival
    THU 9.16 @ 9:00pm

    Attacca Quartet with Rhiannon…
    FRI 9.17 @ 11:00am

    John Adams conducts the Ojai…
    FRI 9.17 @ 8:00pm

    I Still Play with pianist Timo Andres
    SUN 9.19 @ 8:00am

    LA Phil New Music Group
    SUN 9.19 @ 11:00am

    Festival Finale
    SUN 9.19 @ 5:30pm

    Interviews

    Interview with Dustin Donahue

    Interview with Carlos Simon

    Interview with Gabriela Ortiz

    Interview with Ara Guzelimian

    Interview with Miranda Cuckson

    Interview with John Adams

    Selected Pieces from Concerts

    Élégie by Igor Stravinsky

    Huitzitl by Gabriela Ortiz

    Between Worlds by Carlos Simon

    Early to Rise by Timo Andres

    Magnolia by Dylan Mattingly

    Violin Diptych by S. Adams

    Maré by Gabriela Smith

    Toot Nipple by John Adams

    Alligator Escalator by John Adams

    Stubble Crotchet by John Adams

    Benkei’s Standing Death by Paul Wiancko

    Plan and Elevation by Caroline Shaw

    Strum by Jessie Montgomery

    Factory Girl (traditional) by Rhiannon Giddens

    Koromanti Tune # 2 / Build a House by Rhiannon Giddens

    At the Purchaser’s Option by
    Rhiannon Giddens

    Carrot Revolution by Gabriella Smith

    Danse sacrée et danse profane by Claude Debussy

    Partita No. 3 Preludio by J.S. Bach | Fog by Salonen

    Flow by Ingram Marshall

    Running Theme by Timo Andres

    Río de las Mariposas by Gabriela Ortiz

    To Give You Form And Breath by inti figgis-vizueta

    Hallelujah Junction by John Adams

    Objets Trouvés by Esa-Pekka Salonen

    Sunt Lacrime Rerum by Dylan Mattingly

     

  • 2022 Ojai Festival Updates

    2022 Ojai Festival Updates

    2022 Music Director AMOC and Artistic Director Ara Guzelimian Share Updates for the 76th Ojai Music Festival: June 9 to 12, 2022
    Festival programming will include nine world premieres:
    • Family Dinner, a cycle of new mini-concertos by Matthew Aucoin, featuring the entire AMOC ensemble, including Davóne Tines, Emi Ferguson, Doug Balliett, and Jonny Allen 
    • the echoing of tenses, a newly commissioned song cycle by Anthony Cheung, setting poems by Asian-American poets including Arthur Sze, Monica Youn, Jenny Xie, and Ocean Vuong, and featuring Paul Appleby, Miranda Cuckson, and Cheung himself as pianist
    • A new production of Olivier Messiaen’s song cycle Harawi featuring soprano Julia Bullock and pianist Conor Hanick, choreographed and danced by Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber, and directed by Zack Winokur
    • Open Rehearsal, a new collaborative dance-theater work directed by Bobbi Jene Smith featuring AMOC artists and guests Vinson Fraley, Jonathan Fredrickson, Jesse Kovarsky, Yiannis Logothetis, and Mouna Soualem
    • How to Fall Apart, a music-dance piece newly commissioned by AMOC, composed by Carolyn Chen in collaboration with Jay Campbell, Julia Eichten, Keir GoGwilt, Or Schraiber and guests Yiannis Logothetis and Matilda Sakamoto
    • The Cello Player, a music-dance piece created by AMOC members Or Schraiber, Coleman Itzkoff, Bobbi Jene Smith, and guest collaborator Yiannis Logothetis
    • A musical-poetic meditation reflecting on displacement and belonging, A Passageway Between Shores, which weaves together a tapestry of original compositions by poet Divya Victor, composer Carolyn Chen and violinist Keir GoGwilt alongside Irish, Scottish and Tamil tunes
    • Free community offerings: Dance in the Park, featuring the dance duo Julia Eichten and Bret Easterling, which celebrates tenderness, togetherness, and fierce joy. On Sunday afternoon, Rome is Falling by composer Doug Balliett will present a high-energy new telling where song, spoken word, and driving music come together to contextualize the action, complete with audience engagement and the performance of members of a local children’s choir
    Additional concert performances will include EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece, reflecting on Julius Eastman’s art and the larger context of his life, creativity, and humanity. Other programs will range from works of Vivaldi and Bach to Cassandra Miller, Reiko Fueting, and Hans Otte in a special performance of The Book of Sounds. Musical guest artists will include the early-music ensemble Ruckus, cellist Seth Parker Woods, composer/pianist Anthony Cheung, clarinetist Gleb Kanasevich, violist Carrie Frey, and percussionist Mari Yoshinaga


    “We are thrilled for audiences to meet AMOC and our formidable guest collaborators as creators and performers. This Festival, with its numerous world premieres, including six new theatrical productions, is a loving portrait of this moment in time, full of work that is based on our artists’ own experiences. As we climb out of this pandemic and meet each other in a moment when many of us still feel a lingering fear of contact with others, we believe it’s more important now than ever to find intimacy again, to gather together through rituals of performance. And we can’t imagine a more transcendent place to do that than at Ojai.” — Zack Winokur, Artistic Director of AMOC, 2022 Music Director

    OJAI, California — UPDATED March 22, 2022 — The 76th Ojai Music Festival, June 9 to 12, 2022, welcomes as Music Director the discipline-colliding collective AMOC (American Modern Opera Company), which represents a new generation of artists working together in creation and performance. Ojai’s Music Director AMOC comprises 17 of the most adventurous singers, dancers, instrumentalists, choreographers, and composers at work today in music and dance.

    For the 2022 Festival, AMOC will serve as the first-ever multi-disciplinary collective to hold the position of Music Director in the Festival’s 75-year history. AMOC has been described by The Boston Globe as “a creative incubator par excellence” and Peter Sellars in The New Yorker as “not just the future of opera but the future of everything.”  An ensemble of some of the most creative, forward-thinking artists working between tradition and experimentation, AMOC was co-founded by composer/conductor Matthew Aucoin and director/choreographer Zack Winokur in 2017 and includes core members Jonny Allen (percussion), Paul Appleby (tenor), Doug Balliett (double bass/composer), Julia Bullock (soprano), Jay Campbell (cello), Anthony Roth Costanzo (countertenor), Miranda Cuckson (violin/viola), Julia Eichten (dancer/choreographer), Emi Ferguson (flute), Keir GoGwilt (violin/scholar), Conor Hanick (piano), Coleman Itzkoff (cello), Or Schraiber (dancer/choreographer), Bobbi Jene Smith (dancer/choreographer), and Davóne Tines (bass-baritone). AMOC personnel includes Jennifer Chen (managing director), Cath Brittan (producer), and Mary McGowan (company manager). Julia Bullock, Jay Campbell, Miranda Cuckson, Emi Ferguson, and Davóne Tines will all make welcome returns to Ojai, having participated in past Ojai Festivals.

    Ojai Festival’s Artistic and Executive Director Ara Guzelimian commented, “As we mark the 75th anniversary of the Festival’s founding in 1947, we celebrate the spirit of Ojai which has always led the way to new and unexpected horizons, a spirit embodied in the work of AMOC. This brilliant assembly is representative of a new generation of artists – in their fearless melding of disciplines, in their spirit of collaboration as a central artistic premise, and their collective commitment to creation as well as performance. Together, they have produced some of the most exciting work to emerge in recent years. Their music directorship at Ojai is the first curatorial project that involves every single member of AMOC, and it has been an exhilarating process to devise these programs together. I happily anticipate a Festival full of joyous discovery and adventure.”

    WORLD PREMIERES
    Programming for the 2022 Festival will include a premiere performance of AMOC’s staging of Olivier Messiaen’s deeply affecting song cycle Harawi for soprano and piano. In addition to Julia Bullock and Conor Hanick’s performance of this sweeping work, this semi-staged production breaks open Messiaen’s musical explorations of love and death into a newly physicalized and theatrical dimension through the choreographic work of Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber, directed by Zack Winokur. Harawi, written in 1945, is based on an Andean love song genre of the same name, with texts by Messiaen and incorporating the Quechua language.

    The world premiere of Family Dinner, commissioned by the Ojai Festival, anchors the Saturday evening slot of the 2022 Festival. Family Dinner is a cycle of mini-concertos by Matthew Aucoin, each movement of which spotlights a different member of AMOC. The piece will also feature spoken “toasts” delivered both by AMOC artists and special guests.

    AMOC premieres a new program conceived by Keir GoGwilt, A Passageway Between Shores, a musical-poetic meditation reflecting on displacement and belonging, and featuring original work by poet Divya Victor, composer Carolyn Chen and GoGwilt.  Melding this original music with traditional songs and familiar refrains, A Passageway Between Shores includes Irish, Scottish and Tamil music.

    The Festival will present the premiere of LA-based composer Carolyn Chen’s How to Fall Apart, a newly-AMOC-commissioned one-hour work integrating text, gesture, and music. This will be a first-time collaboration between Chen and AMOC, and will feature AMOC members Jay Campbell, Julia Eichten, Keir GoGwilt, and guest collaborators Yiannis Logothetis and Matilda Sakamoto.

    A new full-length collaborative dance work created especially for the Ojai Festival by AMOC member and choreographer Bobbi Jene Smith, Open Rehearsal, evolves and adapts parts of Smith’s most recent film, Broken Theater, which was developed and shot at Mass MoCA and La MaMa. The piece explores themes of power, love, and trust through the theatrics of rehearsal and will feature music by Schubert, Bach, Connie Converse, and Pete Seeger.

    The Cello Player, another new collaborative piece, will receive its first performance at Ojai. Created by Or Schraiber, Yiannis Logothetis, Coleman Itzkoff, and Bobbi Jene Smith, The Cello Player is a dance-music piece excavating the complexity of ancient relationships: the tortured conception of friendship as a messy amalgam of love, hatred, insecurity, and neediness.

    Rounding out the world premieres in Ojai will be an Ojai Festival-commissioned song cycle, the echoing of tenses, by Anthony Cheung. The piece sets poems by Asian-American writers interconnected by the larger theme of memory, made complicated by the circumstances and tensions of cultural and personal identity, family, migration, loss, and reflection. The various poems by Arthur Sze, Monica Youn, Jenny Xie, Ocean Vuong, and others will be sung, spoken, and interwoven throughout. The work features Paul Appleby, Miranda Cuckson, and Cheung himself as pianist.

    FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS
    In addition to a rich offering of AMOC’s newest productions, the 2022 Festival will include concert events in Libbey Bowl, with a kick-off concert on Thursday evening presenting an epic musical marathon that will feature AMOC’s core members. This wide-ranging program will include music by Kate Soper, Michael Hersch, Celeste Oram, Orlando Gibbons, Matthew Aucoin, Iannis Xenakis, Bob Dylan, Frederic Rzewski, and Eric Wubbels.

    Bookending the four-day event on Sunday evening, AMOC will bring the 2022 Festival to a close with a joyful, high-spirited program that brings together every one of the Festival’s artists, in every discipline, for a grand finale and communal catharsis. The program will feature a broad array of Baroque music featuring countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo and Ruckus, and the Festival will conclude with the entire company performing Julius Eastman’s jubilant, mesmerizing Stay On It.

    Additional musical highlights of the four-day Festival will include EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece, reflecting the performers’ consideration of Julius Eastman’s art and the larger context of his life, creativity, and humanity; a rare performance of the complete epic solo piano work The Book of Sounds by pioneering German composer and pianist Hans Otte played by Conor Hanick; and a program titled About Bach, which pairs works of Bach with contemporary reflections on his music by Cassandra Miller and Reiko Fueting.

    The Festival offers its first performance of a work by one of Southern California’s most vital and distinctive musical voices, Andrew McIntosh. McIntosh’s Little Jimmy was inspired by a visit the composer made to a backpackers’ camp called Little Jimmy, located on Mt. Islip in the Angeles National Forest.  Little Jimmy, performed by pianists Conor Hanick and Matthew Aucoin and percussionists Jonny Allen and Mari Yoshinaga, is programmed alongside Messiaen’s Harawi.

    Making their Ojai Festival debuts will be Ruckus, a “shapeshifting” Baroque early music band comprising some of today’s leading soloists of Baroque repertoire; musicians Carrie Frey, Gleb Kanasevich, Seth Parker Woods, and Mari Yoshinaga; and artistic collaborators in the multi-disciplinary works including Bret Easterling, Vinson Fraley, Jonathan Fredrickson, Jesse Kovarsky, Yiannis Logothetis, Matilda Sakamoto, and Mouna Soualem.

    COMMUNITY OFFERINGS
    During the four days of the Festival, free community activities will occur in Libbey Park and throughout Ojai, as well as ongoing integration of the Festival’s year-round BRAVO music education program in the public schools.

    On Sunday, June 12, all are invited to two free events receiving their world premieres in Libbey Park.  The first, Dance in the Park, features the dance duo Julia Eichten and Bret Easterling, celebrating  tenderness, togetherness, and fierce joy. On Sunday afternoon, Rome is Falling is a high-energy new telling where song, spoken word, and driving music come together to contextualize the action with audience engagement and the performance of a local children’s choir. The new work by AMOC member Doug Balliett features the composer, Coleman Itzkoff, Davóne Tines, Anthony Roth Costanzo, Jonny Allen, Keir Gogwilt, Emi Ferguson, Julia Bullock, Paul Appleby, Matthew Aucoin, and Ruckus.

    BEYOND OJAI: DIGITAL OFFERINGS
    The Ojai Music Festival lives beyond the flagship four-day festival in June, allowing further engagement with audiences worldwide. Free offerings include the Festival’s state-of-the-art live streaming and archived library of concerts, Virtual Ojai Talks with featured 2022 Festival artists, and OjaiCast, the podcast series that provides insights on upcoming programming. The Festival’s digital projects are available at OjaiFestival.org.

    Click Here to View Festival Schedule 

    AMOC, 2022 MUSIC DIRECTOR
    Founded in 2017 by Matthew Aucoin and Zack Winokur, the mission of AMOC (American Modern Opera Company) is to build and share a body of collaborative work. As a group of dancers, singers, musicians, writers, directors, composers, choreographers, and producers united by a core set of values, AMOC artists pool their resources to create new pathways that connect creators and audiences in surprising and visceral ways. AMOC recently received a $750,000 grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation “to support visionary artists in collaborative processes that re-envision a long-enduring art form in an artist-centric and contemporary manner.”

    Current and past projects include The No One’s Rose, a devised music-theater-dance piece featuring new music by Matthew Aucoin, directed by Zack Winokur with choreography by Bobbi Jene Smith; EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece contending with the life and work of Julius Eastman; Winokur’s production of Hans Werner Henze’s El Cimarrón, which has been performed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Repertory Theater; a new arrangement of John Adams’s El Niño, premiered at The Met Cloisters as part of Julia Bullock’s season-long residency at the Met Museum; Davóne Tines’s and Winokur’s Were You There, a meditation on black lives lost in recent years to police violence; and Bobbi Jene Smith and Keir GoGwilt’s dance/music works With Care and A Study on Effort, which have been produced at San Francisco’s ODC Theater, Toronto’s Luminato Festival, and elsewhere. Conor Hanick’s performance of CAGE, Zack Winokur’s production of John Cage’s music for prepared piano, was cited as the best recital of the year by The New York Times in 2018 and The Boston Globe in 2019. Additionally, AMOC will serve as the Ojai Music Festival’s 2022 Music Director, only the second ensemble, and first explicitly interdisciplinary company, to hold the position in the Festival’s 75-year history.

    CO-FOUNDERS

    MATTHEW AUCOIN, composer, conductor, pianist
    ZACK WINOKUR, director, choreographer, dancer

    ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
    ZACK WINOKUR

    MANAGING DIRECTOR
    JENNIFER CHEN

    PRODUCER
    CATH BRITTAN

    COMPANY MANAGER
    MARY MCGOWAN

    CORE ENSEMBLE
    JONNY ALLEN, percussionist
    PAUL APPLEBY, tenor
    DOUG BALLIETT, double bassist, composer
    JULIA BULLOCK, soprano
    JAY CAMPBELL, cellist
    ANTHONY ROTH COSTANZO, countertenor
    MIRANDA CUCKSON, violinist, violist
    JULIA EICHTEN, dancer, choreographer
    EMI FERGUSON, flutist
    KEIR GOGWILT, violinist, scholar
    CONOR HANICK, pianist
    COLEMAN ITZKOFF, cellist
    OR SCHRAIBER, dancer, choreographer
    BOBBI JENE SMITH, dancer, choreographer
    DAVÓNE TINES, bass-baritone

    ARA GUZELIMIAN, ARTISTIC AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
    Ara Guzelimian is Artistic and Executive Director of the Ojai Music Festival, having begun in that position in July 2020. The appointment culminates many years of association with the Festival, including tenures as director of the Ojai Talks and as Artistic Director 1992–97. Guzelimian stepped down as provost and dean of the Juilliard School in New York City in June 2020, having served in that position since 2007. At Juilliard, he worked closely with the president in overseeing the faculty, curriculum, and artistic planning of the distinguished performing arts conservatory in all three of its divisions: dance, drama, and music. He continues at Juilliard as Special Advisor, Office of the President.

    Prior to the Juilliard appointment, he was senior director and artistic advisor of Carnegie Hall from 1998 to 2006. Guzelimian serves as artistic consultant for the Marlboro Music Festival and School in Vermont. He is a member of the steering committee of the Aga Khan Music Awards, the artistic committee of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust in London, and a board member of the Amphion and Pacific Harmony Foundations. He is also a member of the music visiting committee of the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City.

    Previously, Guzelimian held the position of artistic administrator of the Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado, and he was long associated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the beginning of his career, first as producer for the orchestra’s national radio broadcasts and, subsequently, as Artistic Administrator. Mr. Guzelimian is editor of Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (Pantheon Books, 2002), a collection of dialogues between Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said. In September 2003, Guzelimian was awarded the title Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government for his contributions to French music and culture.

    OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The Ojai Music Festival represents an ideal of adventurous, open-minded and open-hearted programming in the most beautiful and welcoming of settings, with audiences and artists to match its aspirations. As its 75th anniversary approaches, the Festival remains a haven for thought-provoking musical experiences, bringing together innovative artists and curious audiences in an intimate, idyllic outdoor setting. Each Festival’s narrative is guided by a different Music Director, whose distinctive perspectives shape programming — ensuring energized festivals year after year.

    Throughout each year, the Ojai Music Festival contributes to Southern California’s cultural landscape with in-person and online Festival-related programming as well as robust educational offerings that serve thousands of public-school students and seniors. The organization’s apex is the world-renowned four-day Festival, which takes place in Ojai, a breathtaking valley 75 miles from Los Angeles, which is a perennial platform for the fresh and unexpected. During the immersive experience, a mingling of the most curious take part in concerts, symposia, free community events, and social gatherings. During the intimate Festival weekend, considered a highlight of the international music summer season, Ojai welcomes up to 7,000 patrons and reaches 35 times more audiences worldwide through live and on-demand streaming of concerts and discussions.

    Since its founding in 1947, the Ojai Music Festival has presented broad-ranging programs in unusual ways with an eclectic mix of new and rarely performed music, as well as refreshing juxtapositions of musical styles. Through its signature structure of the Artistic Director appointing a different  Music Director each year, Ojai has presented a “who’s who” of music including Vijay Iyer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and Barbara Hannigan in recent years; throughout its history, featured artists have included Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kent Nagano, Pierre Boulez, John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Robert Spano, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, David Robertson, Eighth Blackbird, George Benjamin, Dawn Upshaw, Leif Ove Andsnes, Mark Morris, Jeremy Denk, Steven Schick, Matthias Pintscher, and Peter Sellars.

    COVID-19 HEALTH AND SAFETY PLANNING
    The Ojai Music Festival is committed to the health and safety of the Festival and greater Ojai communities. Given changing conditions, we continue to consult with county and state public health officials to determine the best practices (which may include masking and vaccination requirements) to put into effect for the June Festival. We will communicate our policy and any required protocols as we approach the June Festival. Please check our website for updated health and safety information to plan your visit.

    SINGLE TICKET FOR 2022 OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    2022 Ojai Festival single tickets are on sale and range from $50 to $150 in the reserved section of Libbey Bowl. Lawn tickets available at $20. Tickets may be purchased online at OjaiFestival.org or by calling (805) 646-2053.

    ####

  • 2021 Live Stream Archive

    2021 Live Stream Archive

    The Ojai Music Festival offers the world beyond Ojai’s Libbey Bowl to experience the music and conversations through its free live streaming.

    Viewers can enjoy interviews with artists before each performance with Live Stream hosts Thomas Kotcheff and Sarah Gibson. Also check out the 2021 Program Book and Full Festival Schedule.

    ____

    2021 Stream Archive

    To watch in full-screen mode, click in the bottom right of the player.

    Full Concerts

    Ojai Mix: Prelude to a Festival
    THU 9.16 @ 9:00pm

    Attacca Quartet with Rhiannon…
    FRI 9.17 @ 11:00am

    John Adams conducts the Ojai…
    FRI 9.17 @ 8:00pm

    I Still Play with pianist Timo Andres
    SUN 9.19 @ 8:00am

    LA Phil New Music Group
    SUN 9.19 @ 11:00am

    Festival Finale
    SUN 9.19 @ 5:30pm

    Interviews

    Interview with Dustin Donahue

    Interview with Carlos Simon

    Interview with Gabriela Ortiz

    Interview with Ara Guzelimian

    Interview with Miranda Cuckson

    Interview with John Adams

    Selected Pieces from Concerts

    Élégie by Igor Stravinsky

    Huitzitl by Gabriela Ortiz

    Between Worlds by Carlos Simon

    Early to Rise by Timo Andres

    Magnolia by Dylan Mattingly

    Violin Diptych by S. Adams

    Maré by Gabriela Smith

    Toot Nipple by John Adams

    Alligator Escalator by John Adams

    Stubble Crotchet by John Adams

    Benkei’s Standing Death by Paul Wiancko

    Plan and Elevation by Caroline Shaw

    Strum by Jessie Montgomery

    Factory Girl (traditional) by Rhiannon Giddens

    Koromanti Tune # 2 / Build a House by Rhiannon Giddens

    At the Purchaser’s Option by
    Rhiannon Giddens

    Carrot Revolution by Gabriella Smith

    Danse sacrée et danse profane by Claude Debussy

    Partita No. 3 Preludio by J.S. Bach | Fog by Salonen

    Flow by Ingram Marshall

    Running Theme by Timo Andres

    Río de las Mariposas by Gabriela Ortiz

    To Give You Form And Breath by inti figgis-vizueta

    Hallelujah Junction by John Adams

    Objets Trouvés by Esa-Pekka Salonen

    Sunt Lacrime Rerum by Dylan Mattingly

     

    ____

    2021 Live Stream Schedule

    To view the live stream, visit our homepage at concert-time. The live stream video will appear at the top of the page. If it’s concert-time and the live stream still hasn’t appeared, click at the top left of your browser to reload the page. To watch in full-screen mode, click in the bottom right of the player.

    More live stream questions? Please call or text (805) 317-4184.

    THU Sept 16, 2021 – Stream begins 8:45pm

    • 8:45pm – Welcome
    • 9:00pm – Ojai Mix: Prelude to a Festival

    FRI Sept 17, 2021Stream begins 10:45am

    • 10:45am – Interview with Dustin Donahue
    • 11:00am – Attacca Quartet with Rhiannon Giddens

    FRI Sept 17, 2021 – Stream begins 7:45pm

    • 7:45pm – Interview with Carlos Simon
    • 8:00pm – John Adams conducts the Ojai Festival Orchestra

    SAT Sept 18, 2021 – Stream begins 10:15am

    • 10:15am – Interview with John Adams
    • 10:30am – Pianist Víkingur Ólafsson in recital

    SAT Sept 18, 2021 – Stream begins 7:45pm

    • 7:45pm – Interview with Miranda Cuckson
    • 8:00pm – They’re Calling Me Home (Rhiannon Giddens and friends)

    SUN Sept 19, 2021 – Stream begins 7:45am

    • Welcome
    • 8:00am – I Still Play (Timo Andres, piano)

    SUN Sept 19, 2021 – Stream begins 10:45am

    • 10:45am – Interview with Gabriela Ortiz
    • 11:00am – LA Phil New Music Group

    SUN Sept 19, 2021 – Stream begins 5:15pm

    • 5:15pm – Interview with Ara Guzelimian
    • 5:30pm – Festival Finale with John Adams, Víkingur Ólafsson, Rhiannon Giddens, and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra (LACO)

  • 2022 Ojai Festival Announcement

    2022 Ojai Festival Announcement


     

    2022 Music Director AMOC (American Modern Opera Company) and  Artistic Director Ara Guzelimian Announce the 76th Ojai Music Festival: June 9–12, 2022

    Festival programming will include six world premieres:
    • Family Dinner, a cycle of new mini-concertos by Matthew Aucoin, featuring the entire AMOC ensemble, including Davóne Tines, Emi Ferguson, Doug Balliett, and Jonny Allen
    • the echoing of tenses, a newly commissioned song cycle by Anthony Cheung, setting poems by Asian-American poets including Arthur Sze, Monica Youn, Jenny Xie, and Ocean Vuong, and featuring Paul Appleby, Miranda Cuckson, and Conor Hanick 
    • A semi-staged performance of Olivier Messiaen’s song cycle Harawi featuring soprano Julia Bullock and pianist Conor Hanick, directed by Zack Winokur, choreographed and danced by Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber
    • A collaborative dance-theater work directed by Bobbi Jene Smith featuring AMOC artists and guests Vinson Fraley, Jesse Kovarsky, Yiannis Logothetis, Mackenzie Meldrum, and Mouna Soualem
    • How to Fall Apart, a music-dance piece newly commissioned by AMOC, composed by Carolyn Chen in collaboration with Jay Campbell, Julia Eichten, Keir GoGwilt, Or Schraiber and guests Yiannis Logothetis and Matilda Sakamoto
    • Waiting, a music-dance piece, created by AMOC members Or Schraiber, Coleman Itzkoff, Bobbi Jene Smith, and guest collaborator Yiannis Logothetis
    Additional concert performances will include EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece, reflecting on Julius Eastman’s art and the larger context of his life, creativity, and humanity. Other programs will range from works of Monteverdi and Bach to Cassandra Miller, Reiko Fueting, and Hans Otte in a special performance of his epic The Book of Sounds. Guest artists include the early-music ensemble Ruckus and cellist Seth Parker Woods

     

    “For many decades, the Ojai Festival has been an artistic oasis, a place where artists and audiences alike go to be refreshed by the Festival’s atmosphere of openness, experimentation, and adventure. AMOC is thrilled and honored to uphold Ojai’s essential spirit and to expand the Festival’s scope through works developed in collaboration across the arts. We can’t imagine a better forum to feature the work of AMOC’s many artists and guest collaborators.

    This Festival will be a welcome return for many of us: a return to Ojai for previous Festival artists including Julia Bullock, Jay Campbell, Miranda Cuckson, Emi Ferguson, and Davóne Tines, and a return to collaboration with Ojai’s Artistic Director & Executive Director Ara Guzelimian for the many AMOC artists who have benefited from Ara’s wisdom throughout their careers.” — AMOC, 2022 Music Director

    Download Announcement, PDF version 

    Ojai CA — The 76th Ojai Music Festival, June 9 to 12, 2022, welcomes as Music Director the discipline-colliding collective AMOC (American Modern Opera Company), which represents a new generation of artists working together in creation and performance. Ojai’s Music Director AMOC is made up of 17 of the most adventurous singers, dancers, instrumentalists, choreographers, and composers at work today in music and dance.

    For the 2022 Festival, AMOC will serve as the first-ever collective to hold the position of Music Director in the Festival’s 75-year history. As described by The Boston Globe, AMOC is “a creative incubator par excellence.” A collective of some of the most creative, forward-thinking artists working between tradition and experimentation, AMOC was co-founded by composer/conductor Matthew Aucoin and director/choreographer Zack Winokur and includes core members Jonny Allen (percussion), Paul Appleby (tenor), Doug Balliett (double bass/composer), Julia Bullock (soprano), Jay Campbell (cello), Anthony Roth Costanzo (countertenor), Miranda Cuckson (violin/viola), Julia Eichten (dancer/choreographer), Emi Ferguson (flute), Keir GoGwilt (violin/scholar), Conor Hanick (piano), Coleman Itzkoff (cello), Or Schraiber (dancer/choreographer), Bobbi Jene Smith (dancer/choreographer), and Davóne Tines (bass-baritone). AMOC personnel includes Jennifer Chen (managing director), Cath Brittan (producer), and Mary McGowan (company manager). Julia Bullock, Jay Campbell, Miranda Cuckson, Emi Ferguson, and Davóne Tines will all make welcome returns to Ojai, having participated in past Ojai Festivals.

