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SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-07-05/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260710T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260710T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014665-1783693800-1783699200@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-07-10/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260712T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260712T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014650-1783854000-1783859400@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-07-12/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260717T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260717T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014666-1784298600-1784304000@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-07-17/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260719T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260719T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014651-1784458800-1784464200@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-07-19/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260724T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260724T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014667-1784903400-1784908800@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-07-24/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260726T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260726T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014652-1785063600-1785069000@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-07-26/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260731T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260731T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014668-1785508200-1785513600@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-07-31/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260802T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260802T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014653-1785668400-1785673800@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-08-02/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260807T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260807T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014669-1786113000-1786118400@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-08-07/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260809T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260809T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014654-1786273200-1786278600@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-08-09/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260814T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260814T160000
DTSTAMP:20260622T204125Z
CREATED:20260622T204125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T204125Z
UID:10014670-1786717800-1786723200@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin-2/2026-08-14/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
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X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260816T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260816T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014655-1786878000-1786883400@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-08-16/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260823T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260823T123000
DTSTAMP:20260622T203851Z
CREATED:20260622T203851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260622T203851Z
UID:10014656-1787482800-1787488200@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Tanglewood Talks 2026 with Jeremy Yudkin
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Jeremy Yudkin is back with the 43rd season of Tanglewood pre-concert talks.  These programs will take place in the Town Hall auditorium\, located at 6 Walker Street\, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. on Friday afternoons and Sunday mornings from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. \nThe Summer 2026 schedule will be as follows: \nJULY \nSunday\, July 5. Portraits of Lincoln. \nCelebrating American and Abraham Lincoln with Aaron Copland\, Philip Glass (world premiere!)\, and John Williams. \nFriday\, July 10. Tchaikovsky. \nHis towering Piano Concerto No. 1 and excerpts from the immortal Swan Lake. \nSunday\, July 12. Chopin\, Brahms\, and Jani.\nChopin Piano Concerto No. 2\, Brahms’s Second Symphony\, and “What do flowers do at night?” \nFriday\, July 17. Renée Fleming/Hampson/Wakao.\nSamuel Barber’s Violin Concerto\, Carlos Simon’s Meditations on Grace\, and excerpts from John Adams’s Nixon in China. \nSunday\, July 19. Hayden\, Beethoven\, Shostakovich.\nHaydn’s brilliant Symphony No. 22\, Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 1\, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2. \nFriday\, July 24. Mozart and Tchaikovsky.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 and Tchaikovsky’s experimental Third Symphony (“Polish”). \nSunday\, July 26. Tchaikovsky and Mozart.\nMozart’s Violin Concerto No. 1\, Salonen’s Gambit\, and Tchaikovsky’s celebrated Symphony No. 5. \nFriday\, July 31.Wagner\, Sibelius\, and Beethoven.\nThe Tristan Prelude\, Sibelius’s magnificent Seventh\, and Beethoven’s masterful “Emperor” Concerto. \nAUGUST \nSunday\, August 2. Nelsons/Joshua Bell.\nBruch’s Scottish Fantasy\, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris\, and Schumann’s Third Symphony. \nFriday\, August 7. Yo-Yo I.\nFauré\, Cantique de Jean Racine; Brahms\, String Sextet\, Op. 36\, and his Double Concerto for Violin\, Cello\, and Orchestra. \nSunday\, August 9. Yo-Yo II.\nTavener\, Mahámátar\, Kalhor\, Venus in the Mirror\, and Golijob\, Azul. \nFriday\, August 14. Music and Dance.\nDance for Martha Graham\, Copland’s Appalachian Spring\, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony. \nSunday\, August 16. \nBruch\, Violin Concerto\, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5\, which moves from fatalism to triumph. (Beethoven’s Fifth\, anyone?) \nFriday\, August 21. No lecture. \nSunday\, August 23. Beethoven’s Ninth! \nPhoto by Ben Garver \nAbout the speaker: Jeremy Yudkin is Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University.  He has served as Visiting Professor of Music at Oxford\, Harvard\, and the Sorbonne.  He is the author of ten books\, including From Silence to Sound: Beethoven’s Beginnings (2020) and Understanding Music (Prentice Hall\, 1996\, 2016)\, and edited the recently-published 550-page volume The New Beethoven.  He also researched and published the first-ever book on the Lenox School of Jazz (2006).  He has given hundreds of lectures across Europe\, the United States\, and Russia and has won numerous awards\, including an Award for Excellence in Historical Research for his book on Miles Davis (2008).  At Boston University\, where he teaches courses on Beethoven\, Bartók\, Bob Dylan\, and the Beatles – among many others – he has been nominated ten times for Metcalf Awards in Teaching and once as Provost’s Scholar-Teacher of the Year. \nThe pre-concert talks are free thanks to the Lenox Library Association’s Goodwin Fund.
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/tanglewood-talks-2026-with-jeremy-yudkin/2026-08-23/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult Program,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Tanglewood-shed-2014-Marco-Borggreve-1.jpg
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260829T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260829T170000
DTSTAMP:20260218T183758Z
CREATED:20260218T183757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260218T183758Z
UID:10014062-1787994000-1788022800@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Lenox Library Association's Annual Book Sale
DESCRIPTION:Explore one of the area’s biggest book sales\, featuring 8\,000 like-new books in over 30 categories at bargain prices\, all donated from Berkshire homes.  You’ll discover books for all ages and interests – book lovers\, book dealers\, collectors\, and kids.    \n Sale offers a broad selection of collectibles\, including signed copies\, first editions\, and pre-1900 treasures.    \n All proceeds from this event\, the Lenox Library’s Association’s biggest fundraiser of the year\, support the library’s programs\, materials\, and resources.  This event is sponsored by the Lenox office of Apella Wealth. 
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/lenox-library-associations-annual-book-sale-2/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Community,Fundraising,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Front-Take-Away-Card-2026-Book-sale.png
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260830T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260830T170000
DTSTAMP:20260218T183956Z
CREATED:20260218T183946Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260218T183956Z
UID:10014431-1788080400-1788109200@lenoxlib.org
SUMMARY:Lenox Library Association's Annual Book Sale
DESCRIPTION:Explore one of the area’s biggest book sales\, featuring 8\,000 like-new books in over 30 categories at bargain prices\, all donated from Berkshire homes.  You’ll discover books for all ages and interests – book lovers\, book dealers\, collectors\, and kids.    \n Sale offers a broad selection of collectibles\, including signed copies\, first editions\, and pre-1900 treasures.    \n All proceeds from this event\, the Lenox Library’s Association’s biggest fundraiser of the year\, support the library’s programs\, materials\, and resources.  This event is sponsored by the Lenox office of Apella Wealth. 
URL:https://lenoxlib.org/event/lenox-library-associations-annual-book-sale/
LOCATION:Lenox Town Hall\, 6 Walker Street\, Lenox\, MA\, 01240\, United States
CATEGORIES:Community,Fundraising,LLA Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lenoxlib.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Front-Take-Away-Card-2026-Book-sale.png
GEO:42.3564156;-73.2847252
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lenox Town Hall 6 Walker Street Lenox MA 01240 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=6 Walker Street:geo:-73.2847252,42.3564156
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR