Cassatt String Quartet

Cassatt in the Basin!: More than just concerts

For over 20 years, the world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet has made bi-annual trips from New York City to West Texas for their “Cassatt in the Basin!” residency program. In Midland, Odessa, and surrounding areas they visit schools and community centers to perform and teach life lessons via chamber music and orchestral playing such as teamwork, verbal and non-verbal communication, and respect for one another. It is the only program of its kind.

In October 2023 the quartet performed at the Aphasia Center in Midland, TX. Aphasia is a language disorder that impacts how people are able to communicate through conversations as well as the ability to read and write. The Executive Director of the center, Kitty Binek, was effusive about the positive effect of Cassatt Quartet’s visit, “The unique experience of being seated among professional and engaging musicians allowed our members access to an immensely enriching event they might not have otherwise experienced. It was a joyful and memorable event, and we look forward to future collaborations to enhance the wellbeing of our members.” 

On October 17, 2024 the Cassatts will perform a “Seeing Sound” at a fundraiser for the Bynum School which provides year-round educational and vocational activities for people with special needs. During the concert Bynum students will create artwork inspired by how the music makes them feel. Their art will then be auctioned off, with proceeds benefiting the school. 

“It is such a gift to have this relationship with the community I grew up in. To perform in these spaces and work with students who might not otherwise have access to live performances really means a lot,” says violinist and Executive Director of Cassatt in the Basin Jennifer Leshnower. 

Cassatt Quartet’s fall 2024 residency is October 11-17, and features another “Seeing Sound” concert at the  Museum of the Southwest Fredda Turner Children’s Museum in Midland, chamber music coachings at schools throughout the region, including the West Texas Music Conservatory and their youth orchestra, and a Yom Kippur service at Temple Beth El in Odessa. Details about these and other events are below. For more information and full program details, visit https://www.cassattinthebasin.net.

CASSATT IN THE BASIN OCTOBER 2024 SCHEDULE

Friday 10/11
6pm
Private Yom Kippur Service, Kol Nidre at Temple Beth El
(1501 N. Grandview, Odessa)

Saturday 10/12
Time TBD
Community Concert at TBD

Sunday 10/13
2pm & 3pm
Seeing Sound Concerts
Draw to the Music at Museum of the Southwest Fredda Turner Children's Museum
(1705 W Missouri Ave, Midland)

Monday 10/14
Time TBD
Coaching
Midland High School 
(906 W. Illinois Ave, Midland)

5-6pm
Chamber Music Coaching at Texas Tech University
(18th and Boston Avenue, Lubbock)

Tuesday 10/15
Time TBD
Coaching at Permian High School
(1800 E 42nd St, Odessa)

4:30 - 7pm
Coaching at West Texas Music Conservatory
(1602 Tarleton St, Midland)

Wednesday 10/16
Time TBD
Coaching at Legacy High School
(3500 Neely Ave, Midland)

Thursday 10/17
Time TBD
Coaching at Odessa High School
(1301 Dotsy Ave, Odessa)

6pm 
Bynam School Fundraising Concert at Midland Polo Club
(5401 Polo Club Rd, Midland)



Violist Emily Brandenburg joins Cassatt String Quartet

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Cassatt String Quartet announces violist Emily Brandenburg to join in Fall 2024

Cassatt String Quartet celebrates 40th anniversary in 2024-25 season

"an extraordinary quartet" – The New York Times

The violist Emily Brandenburg joins the Cassatt String Quartet beginning in Fall 2024.

"Muneko, Jennifer, and I are overjoyed to welcome Emily Brandenburg to the Cassatt Quartet as our new violist, and to look forward to the years of shared adventures and music-making ahead! Emily brings to the CSQ her extraordinary experience as a lifelong chamber musician and an especially devoted quartet player; she balances a brilliant analytical mind with a rich, compelling, unusual voice that is deeply layered and beautiful," says CSQ cellist Gwen Krosnick.

