Bled Festival took off in 1995 and is dedicated mainly to chamber music, though it also includes crossover genres, especially jazz. Each year there is also a special concert, Night of Slovene Composers, organised by the Society of Slovene Composers and featuring new music by the contemporary Slovene composers. The festival is managed by Bled culture institute.
Venues
Concerts take place at various venues, including Bled Festival Hall, the Bled Castle, the church on Bled Island and the Radovljica Manor House.
Programme
Some of the guests from abroad in previous years include Chicago Master Singers (US), Melbourne String Ensemble (AU) and Tartini String Quartet.
All the concerts are connected with the international master classes and competition, with about 2000 participants so far.
In addition to offering financial prizes, an international jury awards the best competitors. Awards have been given in the categories of violin, viola, and chamber music. As of recently, there are also painting exhibitions.
See also
External links
Gallery
Bled Festival poster, 2011
Cello Attacca! is a group of young cellists, joined and led by their professor Karmen Pečar Koritnik. They closed the 2016 edition of Bled Festival with a concert at St. Martin's Church, Bled.
The 2016 Rising Starts programme featured the musicians Antoni Brozek and Pjotr Jasiurkovsky as mentors. Both are regulars at the Bled Festival, 2016
Playing at the Cafe Belvedere, the group Oriyon presented their take on classical French chanson at Cafe Belvedere, one of the Bled Festival venues, 2016
A concert of young jazz musicians at one of the cafes above the Bled lake, 2016
Professor Saewon Suh is not only regularly performing at the Bled Festival, he often also brings some outstanding (and mostly Korean) young musicians with him, 2016
The dance collective Schmerlitz, a folklore dance group of Lusatian Serbs, performing at the Bled Festival, 2016