    Ojai Festival’s Artistic and Executive Director Ara Guzelimian commented, “As we mark the 75th anniversary of the Festival’s founding in 1947, we celebrate the spirit of Ojai which has always led the way to new and unexpected horizons, a spirit embodied in the work of AMOC. This brilliant assembly is representative of a new generation of artists — in their fearless melding of disciplines, in their spirit of collaboration as a central artistic premise, and their collective commitment to creation as well as performance. Together, they have produced some of the most exciting work to emerge in recent years. Their music directorship at Ojai is the first curatorial project that involves every single member of AMOC, and it has been an exhilarating process to devise these programs together. I happily anticipate a Festival full of joyous discovery and adventure.”

    WORLD PREMIERES
    Programming for the 2022 Festival will include the world premiere performance of AMOC’s staging of Olivier Messiaen’s deeply affecting song cycle Harawi for soprano and piano. In addition to Julia Bullock and Conor Hanick’s performance of this sweeping work, this semi-staged production breaks open Messiaen’s musical explorations of love and death into a newly physicalized and theatrical dimension through the choreographic work of Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber, and direction by Zack Winokur. Harawi, written in 1945, is based on an Andean love song genre of the same name, with texts by Messiaen and incorporating the Quechua language.

    The world premiere of Family Dinner anchors the Friday evening slot of the 2022 Festival. Family Dinner is a cycle of mini-concertos by Matthew Aucoin, each movement of which spotlights a different member of AMOC. The piece will also feature spoken “toasts” delivered both by AMOC artists and special guests.

    The Festival will present the premiere of Carolyn Chen’s How to Fall Apart, a newly-commissioned one-hour work integrating text, gesture, and music. This will be a first-time collaboration between Chen and AMOC, and will feature AMOC members Jay Campbell, Julia Eichten, Keir GoGwilt, Or Schraiber, and guest collaborators Yiannis Logothetis, and Matilda Sakamoto.

     A new full-length collaborative dance work created especially for the Ojai Festival by AMOC member and choreographer Bobbi Jene Smith. This new work, evolving and adapting parts of Smith’s most recent film Broken Theater, which was developed and shot at Mass MoCA and La MaMa, explores themes of power, love, and trust through the theatrics of rehearsal. The work will feature music by Schubert, Bach, Connie Converse, and Pete Seeger.

    Waiting, another new collaborative piece, will receive its first performance at Ojai. Created by Or Schraiber, Yiannis Logothetis, Coleman Itzkoff, and Bobbi Jene Smith, Waiting is a dance-music piece excavating the complexity of ancient relationships: the tortured conception of friendship as a messy amalgam of love, hatred, insecurity, and neediness.

    Rounding out the world premieres in Ojai will be an AMOC-commissioned song cycle, the echoing of tenses, by Anthony Cheung. The piece sets poems by Asian-American writers interconnected by the larger theme of memory, made complicated by the circumstances and tensions of cultural and personal identity, family, migration, loss, and reflection. The various poems by Arthur Sze, Monica Youn, Jenny Xie, Ocean Vuong, and others will be sung, spoken, and interwoven throughout. The work features Paul Appleby, Miranda Cuckson, and Conor Hanick.

    FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS
    In addition to a rich offering of AMOC’s newest productions, the 2022 Festival will include concert events in Libbey Bowl, with a kick-off concert on Thursday evening presenting an epic musical marathon that will feature AMOC’s core members. This wide-ranging program will include music by Andy Akiho, Kate Soper, Alban Berg, Celeste Oram, Matthew Aucoin, Iannis Xenakis, and Eric Wubbels. Bookending the four-day event on Sunday evening, AMOC will bring the 2022 Festival to a close with a joyful, high-spirited program that brings together every one of the Festival’s artists, in every discipline, for a grand finale and communal catharsis. The program will range from Baroque arias featuring countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo, to the ecstatic, shape-shifting grooves of Julius Eastman.

    Musical highlights of the four-day Festival will include EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece, reflecting the performers’ consideration of Julius Eastman’s art and the larger context of his life, creativity, and humanity; a rare performance of the complete epic solo piano work The Book of Sounds by pioneering German composer and pianist Hans Otte played by Conor Hanick; and a program titled About Bach, which pairs works of Bach with contemporary reflections on his music by Cassandra Miller and Reiko Fueting, among others.

    Making their Ojai Festival debuts will be Ruckus, a “shapeshifting” Baroque early music band comprising some of today’s leading soloists of Baroque repertoire; cellist Seth Parker Woods and artistic collaborators in the multi-disciplinary works including Vinson Fraley, Jesse Kovarsky, Yiannis Logothetis, Mackenzie Meldrum, Matilda Sakamoto, and Mouna Soualem.

    COMMUNITY OFFERINGS
    During the four days of the upcoming Festival, free community activities will occur in Libbey Park and throughout Ojai, as well as ongoing integration of the Festival’s year-round BRAVO music education program in the public schools. Additional programming details will be announced in spring 2022.

    BEYOND OJAI: DIGITAL OFFERINGS
    The Ojai Music Festival lives beyond the flagship four-day festival in June, allowing further engagement with audiences worldwide. Free offerings include the Festival’s state-of-the-art live streaming and archived library of concerts, Virtual Ojai Talks with featured Festival artists and alum, and OjaiCast, the new podcast series that provides insights on upcoming programming. The Festival’s digital projects are available at OjaiFestival.org.

    View Festival Schedule 

    AMOC (AMERICAN MODERN OPERA COMPANY), 2022 MUSIC DIRECTOR
    Founded in 2017 by Matthew Aucoin and Zack Winokur, the mission of AMOC (American Modern Opera Company) is to build and share a body of collaborative work. As a group of dancers, singers, musicians, writers, directors, composers, choreographers, and producers united by a core set of values, AMOC artists pool their resources to create new pathways that connect creators and audiences in surprising and visceral ways.

    Current and past projects include The No One’s Rose, a devised music-theater-dance piece featuring new music by Matthew Aucoin, directed by Zack Winokur with choreography by Bobbi Jene Smith; EASTMAN, a multi-dimensional performance piece contending with the life and work of Julius Eastman; Winokur’s production of Hans Werner Henze’s El Cimarrón, which has been performed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Repertory Theater; a new arrangement of John Adams’s El Niño, premiered at The Met Cloisters as part of Julia Bullock’s season-long residency at the Met Museum; Davóne Tines’s and Winokur’s Were You There, a meditation on black lives lost in recent years to police violence; and Bobbi Jene Smith and Keir GoGwilt’s dance/music works With Care and A Study on Effort, which have been produced at San Francisco’s ODC Theater, Toronto’s Luminato Festival, and elsewhere. Conor Hanick’s performance of CAGE, Zack Winokur’s production of John Cage’s music for prepared piano, was cited as the best recital of the year by The New York Times in 2018 and The Boston Globe in 2019. Additionally, AMOC will serve as the Ojai Music Festival’s 2022 Music Director, only the second ensemble, and first explicitly interdisciplinary company, to hold the position in the Festival’s 75-year history.

    CO-FOUNDERS
    MATTHEW AUCOIN, composer, conductor, pianist
    ZACK WINOKUR, director, choreographer, dancer

    ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
    ZACK WINOKUR

    MANAGING DIRECTOR
    JENNIFER CHEN

    PRODUCER
    CATH BRITTAN

    CORE ENSEMBLE
    JONNY ALLEN, percussionist
    PAUL APPLEBY, tenor
    DOUG BALLIETT, double bassist, composer
    JULIA BULLOCK, soprano
    JAY CAMPBELL, cellist
    ANTHONY ROTH COSTANZO, countertenor
    MIRANDA CUCKSON, violinist, violist
    JULIA EICHTEN, dancer, choreographer
    EMI FERGUSON, flutist
    KEIR GOGWILT, violinist, scholar
    CONOR HANICK, pianist
    COLEMAN ITZKOFF, cellist
    OR SCHRAIBER, dancer, choreographer
    BOBBI JENE SMITH, dancer, choreographer
    DAVÓNE TINES, bass-baritone

    ARA GUZELIMIAN, ARTISTIC AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
    Ara Guzelimian is Artistic and Executive Director of the Ojai Music Festival, beginning in that position in July 2020. The appointment culminates many years of association with the Festival, including tenures as director of the Ojai Talks and as Artistic Director 1992–97. Guzelimian stepped down as provost and dean of the Juilliard School in New York City in June 2020, having served in that position since 2007. At Juilliard, he worked closely with the president in overseeing the faculty, curriculum, and artistic planning of the distinguished performing arts conservatory in all three of its divisions: dance, drama, and music. He continues at Juilliard as special advisor, Office of the President.

    Prior to the Juilliard appointment, he was senior director and artistic advisor of Carnegie Hall from 1998 to 2006. Guzelimian serves as artistic consultant for the Marlboro Music Festival and School in Vermont. He is a member of the steering committee of the Aga Khan Music Awards, the artistic committee of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust in London, and a board member of the Amphion and Pacific Harmony Foundations. He is also a member of the music visiting committee of the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City. 

    Previously, Guzelimian held the position of artistic administrator of the Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado, and he was long associated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the beginning of his career, first as producer for the orchestra’s national radio broadcasts and, subsequently, as Artistic Administrator. Mr. Guzelimian is editor of Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (Pantheon Books, 2002), a collection of dialogues between Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said. In September 2003, Guzelimian was awarded the title Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government for his contributions to French music and culture.

    OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    The Ojai Music Festival represents an ideal of adventurous, open-minded and open-hearted programming in the most beautiful and welcoming of settings, with audiences and artists to match its aspirations. As its 75th anniversary approaches, the Festival remains a haven for thought-provoking musical experiences, bringing together innovative artists and curious audiences in an intimate, idyllic outdoor setting. Each Festival’s narrative is guided by a different Music Director, whose distinctive perspectives shape programming — ensuring energized festivals year after year.

    Throughout each year, the Ojai Music Festival contributes to Southern California’s cultural landscape with in-person and online Festival-related programming as well as robust educational offerings that serve thousands of public-school students and seniors. The organization’s apex is the world-renowned four-day Festival, which takes place in Ojai, a breathtaking valley 75 miles from Los Angeles, which is a perennial platform for the fresh and unexpected. During the immersive experience, a mingling of the most curious take part in concerts, symposia, free community events, and social gatherings. During the intimate Festival weekend, considered a highlight of the international music summer season, Ojai welcomes 7,000 patrons and reaches 35 times more audiences worldwide through live and on-demand streaming of concerts and discussions.

    Since its founding in 1947, the Ojai Music Festival has presented broad-ranging programs in unusual ways with an eclectic mix of new and rarely performed music, as well as refreshing juxtapositions of musical styles. Through its signature structure of the Artistic Director appointing a different  Music Director each year, Ojai has presented a “who’s who” of music including Vijay Iyer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and Barbara Hannigan in recent years; throughout its history, featured artists have included Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kent Nagano, Pierre Boulez, John Adams, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Robert Spano, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, David Robertson, Eighth Blackbird, George Benjamin, Dawn Upshaw, Leif Ove Andsnes, Mark Morris, Jeremy Denk, Steven Schick, Matthias Pintscher, and Peter Sellars.

    COVID-19 HEALTH AND SAFETY PLANNING 
    The health and safety of the Festival’s family of artists, audiences, and Ojai community is paramount. We will continue to update safety protocols to ensure we follow best practices for the Festival in June 2022. During the 2021 Festival, the Festival developed COVID-19 safety protocols with a team of local public health officials that included proof of vaccination and wearing masks. As we look toward June when we gather once again, the Festival will continue to monitor evolving information related to the global pandemic and work with our team to determine the safest protocol.

    SERIES PASSES FOR 2022 OJAI MUSIC FESTIVAL
    2022 Ojai Festival series passes are available and may be purchased online, or by calling (805) 646-2053. Festival series passes range from $205 to $965 for
    reserved seating and lawn series passes start at $80.

  • Countdown to the 75th Festival

    Countdown to the 75th Festival

     


     

    Over the summer, we happily presented Musical Pop-Ups for the Ojai community as our thanks for its 75 years of support.
    Enjoy a glimpse of music around the town as we wait in anticipation for the 75th Ojai Music Festival in September. 

     

     

    Video production by Two Fish Digital. 

     

     

  • Music at Ojai Meadows Preserve

    Music at Ojai Meadows Preserve

     

    Dear Ojai Festival friends,

    I write this on the first day of summer at a welcome time of our world opening up. There is a warmth in the air and the promise of gathering with friends and family. 

    Music ultimately thrives in the moment of its sounding. When John Adams and I began talking about the 2021 Ojai Festival as long ago as fall 2019, we never imagined the resonance that our incipient plans would have nearly two years later. Neither of us wanted the 75th anniversary to be a retrospective of the Festival’s golden past and John specifically wanted to provide a forum for a new generation of composers that he admired. Coming out of a pandemic, this focus on younger composer now reads like a much-needed statement of faith in the present, and the promise of the future.

    John has been one of the most generous of composers throughout his career. As a conductor, he has led something in the vicinity of 100 premieres of new works with orchestras and ensembles across the world. His friendships and collaboration with such artists as Peter Sellars, Dawn Upshaw, Leila Josefowicz, Julia Bullock, Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson, and Sanford Sylvan have been among the defining milestones of their careers. John and I met at a Cal Arts Festival in the 1980s, when his Grand Pianola Music was creating a stir for its unabashed exuberance and immediacy. His works then and in the intervening decades have helped create a unique American voice for our time – he seamlessly folds in multiple influences and experiences, from the Duke Ellington band playing on a summer platform at Lake Winnipesaukee in his New Hampshire childhood, to New England Transcendentalism, to the Schoenberg Chamber Symphony, to the California sensibilities of the Beat Generation, to  defining political events of our time as the material of opera, to the symphonies of Sibelius and much more.

    John recently made a visit to Ojai during the mid-June week which had been the period of the original scheduled Festival. We shared a series of free pop-up mini-concerts in outdoor settings throughout Ojai, as a gift to the community and in anticipation of the Festival to come in September. It was such a joy to hear music again in the summer air of Ojai, with those magical Topa Topa mountains framing the scene.

    Here is a small gift to you with our heartfelt thanks for all that you do and for your belief in the future of the Ojai Music Festival. While in Ojai earlier this month, we were graced by the company of Niloufar Shiri, a composer, improviser, and kamancheh player, who is currently working on her doctorate in composition at UC Irvine. The musical heritage of the kamancheh, a bowed lap fiddle, ranges from the Iran and the Middle East to Central Asia. Niloufar recorded this brief work in the magical setting of the Ojai Meadows Preserve, one of the numerous glorious natural areas preserved for all by the Ojai Valley Land Conservancy.

    We bring this to you in celebration of music made in Ojai and with deep gratitude for your continued support. Thank you and see you at Libbey Bowl in September!