Emily Brandenburg says “I am thrilled to be joining the Cassatt String Quartet as their new violist. I have admired the quartet for their artistry, and for their long standing commitment to new music, working hand-in-hand with a diverse array of composers. I look forward to beginning this chapter with them as they enter their 40th season and to all the years of memories and music making to come." 

Ms. Brandenburg holds degrees from Yale, New England Conservatory, and McDuffie Center for Strings at Mercer University. She was previously artist-in-residence at the University of Evansville in Indiana where she was principal viola of Evansville Philharmonic and a member of the Eykamp String Quartet. 

The announcement follows the departure of violist Rosemary Nelis, who joined the group in 2022, and is leaving to focus on other projects.

The Cassatt String Quartet celebrates its 40th anniversary in 2024-2025 with premieres by Joan Tower, Victoria Bond, Mari Kimura and Shirish Korde, all written for the group. The season includes a tour of Italy with guitarist Eliot Fisk, concerts across the United States, teaching residencies at major universities and conservatories, the CSQ's bi-annual Cassatt in the Basin residency in West Texas, and the Seal Bay Festival in Maine.

Cassatt String Quartet Biography

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the New York City-based Cassatt String Quartet has performed throughout the world since 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall and Weill Recital Hall; Tanglewood Music Center; the Kennedy Center; Théâtre des Champs-Élysées; Centro National de las Artes; Maeda Hall; and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The Quartet’s prolific discography – featured three times in Alex Ross’s “10 Best Classical Recordings” column in The New Yorker – includes over forty recordings, for the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels. The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt.

Aug 3-6: Seal Bay Festival across Maine

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The Cassatt String Quartet gives performances across Maine at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music August 3-6

Programs in Vinalhaven, Portland, and Belfast

Works by Wang Jie, Shirish Korde, Vineet Shende, Daniel Strong Godfrey, and more

"an extraordinary quartet" – The New York Times

The world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet (Muneko Otani & Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Anna Griffis, guest viola; Gwen Krosnick, cello) performs in Maine as the longtime ensemble of the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music. From the island of Vinalhaven to Portland, the quartet's itinerary includes public performances August 3-6, as well as numerous concerts in retirement homes and community centers across the state September 25-29. Details are in the calendar listing below.

The 2024 festival brings composers Wang Jie, Daniel Strong Godfrey, Shirish Korde, and Vineet Shende to Maine for concerts in Vinalhaven, Belfast, and Portland. Along with guest vocalist Dominique Eade and bassist Peter Weitzner, the Cassatts perform works by these composers throughout the festival.

Founded in 1994, the Seal Bay Festival fosters the relationship between American composers, performers, and audiences. At SBF’s annual Composer Institute, composers Wang Jie, Shirish Korde, and Daniel Strong Godfrey are mentors to composers who are at the beginning of their careers. Music by these Fellows is premiered by the Cassatts on August 5, after several days of workshop rehearsals.

Complete program and venue information is below.

Seal Bay Festival Calendar Listing and Program Details

August 3, 1 pm: Open Rehearsal with the Cassatt String Quartet
Vinalhaven Public Library (6 Carver St, Vinalhaven)
Free admission
Zexuan Ding
: String Quartet++
Zhang Chuqiao: String Quartet++

August 3, 7 pm: Partners in Island Education Fundraising Concert
with the Cassatt String Quartet, Dominique Eade, voice, Peter Weitzner, Bass & Wang Jie, piano
Smith Hokanson Memorial Auditorium at Vinalhaven School, 22 Arcola Ln, Vinalhaven
Suggested donation of $25, children attend free

Daniel Strong Godfrey: Amazing Grace (2020)
Wang Jie: Songs for Mahler in the Absence of Words+
Duke Ellington/Shirish Korde: Moods of Ellington (rev. 2024)++

