The
Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts remains at the core of Aldeburgh Music's annual programme. Artistic directors of the Aldeburgh Festival have included composer
Thomas Ades (1999-2008) and from 2009 to 2016
Pierre-Laurent Aimard. Traditionally starting on the second Friday in June and running for 17 days, events are presented not only in the various venues at Snape Maltings, but in all the traditional Festival venues such as
Aldeburgh Parish Church,
Orford Church,
Blythburgh Church and the Festival's original home,
Aldeburgh’s Jubilee Hall. Site-specific events have taken place elsewhere, such as
Sizewell Beach (Everlasting Night, 2011),
Leiston Long Shop Museum (Before Life and After, 2012),
RAF Bentwaters Airbase (
Faster than Sound), and community events on the beach. The Pumphouse, situated off the marshes on the outskirts of the town, provides an informal, alternative performance venue. Although
Britten’s work always features in the Festival – and played a large role in 2013, his centenary year – it by no means dominates the programme, which continues to commission and present new work from contemporary composers, as well as exploring themes across many genres. The Festival's Artists in Residence have included composer-conductor
Oliver Knussen, a former artistic director of the Festival, in 2012, and composer
George Benjamin in 2015. Previous contemporary composers to be examined in depth in recent festivals include
György Ligeti and
Marco Stroppa (2011),
George Benjamin and
Pierre Boulez (2010),
Harrison Birtwistle and
Elliott Carter (2009) and
György Kurtág (2008). Festivals also include work by the Britten Pears Young Artist Programme, including Britten–Pears Alumni. A programme of fringe events takes place at The Pumphouse in Aldeburgh.
Snape Proms The Snape Proms take place throughout August each year in the Concert Hall. Some seats in the main block are removed, and audiences sit on cushions on the floor. With a different concert each evening throughout the month, the Proms present an eclectic range of music, including classical, jazz, folk and world music, and incorporate comedy and poetry.
Easter Festival An Easter Festival is mounted each year, together with an autumn weekend generally themed around the work of
Benjamin Britten.
Britten–Pears Young Artist Programme Since the very first course in 1972, over 10,000 young artists have attended what started as the Britten–Pears School for Advanced Musical Studies, and is now called the
Britten Pears Young Artist Programme. Masterclasses for singers, ensembles, instrumentalists and composers are held from March until October. There are also opportunities for emerging young professional musicians to work with conductors, soloists and orchestral principals in both the Britten–Pears Orchestra and the Britten–Pears Baroque Orchestra. Many of the masterclasses are open to the public, and each course culminates in a public performance, including at the
Aldeburgh Festival and
Snape Proms. Auditions are held across the world, now using modern technology to access countries on the other side of the globe. Previous conductors of the BPO include
Edward Gardner,
Oliver Knussen,
Kirill Karabits,
Vasily Petrenko and
Robin Ticciati. The Britten–Pears Baroque Orchestra, formed in 1992, is formed each year to work on baroque repertoire, and previous tutors have included period specialists
Richard Egarr,
Emmanuelle Haïm,
Laurence Cummings,
Andreas Scholl and
Harry Bicket. Singers are auditioned for song recital courses, and recent courses have included American and French song with Dawn Upshaw. Singers and orchestra come together to perform opera; recent productions have included Death in Venice and Albert Herring, and
Poulenc’s
Les Mamelles de Tiresias in
Britten’s arrangement. Each year there is a digital media course, called New Music/New Media. String quartets come together each spring and present a weekly recital of "work-in-progress" at the Jubilee Hall, and in late summer the International Academy of String Quartets provides further opportunities for working on repertoire. Menahem Pressler,
Pierre-Laurent Aimard and the
Arditti Quartet have all taught masterclasses.
Aldeburgh Residencies Aldeburgh Residencies are designed for established musicians and other artists. The first Jerwood Opera Writing Foundation, led by Artistic Advisor
Giorgio Battistelli and a distinguished faculty of experienced practitioners, featured three week-long workshops in March, July and October 2007. Ten of the participants were composers, mostly at the start of a professional career but with little or no experience in writing opera, while the remaining participants were a mix of poets, playwrights and directors with an interest in, but no experience at that stage of, writing libretti. In 2010, the second Jerwood Opera Writing Foundation course began, involving composers, writers and directors both in the UK and worldwide. The participants, twenty composers, writers and directors, took part in three week-long workshop-led courses at
Snape Maltings in November 2010, March and July 2011. The workshops mixed practical exercises, theory and discussion, with contributions from teachers including
Harrison Birtwistle, Stephen Langridge,
Stephen Plaice,
David Sawer,
Lavinia Greenlaw,
Jonathan Dove and
Orlando Gough amongst others, and culminated in performances of mini music-theatre works created by the twenty participants. At the end of November 2011, Aldeburgh Music invited applications for Jerwood Opera Writing Fellowships from composers and writers and their collaborators who wanted to develop a particular opera project for commission and performance. Fellowships were to give support during the development of a new opera by providing a collaborative, supportive environment, as well as financial and practical support and expertise, such as workshops and mentoring. Over sixty applications were submitted from countries worldwide and the following four proposals were each awarded a Jerwood Opera Writing Fellowship:
Knots and Do-Nots – composer
Sasha Siem and director Ted Huffman;
Pleasure – composer
Mark Simpson and writer Melanie Challenger;
Thanatophobia – composer Joanna Lee and writer Hannah Silva; and
Beyond the Pale – composer Benjamin Scheuer, writer Tom Swift and director Tom Creed.
