Norfolk's Chamber Music Fest
Melvin Chen 
Photo by Matt Field

Norfolk's Chamber Music Fest

The Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, running from Friday, July 7 through Saturday, Aug. 19, is making big changes to its facility and programming this season. Nearing completion is a $10 million renovation of the Music Shed, which includes air-conditioning, a remodeled entry, new restrooms, a small store and a new green room. A full annex at the back of the building for practice and rehearsals will be completed by early August. The main hall, where concerts have been held since 1906, will keep its historic ambiance and excellent acoustics.

The tradition of having quartets in residence, who teach the 38 fellows and perform concerts on weekends, will continue. The Brentano Quartet will be in Norfolk, Conn., for the first two weeks, the Miro Quartet for weeks three and four, and the Emerson Quartet for the fifth week.

“We think of ourselves as a teaching festival where the most talented students from around the country come to study chamber music and have opportunities to perform alongside the faculty,” said Melvin Chen, the director of the festival.

On a bittersweet note, the Emerson Quartet will retire after many years as festival mentors. The quartet, one of the premier chamber music ensembles of its time, is currently on a global farewell tour that will include Norfolk on Friday, Aug. 4, and end at Lincoln Center in New York City on Sunday, Oct. 22.

The musical theme for the season is “Instrumental Insights.” As Chen said, “Chamber music is not something fixed but something evolving and growing, and we need to participate in that. We will offer special insight into a variety of musical topics that will be illuminated through music.”

The versatility of the clarinet is showcased in a program with the Miro Quartet that includes a Mozart quintet and a selection of Benny Goodman works. The Ukraine/Russia concert will explore the historic conflict that has existed between the two countries and will include a piece of music that had to be re-created after it was burned by the Russians in the mid-1900s.

“Drawing from Tradition” is a concert that will present three pieces that combine musical traditions: one fuses a Hindustani vocal tradition with a Western piano quintet; another draws from a Tibetan dance; and a final piano quintet draws from dance music composed by people enslaved in the United States.

Chen added, “My objective to having a theme for the summer and a theme for every program is that people will be attracted to the idea of the program. They may not know the specific pieces, but the idea of the program may be intriguing to them. So, the hope is that they will come and explore the idea. In that way, we hope to draw a wider audience. I’d like people to look at the program and think ‘let me find out what that sounds like.’”

The festival offers a variety of free concerts and events. Pre-concert conversations, during which Chen and professors from the Yale School of Music talk with festival artists, take place at the Battell Recital Hall each Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. before concerts. Free chamber music concerts are performed at the Music Shed on Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. and Saturdays at 10:30 a.m. from July 6 to Aug. 12. Master classes and open rehearsals welcome audiences on select Wednesdays starting July 5 until Aug. 9, but check the festival's website.

The Festival Open House on Sunday, Aug. 6, will feature dogs trained to perform on Broadway performing in “Broadway Tails,” presented by William Berloni, a Tony Award-winning animal trainer.

The season gala concert on Saturday, Aug. 12, will feature Tony Award-winner and Norfolk alum Ted Sperling hosting performances that look at love through the Stephen Sondheim songbook. Scarlett Strallen and Bryce Pinkham will perform selections from “Sweeney Todd,” “A Little Night Music,” and “Into the Woods”

The season will close on Saturday, Aug. 19 at 4 p.m. with a finale based on tradition. The Litchfield County Choral Union and members of the Yale choral ensembles will present the cantata “Hymn of Praise,” which was a highlight of the Music Shed’s first concert in 1906.

 

Article courtesy of Norfolk Now.

Latest News

Angela Derrick Carabine

SHARON — Angela Derrick Carabine, 74, died May 17, 2025, at Vasser Hospital in Poughkeepsie, New York. She was the wife of Michael Carabine and mother of Caitlin Carabine McLean.

A funeral Mass will be celebrated on June 6 at 11:00 a.m. at Saint Katri (St Bernards Church) Church. Burial will follow at St. Bernards Cemetery. A complete obituary can be found on the website of the Kenny Funeral home kennyfuneralhomes.com.

Revisiting ‘The Killing Fields’ with Sam Waterston

Sam Waterston

Jennifer Almquist

On June 7 at 3 p.m., the Triplex Cinema in Great Barrington will host a benefit screening of “The Killing Fields,” Roland Joffé’s 1984 drama about the Khmer Rouge and the two journalists, Cambodian Dith Pran and New York Times correspondent Sydney Schanberg, whose story carried the weight of a nation’s tragedy.

The film, which earned three Academy Awards and seven nominations — including one for Best Actor for Sam Waterston — will be followed by a rare conversation between Waterston and his longtime collaborator and acclaimed television and theater director Matthew Penn.

Keep ReadingShow less
The art of place: maps by Scott Reinhard

Scott Reinhard, graphic designer, cartographer, former Graphics Editor at the New York Times, took time out from setting up his show “Here, Here, Here, Here- Maps as Art” to explain his process of working.Here he explains one of the “Heres”, the Hunt Library’s location on earth (the orange dot below his hand).

obin Roraback

Map lovers know that as well as providing the vital functions of location and guidance, maps can also be works of art.With an exhibition titled “Here, Here, Here, Here — Maps as Art,” Scott Reinhard, graphic designer and cartographer, shows this to be true. The exhibition opens on June 7 at the David M. Hunt Library at 63 Main St., Falls Village, and will be the first solo exhibition for Reinhard.

Reinhard explained how he came to be a mapmaker. “Mapping as a part of my career was somewhat unexpected.I took an introduction to geographic information systems (GIS), the technological side of mapmaking, when I was in graduate school for graphic design at North Carolina State.GIS opened up a whole new world, new tools, and data as a medium to play with.”

Keep ReadingShow less