August 4, 7 pm: Concert
with the Cassatt String Quartet, Dominique Eade, voice, Peter Weitzner, Bass & Wang Jie, piano
Smith Hokanson Memorial Auditorium at Vinalhaven School, 22 Arcola Ln, Vinalhaven
Free admission, donations are welcome

Daniel Strong Godfrey: Amazing Grace+
Vineet Shende: Solo for viola++
Wang Jie: Songs for Mahler in the Absence of Words+
Shirish Korde: God Bless the Child for voice and cello
after Billie Holiday and Eric Dolphy (2024)+
Duke Ellington/Shirish Korde: Moods of Ellington (rev. 2024)++

August 5, 7 pm: Emerging Composers Concert, presented by Composers Institute at Seal Bay Festival
with the Cassatt String Quartet
The Colonial Theatre, Dreamland, 163 High St, Belfast
Tickets are $10, available at door

Zexuan Ding: String Quartet++
Zhang Chuqiao: String Quartet++
Daniel Strong Godfrey: Amazing Grace+
Vineet Shende: Solo for viola++
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

August 6, 7:30 pm: Concert
with the Cassatt String Quartet, Dominique Eade, voice, Peter Weitzner, Bass & Wang Jie, piano
Portland Conservatory of Music, 28 Neal St, Portland
Tickets are $12-29, available at door and online (link coming soon)

Daniel Strong Godfrey: Amazing Grace+
Vineet Shende: Solo for viola++
Wang Jie: Songs for Mahler in the Absence of Words+
Shirish Korde: God Bless the Child for voice and cello
after Billie Holiday and Eric Dolphy (2024)+
Duke Ellington/Shirish Korde: Moods of Ellington (rev. 2024)++

+denotes Maine premiere
++denotes world premiere

Community Outreach Events September 25-29, 2024
Programs TBA

September 25

  • 1 pm: 75 State Street (Portland)

  • 3 pm: Atrium at the Cedars (Portland)

September 26

  • 11 am: House concert (Brunswick)

  • 1:30 pm: Thornton Oaks (Brunswick)

  • 3:15 pm: The Highlands (Topsham)

September 27

  • 11 am: Avita (Brunswick)

September 28

  • 11 am: Village Square (Kennebunkport)

  • 6 pm: House concert (Kennebunkport)

September 29

  • 3 pm: Wells Reserve at Laudhol (Wells)

Cassatt String Quartet Biography

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, including three discs that were named “10 Best Classical Recordings” in The New Yorker. The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Seal Bay Festival is supported by The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, Davis Family Foundation, Maine Arts Commission, and Amphion Foundation

Cassatt String Quartet: Boston Music Intelligencer (Review)

March 12: Cassatt String Quartet at Symphony Space

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March 12: Cassatt String Quartet and Ursula Oppens perform piano quintets by Joan Tower and Tania León at Symphony Space

Part of Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival's 27th season

Also: Victoria Bond's Blue and Green Music and Wang Jie's Song for Mahler in the Absence of Words

On March 12, 2024 at 7:30 pm, the internationally acclaimed Cassatt String Quartet and pianist Ursula Oppens perform at Symphony Space. The program is part of Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival and features 21st century works for strings and piano by Tania León, Joan Tower, Victoria Bond and Wang Jie. For more on Oppens, read a profile of the pianist in the New York Times.

The highlight of the program is Victoria Bond’s Blue and Green Music, which the quartet recorded for Albany Records and is based on a Georgia O’Keefe painting of the same title. Tania León's Ethos, Joan Tower’s Dumbarton piano quintet and Wang Jie’s Songs for Mahler in the Absence of Words for piano quartet are also on the program. The concert will explore facets of contemporary music by living composers, all of whom will be present to discuss their works on stage with host and creator, Victoria Bond.

