Music of Vermont

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Vermont is a state in the United States. Some of the state's most well-known bands include Phish, Drowningman, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, 8084, Rough Francis, Waylon Speed, The Wards, The Cancer Conspiracy and Prydein. Burlington also has a thriving music scene with folk artists like Eric George,[1] Cricket Blue, the North End Honeys, and Apple Herbert, rockabilly-surf acts like the Twisters, and punk bands like the A$$BEE$.[2] The city also hosts jam bands, including the Jellies, Preserve, and Chutney Alice.

The state is also home to many iconoclastic composers, from Revolutionary-era Justin Morgan through electronic/avant-gardist Otto Luening. Vermont's long list of contemporary composers includes Jon Appleton, Dennis Bathory-Kitsz, David Gunn, Brian Johnson, Leroy Preston, Laura Koplewitz, John Levin, Peggy Madden, Erik Nielsen, Thomas L. Read, Ernie Stires, GD, Su Lian Tan, Dennis Murphy, and Gwyneth Walker.

Vermont is also a rich source of folk and traditional music, with such musicians as Celia Woodsworth (and her band Avi and Celia,) Pete Sutherland, Anaïs Mitchell, Deb Flanders, Jon Gailmor, and many others.

Music education and institutions

The Vermont Symphony Orchestra,[3] founded in 1934, was the first state-funded orchestra in the nation. The orchestra's first artistic director was Alan Carter, followed by Efrain Guigui, and Kate Tamarkin. The Artistic Director and conductor today is Jaime Laredo. Laredo is a world-renowned violinist who played for many years with Isaac Stern and performs worldwide as a soloist and frequently in duo concerts with Sharon Robinson, cellist. The VSO's "Made in Vermont" series annually commissions a Vermont composer to create a large-scale work that tours the State. Previous recipients have included G. Walker, L. Koplewitz, et al. Current composer-in-residence with the VSO is David Ludwig. The Vermont Youth Orchestra[4] has come to prominence since the mid-1990s under the direction of composer/conductor Troy Peters.[5] The Consortium of Vermont Composers was formed in 1988 to promote composers of classical music from the state; the Consortium calls Vermont the "most composer-friendly state" in the country.[6]

Vermont has a program entitled the Vermont MIDI Project, a non-profit program that encourages young students from elementary school to high school to compose music and submit what they have written to a diannual competition. If selected, the compositions are performed by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra. This program makes use of Sibelius notation software, which allows people to compose music electronically.

The Vermont College of Fine Arts in Montpelier houses a low-residency MFA program in music composition, where composers from all over the country gather every semester to study and perform.

Music festivals

The Vermont Mozart Festival, founded in 1974, is the state's largest classical music festival, and a popular summer destination for music lovers around the United States. As of 2006, the Mozart Festival has performed well over 2,000 works in over 30 locations, including 278 of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's 626 compositions—possibly more than any other festival or concert series in the country.

The Marlboro Music Festival, which has been held since 1950, is another important festival for the state's music. There is also a Champlain Valley Folk Festival, the New World Festival held in Randolph and the One World, One Heart Festival, sponsored by local ice cream manufacturer Ben & Jerry's. The One World, One Heart Festival is held in Warren, Vermont and features concerts by folk and country performers.[7]

The North Branch Bluegrass Festival, held annually since 2008 in Bridgewater, Vermont is an old-fashioned family music festival. It features a weekend show of regional bluegrass musicians, over a dozen music workshops, and weekend field camping.

References

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Notes

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  7. Byron, pg. 309

External links