Talking Heads: Kenneth Woods – Ten Years After…

Just a decade after he became conductor of the English Symphony Orchestra, Kenneth Woods looks back on his varied career in the US and UK, then considers what might be coming next.

interview by Richard Whitehouse

Autumn customarily sees the start of a new concert season for UK orchestras – except when, of course, the requisite financial support is not forthcoming. That could easily have been the case for the English Symphony Orchestra were it not for its ambitious schedule, as detailed in the document Music for Humans, which reflects the convictions and the vision of several persons who work for and as part of this ensemble – notably its chief executive officer Seb Lovell-Huckle and, above all, its principal conductor and artistic director Kenneth Woods.

With his extensive discography and frequent appearances online or on radio, Woods is not exactly a ‘best kept secret’ among British or – given he hails from the USA – British-based musicians, but his contribution to British musical life during the past two decades is a very substantial one and worth reflecting on for any consideration of music-making in the UK during that period. Speaking to him recently in Worcester, where the ESO has its HQ and gives many of its concerts, brought some of these achievements into closer perspective.

A native of Madison (capital of the state of Wisconsin and which, situated adjacent to five lakes with various historic landmarks including several buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, surely ranks among the most visually striking cities of America’s upper mid-west), Woods did his early academic training here and at Indiana University before doctoral studies at the University of Cincinnati. Here he studied conducting at the College-Conservatory of Music and assisted Jesús López Cobos, music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.

Subsequent mentors included Leonard Slatkin, David Zinman and Jorma Panula, but the most decisive influence was Gerhard Samuel (above) who, in 21 seasons with the Cincinnati Philharmonia, programmed a wide range of unfamiliar and contemporary works. Those who were present are unlikely to forget their London visit in 1989 featuring the UK premiere of the Symphony by Hans Rott, while his later recordings include Larry Austin’s realization of Ives’s Universe Symphony and the entertaining ‘Symphony of 1825’ allegedly by Schubert but now known   to be a publisher’s concoction – on both of which, Woods features in the cello section. Also   a composer, with a distinctly though never inflexibly contemporary idiom, Samuel remains    a totemic musical figure whose undoubted significance Woods continues to acknowledge.

‘‘Working with Gerhard was important not just in terms of honing my conducting technique, but also in helping me to understand that the responsibility of a conductor give audiences a chance to hear works from outside the canon, whether new works or lost works of the past. His long experience of bringing to life pieces such as Hans Rott’s Symphony and Mahler’s orchestration of Beethoven’s Ninth showed me the positive impact a conductor can make simply by giving an unknown work a chance to be heard rather than simply written about.”

The latter was a challenge Woods took on with directorships of the Grande Ronde Symphony and Oregon East Symphony orchestras at the end of the last century then into the new one. During the 2000’s he also maintained an active collaboration as Principal Guest Conductor with the Rose City Chamber Orchestra in Portland. Guest engagements included the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Northern Sinfonia and the State of Mexico Symphony (a 2004 account of the first movement from Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony can be heard on YouTube below). He continued (and continues) to appear as a cellist, notably as part of the string trio Ensemble Epomeo with whom he worked widely in the decade from 2008 and made several recordings.

‘‘Playing with Epomeo was a great opportunity to explore a repertoire which is much more extensive than often imagined, and to extend that repertoire through timely revivals and new commissions. It also enabled us to approach the issue of music education a slightly different way, the Auricolae album bringing new music to younger listeners via the retelling of often familiar stories and commissioning composers whose music they’ll more than likely enjoy when they’ve heard it. Any regret at disbanding was tempered by the knowledge of what we achieved over that decade, and what we all learned from that intensity of collaboration with one another. I’d hope we can be proud of what we’ve contributed to the string trio medium’’.

Having relocated to the UK in the mid-2000s and pursued a varied freelance career, Woods’s major break came when he was appointed principal guest conductor of the Orchestra of the Swan in 2009. The following four years brought several notable projects, most significantly a first recorded cycle of the symphonies by Hans Gál. Although he lived out his long life as a respected pedagogue in Edinburgh, Gál never regained the eminence he enjoyed in Germany and Austria prior to the Third Reich. Both as cellist and conductor, Woods has done as much as any musician to bring about fuller reassessment of a composer who not merely continued the Austro-German lineage but took this in often unexpected and intriguing directions. Even the cycle of symphonies had come about through an unlikely succession of circumstances.