"I'm so delighted to invite the Cassatt String Quartet and Ursula Oppens back to the Cutting Edge Concerts' stage. The Cassatts are one of the finest ensembles of today, and it's been such a pleasure to hear them take my work Blue and Green Music on tour around the country this past season. I cannot wait to hear this program along with the audience," says Bond.

Program details for the March 12 concert are below. The performance is at Symphony Space's Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theater (2537 Broadway, Manhattan). Tickets are $25 in advance ($20 senior/student) and available at SymphonySpace.org.

Calendar Listing

CUTTING EDGE CONCERTS NEW MUSIC FESTIVAL

Cassatt String Quartet and Pianist Ursula Oppens

Tuesday, March 12, 2024 at 7:30 pm
Symphony Space (2537 Broadway, Manhattan)
Tickets: $25 in advance (at SymphonySpace.org)

PROGRAM

Victoria Bond: Blue and Green Music
Tania León: Ethos for Piano and String Quartet
Wang Jie: Song for Mahler in the Absence of Words
Joan Tower: Dumbarton Quintet for piano quintet

About Cassatt String Quartet

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the New York City-based Cassatt String Quartet has performed throughout the world for nearly four decades, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall and Weill Recital Hall; Tanglewood Music Center; the Kennedy Center; Théâtre des Champs-Élysées; Centro National de las Artes; Maeda Hall; and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The Quartet’s prolific discography – featured three times in Alex Ross’s “10 Best Classical Recordings” column in The New Yorker – includes over forty recordings, for the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels.

The Cassatt Quartet’s 2023-2024 season includes performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Adolphus Hailstork, Chen Yi, Joan Tower, Zhou Long, Victoria Bond and Daniel S. Godfrey; their annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival in Maine and Cassatt in the Basin! in West Texas; hometown concerts in the New York area, including at Symphony Space and Bargemusic; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain.

The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt.

Cassatt Quartet in Ossining, Hartford, and NYC

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Cassatt String Quartet November/December preview:

Concerts in Ossining, NYC, and West Hartford

Performances with Israeli-American trombonist Haim Avistur; pianists Doris Stevenson & Magdalena Baczewka

November 11 & 16 with Trombonist Haim Avistur

Fresh from the world premiere of Adolphus Hailstork's Monuments for trombone and string quartet in Texas, the Cassatt String Quartet brings the work to the Northeast for performances in Ossining, NY (November 11 at Bethany Arts Community) and the Mandell JCC in West Hartford, CT (November 16). Monuments is a profound tribute to 9/11, and features Israeli-American trombonist Haim Avistur. The work is performed alongside music by Victoria Bond, Beethoven, and Joan Tower.

While in Hartford, the Cassatts give a masterclass at the Hartt School of Music on November 17 at 10 am.

November 30: Columbia University Residency

The quartet returns to Columbia University for a residency that culminates in a performance on November 30 with pianist Magdalena Stern-Baczewska. The program, presented by The Italian Academy at Columbia University, features works by Beethoven, Pultizer-prize winner Zhou Long, and Shostakovich. Reserve free tickets here.

December 3: Bargemusic

On December 3, the Cassatt String Quartet performs the world premiere of a piano quintet by Allen Shawn. They are joined by pianist Doris Stevenson, performing the work in a program that also features music by Zhou Long and Dorothy Rudd Moore.

Cassatt String Quartet Fall 2023 Season at a Glance

October 29 at 3 pm, Wagner Noël PAC (Midland, TX): World premiere by Adolphus Hailstork, plus music by L.V. Beethoven, Joan Tower, Zhou Long, Burleigh, Candillari, and Fanny Mendelssohn with guest artists pianist Shari Santorelli and trombonist David Jackson. Part of the Cassatt in the Basin residency in West Texas.

November 11 at 5 pm, Bethany Arts Community (Ossining, NY): Trombonist Haim Avistur joins the quartet for works by Joan Tower and Adolphus Hailstork, plus string quartets by Beethoven and Victoria Bond.