    With thanks and warm regards from all of us at the Ojai Festival,

    Ara Guzelimian
    Artistic & Executive Director


    ABOUT Niloufar Shiri, Kamancheh
    Niloufar Shiri is a kamancheh player and composer from Tehran, Iran, trained in Iranian classical music. Niloufar is a graduate in kamâncheh performance of the Tehran Music Conservatory and received her bachelor degree with honors in composition from UC San Diego.

    She is an imaginative interpreter of Iranian music and uses story-telling and poetry as a source of inspiration for her deeply textural and often ghostly music. Her compositions use aspects of contemporary Iranian poetry to incorporate the enigmatic complexity of Iranian literature and culture.

    As a kamancheh player and composer, she has received commissions and collaborated with numerous ensembles and festivals inside and outside of the United States including the International Contemporary Ensemble, Long Beach Opera, Mostly Mozart, Tehran Contemporary Music Festival, Atlas Ensemble among others. In conjunction with her studies at UC San Diego, she has also been directly studying and researching Iranian classical music with the research team of maestro Hossein Omoumi at UC Irvine and in 2012, the research received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

    She is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in Integrated Composition, Improvisation, and Technology at UC Irvine.

     

     

    The Ojai Valley Land Conservancy is a community supported nonprofit that protects and restores the open space, wildlife habitat, watersheds, and views of the Ojai Valley for current and future generations. In the Ojai Valley, the OVLC manages roughly 2,300 acres of open space. On these lands the OVLC maintains 27 miles of trail, guides hundreds of visitors, and hosts tens of thousands of school children, hikers, equestrians, and others each year.  For more information visit their website here.

     

    Video production by Two Fish Digital. 

     

     

  • Dylan Mattingly & Emily Levin

    Dylan Mattingly & Emily Levin

    Press Play; Click Box Above to Go Full Screen [  ]


    Welcome to the Festival’s continuing series of the virtual Ojai Talks, where we celebrate the intersection of music, ideas, and the creative process with Ojai Festival artists, innovators, and thinkers.

     

    Festival composer Dylan Mattingly and harpist Emily Levin discuss Dylan’s new work Sunt Lacrimae Rerum (these are the tears of things), which will receive its world premiere with the LA Phil New Music Group in Ojai this coming September 19, 2021 as part of the 75th Ojai Music Festival. 

    Dylan has a unique voice that draws as much from innovative, often microtonal sonic language as it does from his deep absorption in the classics of ancient Greece and Rome. The piece takes inspiration (and its title)  from Virgil’s Aeneid – Aeneas, fleeing the destruction of war, finds a vision of salvation in a work of art. We will also watch a performance of Dylan’s La Vita Nuova for guitar and harp by Festival artist Emily Levin and guitarist Colin Davin.

     

    About Dylan Mattingly

     

    Dylan Mattingly’s work is fundamentally ecstatic, committed to transformative experience. His music has been described as “gorgeous” by the San Francisco Chronicle, “transcendent” and “the most poignantly entrancing passages of beautiful music in recent memory” by LA Weekly, and “in the pantheon of contemporary American composers” (Prufrock’s Dilemma) and is often informed by his scholarship on Ancient Greek music and poetry.

    Dylan is the executive and co-artistic director of the NY-based new-music ensemble Contemporaneous. Among the ensembles and performers who have commissioned his music are the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, the Berkeley Symphony, John Adams, Marin Alsop, and many others. Mattingly’s in-development 6-hour multimedia opera, Stranger Love, has recently been presented on the PROTOTYPE Festival and the Bang on a Can Marathon. Mattingly was the Musical America “New Artist of the Month” for February 2013 and was awarded the Charles Ives Scholarship by the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2016. 

    About Emily Levin

    Emily Levin is the Principal Harpist with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Bronze Medal Winner of the 9th USA International Harp Competition. Her playing has been praised for its “communicative, emotionally intense expression” (Jerusalem Post) and the Herald Times commended her “technical wizardry and artistic intuition.” As a soloist, orchestral musician, and chamber collaborator, Levin brings the harp to the forefront of a diverse musical spectrum, using her instrument to connect with all audiences.

    Now in her third season with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Emily has also performed as Guest Principal Harp with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Houston Symphony, and regularly appears with the New York Philharmonic. As a soloist, she has performed throughout North America and Europe, in venues including Carnegie Hall (New York), the Kimmel Center (Philadelphia) and Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Rugen, Germany). At the request of conductors Jaap van Zweden and John Adams, she appeared as soloist with the DSO in 2018 and 2019; other concerto performances include the Jerusalem, Colorado and West Virginia Symphony Orchestras, the Louisiana Philharmonic, the Lakes Area Music Festival, and the Indiana University Festival Orchestra, among others. Her debut album, Something Borrowed, explores the art of musical borrowing with works inspired by language, literature, and culture. For the album, the Classical Recording Foundation named her their 2017 Young Artist of the Year

    Emily is a top prize winner at the two most prestigious harp competitions—the 2013 USA International Harp Competition, where she won the Bronze Medal, and the 2009 International Harp Contest in Israel, where at age 18 she was a Finalist and recipient of the Renie Prize.  She is a 2016 Winner of the Astral Artists national auditions.

    In 2019, Emily was appointed Artistic Director of the Fine Arts Chamber Players, a concert chamber music series presented at the Dallas Museum of Art. Her artistic vision will be presented in the 2019-2020 FACP concert series, with seven chamber concerts presented free of charge to the general public. Other notable chamber music performances include the BRAVO! Vail Music Festival, the Lyric Chamber Music Society, the Colorado Chamber Players. Most recently, she recorded a live concert in New York City with her duo partner, guitarist Colin Davin, for video release in spring 2020. 

    A strong believer in music’s powerful impact, Levin organized a concert series in early 2017 with her fellow Dallas musicians, with all profits benefiting the International Rescue Committee and the Refugee Services of Texas. As Artistic Director of FACP, she presents chamber music concerts to the community that are free of charge and open to all. She is passionate about sharing music in schools, and is currently working with the Dallas Symphony to offer free harp lessons as part of their South Dallas Education Initiative.

    Emily works extensively with established and emerging composers alike, which led to commendation from the New York Times for “singing well and playing beautifully,” She is a core member of the New York-based new music group Ensemble Échappé and is the harpist for the Dallas new music group Voices of Change. In 2012, The Indiana University Composition Department recognized her for her collaboration and performance of new music.

    Emily was named Adjunct Associate Professor of Harp at Southern Methodist University in 2019, and is also on Faculty at the Young Artist’s Harp Seminar. She received her Master of Music degree in 2015 at the Juilliard School under the tutelage of Nancy Allen, where she was a teaching fellow for both the Ear Training and Educational Outreach departments. A self-described bookworm, she completed undergraduate degrees in Music and History at Indiana University with Susann McDonald. Her honors history thesis discussed the impact of war songs on the French Revolution.

     

     

    La Vita Nuova (and other consequences of Spring)

    La Vita Nuova (and other consequences of Spring), written for Colin Davin and Emily Levin, is music of superbloom, the wave of Spring crashing upon our lives, which does not differentiate the flowering of the Marin headlands from falling in love. The piece is in three paradises, with a reprise of the first at the end — each a part of my imagination of Spring the ideal, a moment of first warmth, first love, first life. Each of these instants is spread out to become an entire world removed from time, into which one might walk, explore, listen for the strange details of a particular gravity.

    The title is taken from Dante’s La Vita Nuova, which I found and read one morning midway on my journey through a used-bookstore. For many years, La Vita Nuova had seemed peripherally a part of my future, due perhaps to the thousands of times I’d heard it referenced in Bob Dylan’s Tangled Up in Blue (“then she opened up a book of poems / and handed it to me / written by an Italian poet from the thirteenth century. / And every one of them words rang true / and glowed like burnin’ coal / pouring’ off of every page / like it was written in my soul from me to you…”). And so I found myself particularly receptive to its strange beauty and delightful earnestness, which both emphasize and evaporate the vast space and time between Dante’s life and the one we’re in.

    The piece is an imagination of ourselves not separate from the world, its seasons, the gravitational pull of time, entropy, and generation, but as individual strands of an endless superabundance of its consequences. These are the sounds of my Spring, the collapse of memory and experience at winter’s thawing, the feeling of grass on bare feet — made to be seen in as vivid a color as I could write, so that we might surround ourselves as much as possible with the force which Spring enacts upon us.

    • Dylan Mattingly, composer 

     

  • 2021 Festival Moves to September

    2021 Festival Moves to September

    Dear Ojai Festival friends,

    We are absolutely delighted to let you know that this year’s Ojai Music Festival will take place in person on September 16 – 19, 2021. We shall once again gather together in the magical setting of Libbey Bowl and the Ojai Valley to create a festival community joined in the spirit of musical discovery and celebration. In addition, we are planning a summer-long celebration of the Ojai Festival in June with events throughout Southern California as well as newly produced online programs, all culminating with the September Festival in Ojai.  

    This, of course, is a change from our long-held tradition of a June festival but we felt strongly that we wanted to hold the Ojai Festival at a time when we could do so under the best possible conditions of health and safety for all. The Board of Directors and staff came to this decision after extensive consultation with public health professionals and government agencies, determining best practices in conversations with fellow arts organizations nationwide, and importantly, in discussions with the artists themselves. Remarkably, every single artist originally engaged for the June period has been able to make themselves available for the September dates! 

    There is such joy in the prospect of being together again and anticipating the rewards of what will be a milestone 75th Festival! And we have such a rich company assembled by our Music Director John Adams, bringing together an array of wondrous artists and composers who embody the true Ojai spirit: 

    • Featured composers include Samuel Carl Adams, Timo Andres, Rhiannon Giddens, Dylan Mattingly, Gabriela Ortiz, Carlos Simon, and Gabriella Smith. 
    • Making their Ojai debuts are the extraordinary Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi who are creating music that crosses traditions, genres, and cultures; Giddens will collaborate in her own works with the Attacca Quartet and as soloist in music of John Adams, conducted by the composer; Icelandic pianist Víkingur Ólafsson in a solo recital of works by Philip Glass, Bach, John Adams, Debussy, and Rameau; Chumash Elder Julie Tumamait will lead a series of events exploring the music, culture and cosmology of the original indigenous peoples of the Ojai Valley; and violinist Miranda Cuckson performing works by Kaija Saariaho, Anthony Cheung, Bach, and Dai Fujikura; recorder player Anna Margules will share a solo concert of new music for recorder and electronics from Mexico; and the Grammy-Award winning Attacca Quartet in a concert of music by John Adams, Rhiannon Giddens, Jessie Montgomery, Caroline Shaw, Gabriella Smith, and Paul Wiancko. 
    • John will conduct two chamber orchestra concerts that will include works by Debussy, Bach, Gabriella Smith, and Carlos Simon, alongside the west coast premiere of Samuel Carl Adams’ Chamber Concerto, featuring violinist Miranda Cuckson. 
    • The Festival will honor long-standing ties with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, with a concert by members of the LA Phil New Music Group featuring the world premiere of the jointly commissioned work Sunt Lacrimae Rerum (these are the tears of things) by Dylan Mattingly.  
    • The return of Timo Andres performing I Still Play, a series of 11 works by such composers as Laurie Anderson, Louis Andriessen, Donnacha Dennehy, Philip Glass, Pat Metheny, Nico Muhly, and Randy Newman. This Ojai recital will mark the first live public performance of the complete cycle, which was commissioned as a tribute to legendary Nonesuch Records President Bob Hurwitz.   
    • The 75th Festival will integrate elements of its year-round BRAVO education program. During the Festival, Ojai students will perform alongside Festival artists in a free community concert. In addition, featured artists and composers will hold free workshops for Ojai public school children leading up to the Festival.  

    All series passes for the June dates will be honored in September. Series passes are now on sale and we encourage you to purchase now as we anticipate that demand will be high as we approach September. 

    I am writing this just on the cusp of the first day of spring and the air is full of hope. We all hugely look forward to seeing you in Ojai, throughout Southern California, and online in the coming months. And best of all, at Libbey Bowl in September! 

    With thanks and good wishes, 

     
    Artistic & Executive Director 

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  • Playing Changes

    Playing Changes

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    Welcome to the Festival’s continuing series of the virtual Ojai Talks, where we celebrate the intersection of music, ideas, and the creative process with Ojai Festival artists, innovators, and thinkers.
     

    San Francisco Symphony hosted the online premiere of Playing Changes, a new collective project by violinist Helen Kim, choreographer Robert Dekkers, the movement artists of Post:Ballet, and Yak Films photographer Benjamin Tarquin. Playing Changes is an exploration of collaborative art during a time of isolation and confinement features music by Samuel Adams, Philip Glass, Daniel Bernard Roumain, LJ White, as well as newly commissioned works by Ambrose Akinmusire, Mary Kouyoumdjian, and Elizabeth Ogonek.

    Enjoy our conversation with Helen Kim and 2021 Ojai Festival composer Samuel Adams, as they introduce the project and Sam’s recent violin work, titled Playing Changes from his Violin Diptych, as featured in the collaborative project.

    Watch the complete project: Playing Changes – SFSymphony+ (sfsymphonyplus.org)

    About Samuel Adams

     

    Recently named a Guggenheim Fellow, Samuel Adams (b. 1985, San Francisco, CA) is a composer of acoustic and electroacoustic music. His work has been hailed as “mesmerizing” and “music of a composer with a personal voice and keen imagination” by The New York Times, “canny and assured” by The Chicago Tribune and “wondrously alluring” by The San Francisco Chronicle.

    Highlights of the 2019/20 season include a new work for the Australian Chamber Orchestra, which will be toured in both Australia and the United States, and the premiere performances of his Second String Quartet for Chicago-based Spektral Quartet in New York, Seattle, and Berkeley. Adams is also building an evening-length work for dance entitled Lyra, which will premiere this coming July in San Francisco.

    Last season, Adams’s Movements (for us and them) was toured both in Australia and the US to critical acclaim. The Sydney Morning Herald called the work music of “subtle emotional power” that “stole the show.” Adams’s orchestral work many words of love was toured nationally by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Riccardo Muti and received another performance by New World Symphony in Miami. In May 2018, Adams’s new Chamber Concerto was premiered by violinist Karen Gomyo with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Esa-Pekka Salonen to mark the 20th anniversary of the CSO’s contemporary series MusicNOW. The piece was hailed as “hypnotic, endlessly varied and natural” by Classical Voice America and music of “allusive subtlety and ingenuity” by the Chicago Tribune. The work will receive additional performances in 2019 and 2020 and will be recorded in 2021.

    Adams served as the curator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW series from 2015-2018, a period that saw the commissioning of nine new works, including Amy Beth Kirsten’s SAVIOR and a new work by Manual Cinema, as well as the development of an audiovisual collaboration with the Art Institute of Chicago. He has also curated for the San Francisco Symphony as part of their experimental SoundBox series.