‘‘Having conducted the first recordings of Gál’s orchestral music [Violin Concerto, Violin Concertino and Triptych for Orchestra] with the Northern Sinfonia, our producer Simon Fox-Gál [grandson of the composer] and I were excited to do the symphonies together. Thomas Zehetmair and the Northern Sinfonia had already recorded the first two for Avie, so Simon thought it would be diplomatic for me to start with the Third and Fourth to avoid any direct competition. It was my dear friend Melanne Mueller [Managing Director of Avie] and her husband Simon Foster [Avie’s co-founder] who suggested before we’d recorded a note that we announce this project as a complete cycle. It was a big risk as we didn’t have funding in place, but things don’t happen in this business unless you decide to make them happen. I was keen from the start to couple each of these symphonies with one by Schumann, as this gave a relevant context for listeners to approach Gál while allowing me to record interpretations of works that I’d often conducted and about which I felt I had something worthwhile to say’’.

The critical and popular reaction to these releases certainly justified the confidence placed in Woods by label and producer. The resulting cycle, part of the Avie label’s extensive coverage of Gál’s output, was later reissued as a standalone double-set but the originals remain of value for underlining the continuity of thinking across centuries between these composers and their aesthetic connections. Was Woods at all surprised that these recordings failed to translate into public performances of the Gál symphonies, or that other conductors failed to take them up?

‘‘More disappointed than surprised. Much unfamiliar music remains so, not through its lack of appeal for players or listeners but because orchestra managers and promoters simply won’t take any risk – preferring to schedule what they know will attract an audience, without any real thought as to expanding a repertoire that has become more restricted in terms of Baroque or Classical music through notions of authenticity, and in contemporary music because of the failure to commission more substantial pieces as might occupy the second half of a concert’’.

It was just such thinking that Woods was able to put into practice with the English Symphony Orchestra. Founded by William Boughton in 1978 as the English String Orchestra and based in Malvern, it enjoyed a successful spell in the concert hall and recording studio – promoting a wide range of music with an emphasis on British music of the early and mid-20th century. Having stood down in 2006, Boughton was replaced by a sadly ailing Vernon Handley – his death two years later leaving the orchestra in a period of uncertainty until 2013, when Woods became director of its Malvern concert series – becoming principal conductor the following year and its artistic director in 2016. From the outset, he was keen to make commissioning and recording of new pieces central to the ESO’s activities. Its first such undertaking was the 2014 violin concerto Wall of Water by Deborah Pritchard, which also saw the orchestra renew its long-term association with the Nimbus label, but Woods was already thinking in terms of a more ambitious strategy which duly resulted in the ESO’s 21st Century Symphony Project.

‘‘Three events led me to conceive of this project. First, early on in my conducting studies, my experience of learning Brahms’s First Symphony when I found myself imagining the amazing feeling those present at the premiere in 1876 must have had in witnessing a seminal addition to the repertoire. Why shouldn’t it be possible to enjoy a similar experience today? Second, performing Philip Sawyers’s Second Symphony with ’the Swan in 2013 when the musicians, listeners and I all experienced something akin to those at the premiere of the Brahms. Third, having commissioned Philip’s Third Symphony when I joined ESO, I realised that it needn’t be a one-off. My new post with the ESO was the catalyst so here we are over a decade later – the project having come through a pandemic and associated lockdowns, with six symphonies commissioned and premiered, and more to follow as we start on this project’s second phase’’.

Indeed, what started out as the commissioning, performing and recording of nine symphonies in as many years has evolved into a process featuring composers new to and already involved with the project. Following on from Sawyers’s Third, it has seen the premieres and recordings of David Matthews’s Ninth, Matthew Taylor’s Fifth, Steve Elcock’s Eighth, Adrian Williams’s First and Robert Saxton’s Scenes from the Epic of Gilgamesh. Six very different works from six very different composers, all confirming the validity of the symphony in the present day.