November 16 at 7 pm, Mandell JCC (West Hartford, CT): Works by Victoria Bond and L.V. Beethoven, plus music for trombone and string quartet by Joan Tower and Adolphus Hailstork with guest artist Haim Avistur.

November 17 at 10 am, Hartt School of Music (West Hartford, CT): Masterclass with students from the Hartt School of Music, open to the public.

November 19 at 5 pm, Hudson View Gardens (New York, NY): Works by Victoria Bond, L.V. Beethoven, and Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel.

November 30 at 7 pm, Italian Academy at Columbia University (New York, NY): Culmination of residency at Columbia University. Works by Beethoven, Zhou Long, and Shostakovich's Piano Quintet with pianist Magdalena Stern-Baczewska.

December 3 at 4 pm, Bargemusic (Brooklyn, NY): World premiere of Allen Shawn's Piano Quintet with pianist Doris Stevenson, plus works by Dorothy Rudd Moore and Zhou Long. 

December 10 at 4:45 pm, Music at the Mansion (Ridgefield, CT): Works by Beethoven, Victoria Bond, and Fanny Mendelssohn. Preceded by a wine and cheese reception at 4pm.

Artist Biography

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the New York City-based Cassatt String Quartet has performed throughout the world for nearly four decades, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall and Weill Recital Hall; Tanglewood Music Center; the Kennedy Center; Théâtre des Champs-Élysées; Centro National de las Artes; Maeda Hall; and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The Quartet’s prolific discography – featured three times in Alex Ross’s “10 Best Classical Recordings” column in The New Yorker – includes over forty recordings, for the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels.

The Cassatt Quartet’s 2023-2024 season includes performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Adolphus Hailstork, Chen Yi, Joan Tower, Zhou Long, and Daniel S. Godfrey; their annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival in Maine and Cassatt in the Basin! in West Texas; hometown concerts in the New York area, including at Symphony Space and Bargemusic; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain.

The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt.

Cassatt String Quartet interview with violinist Dominique Valenzuela

Since 2005, the world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet has come to West Texas for a bi-annual residency. Cassatt in the Basin has enriched the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region. On October 29 at 3 pm, the quartet performs at the Wagner Noël Performing Arts Center in Midland, Texas. Admission is free, details are here.

One of the alumni of Cassatt in the Basin programs, the violinist Dominique Valenzuela, recently conducted an interview with CSQ’s cellist Gwen Krosnick. The interview was for a community engagement class that is part of Valenzuela’s Master’s degree program at Juilliard. He gave the quartet permission to share the interview with the public.

Dominique Valenzuela wrote in an email to Gwen Krosnick, “As I was giving my presentation it made me realize the impact that the Cassatt has had on my life. To give a presentation on your quartet at the Juilliard School… I could have never imagined that it would be possible, and I am grateful beyond doubt. I am so grateful to have such wonderful role models in my life.”

Here is the interview, edited for context and clarity.

Dominique Valenzuela: What is the Cassatt String Quartet’s philosophy in presenting chamber music to the community?

Gwen Krosnick: Sharing what we do with different communities - from elementary schools to assisted-living communities and beyond - is centrally meaningful to the Cassatt Quartet! We treat these concerts with the respect and love that we bring to every concert we play. At each one we curate a program of music that we hope will allow these audiences to connect to this music we love.

DV: How does the Cassatt String Quartet see chamber music as a vehicle for social change?

GK: Chamber music is very literally an art form that hinges on our ability to connect with other people who have different backgrounds and different perspectives than our own - often wildly so! Our rehearsals and our concerts, and the way we interact with each other and the communities we play for, are a microcosm of listening to the ideas of others with generosity, thoughtfulness, and joy. For communities to engage with chamber music - which includes a great range of music across hundreds of years through today, gives us access to catharsis, meaning, and inspiration. This can only deepen the connections and strength of those community ties.