    Adams has held residencies at Civitella Ranieri (Umbria, IT), Visby International Centre for Composers (Visby, SE), Avaloch Farm (Boscawen, NH), Ucross (Ucross, WY), and Djerassi Resident Artists Program (La Honda, CA).

    A committed educator, Adams frequently engages in projects with young musicians. In 2015, he worked with the Negaunee Institute of Music to establish the Civic Orchestra New Music Workshop, a program for emerging composers. In 2014, he was in residence with The National Youth Orchestra of the United States of America, for which he composed a work that was premiered under the baton of David Robertson. Adams also regularly works with the students of The Crowden Music Center (Berkeley, CA) and maintains a private teaching studio.

    Adams grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area where he attended Berkeley’s Crowden School. He went on to study at Stanford University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree with honors in composition and electroacoustic music while also working as a bassist in the San Francisco improvised music community. He received a master’s degree in composition from The Yale School of Music.

    Visit Sam’s website here>

     

    About Helen Kim

    Violinist Helen Kim joined the San Francisco Symphony as Associate Principal Second Violin in 2016. A member of the Saint Louis Symphony from 2011 to 2016, she made solo appearances with that orchestra in both the 2013 and 2014 seasons. She has spent her summers teaching and performing at festivals including Aspen, Yellow Barn, Luzerne, and the Innsbrook Institute. Ms. Kim received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Southern California, where she was Presidential Scholar, and a master’s degree from the Yale School of Music. 

  • 2021 Festival Update

    2021 Festival Update

    Dear Ojai Festival friends,

    We are absolutely delighted to let you know that this year’s Ojai Music Festival will take place in person on September 16 – 19, 2021. We shall once again gather together in the magical setting of Libbey Bowl and the Ojai Valley to create a festival community joined in the spirit of musical discovery and celebration. In addition, we are planning a summer-long celebration of the Ojai Festival in June with events throughout Southern California as well as newly produced online programs, all culminating with the September Festival in Ojai.  

    This, of course, is a change from our long-held tradition of a June festival but we felt strongly that we wanted to hold the Ojai Festival at a time when we could do so under the best possible conditions of health and safety for all. The Board of Directors and staff came to this decision after extensive consultation with public health professionals and government agencies, determining best practices in conversations with fellow arts organizations nationwide, and importantly, in discussions with the artists themselves. Remarkably, every single artist originally engaged for the June period has been able to make themselves available for the September dates! 

    There is such joy in the prospect of being together again and anticipating the rewards of what will be a milestone 75th Festival! And we have such a rich company assembled by our Music Director John Adams, bringing together an array of wondrous artists and composers who embody the true Ojai spirit: 

    • Featured composers include Samuel Carl Adams, Timo Andres, Rhiannon Giddens, Dylan Mattingly, Gabriela Ortiz, Carlos Simon, and Gabriella Smith. 
    • Making their Ojai debuts are the extraordinary Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi who are creating music that crosses traditions, genres, and cultures; Giddens will collaborate in her own works with the Attacca Quartet and as soloist in music of John Adams, conducted by the composer; Icelandic pianist Víkingur Ólafsson in a solo recital of works by Philip Glass, Bach, John Adams, Debussy, and Rameau; Chumash Elder Julie Tumamait will lead a series of events exploring the music, culture and cosmology of the original indigenous peoples of the Ojai Valley; and violinist Miranda Cuckson performing works by Kaija Saariaho, Anthony Cheung, Bach, and Dai Fujikura; recorder player Anna Margules will share a solo concert of new music for recorder and electronics from Mexico; and the Grammy-Award winning Attacca Quartet in a concert of music by John Adams, Rhiannon Giddens, Jessie Montgomery, Caroline Shaw, Gabriella Smith, and Paul Wiancko. 
    • John will conduct two chamber orchestra concerts that will include works by Debussy, Bach, Gabriella Smith, and Carlos Simon, alongside the west coast premiere of Samuel Carl Adams’ Chamber Concerto, featuring violinist Miranda Cuckson. 
    • The Festival will honor long-standing ties with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, with a concert by members of the LA Phil New Music Group featuring the world premiere of the jointly commissioned work Sunt Lacrimae Rerum (these are the tears of things) by Dylan Mattingly.  
    • The return of Timo Andres performing I Still Play, a series of 11 works by such composers as Laurie Anderson, Louis Andriessen, Donnacha Dennehy, Philip Glass, Pat Metheny, Nico Muhly, and Randy Newman. This Ojai recital will mark the first live public performance of the complete cycle, which was commissioned as a tribute to legendary Nonesuch Records President Bob Hurwitz.   
    • The 75th Festival will integrate elements of its year-round BRAVO education program. During the Festival, Ojai students will perform alongside Festival artists in a free community concert. In addition, featured artists and composers will hold free workshops for Ojai public school children leading up to the Festival.  

    All series passes for the June dates will be honored in September. Series passes are now on sale and we encourage you to purchase now as we anticipate that demand will be high as we approach September. 

    I am writing this just on the cusp of the first day of spring and the air is full of hope. We all hugely look forward to seeing you in Ojai, throughout Southern California, and online in the coming months. And best of all, at Libbey Bowl in September! 

    With thanks and good wishes, 

     
    Artistic & Executive Director 

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  • I Still Play

    I Still Play

    Press Play; Click Box Above to Go Full Screen [  ]


    Welcome to the Festival’s continuing series of the virtual Ojai Talks, where we celebrate the intersection of music, ideas, and the creative process with Ojai Festival artists, innovators, and thinkers.
     

    Last year, Nonesuch Records released an album titled, I Still Play, a collection of 11 newly commissioned piano pieces written for Bob Hurwitz, the legendary recording executive who had recently retired as president of the label. The project honored Hurwitz’s championing of composers – among them John Adams, Laurie Anderson, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Louis Andriessen, Randy Newman, and Timo Andres – as well as his own practice as a serious amateur pianist. This year’s Festival will feature the first public performance of these works, played by composer/pianist Timo Andres.

    Enjoy this wonderful treat – an intimate conversation between colleagues and friends: 2021 Festival artist/composer Timo Andres, artist/composer Laurie Anderson and Bob Hurwitz.

    About Timo Andres

     

    Timo Andres (b. 1985, Palo Alto, CA) is a composer and pianist who grew up in rural Connecticut and lives in Brooklyn, NY. A Nonesuch Records artist, his album of orchestral works, Home Stretch, has been hailed for its “playful intelligence and individuality,” (The Guardian) and of his 2010 debut album for two pianos Shy and Mighty (performed by himself and duo partner David Kaplan), Alex Ross wrote in The New Yorker that “it achieves an unhurried grandeur that has rarely been felt in American music since John Adams came on the scene… more mighty than shy, [Andres] sounds like himself.”

    Notable works include Everything Happens So Much for the Boston Symphony with Andris Nelsons; Strong Language, a string quartet for the Takács Quartet, commissioned by Carnegie Hall and the Shriver Hall Concert Series; Steady Hand, a two-piano concerto commissioned by the Britten Sinfonia and premiered at the Barbican with Andres and pianist David Kaplan; and The Blind Banister, a piano concerto for Jonathan Biss, which was a 2016 Pulitzer Prize Finalist.

    As a pianist, Timo Andres has appeared with the LA Phil, North Carolina Symphony, the Britten Sinfonia, the Albany Symphony, New World Symphony, and in many collaborations with Andrew Cyr and Metropolis Ensemble. He has performed solo recitals for Lincoln Center, Wigmore Hall, San Francisco Performances, the Phillips Collection, and (le) Poisson Rouge. Among others, Andres has collaborated with Ted Hearne, Becca Stevens, Jeffrey Kahane, Gabriel Kahane, Brad Mehldau, Nadia Sirota, the Kronos Quartet, the LA Dance Project, John Adams, and Philip Glass, with whom he has performed the complete Glass Etudes around the world, and who selected Andres as the recipient of the City of Toronto Glenn Gould Protégé Prize in 2016.

    Recent and upcoming projects include a new work for the Calder Quartet commissioned by the LA Phil, premièred at Noon to Midnight; a major choral-orchestral work for the Orchester Cottbus Staatstheater, Land Mass; orchestrations for Sufjan Stevens and New York City Ballet for Justin Peck’s Principia; and dates at the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, the Neue Galerie, and the Big Ears Festival with vocalist Theo Bleckmann. In November 2019, Andres curates (and performs in) “American Perspective,” a concert with the Cincinnati Symphony, André de Ridder, Dance Heginbotham, and cellist Inbal Segev, playing his concerto, Upstate Obscura. In April 2020, Carnegie Hall presents him in a piano recital at Zankel Hall, playing works by himself, John Adams, Nico Muhly, Robin Holcomb, Philip Glass, Donnacha Dennehy, Louis Andriessen, and the world premiere of a commissioned work by Gabriella Smith.

    Timo Andres earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Yale School of Music. He is a Yamaha/Bösendorfer Artist and in 2018 joined the composition faculty at Mannes School of Music. Visit his website here.

    About Laurie Anderson

    Laurie Anderson is one of America’s most reknowned – and daring – creative pioneers. Known primarily for her multimedia presentations, she has cast herself in roles as varied as visual artist, composer, poet, photographer, filmmaker, electronics whiz, vocalist, and instrumentalist.

    O Superman launched Anderson’s recording career in 1980, rising to number two on the British pop charts and subsequently appearing on Big Science, the first of her seven albums on the Warner Brothers label. Other record releases include Mister Heartbreak, United States Live, Strange Angels, Bright Red, and the soundtrack to her feature film Home of the Brave. A deluxe box set of her Warner Brothers output, Talk Normal, was released in the fall of 2000 on Rhino/Warner Archives. In 2001, Anderson released her first record for Nonesuch Records, entitled Life on a String, which was followed by Live in New York, recorded at Town Hall in New York City in September 2001, and released in May 2002.

    Anderson has toured the United States and internationally numerous times with shows ranging from simple spoken word performances to elaborate multimedia events. Major works include United States I-V (1983), Empty Places (1990), The Nerve Bible (1995), and Songs and Stories for Moby Dick, a multimedia stage performance based on the novel by Herman Melville. Songs and Stories for Moby Dick toured internationally throughout 1999 and 2000. In the fall of 2001, Anderson toured the United States and Europe with a band, performing music from Life on a String. She has also presented many solo works, including Happiness, which premiered in 2001 and toured internationally through Spring 2003.

    Anderson has published six books. Text from Anderson’s solo performances  appears in the book Extreme Exposure, edited by Jo Bonney. Anderson has also written the entry for New York for the Encyclopedia Brittanica and in 2006, Edition 7L published Anderson’s book of dream drawings entitled “Night Life”.

    Laurie Anderson’s visual work has been presented in major museums throughout the United States and Europe. In 2003, The Musée Art Contemporain of Lyon in France produced a touring retrospective of her work, entitled The Record of the Time: Sound in the Work of Laurie Anderson. This retrospective included installation, audio, instruments, video and art objects and spans Anderson’s career from the 1970’s to her most current works. It continued to tour internationally from 2003 to 2005. As a visual artist, Anderson is represented by the Sean Kelly Gallery in New York where her exhibition, The Waters Reglitterized, opened in September 2005. In 2008, the Museum of Modern Art acquired her “Self-Playing Violin” which was featured in the “Making Music” exhibition in Fall 2008.

    As a composer, Anderson has contributed music to films by Wim Wenders and Jonathan Demme; dance pieces by Bill T. Jones, Trisha Brown, Molissa Fenley, and a score for Robert LePage’s theater production, Far Side of the Moon. She has created pieces for National Public Radio, The BBC, and Expo ‘92 in Seville. In 1997 she curated the two-week Meltdown Festival at Royal Festival Hall in London. Her most recent orchestra work Songs for Amelia Earhart. premiered at Carnegie Hall in February 2000 performed by the American Composers Orchestra and later toured Europe with the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra conducted by Dennis Russell Davies. The piece was performed as part of the Groningen Festival honoring Laurie Anderson in Fall 2008 with the Noord Nederlands Orkest.

    Recognized worldwide as a groundbreaking leader in the use of technology in the arts, Anderson collaborated with Interval Research Corporation, a research and development laboratory founded by Paul Allen and David Liddle, in the exploration of new creative tools, including the Talking Stick. She created the introduction sequence for the first segment of the PBS special Art 21, a series about Art in the 21st century. Her awards include the 2001 Tenco Prize for Songwriting in San

    Remo, Italy and the 2001 Deutsche Schallplatten prize for Life On A String as well as grants from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. She recently collaborated with Bran Ferren of Applied Minds, Inc to create an artwork that was displayed in “The Third Mind” exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in New York in Winter 2009.

    In 2002, Anderson was appointed the first artist-in-residence of NASA which culminated in her 2004 touring solo performance “The End of the Moon”. Recent projects include a series of audio-visual installations and a high definition film, “Hidden Inside Mountains”, created for World Expo 2005 in Aichi, Japan. In 2007 she received the prestigious Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize for her outstanding contribution to the arts. In 2008 she completed a two-year worldwide tour of her performance piece, “Homeland”, which was released as an album on Nonesuch Records in June, 2010. Anderson’s solo performance “Delusion” debuted at the Vancouver Cultural Olympiad in February, 2010 and toured internationally throughout 2011. In 2010 a retrospective of her visual and installation work opened in Sao Paulo, Brazil and later traveled to Rio de Janeiro.

    In 2011 her exhibition of all new work titled “Forty-Nine Days In the Bardo” opened at the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. That same year she was awarded with the Pratt Institute’s Honorary Legends Award. In January of 2012 Anderson was the artist-in-residence at the High Performance Rodeo in Calgary, Alberta where she developed her latest solo performance titled “Dirtday!” Her exhibition “Boat” curated by Vito Schnabel opened in May of 2012. She has recently finished residencies at both CAP in UCLA in Los Angeles and EMPAC in Troy New York. Her film Heart of a Dog was chosen as an official selection of the 2015 Venice and Toronto Film Festivals. In the same year, her exhibition Habeas Corpus opened at the Park Avenue Armory to wide critical acclaim and in 2016 she was the recipient of Yoko Ono’s Courage Award for the Arts for that project. Anderson lives in New York City. Visit her website here.

    Music Links

    Timo Andres’ Wise Words 

     

    Philip Glass’ Evening Song No. 2

     

    John Adams’ I still play

     

    I Still Play

    I Still Play, an album of eleven new solo piano compositions written by artists who have recorded for Nonesuch Records, is now available on Nonesuch. The pieces were written in honor of the label’s longtime President Bob Hurwitz on the occasion of his 2017 shift into the Chairman Emeritus role after running the label for thirty-two years. I Still Play features works by John Adams, Laurie Anderson, Timo Andres, Louis Andriessen, Donnacha Dennehy, Philip Glass, Nico Muhly, Brad Mehldau, Steve Reich, Pat Metheny, and Randy Newman. The pieces have been recorded by Andres and fellow Nonesuch artist Jeremy Denk, as well as by Mehldau and Newman themselves.