Aldeburgh Education Over 8,000 young people participate in Education projects each year. The latest initiative is Group A, a non-audition choir for young people of between the ages of 13 and 18, and The Big Shout, an opportunity for members of the community to come together to sing. Aldeburgh Education also devises training in participatory settings for artists at all levels. Aldeburgh Education has been working with
Suffolk County Council since 1987, and has been a lead partner in the Suffolk Music Education Hub since 2012. It has worked with
HM YOI Warren Hill since 1999, and with Lapwing, an organisation providing individual learning programmes for young people who have complex barriers to learning, since 2009, as well as with a variety of local and national arts organizations around the UK and beyond including the development of audio/visual interactive media.
Aldeburgh Young Musicians Aldeburgh Young Musicians (AYM) was created to fill the perceived gap in Aldeburgh Music's engagement with the musical development of younger people. Starting in 2006 with performances in disused hangars at
RAF Bentwaters, Faster than Sound, co-produced with Joana Seguro from Lumin, is now based in the Hoffmann Building at
Snape Maltings. Since 2009, there have been five week-long residencies each year, culminating in a performance. Recent presentations include I Burn for You, a new music theatre piece based on Dracula, by
Ian Wilson (composer) and
Tom Creed (director); Symmetry with Marcus du Sautoy and Fall Back connecting the legacy of Dubstep with some of the earliest experiments in electronic music and projection. During the 2012
Aldeburgh Festival, choral ensemble EXAUDI teamed up with sound artist Bill Thompson and students from the University of East Anglia and presented a promenade performance in the Hoffmann Building of
John Cage’s
Song Books. Other Faster than Sound projects in 2012 include
Star-Shaped Biscuit, text and music by
David Toop, which will be performed in one of the remaining semi-derelict buildings at
Snape Maltings. Later in 2012, composer
Richard Baker and sound artist Brian Duffy collaborate on a new work exploring the hidden voices of electronic toys and toy instruments in combination with a small chamber ensemble.
TEDx Aldeburgh TED is a US-led non-profit organisation devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. It brings together in international conferences, people from the worlds of Technology, Entertainment and Design (TED). Aldeburgh Music hosted the inaugural TEDx Aldeburgh Conference on 6 November 2010. Hosted by the TED music director Thomas Dolby and produced by Joana Seguro as an opportunity of having in one place great minds and explorers of contemporary music, the event featured talks by
David Toop,
Tod Machover,
Martyn Ware,
William Orbit,
Tim Exile,
Imogen Heap, Ash Nehru of
United Visual Artists. In addition, there were TED talk videos from
David Byrne,
Itay Talgam,
Evelyn Glennie and
Benjamin Zander. The gathering of people and ideas coincided with Aldeburgh's New Music New Media course for emerging professional composers and musicians, led by
Tod Machover. The second conference was held on 5 November 2011 when the speakers included Vincent Walsh,
Peter Gregson, Kingslee Daly,
Jennifer Stumm,
Nitin Sawhney, Kathy Hinde and the
Modified Toy Orchestra.
Visual Arts: SNAP The
Aldeburgh Festival has always included the visual arts as well as music, and a number of exhibitions are curated each year to accompany the music programme. From 2011, the main exhibition of contemporary art has been promoted under the title SNAP, at various locations around the Snape Maltings site, organized by Abigail Lane. In 2012, featured artists included
Glenn Brown, May Cornet,
Brian Eno,
Ryan Gander,
Maggi Hambling, Mark Limbrick, Emily Richardson and
Gavin Turk. Aldeburgh Music is also responsible for running the Peter Pears Gallery in Aldeburgh and the Pond Gallery at Snape Maltings. For most of the year these galleries are hired out to local artists, but provide the space for Aldeburgh Music-curated exhibitions during the
Aldeburgh Festival. ==People==