DV: What kinds of concerts does the CSQ present in the community?

GK: The Cassatt String Quartet has been on the roster of the New York State Council for the Arts (NYSCA) for years. That funding and other major grants from sources throughout the states of New York, Maine and Texas (for which my colleagues brilliantly write applications!) allow us to focus our community partnerships in these areas.

These three states have special personal and professional meaning to us: New York is where the CSQ is based (the quartet itself, and all our members live in the greater NYC area). Maine is the site of the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music, at which the CSQ has been in residence every summer for 20 years. Texas is where Jennifer Leshnower, our second violinist, is from and where her non-profit organization, Cassatt in the Basin, brings us twice a year to work with string students in the Permian Basin.

In each of these areas - and very often at other series and residencies (such as through the Treetops Chamber Music Series in Stamford, CT, for instance) - we play concerts at assisted-living communities, schools, children's museums, community centers, and other venues that aren’t conventional spaces for live music-making.

DV: How do the Cassatts hope to impact communities in the future by building on your already-sturdy foundation?

GK: One thing I love about the CSQ is that we have built long-term relationships with the audiences and communities. I love playing for new audiences, too, in new places - we all do!

There is a real depth to the relationships built over time. This has been such an inspiration for me, both in West Texas with the string students and public school music teachers, and at retirement communities where the quartet plays every single summer in Maine. Returning again and again to places where the quartet has played for years has a deep resonance and opens a capacity for community-building that is even more meaningful.

DV: What is the Cassatt’s mission and hope for the world, especially given that the quartet is historically all-female?

GK: I'm not certain I can speak for the whole Cassatt String Quartet on a worldwide mission, given that I have been in the quartet for two years out of its forty! But I will say that my colleagues and I share a belief that art and music matter: that the arts provide something that the world and humanity need. The way music sparks conversation and gives us access to emotional places where we might not otherwise go is centrally and vitally important.

The fact that the Quartet, named for the 19th century American painter Mary Cassatt, has been comprised totally of women instrumentalists since 1985 is important to our story. We feel both a responsibility and a real pride in sharing music composed by a diverse range of American women. I hope that audiences will hear music by Dorothy Rudd Moore, Florence Price, Fanny Mendelssohn, Victoria Bond, Joan Tower, and Tania León (just a few of the women whose works we are performing this season!) and really understand that this art form of classical music, which has traditionally been so exclusionary and indeed prided itself on inaccessibility, in fact has the capacity to be wildly, celebratorily, and endlessly diverse. It is a living, breathing, ever-changing thing, chamber music!

The great music within the field of chamber music is made more profound by a wider and more diverse, passionate community of musicians, audiences, composers, and music lovers taking part in shaping its future.

DV: How do you curate a program for different audiences?

GK: For all our concerts, from our most convention and formal performances to outdoor parks and senior centers, we give our most passionate, personal playing. We offer repertoire that we cherish, including music that the audience may not have heard before, and we talk directly to audiences at each concert from the stage about what we love in the music we are about to share with them.

Sometimes presenters will ask for a specific piece, or for us to play with a specific collaborator, and of course that comes into our conversations about programming! But mainly we think about how different pieces of music will tell a story to an audience - an open-ended story so that each person can experience it in a different and personal way.

There are practical considerations, like how long is the concert at next week's assisted living community. How young are the kids at next month's childrens' concert - and therefore what are their attention spans? What works will be “in our fingers” for a given date, so that we can really play our best?. Once those factors are accounted for, we simply put together a program that we love, so that an audience member can feel the joy and love for this pouring off us and feel a connection to the music we share with them. I feel VERY strongly that this basic goal is not different for an elementary school audience or at the fanciest concert hall we play!

DV: How does engagement with audiences of various backgrounds further impact your greater mission as leader in the arts?