    The pieces were first performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) in 2017, at a concert celebrating Hurwitz’s tenure at the label. His longtime friend and colleague, current Nonesuch President David Bither, says, “Bob’s great friend John Adams deserves credit for the idea at the core of this recording. I enlisted his help in thinking of how we might honor Bob. A few weeks later he suggested that we ask the composers who had worked so closely with Bob to each write him a new piece of music. An honorable suggestion, but with a twist.

    “Bob is a pianist and since he was a child has played virtually every day of his life,” Bither continues. “He has said many times that this practice has had a profound influence on how he listens to music. John’s suggestion was that each composer write something that was not a concert piece but that an accomplished pianist like Bob might play.”

    Timo Andres, who recorded the majority of the compositions for this record, says in his liner note, “Each of these eleven tributes to Bob Hurwitz was written for an audience of one, on a particular Steinway in a specific Upper West Side living room. Each distills an aspect of its author’s voice to a concentrated miniature. The prevailing tone is conversational rather than declamatory, though it’s a wide-ranging conversation. Large questions are posed but rarely answered in full.” He adds, “If the listener has the odd feeling of having stumbled into an exchange between two friends and missing an inside joke or shared reference here and there—that’s not far from the truth.”

    Learn more on Nonesuch Records website here

  • Chumash Story & Song

    Chumash Story & Song

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    Chumash Story and Song 

     Julie Tumamait has traced her family’s Chumash ancestry as far back as the mid-18th Century. She is currently the Tribal Chair of the Barbareño/Ventureño Band of Mission Indians (Chumash). Julie is well known throughout Ventura County for her Chumash cultural education programs and also performs ceremonies and songs.  

    This Imagine performance includes a series of creation myths and Chumash songs, in the native language, using various hand-held percussion instruments for accompaniment. The red kelp bulb rattle has bear fur around the bottom. The clapper is made from elderberry wood. She holds a feathered ceremonial fan. Her skirt is decorated with many shells and her bracelet, earrings, and necklace are all made from shells. She also wears a coyote fur.

    Her combination of storytelling and music focus on tales such as the Rainbow Bridge, a myth that explains how the Chumash people reached the California mainland from the Channel Islands by crossing a rainbow, and how those who looked down fell into the ocean and were turned into dolphins.

    Other stories and intriguing ideas:

    How did woodpecker get his bright red head? 

    What does the word Ojai mean? 

    There was a Princess ruler! 


    How did coyote get the colors in his fur coat? 


    What does the word Chumash mean? 

    How did coyote learn to howl? 

    We also hear a song performed by Juana Maria, the Native American woman who lived alone for 18 years on San Nicolas Island during the 19th century before coming to the California mainland, where she died. Juana Maria’s story inspired the novel Island of the Blue Dolphins, which is read by our 4th graders (and most 4th graders) as part of the early California curriculum in that grade.

     Here are some Chumash words that we are honored to learn. Learning another people’s language is a way to respect them.                                                

                                                         hello is haku  

                                                         thank you is wəyə  

                                                         goodbye for now is kiwanan 

    These early-morning songs, performed beneath the canopy of oaks of the outdoor amphitheater at the Ojai Valley School’s Upper Campus, introduce students to the history of the Chumash people. Stories and songs help us to know that we must care for our world, and every living being. Music and storytelling continue to play a role in the culture and traditions of the native people who were the first to call the Ojai Valley their home.

    Learn more about Chumash history at www.ojaivalleymuseum.org

    This performance is made possible by the Ojai Valley School –Barbara Barnard Smith Fund, a Designated Endowment Fund of the Ventura County Community Foundation. Thanks to Professor Smith, these funds annually open the doors to an engaging multicultural experience for students, teachers, parents and the community, truly a world view of music.  Ojai Valley School is indebted to Professor Smith for her foresight and generosity. 

     

     

  • Festival Alum: Flashback/Flashforward

    Festival Alum: Flashback/Flashforward

    Jennifer Koh

    Violinist Jennifer Koh reflects on her 2017 Festival debut, performing Vijay Iyer’s world premiere of Trouble and its significance even today; she also reminisces on her “Bach & Beyond” concert in 2017 and her current projects including working with 2017 composer Courtney Bryan!

     

    Vijay Iyer

     

    2017 Music Director Vijay Iyer talks about his Festival debut as both musician and composer that also brought his collaborators to create a thought-provoking, community-making immersive experience. He shares his memories of the music-packed Thursday night concert that gave us both two premieres and a performance with the great Wadada Leo Smith.

    As he taped this video at his home in New York for us, he also gave us an update on upcoming projects:

    “The biggest news is that I have a new album titled UnEasy,in a trio format with Tyshawn Sorey (drums) and Linda May Han Oh (contrabass), due out April 9 on ECM Records. We intend to play some trio concerts as soon as possible! My piece “Bruits” (2014) for piano and wind quintet is featured on a new album of the same name by Imani Winds, with Cory Smythe on piano, due out February 5 on Bright Shiny Things. I just wrote a new solo piece for Matt Haimovitz titled “Equal Night,” which he recorded for his Primavera project, due out this spring on Oxingale Records. I also recently composed “The Window,” a duo for cellist Inbal Segev and myself; “Crown Thy Good,” a solo variation of a certain American anthem for pianist Min Kwon; “Plinth for Kwame Ture,” a solo piano piece for Shai Wosner; and “For Violin Alone,” a very short piece for Jennifer Koh; all of these will be recorded soon. In the longer term, I’m also working on a cello concerto for Inbal, and a large-ensemble project with Wadada Leo Smith and Peter Sellars, and I’m contributing to a new project for Boston Lyric Opera. Details to follow!”

    Relive the Thursday June 8, 2017 concerts

     

    Vijay Iyer: Emergence 
    Vijay Iyer:  
    Trouble 
    Vijay Iyer/Wadada Leo Smith:  A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke 

    2017 Program book notes by Christopher Hailey 

    Not so long ago Vijay Iyer said that “to succeed in America is, somehow, to be complicit with the idea of America— which means that at some level you’ve made peace with its rather ugly past.” Iyer went on to urge his audience not to allow this ugly past to determine our future. “What I humbly ask of you, and of myself,” he concluded, “is that
     we constantly interrogate our own complicity with excess, that we always remain vigilant to notions of community that might—perhaps against our best intentions, sometimes—embrace a system of domination at the expense of others.” This concert explores three contexts for this kind of balanced creative interaction: between differently constituted ensembles; between a soloist and an orchestra; and between two artists across generations.

    Iyer has written of Emergence: “Emergence is a composition for my group, the Vijay Iyer Trio, plus chamber orchestra. This piece situates our trio’s collaborative improvisational language in the context of a classical ensemble. In juxtaposing the respective powers of these very different ensembles, and featuring them separately and together, we explore how these two contrasting perspectives on music might coexist. The trio’s specialized skills of internal rhythmic synchronization and organic creative embellishment exist in relief against the orchestra’s interpretive powers, range of colors, and sheer physical spread of sound. In this piece, the trio should not be featured up front in a typical “concerto” formation, but rather in the rear of the orchestra, driving the energy from within the ensemble. At times this “rhythm section” function may challenge the role of the conductor, since the sense of pulse is often guided sonically by the trio. In addition, at certain moments, the orchestral players are asked to make choices in real time, sometimes by listening and responding to each other, which challenges the centrality of the score and the composer. These reconsiderations of authority and agency are key questions for me as a composer and improviser.”

    Here, as in all of Iyer’s writing, terms like “authority” and “agency,” “community,” and  “collaboration” point to his understanding that music can serve as an analogue and laboratory for social formation and action. We see it in the abstract in Emergence; in Trouble it is explicit: “Good trouble,” “necessary trouble”— these are favorite phrases of U.S. Representative John Lewis, referring to the strategies and tactics of the Civil Rights movement and the ongoing struggles for equality and justice in the last six decades. When meeting with Jennifer Koh over the past year to discuss the details of this piece, I often found it difficult to focus; typically we found ourselves instead recoiling in horror at the events of any given day. This pattern has only intensified since January 20th, as we find our communities, our country, and our planet in greater peril with each passing hour. In creating the piece I found myself both channeling and pushing against the sensation of extreme precarity that pervades our moment.”

    Here, too, is a work that explores the relationship between musical forces, though Iyer sought to avoid the clichés of the virtuoso concerto: “I didn’t want to rehash the typical narrative positioning a heroic individual over or against a multitude. Ms. Koh told me that the soloist could instead be viewed as someone willing to be vulnerable, to publicly venture where most people won’t, to accept a role that no one else will accept, to bear the unbearable. In other words, the soloist can embody the relationship of an artist to her community: not so much a “leader” or “hero,” but something more like a shaman, a conduit for the forces in motion around us.”

    Although Trouble is not a programmatic work it is informed by the experience of its time. “The short second movement,” Iyer writes, “is dedicated to Vincent Chin, whose murder in the early ’80s signaled an ongoing pattern of violent hate crimes against people of color. His death became a watershed moment for antiracist activism, which is as urgently needed today as it has ever been.”

    **

    “If you look at my collaborations,” Iyer has said, “it is very much in line with all these others in the sense that it is a building of community, particularly among artists of color. This is what I learned from the example of elder African-American artists, which is where it is all coming from; to refuse to be silenced.”

    Wadada Leo Smith has not been silent.  He came of age during the 1950s and was a witness of the civil rights battles of the 1960s. His Ten Freedom Summers
    was a finalist for the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Music, described by the jury as “an expansive jazz work that memorialized 10 key moments in the history of civil rights in America, fusing composed and improvised passages into powerful, eloquent music.” The power and eloquence of Smith’s voice is felt across a range of activities, including composing, performing, improvising, teaching, and writing. For Vijay Iyer he is “a hero, friend, and teacher” of the past two decades, in particular through his own participation in Smith’s Golden Quartet:

    “The group’s broad palette included ‘pure’ tones and distorted sound, motion and stillness, melody and noise. In quartet performances, Wadada and I often became a unit-within-the-unit, generating spontaneous duo episodes as formal links. In the process, a space of possibility emerged that introduced me to other systems of musicmaking.”

    Their special chemistry bore fruit in a joint album, A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke (2016), which has been lauded by critics for its “charismatic delicacy and subtle force” and an “awareness and acuity between the players that overlaps and breaks away on razor-thin margins.”

    Like Iyer, Smith believes that music is a reflection of and means for engaging with social and political experience. Music, he has said, “allows the person a moment to reflect minus the distraction of living and being involved in living. And that reflection allows them that little moment with themselves so that they can figure out the best way to maneuver through this maze of a society.” People’s problems may still be there, he concedes, “but they have experienced a few moments of liberation to give them enough energy to carry on until the next challenge comes.”

    “You run through your life,” he concludes, “and you hope that you can show something that enlightens somebody at some point in time. And if that happens, then that is really leading to a better humanity, a better society.”

     

    Anthony Romaniuk

    72nd Ojai Music Festival

    Across Time, Part 1

    William Byrd – Fantasy in C Major
    Henry Purcell – Fairest Isle from King Arthur (arr. Anthony Romaniuk)
    Johann Sebastian Bach – Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue in D minor
    Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach – Fantasy in F#
    Dmitri Shostakovich – Prelude in A minor
    Dmitri Shostakovich – Fugue in C Major
    Bela Bartok – First Dance in Bulgarian Rhythm from Mikrokosmos, Book VI
    George Crumb – Twin Suns from Makrokosmos, Book II
    Gyorgy Ligeti – White on White from Etudes, Book III
    Henry Purcell – Fantasia No. 10 in C minor 

    Anthony Romaniuk, piano and harpsichord
    Patricia Kopatchinskaja, violin | JACK Quartet

    Program Notes
    by Christopher Hailey

    We improvise with what is in our grasp, by shaping that which is; we mourn with empty hands, reaching out for that which was. This concert in two parts explores presence and absence, the self-sufficient ‘kingdom of the mind’ and the exile of grief.

    The fantasy, prelude, fugue, and etude all have roots in improvisation, the capacity to elaborate, ex tempore, on an idea, a theme or motif. William Byrd created the template for the keyboard fantasy in late Renaissance England, a form described by Thomas Morley as a piece in which “a musician taketh a point at his pleasure, and wresteth and turneth it as he list, making either much or little of it according as shall seeme best in his own conceit.” Henry Purcell, without a doubt the finest English composer of his era, influenced Benjamin Britten, among others, with his operas, including King Arthur; his fantasias for viol consort, on the other hand, look back to Byrd and Morley and were among the last of their kind. Less than half a century later J. S. Bach’s Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue represents a significant expansion upon Byrd’s and Purcell’s model, combining elements of both toccata and recitative in the fantasy and improvisatory freedom in a three-voice fugue on an extended and highly chromatic subject.

    The emotional intensity of the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue is unusual for Bach, but wholly characteristic of his son, Carl Philipp Emanuel, who, like his father, was renowned for his keyboard improvisations. Charles Burney, after a visit with the younger Bach, described an impromptu after-dinner concert during which Bach “grew so animated and possessed, that he not only played, but looked like one inspired. His eyes were fixed, his under lip fell, and drops of effervescence distilled from his countenance.” The Fantasy in F minor is a late work, whose remarkable expressive range inspired tonight’s free adaption for keyboard and violin.

    Dimitri Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues pay homage to the 48 of Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier through numerous direct and indirect allusions.

    In the etudes that follow, the instrument at hand is both subject and medium, the musical idea cloaked as a technical challenge. Béla Bartók’s six books of Mikrokosmos, composed between 1926 and 1939, are pedagogical in intent. The first number of book VI, “Free Variations,” features mixed meter rhythms derived from Bulgarian folk music. “Two Suns,” from the second book of George Crumb’s Makrokosmos (another act of homage), explores piano resonance through direct manipulation of its strings. In György Ligeti’s White on White, from his unfinished third book of etudes, a tranquil opening canon is followed by a frenzy of polyrhythms; only at the end do black keys intrude upon the white-key expanses.