Alongside this project, Woods revived the ESO’s Composer-in-Association chair – beginning with John McCabe then, after his untimely death in 2015, the post was re-named in McCabe’s memory and has since been occupied by Philip Sawyers (now Composer Laureate), Adrian Williams, David Matthews and Steve Elcock. Again, the exact nature of this role depends on  the incumbent but Woods is keen these composers represent who the ESO is and what it does.

‘‘It’s not just a matter of commissioning then premiering their new works, but of having their active involvement at the time of composition and rehearsal; of reviving some of their earlier pieces, and maybe getting their input as to how we might schedule their music in the context of an overall concert. Hopefully it also gives audiences the chance to become more familiar with the composer as a ‘real person’ instead of merely a name in the programme. I feel sure that the quality of what these composers have been writing for us is its own justification’’.

In addition to overseeing the ESO’s educational and social activities (not least the ESO Youth Academy with its extensive schedule of courses at beginner, intermediate or advanced levels, performances by ESO musicians at residential care-homes and ‘relaxed’ concerts of a more informal nature), Woods has a longstanding blog A View from the Podium that tackles issues pertinent to the music-world from a wholly non-partisan angle; unafraid to stir controversy on topics of wider relevance than is often evident from their coverage in the mainstream media.

Since 2018 Woods has been in charge of the Elgar Festival – a two-day series of concerts and recitals with related events held on the weekend nearest to the composer’s birthday (June 2nd), while making full use of the various places and venues associated with Elgar’s home county.

‘‘Given the region in which most of our concerts take place, it made sense to revive the Elgar Festival and perform his music at venues associated with his life and work in the region. It’s also been a welcome opportunity to include music by recent and contemporary composers who come audibly within the Elgar lineage, and I’m aiming with next year’s festival to try a reordering of the conventional concert programme to feature familiar pieces by Elgar next to others that might spring a few surprises, but which I hope the audience will enjoy hearing’’.

It would be remiss not to mention the Colorado MaherFest which Woods took over from long -serving founder Robert Olson in 2016, and whose remit he has successfully expanded while remaining true to the spirit of an event endorsed by the International Gustav Mahler Society.

‘‘Taking on directorship of MahlerFest after Robert was a daunting prospect given how many years he had been at its helm and the performance tradition he’d established during that time. Of course, I have my own convictions as to Mahler interpretation, and our performances have been able to utilize recent developments in scholarship such as the new critical edition of the First Symphony [published by Breitkopf and Härtel] we gave in 2019. Here again, I was keen to expand the context in which this music was performed – both in terms of medium, Mahler having left little else apart from symphonies or songs, and in other composers heard here. We think of programming in terms of celebrating Mahler’s influences such as Beethoven, Wagner and Schumann. Also we explore his artistic and creative ties to contemporaries in a variety of media – whether artists like Klimt and Roller, writers, philosophers or, of course, composers. We’ve performed contemporaries like Robert Kahn and Zemlinsky, and last year there was Alfredo Casella [the First Cello Sonata], who was an active supporter of Mahler’s music in Italy when it was all but unknown there.”

The festival also aims to look forward. “Finally, we try hard to raise awareness of the music of composers who were influenced by Mahler. This includes modernists such as Schoenberg, Berg and Webern, together with more tonal composers such as Krenek, Schulhoff and Weill. This opens the door to the music of those composers who were either murdered or forced into exile by the Nazis such as Krása, Gál or Ullmann; not to mention such as Korngold, Waxman and Steiner, who founded the art of film scoring as we understand it today. This can only lead to a wider appreciation of Mahler’s legacy and hopefully encourage others to seek out music they would otherwise not have performed or heard, thereby enriching their own experience’’.

A more recent move has been making the final concerts of MahlerFest available on CD or for download, enhancing a discography that makes Woods among the most recorded of present-day conductors. Along with releases for the Avie, Nimbus, Signum, Somm and Toccata labels, plans are well advanced for the ESO’s own label – drawing on a wealth of material recorded at the Wyastone studios in Herefordshire during the pandemic and its aftermath, besides such as the complete symphonies of Sibelius. Nos. 5, 6 and Tapiola are planned as the first release.

