The Festival was founded in 1963 by the composers
Lou Harrison,
Robert Hughes and collaborators from the Santa Cruz-area music community, on the campus of the newly opened
Cabrillo College just outside Santa Cruz in
Aptos, California. The first music director was
Gerhard Samuel. The Festival quickly grew to prominence, thanks in part to Harrison's stature and the participation of well-known composers such as
John Cage and
Aaron Copland. Subsequent music directors included
Mexican composer
Carlos Chávez, conductor
Dennis Russell Davies, and American composer
John Adams. By the late 1970s, the Festival had established itself as an independent organization unaffiliated with Cabrillo College. After the devastating
Loma Prieta earthquake caused major damage around Santa Cruz in 1989, the Festival established itself in downtown Santa Cruz, and the majority of the Festival's performances since 1989 have taken place at Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium or at
Mission San Juan Bautista in
San Juan Bautista, California. In 1992,
Marin Alsop was chosen as the Festival's new music director. Alsop rose to significant fame in the 2000s after being the first conductor awarded a
MacArthur Genius Grant in 2005 and the first woman named to direct a major American orchestra, the
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, in 2007. In 1992, she was a young up-and-coming musician. She decided to more exclusively focus the Festival on the work of living composers. Since her tenure began, the Festival has promoted the careers of a number of prominent composers, performing their work and offering substantial commissions. Notable examples include
Christopher Rouse,
Jennifer Higdon,
Kevin Puts, and
Michael Daugherty. The Festival also frequently features the music of
Philip Glass,
John Adams,
James MacMillan, and
Osvaldo Golijov, among others. In September 2016, the Festival announced that
Cristian Măcelaru would succeed Alsop as music director, beginning in summer 2017. The 2021 program included the world premier of "Contested Eden" by
Gabriela Lena Frank, with recorded choreography filmed on locations of the nearby
CZU Lightning Complex fires. ==Activities==