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    Julia Bullock

    70th Ojai Music Festival

    KAIJA SAARIAHO’S La Passion De Simone

    Julia Bullock, soprano
    Joana Carneiro, conductor
    Peter Sellars, director
    ICE (International Contemporary Ensemble) 
    Roomful of Teeth

    Program Notes
    by Christopher Hailey

    That may depend on which Simone. Simone Weil was many things: a brilliant philosopher, a wayward Marxist theoretician (and sparring partner with Trotsky), trade union activist and factory worker, dedicated teacher, linguist, controversial cultural historian, Jewish anti-Semite, pacifist, altruist, anarchist, front-line soldier for the Spanish Republic, ascetic Catholic mystic, member of the French Resistance … “I envied her,” wrote Simone de Beauvoir, “for having a heart which could beat right across the world,” adding elsewhere:

    Her intelligence, her asceticism, her total commitment, and her sheer courage – all these filled me with admiration; though I knew that, had she met me, she would have been very far from reciprocating my attitude. I could not absorb her into my universe, and this seemed to constitute a vague threat to me.

    The threat is real because Simone Weil was a woman of radical consequence. Throughout her short life every cause, every revelation entailed a course of action; her intellectual, emotional, and spiritual convictions were inscribed in the fiber of her physical being, leading, in the end, to the extinction of that very self.

    Simone Weil (1909–43), born in Paris into a loving, well-to-do agnostic Jewish family, had all the benefits of culture and education. She was a brilliant student of philosophy and embarked on a teaching career, which she interrupted to spend a year working in a factory to experience firsthand the workers’ plight. With the rise of Hitler she engaged more directly in contemporary politics, writing essays, leading demonstrations, and joining a fighting brigade against fascism in Spain. While recuperating from a serious accident, a mystical experience led her to embrace Catholicism (without, however, joining the church), after which issues of moral and ethical philosophy began to dominate her thinking. With France, and in particular its Jewish citizens, under threat she accompanied her parents to safety in America, before returning to Britain to serve the French government in exile. Already weakened by tuberculosis, she died, it is said, from self-starvation born of her deep empathy for the suffering of the French people under German occupation. Amin Maalouf has written:

    At the age of 34, between the ages of Jesus and Mozart, a young woman decided to leave this world. The time was August 1943, and humanity had just reached a summit of barbarity. Simone Weil passed away without a sound, as if by silent protest, in the anonymity of a small English hospital. Her choice to die speaks to us of her rejection of any form of submission – to violence and hate, to Nazism and Stalinism, but also to a dehumanising industrial society that deprives individuals of their substance and leads them into nothingness. Simone’s writings, most of which were published after her death, are an attempt to find a way out of this nothingness. Her passion is a discreet but powerful signpost in our misguided world.

    La Passion de Simone is the result of a collaborative interchange between Maalouf, Kaija Saariaho, and Peter Sellars, who first suggested Weil as a subject for what would become a “Musical Journey in Fifteen Stations.” These collaborators each brought to the project his or her Simone Weil. Saariaho recalls:

    … together we chose the different parts of Weil’s work and life for the libretto before I began composing. Whereas I have always been fascinated by Simone’s striving for abstract (mathematical) and spiritual-intellectual goals, Peter is interested in her social awareness and political activities. Amin brought out the gaping discrepancy between her philosophy and her life, showing the fate of the frail human being amongst great ideas. In addition to Simone Weil’s life and ideas, many general questions of human existence are presented in Amin’s text.

    Each of the text’s fifteen stations – a structure that recalls the Stations of the Cross of the medieval passion play – presents an aspect of Weil’s life and thinking, though largely seen from the perspective of a narrator, a soprano who represents an imaginary sister – older? younger? we are never sure. In any event this narrator is rooted in a sensibility closer to our own, as she considers Weil from perspectives that are now critical, now puzzled, here accusatory, there awed.

    The original version of La Passion de Simone, premiered in Vienna in 2006, is scored for full chorus and orchestra with electronics. In the chamber version, created in 2013 and heard here in its US premiere, the orchestra is reduced to 19 players without electronics and the chorus has become four solo voices. This reduction of forces serves to accentuate the exquisite delicacy of Saariaho’s score, while at the same time introducing an element of astringency to its rich colors and textures. The effect is of a slowly turning cushion of sound that supports both the sinuous line of the narrator’s voice, as well as the dry precision of Weil’s own words, which are interspersed as spoken text.

    La Passion de Simone is a work that both lures and cautions. Saariaho’s score is sensuous and enticing – a striking contrast to the prickly sensibility of a woman known for her limitless capacity for compassion, but notoriously averse to physical contact. Maalouf’s narrator invites us to engage with the life of this remarkable woman, but makes clear that she is ultimately unknowable. We approach the unapproachable through a music of crystalline beauty, a text of hesitant astonishment. Simone Weil rushed into possession only to relinquish her hold; we can only follow at a distance.

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    Jay Campbell

    72nd Ojai Music Festival
    Friday Late Night

    JOHN LUTHER ADAMS Everything That Rises

    JACK Quartet

    Program Notes  
    by Christopher Hailey  
     
    Rise Above 

    John Luther Adams has a special relationship with Ojai. Since 2009 eight of his works have been performed here, including three West Coast premieres (Inuksuit in 2012, and Sila: The Breath of the World and Become River in 2015). Ojai is a natural fit for a composer so sensitive to pulse of nature. From the icy expanses of the Alaskan tundra to the naked clarity of the Sonoran Desert, Adams has set out to find “a new music drawn from the light, the air, the landscapes, and the weather” of the environments in which he has lived. These environments in turn have shaped the language and syntax of the music he makes.  

    Adams is perhaps best known for works written for orchestra or larger ensembles that are characterized by prismatic colors and complex, interlacing lines. “I never imagined I would write a string quartet. Then I heard the JACK Quartet, and I understood how I might be able to make the medium my own.” His first two string quartets, The Wind in High Places (2011) and untouched (2015) featured natural harmonics and open strings. In the third, Canticles of the Sky (2015), adapted from the choir work Canticles of the Holy Wind, “the musicians finally touch the fingerboards of their instruments.” These three works, roughly twenty minutes each, were followed by Everything That Rises, of which Adams writes:  

    This fourth quartet is more expansive, both in time and in space. It grows out of Sila: The Breath of the World − a performance-length choral/orchestral work composed on a rising series of sixteen harmonic clouds. 

    Over the course of an hour, the lines spin out − always rising − in acoustically perfect intervals that grow progressively smaller as they spiral upward . . . until the music dissolves into the soft noise of the bows, sighing. 

    The quartet consists of two principal elements, a fundamental tone in the cello and, in the upper strings, arrayed across the overtone spectrum, gently ascending gestures inflected by trills. Over the course of the piece these elements gradually rise from the deepest to the highest registers, each instrument seemingly independent, the intervals, drawn from ever higher partials of that fundamental tone, becoming ever smaller, a rainbow unfolding, growing ever brighter in tranquil, invisible radiance.  

    Adams shares with Morton Feldman, Pauline Oliveros, Horaţiu Rădulescu, and Georg Friedrich Haas a fascination with the natural harmonic series, both for its inherent beauty and as a way out of the constrictions of languages—whether tonal or serial—based on twelve-note equal-temperament. Theirs is music as a natural phenomenon in which dissonance and consonance, tension and release, departure and arrival are redefined or even abandoned to move beyond polar dichotomies, away from linear narrative toward a new kind of motion, a different sense of time, space, and scale. In Everything That Rises John Luther Adams brings that new sensibility to Ojai at a time of healing and reflection. 

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    Aphrodite Patoulidou

    73rd Ojai Music Festival
    Friday Night, Part II

    CLAUDE VIVIER Lonely Child 

    Aphrodite Patoulidou soprano | LUDWIG | Barbara Hannigan conductor

    Program notes excerpt
    By Christopher Hailey

    There can be no question that much of Claude Vivier’s music is intensely autobiographical and that is especially true of Lonely Child. Vivier was adopted from an orphanage and never learned the identity of his birth parents or the circumstances of his own conception and birth. He grew up in a working-class neighborhood of Montreal and was sent as a teenager to Catholic boarding schools to prepare him for the priesthood, though he was eventually told that he was temperamentally unsuited to religious orders. It may have been his homosexuality, which he never sought to hide, or his all-consuming passion for music that would lead into composition. The two were thereafter intertwined in a life that was lived recklessly, dangerously, fully. He was murdered at 44 by a young man he had picked up at a Paris bar.

    At the time of his death Vivier, whose Ritual Opera Kopernikus was performed at the 2016 Ojai Festival, had already created a body of work that assured his legacy as one of the most distinctive voices of the 20th century. Although that legacy has been slow to reach a wider audience, several works, including Lonely Child, have now earned a firm place in performance and recording. Vivier’s formative influences included the European avant garde of the 1960s, studies with Stockhausen (“the true beginning of my life as a composer”), travel to the Near and Far East (Iran, Japan, Thailand, Bali), and friendship with the pioneers of French spectralism, Gérard Grisey and Tristan Murail. His music often has a ritualistic quality and centers on universal themes of death and transcendence. Vivier has described Lonely Child as “a long song of solitude” composed “without using chords, harmony, or counterpoint,” a homophonic texture that becomes one single, “intervalized” melody:

    Thus, there are no longer any chords, and the entire orchestra is then transformed into a timbre. The roughness and the intensity of this timbre depends on the base interval. Musically speaking, there was only one thing I needed to control, which automatically, somehow, would create the rest of the music, that is great beams of color!

    The work begins softly, the texture spare, gradually adding layer upon layer before returning to the peace of the opening. The French text, a soothing lullaby, speaks of maternal love, guardian fairies, magic, visions of paradise, and eternal peace in the afterlife. There are also lines in Vivier’s own invented language – phonetic sounds he developed from various real and imagined sources – that can be traced back to the unanswered questions of his birth: “Not knowing my parents enabled me to create a magnificent dream world,” Vivier said shortly before his death. “I shaped my origins exactly as I wished.”

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     Barbara Hannigan

    73rd Ojai Music Festival
    SCHOENBERG String Quartet No. 2 in F# minor, op. 10 (1908)

    Mässig
    Sehr rasch
    “Litanei” langsam
    “Entrückung” sehr langsam

     Barbara Hannigan soprano | JACK Quartet

     The Schoenberg String Quartet was the last part of the Friday, June 7 concert that paired the work with Debussy, Debussy, and Ravel.

    The latter two movements of the Second String Quartet are set to poems from Stefan George‘s collection Der siebente Ring (The Seventh Ring), which was published in 1907. The translated poems can be viewed here. 

    PROGRAM NOTES
    By Christopher Hailey

    Poetic imagery, painting, and nature served to stimulate Debussy’s imagination, as did his encounter with non-Western music. In Et la lune descend sur le temple qui fut (And the moon descends on the temple that was), a title suggested by the sinologist Louis Laloy, one hears in its suspended stillness elements of the music of Bali, which Debussy first heard in the 1889 Paris Exhibition Universelle. Ravel’s Une barque sur l’océan (A boat on the ocean), the third of his five-movement Miroirs, is a study of motion, captured in surging arpeggiated currents. Un reflet dans le vent (A reflection in the wind) is the last of Messiaen’s eight Préludes, a set written while he was still a student of Paul Dukas. Their descriptive titles may suggest Debussy, their crisp textures Ravel, but these preludes already bear the hallmarks of Messiaen’s distinctive harmonic and rhythmic language.

    It was the pestilence of 1579 that got dear old Augustin. Or so it seemed. Actually, Vienna’s beloved ballad singer was stone drunk when he was mistaken for a plague victim and tossed into an open pit. When he awoke the next morning, he had a song to sing: “Augustin, Augustin, lie down in your grave! O, you dear Augustin, it’s all over!” It’s a catchy tune and when it popped up uninvited in the second movement of Schoenberg’s Second String Quartet the audience took note. The uproar – it was December 21, 1908 – seemed to confirm Augustin’s dire prognostication: Alles ist hin, this really is the end.

    At a century’s remove it may be difficult to understand the fuss. The quartet is relatively short, its textures and formal layout clear and transparent. The impassioned first movement is an abbreviated sonata form; the second, a fidgety scherzo, interrupted, of course, by the sudden appearance of the sweet triviality of Augustin’s refrain. But the third movement delivers an unprecedented shock: a soprano voice. This setting of Stefan George’s “Litanei” (Litany) does double duty as a series of variations that act as a kind of delayed development section for the truncated opening movement. It has the feel of a single arching line reaching its gripping climax with the words “Kill the longing, close the wound! Take my love away, take from me love” – here the soloist takes a dramatic downward leap – followed by this hushed appeal: “and give me your joy!”

    Release comes in “Entrückung” (Rapture), which begins “I feel air from another planet.” Schoenberg’s ethereal introduction is so exquisitely inviting that even today many are unaware that this movement marks Schoenberg’s own radical leap into atonality – the original velvet revolution. It is doubtful that the first audience had any clue one way or the other because by this point in the evening the music was being drowned out by a phalanx of vociferous rowdies convinced that they were witnessing a catastrophe only slightly less calamitous than that long-ago plague. Most critics were ready to toss the work into a mass grave for failed experiments, but the quartet, like Augustin, proved remarkably resilient and soon found more congenial company in the standard repertory.

    The myth of Syrinx is the story of a chaste nymph transformed into river reeds to escape Pan’s pursuit. Pan, in turn, creates from these reeds the pipes with which he laments his loss. Debussy’s piece for solo flute, scarcely three minutes long, serves as the prelude to another work of transformation: Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night).

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    Steven Schick

    73rd Ojai Music Festival
    Terry Riley IN C

    LUDWIG | Steven Schick, Percussion

    PROGRAM NOTES
    By Christopher Hailey

    There you have it, In C, the first minimalist piece. Its gradually shifting repetitive patterns influenced generations of minimalist and process composers, including Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and John Adams. In fact, Reich (along with Pauline Oliveros and Morton Subotnick) was among the performers at the work’s premiere at the San Francisco Tape Music Center (it was Reich that had suggested the steady pulse of C’s). Riley never thought of this music as “minimalist”; to him it was psychedelic (this was San Francisco after all), not repetition and process, but mind expansion. Oliveras has described the experience as “a cloud of birds tacking the sky with unplanned unanimity” and Michael Tilson Thomas, who did it a few years later at Tanglewood, said it was like being “inside some kind of big improvisation”. The loose, improvisational feel of In C comes from jazz, a major influence on Riley’s music, and, as in jazz, freedom and improvisation are based on listening, on fitting your piece into the larger puzzle. Performing In C requires what Riley called “developing a group dynamic.”

    Back in 1964, Riley originally called In C “The Global Villages for Symphonic Pieces.” Not a great title, you’ll admit, but the “global” and “village” bits suggest why this piece has had such wide resonance. Riley has recalled that the first performances of In C were “big communal events where a lot of people would come out and sometimes listen or dance to the music because the music would get quite ecstatic with all these repeated patterns.” This is what John Adams was getting at when he said that with In C “the pleasure principle had been invited back into the listening experience.”