There may be lots to be proud of in terms of achievement, but Woods is hardly one to rest on his laurels, not least because the future of those projects here outlined – indeed, even the very future of the ESO is not something that could, or should, be taken for granted. A full schedule of events is now in place until next spring, with much in the pipeline after that as long as the finances are there to make it happen. Given that his negotiating skills are no less adept than his conducting skills, Woods is quietly optimistic that things will come together as intended.

‘‘It’s not always been an easy process in securing funds to make possible what we’ve wanted to commission and perform, but then nobody working in this field in the UK expects to have it easy, so I’m just pleased that we’ve accomplished as much as we have so far. There’s much more that I want to achieve with the ESO, so we’ll have to keep finding ways to make things happen. What I do know is that there are composers who have much to give an audience, and that these listeners are more than willing to give this music a try given the right conditions’’.

Such things are vital, not least at a time when the value of what might reasonably be called the Western Cultural Tradition is being questioned as never before. This being the case, and while accepting that ‘the situation’ is likely to get worse before getting better, can one look forward to a further 10 years of the English Symphony Orchestra with Woods at the helm? ‘‘It might be best to ask me that in 10 years’ time, but I’d hope the answer would be ‘yes’’’.

On Record – MahlerFest XXXV: Kenneth Woods conducts Symphony no.3 & Gunning Symphony no.10

Stacey Rishoi (mezzo-soprano), Boulder Children’s Chorale, Women of Boulder Concert Chorale, Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra / Kenneth Woods

Gunning Symphony no.10 (2016-17) [First public performance]
Mahler Symphony no.3 in D minor (1893-6)

Colorado MahlerFest 195269164287 [two discs, 114’21”]
Live performances on 22 May 2022, Macky Auditorium, Boulder, Colorado

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

The 35th Colorado MahlerFest, the eighth under the direction of Kenneth Woods, reached its culmination with the performance of Mahler’s Third Symphony and preceded in this concert with a first public hearing for the 10th Symphony by the late-lamented Christopher Gunning.

What’s the music like?

In its setting out the creation of the world, from an inanimate state to the dawn of humanity, Mahler’s Third Symphony is his most ambitious conceptually and certainly his lengthiest. It is to Woods’s credit that, though his account at 92 minutes is among the swiftest, there is no sense of haste – not least his handling of the first movement’s vastly extended sonata design, which amply conveys the burgeoning of natural forces with unbridled impetus but equally a fantasy or even playfulness manifest through the irresistible abandon of those closing pages.

Those having watched the online broadcast will recall Woods observing the customary break before the remaining five movements which constitute the second part. Here, though, there is barely a pause going into the second movement, its minuet-like lilt and evocation of all things vernal rarely having sounded so delicate or ingratiating. The ensuing scherzo is almost as fine, the often boisterous irony of its outer sections finding contrast in trios whose post-horn solos are ethereally rendered by Richard Adams, with a frisson of danger emerging in the final bars.

Nor is Stacey Rishoi found wanting in a Nietzsche setting that alternates earnest speculation with heartfelt yearning. She is no less inside its successor’s setting of a Knaben Wunderhorn text, its ambivalence offset by a whimsical response from the women’s and children’s choirs. Others may have found even more profundity from the finale, but Woods ensures it emerges as a seamless totality – the anguish at its centre drawn into a rapt eloquence which is carried through to a coda bringing this disciplined and persuasive performance to its ecstatic close.

Unlike other of his peers, their concert output little more than a rehash of their work for film and television, Christopher Gunning’s symphonies and concertos seem abstract music with a vengeance. The single-movement 10th Symphony is both cohesive in its structure and methodical in its evolution. Woods has recorded it with BBC National Orchestral of Wales (Signum Classics), and while that studio recording has greater formal focus, the Colorado musicians unfold this quixotic score to its serene ending with demonstrably greater spontaneity and impulsiveness.

Does it all work?

Almost always. Those who prefer a more expansive or interventionist approach in the Mahler may be disappointed, but the no-nonsense nature of Woods’s traversal conveys any amount of insight or expressive nuance. Presentation is equally straightforward, but Mahler’s expression markings for each movement should have been included alongside those descriptive headings he later deleted, while the Gunning might have been best placed at the start (as in the concert) with the first part of the Mahler – allowing its second part to unfold as an unbroken continuity.

Is it recommended?