    Each performance of In C creates its own blissful global village. It’s a festive ritual, a celebratory group experience. This was perhaps the newest, most radical aspect of Riley’s piece, not its repetitions or its “in C-ness,” which many read as a slap in face of all doctrinaire serialists. Tonality forever! In fact, the piece isn’t really in C at all, since its open-ended modal patterns hint at E and G, as well. But that tonal transparency, those interlocking patterns, were something identifiable, something we could follow, and something that re-imagined both composition and the concert experience. Riley, incidentally, also upset all notions of creative ownership when he published the In C score and its instructions on the first LP recording. So much for copyright. But why not? It’s perfectly in keeping with what Riley calls the “community idea” of music.

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  • Between Worlds

    Between Worlds

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    Welcome to the Festival’s continuing series of the virtual Ojai Talks, where we celebrate the intersection of music, ideas, and the creative process with Ojai Festival artists, innovators, and thinkers.
     

    The Festival is honored to have 2021 Festival Resident Composer Carlos Simon discussing his musical journey and the source of his inspiration for his new work “Between Worlds.” Plus, enjoy a new music video performance of 2021 Festival artist and violinist Miranda Cuckson, playing Simon’s beautiful piece. 

    About Carlos Simon

     

    Carlos Simon is a native of Atlanta, Georgia whose music ranges from concert music for large and small ensembles to film scores with influences of jazz, gospel, and neo-romanticism. 

    Simon was named as one of the recipients for the 2021 Sphinx Medal of Excellence. The Sphinx Medal of Excellence is the highest honor bestowed by the Sphinx Organization, recognizing extraordinary classical Black and Latinx musicians. Along with a $50,000 career grant, Sphinx annually awards the Medals of Excellence to three artists who, early in their career, demonstrate artistic excellence, outstanding work ethic, a spirit of determination, and an ongoing commitment to leadership and their communities. Simon’s latest album, MY ANCESTOR’S GIFT, was released on the Navona Records label in April 2018. Described as an “overall driving force” (Review Graveyard) and featured on Apple Music’s “Albums to Watch” MY ANCESTOR’S GIFT incorporates spoken word and historic recordings to craft a multifaceted program of musical works that are inspired as much by the past as they are the present.

    As a part of the Sundance Institute, Simon was named as a Sundance/Time Warner Composer Fellow in 2018, which was held at the historic Skywalker Ranch. His string quartet, Elegy, honoring the lives of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Eric Garner was recently performed at the Kennedy Center for the Mason Bates JFK Jukebox Series. With support from the US Embassy in Tokyo and US/Japan Foundation, Simon traveled with the Asia/America New Music Institute (AANMI) on a two-week tour of Japan in 2018 performing concerts in some of the most sacred temples and concert spaces in Japan including Suntory Hall in Tokyo, Japan.  Other recent accolades include being a Composer Fellow at the Cabrillo Festival for Contemporary Music, winning the Underwood Emerging Composer Commission from the American Composers Orchestra in 2016, the prestigious Marvin Hamlisch Film Scoring Award in 2015, and the Presser Award from the Theodore Presser Foundation in 2015. He has also served as a contributing arranger for Rachel Barton Pine Foundation’s Music by Black Composers series for violin.

    Recent commissions have come from the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Los Angeles Opera, Philadelphia Orchestra, Washington National Opera, Reno Philharmonic, the American Composers Orchestra, Arizona State University Symphony Orchestra, Irving Klein String Competition, Morehouse College celebrating its 150th founding anniversary, the University of Michigan Symphony Band celebrating the university’s 200th anniversary, Albany Symphony’s Dogs of Desire (American Music Festival) as well as serving as the young composer-in-residence with the Detroit Chamber String and Winds in 2016. Simon’s music has been performed by Tony Arnold, the Third Angle New Music Ensemble, Hub New Music Ensemble, the Asian/American New Music Institute, the Flint Symphony, the Color of Music Festival, University of North Texas Symphony Band, University of Miami Symphony Band, Georgia State University Wind Ensemble and many other professional performance organizations. His piece, Let America Be America Again (text by Langston Hughes) is scheduled to be featured in an upcoming PBS documentary chronicling the inaugural Gabriela Lena Frank Academy of Music. He has served as a member of the music faculty at Spelman College and Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia and now serves as Assistant Professor at Georgetown University.

    Acting as music director and keyboardist for GRAMMY Award winner Jennifer Holliday, Simon has performed with the Boston Pops Symphony, Jackson Symphony, and St. Louis Symphony. He has toured internationally with soul GRAMMY-nominated artist, Angie Stone, and performed throughout Europe, Africa, and Asia.

    Simon earned his doctorate degree at the University of Michigan, where he studied with Michael Daugherty and Evan Chambers. He has also received degrees from Georgia State University and Morehouse College. Additionally, he studied in Baden, Austria at the Hollywood Music Workshop with Conrad Pope and at New York University’s Film Scoring Summer Workshop.

    Carlos Simon, Jr. is a member of many music organizations including ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers), where he was honored as one of the “Composers to Watch” in 2015 and will take part in the ASCAP Film Music Workshop in Los Angeles, California in 2019. He is also an honorary member of Phi Mu Alpha Music Sinfonia Fraternity and a member of the National Association of Negro Musicians, Society of Composers International, and Pi Kappa Lambda Music Honor Society. His compositions have been published by the Gregorian Institute of America (GIA) Publications and Hal Leonard Publications.

    Music & Video Links

     

    About Between Worlds

    Bill Traylor was born a slave in Alabama in 1853 and died in 1949. He lived long enough to see the United States of America go through many social and political changes. He was an eyewitness to the Civil War, Emancipation, Reconstruction, Jim Crow segregation and the Great Migration. As a self taught visual artist, his work reflects two separate worlds— rural and urban, black and white, old and new. In many ways the simplified forms in Traylor’s artwork tell of the complexity of his world, creativity, and inspiring bid for self-definition in a dehumanizing segregated culture. This piece is inspired by the evocative nature as a whole and not one piece by Traylor. Themes of mystical folklore, race, and religion pervade Traylor’s work. I imagine these solo pieces as a musical study; hopefully showing Traylor’s life between disparate worlds.

    Text related to Bill Traylor and the project title “Between Worlds” are borrowed from, and organized in relation to, Between Worlds: The Art of Bill Traylor, by Leslie Umberger for the Smithsonian American Art Museum, (book and exhibition), 2018: https://americanart.si.edu/exhibitions/traylor.

    • Carlos Simon 

  • Composer Gabriela Ortiz

    Composer Gabriela Ortiz

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    Welcome to the Festival’s continuing series of the virtual Ojai Talks, where we celebrate the intersection of music, ideas, and the creative process with Ojai Festival artists, innovators, and thinkers. 

    The Festival is honored to have 2021 Festival Resident Composer Gabriela Ortiz join Festival Producer Fiona Digney for our October session. Click on the tabs below to learn more about Gabriela.

    About Gabriela Ortiz

    Latin Grammy-nominated Gabriela Ortiz is one of the foremost composers in Mexico today and one of the most vibrant musicians emerging on the international scene. Her musical language achieves an extraordinary and expressive synthesis of tradition and the avant-garde by combining high art, folk music and jazz in novel, frequently refined and always personal ways. Her compositions are credited for being both entertaining and immediate as well as profound and sophisticated; she achieves a balance between highly organized structure and improvisatory spontaneity.

    Gustavo Dudamel, the conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, called her recent work Téenek “one of the most brilliant I have ever directed. Its color, its texture, the harmony and the rhythm that it contains are all something unique. Gabriela possesses a particular capacity to showcase our Latin identity.”

    Ortiz has written music for dance, theater and cinema, and has actively collaborated with poets, playwrights, and historians. Indeed, her creative process focuses on the connections between gender issues, social justice, environmental concerns and the burden of racism, as well as the phenomenon of multiculturality caused by globalization, technological development, and mass migrations. She has composed three operas, in all of which interdisciplinary collaboration has been a vital experience. Notably, these operas are framed by political contexts of great complexity, such as the drug war in Only the Truth, illegal migration between Mexico and the United States in Ana and her Shadow, and the violation of university autonomy during the student movement of 1968 in Firefly.

    Based in Mexico, Ortiz’s music has been commissioned and performed all over the world by prestigious ensembles, soloists and orchestras, such as: the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Gustavo Dudamel and Esa Pekka Salonen, Zoltan Kocsis, Carlos Miguel Prieto, the Kroumata and Amadinda Percussion Ensembles, the Kronos Quartet, Dawn Upshaw, Sarah Leonard, the Cuarteto Latinoamericano, Pierre Amoyal, Southwest Chamber Music, the Tambuco Percussion Quartet, the Hungarian Philharmonic Orchestra, the Malmo Symphony Orchestra, the Orquestra Simón Bolivar, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, among others. Recent premieres include: Yanga and Téenek, both pieces commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Gustavo Dudamel, Luciérnaga (Firefly, her third opera) commissioned and produced by the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Únicamente la Verdad (Only the Truth, her first opera) with Long Beach Opera and Opera de Bellas Artes in Mexico.

    Ortiz has been honored with the National Prize for Arts and Literature, the most prestigious award for writers and artists granted by the government of Mexico, and has been inducted into the Mexican Academy of the Arts. Other honors include: the Bellagio Center Residency Program, Civitella Ranieri Artistic Residency; a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship; a Fulbright Fellowship; first prize in the Silvestre Revueltas National Chamber Music Competition; first prize in the Alicia Urreta Composition Competition; a Banff Center for the Arts Residency; the Inroads Commission (a program of Arts International with funds from the Ford Foundation); a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation; and the Mozart Medal Award.

    Born in Mexico City, her parents were musicians in the renowned folk music ensemble Los Folkloristas, founded in 1966 to preserve and record the traditional music of Mexico and Latin America. She trained with the eminent composer Mario Lavista at the Conservatorio Nacional de Música and Federico Ibarra at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. In 1990 she was awarded the British Council Fellowship to study in London with Robert Saxton at The Guildhall School of Music and Drama. In 1992 she received a scholarship from the UNAM to complete her Ph.D. studies in electroacoustic music composition with Simon Emmerson at The City University in London.

    Ortiz currently teaches composition at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Mexico City and as a Visiting Professor at Indiana University. Her music is currently published by Schott, Ediciones Mexicanas de Música, Saxiana Presto, and Tre Fontane.

    Music Links

    Gabriela Ortiz’s Liquid Borders | Steven Schick, conductor with Red Fish Blue Fish

     

    Gabriela Ortiz’s discussion on Yanga with the LA Philharmonic

     

    Excerpts from Gabriela Ortiz’s opera Camelia le tejana

     


    Estudios entre preludios
    : Preludio No. 1

    Behind the Curtain: 5 Fun Facts

    An enjoyable and always surprising time during our Festival is when audience members run into Festival artists in Libbey Park, at a coffee shop, or the Festival Lounge. Those cherished moments are a chance to see artists in a different light. Here, we try to replicate those intimate conversations with “Behind the Curtain.”  

    Gabriela Ortiz on five fun factoids:

    What are your favorite homecooked meal(s)?
    Spanish Gazpacho, Mexican Ceviche, and Key Lime Pie

    Your go-to composer or piece of music when you need to relax?
    Anything Debussy

    What’s on your bookshelf or nightstand that you’d recommend reading? And maybe even something we can find at Bart’s Books!
    Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli

    When you were a student, how would your teachers describe you?
    Extroverted

    If you could collaborate with any musician or composer who would that be?
    LA Philharmonic

  • Ojai Musical Interlude

    Ojai Musical Interlude

     

    All of us at the Festival are so grateful for your support and commitment during this deeply unsettled and unsettling time. The coming  year holds the promise of better things, especially with the arrival of vaccines quite literally beginning to be distributed as I write these words. We dream of having dinner with friends, traveling to see loved ones, seeing the smile on the face of a passing stranger.

    And of listening to music in each other’s company. We are keeping the dream of our June reunion alive, working to realize the energizing vision of John Adams as we anticipate the 75th Festival. We will continue to consult with medical and public health professionals to create the safest environment possible for the Festival.

    In the meantime, our own spirits have been buoyed by all you have done to sustain the Festival, from the great generosity of financial support to notes and messages telling us how much you missed the special experience of music in those four magical days in June.

    We want to thank you with a small year-end gift that captures the beauty and adventurous spirit of the Ojai Music Festival in a newly created video filmed in the serene setting of Meditation Mount, which has recently finished its own period of renewal.

    We hope that the quiet joys of the holidays brighten you and yours. And that the promise of the New Year brings to us a better  world and the occasion to gather together once again.

    With thanks and warm regards from all of us at the Ojai Festival,

    Ara Guzelimian
    Artistic & Executive Director


    The mission of Meditation Mount is to promote the building of an enlightened and compassionate world through the power of creative meditation, inspirational educational programs, and community-based events focused on the practical application of the following universal spiritual principles: Right Human Relations, Goodwill, Group Endeavor, Unanimity, Spiritual Approach, and Essential Divinity.

    Meditation Mount invites you to dream, to imagine and to articulate with us, the design of a new world founded upon spiritual principles and values through the practical application of creative meditation in daily living. The Mount stands as a refuge for the regeneration of the spirit and a beacon of fiery hope in a world yearning for a more light-filled and compassionate approach to building community. There is so much more waiting to emerge that will grow the Mount’s capacity to be of even greater service in this time of global transition. Therefore, we graciously welcome your participation in securing the future of the Mount’s work in the world. For more information visit their website here.

    ABOUT ELLIOT COLE, composer 
    Elliot Cole (*1984) is a composer and “charismatic contemporary bard” (The New York Times).  He has written for and performed with Grammy winners Roomful of Teeth, Grammy Nominees A Far Cry and Metropolis Ensemble, and many other ensembles.  His percussion music evokes “sparkling icicles of sound” (Rolling Stone) and has been performed by over 250 groups all over the world.  He is currently on faculty at the The New School and Juilliard Evening Division, and is Program Director of Musicambia at Sing Sing, where he runs a music school for incarcerated men.  Cole is a PhD candidate in Composition at Princeton University.

    ABOUT Fiona Digney, vibraphone 
    Fiona Digney is an Australian-born percussionist, producer, and educator who holds both education and performance degrees from Australia, The Netherlands, and the USA, and recently received her doctoral studies under the guidance of Steven Schick at UC San Diego. This year, she was named as the Ojai Festival Producer & Artistic Administrator.  Digney has enjoyed a wide-ranging freelance career performing in solo, ensemble, and theatrical settings across the globe. She has performed with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, La Jolla Symphony, Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra, Tetrafide percussion quartet (AUS), and red fish blue fish (USA), as well as a soloist at Club Zho and the launch of the Totally Huge New Music Festival (AUS). Digney is also Managing Director & Artistic Producer of San Diego based performing arts organization Art of Elan.