Very much. Boulder’s Macky Auditorium might not have the most spacious perspective, but its clarity and definition audibly benefit a performance that is much more than the memento of an occasion. Indeed, this MahlerFest series is shaping up to be a memorable Mahler cycle.

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For further purchase options, visit the MahlerFest website – and for more information on the festival itself, click here. Click on the names for further information on conductor Kenneth Woods and composer Christopher Gunning

On Record: Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra / Kenneth Woods – MahlerFest XXXIV: Sawyers & Mahler: Fifth Symphonies (Colorado MahlerFest)

Sawyers Symphony no.5 (2021) [World premiere]
Mahler Symphony no.5 in C# minor (1901-02)

Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra / Kenneth Woods

Colorado MahlerFest 195269164287 [two discs, 111’45”]

Recorded Live performances at Macky Auditorium, Boulder, Colorado, 28 August 2021

reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Two five-movement Fifths brought the 34th Colorado MahlerFest to an impressive ending. Mahler’s cycle is often seen as ‘end of the line’ for the symphony, yet its further evolution is not hard to discern, and Kenneth Woods is rightly making this a crucial aspect of his tenure.

What’s the music like?

Philip SawyersFifth Symphony pursues a stylistic path comparable to those two before it. Its predecessor ended with an expansive Adagio, and this work continues from such inward seriousness in a Moderato that overrides clear-cut sonata procedures for a gradual unfolding whose thoughtful initial theme takes on greater emotional intensity as it builds to an ominous climax, before closing in a mood of no mean ambivalence. The writing, for an orchestra with fifth horn and harp though no percussion other than timpani, is never less than resourceful.

From here an Allegro increases the tempo to capering and, in its middle stages, wistful effect. The central Lento pursues a sustained course over cumulative paragraphs, the latter climaxing with the work’s most anguished music, before an affecting coda. The ensuing Presto affords greater expressive contrast between impulsive outer sections and a chorale-like trio of musing poise. The final Allegro is the most orthodox movement in its energetic and reflective themes, taking in an intensive development and subtly modified reprise prior to a decisive apotheosis.

Pacing is crucial in Mahler’s symphonies, his Fifth being no exception. The opening Funeral March is ideally judged – its development not too histrionic, then a coda whose eruptive force subsides into numbed uncertainty. Proceeding without pause, its successor steers securely to a climactic yet ill-fated chorale, and if the final return of its initial music lacks vehemence, the pulsating expectancy of the closing bars is tangibly rendered. Woods’ handling of the central Scherzo contrasts a rustically evocative trio with the ländler-infused coyness and contrapuntal contrivance either side, the coda wrapping up this overlong movement with real decisiveness.

The remaining two movements are finely realized, the Adagietto taken at a flowing if flexible pace that enables its inherent rapture to emerge without any risk of indulgence. The deftest of transitions duly prepares for a finale whose elaborate interplay of rondo and sonata elements is replete with a cumulative impetus here carried through to a fervent peroration, the chorale blazing forth during a close in which affirmation and nonchalance are irresistibly combined.

Does it all work?

Almost always. Sawyers’ Fifth symphony is a cohesive and absorbing piece – less arresting in overall content than either of its predecessors, though with an unfailing formal logic and expressive eloquence that are not to be gainsaid. Interesting, moreover, that this Fifth marks something of a rapprochement with ‘classical’ tonality, whereas Mahler’s Fifth sets in motion a fractious discourse which informs almost all this composer’s subsequent symphonic works.

Is it recommended?

Certainly. The playing of the Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra is of a high standard, testifying to the excellence of these musicians in their collective responsiveness to Woods’ technical acumen and interpretive insight. To hear this work so authoritatively realized and within the context of a major new symphonic statement says much for the significance of MahlerFest.

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In concert – Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra / Kenneth Woods – MahlerFest XXXIV: Sawyers & Mahler Fifth Symphonies

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Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra / Kenneth Woods

Sawyers Symphony No. 5 (2020) [World Premiere]
Mahler
Symphony no.5 in C sharp minor (1901-2)

Macky Auditorium, Boulder
Saturday 28th August 2021

Written by Richard Whitehouse

A programme of two five-movement Fifths might not have been what Kenneth Woods had envisaged at this stage of his symphonic traversal in the Colorado MahlerFest but, after an inevitably curtailed season last year, the need to jump-start the festival this time round was evident, and the present double-bill did so impressively. Mahler’s cycle is often viewed as the ‘end of the line’ for the genre of the symphony, yet its ongoing evolution is not hard to discern, and it is to Woods’s credit that he is making this aspect a crucial part of his tenure.

Woods has championed the music of Philip Sawyers for more than a decade, with this Fifth Symphony continuing along a stylistic path comparable to those two before it. Its immediate predecessor ended with an expansive Adagio as was his most impressive such movement so far, and the present work continues from such inward (never self-conscious) seriousness in a Moderato (each of the movements being designated with Shostakovich-like inscrutability) that overrides clear-cut sonata procedures for a gradual unfolding whose thoughtful opening theme takes on greater emotional intensity as it builds to an ominous climax then closes in a mood of some ambivalence. Here, as throughout, the writing for a standard orchestra (with fifth horn and harp though no percussion other than timpani) is never less than resourceful.

From here an Allegro picks-up the pace incrementally to capering and, in its middle stages, wistful effect; before the central Lento pursues a sustained course (not a little unlike that of Rubbra’s slow movements) over two cumulative paragraphs – the second of which climaxes with the most anguished music in the whole work, prior to the brief yet affecting coda from strings. More overtly a scherzo, the ensuing Presto also evinces greater expressive contrast between its impulsive outer sections and a chorale-like ‘trio’ of affecting poise. From here, the final Allegro is the most orthodox movement in its energetic and reflective main themes – taking in an intensive development and subtly modified reprise prior to an apotheosis that ensures a decisive yet, as might be expected from this composer, never bathetic conclusion.

On this first hearing, Sawyers’s new symphony proved a cohesive and absorbing piece – less arresting in content, perhaps, than either of its predecessors but with an unfailing formal logic and expressive eloquence that are not to be gainsaid. Interesting, too, this Fifth should mark something of a rapprochement with ‘classical’ tonality; whereas Mahler’s Fifth, which came after the interval, sets in motion that often fractious discourse which duly informs almost all this composer’s symphonic works from his final decade of creativity – indeed, of existence.

Pacing is crucial in Mahler’s symphonies, with this being no exception. From the outset of a trenchant trumpet solo, the Funeral March was almost ideally judged – its development not too histrionic, and coda whose eruptive force subsided into numbed uncertainty. Proceeding (rightly) without pause, its successor – as if a fantasia to the prelude just heard – steered with unobtrusive authority to its climactic if ill-fated chorale, and if the final return of the opening music lacked vehemence, the pulsating expectancy of the closing bars was tangibly rendered.

That the central Scherzo has long divided opinion is not in doubt (Otto Klemperer avoided the work because of it while Hermann Scherchen reduced it by two-thirds), and though Woods’s conception had its merits – a rustically evocative trio plus the transitions on either side – the unforced equability of its outer portions underlined just how closely this music verges on the platitudinous; its ländler-informed coyness and contrapuntal contrivance over-exploiting the potential of its content. At least the coda wrapped up this movement with real decisiveness.

The remaining movements were finely realized, Woods taking the Adagietto at a flowing yet flexible pace that enabled its rapture to emerge without risk of indulgence (here, as throughout, the strings’ articulation of grace notes served a structural as well as expressive purpose). The deftest of transitions duly prepared for a finale whose elaborate interplay of rondo and sonata elements was replete with a cumulative impetus as carried through to a fervent peroration, the chorale blazing forth during a close where affirmation and nonchalance were irresistibly fused.

It should be added that the playing of the Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra was of a consistently high standard – testifying to the excellence of the individual musicians as, also, their collective responsiveness to Woods’s technical acumen and interpretative insight. Its latter-day status as mainstream repertoire may have obscured its innovative qualities (and drawn attention away from its unevenness), but to hear this work so authoritatively realized and within the context of a major new symphonic statement says much for the continued importance of MahlerFest.

Further information on the Colorado MahlerFest can be found on their YouTube channel. For more on the festival, visit their website – and click on the names to visit the websites of Kenneth Woods and Philip Sawyers respectively.