GK: In much the same way that we love playing chamber music BECAUSE of the access it gives us to different perspectives and different emotional places, it means a lot to us to play for audiences that show us – through their unique backgrounds and vantage points - new reactions, new insights, and new love for what we do and the music we play. For the Cassatt Quartet, getting to play for and connect with so many diverse kinds of audiences, each with its own energy, response, and chorus of reactions, makes us ever more motivated and committed to reflecting - in our programming, and in our mission - that diversity of energies, reactions, and voices. A musical field that reflects, echoes, and amplifies the communities for whom we play is more sustainable, more electrifying, and more profoundly meaningful as we step forward into the future.

Sept. 22: Cassatt SQ in Boston and more

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Cassatt String Quartet performs world premiere in Boston on Sept. 22

Concert at Northeastern University includes Daniel S. Godfrey’s Toward Light with guitarist Eliot Fisk and the world premiere of Passion's Continuum by Anthony Paul De Ritis

"an extraordinary quartet" – New York Times

On September 22 at 7:30 pm the Cassatt String Quartet performs in recital at Northeastern University in Boston. The concert features Toward Light with guitarist Eliot Fisk by Daniel S. Godfrey and the world premiere of Passion's Continuum by Anthony Paul De Ritis. The performance is at Fenway Hall (77 Saint Stephen Street in Boston). Admission is free and tickets are not required.

The following week, the CSQ and Eliot Fisk head to Mechanics Hall in Worcester, MA to record Godfrey’s Quintet, produced by multi-GRAMMY award-winning producer Judith Sherman.

This is one of several appearances of the Cassatt String Quartet in New England this year. On November 16, the quartet is joined by trombonist Haim Avistur for a program of music by Joan Tower, Victoria Bond, Adolphus Hailstork, and Beethoven in West Hartford, CT, and on December 10 they appear in Ridgefield, CT performing music by Beethoven, Victoria Bond, and Fanny Mendelssohn. Details are below.

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the New York City-based Cassatt String Quartet has performed throughout the world for nearly four decades, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall and Weill Recital Hall; Tanglewood Music Center; the Kennedy Center; Théâtre des Champs-Élysées; Centro National de las Artes; Maeda Hall; and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The Quartet’s prolific discography – featured three times in Alex Ross’s “10 Best Classical Recordings” column in The New Yorker – includes over forty recordings, for the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels.

The Cassatt Quartet’s 2023-2024 season includes performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Adolphus Hailstork, Chen Yi, Joan Tower, Zhou Long, and Daniel S. Godfrey; their annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival in Maine and Cassatt in the Basin! in West Texas; hometown concerts in the New York area, including at Symphony Space and Bargemusic; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain.

The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt.

Cassatt String Quartet: Upcoming Concerts in New England

September 22 at 7:30 pm: Northeastern University with guitarist Eliot Fisk

Fenway Center at Northeastern University (77 St Stephen St, Boston, MA)

Program:
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Anthony Paul De Ritis: Passion's Continuum for String Quartet World Premiere
Heitor Villa-Lobos: Cadenza from the concerto for Guitar and Orchestra
Heitor Villa-Lobos: Prelude # 5 In D major
Daniel Strong Godfrey: Toward Light

November 16 at 7 pm: West Hartford, CT

Mandell JCC (335 Bloomfield Ave, West Hartford, CT)

Program:
Joan Tower : Elegy for Trombone Quintet 
Victoria Bond: Blue & Green Music
Adolphus Hailstork: Monuments for Trombone and String Quartet 
Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet Op. 18, no. 1

with trombonist Haim Avitsur

November 17: Masterclass at Hartt School of Music

Hartt School of Music (200 Bloomfield Avenue West Hartford, CT)

Following their November 16 performance in West Hartford, the Cassatt String Quartet gives a masterclass to students of the Hartt School of Music. The event if free and open to the public.

December 10 at 4:45 pm: Music at the Mansion (Ridgefield, CT)

Lounsbury House (316 Main St, Ridgefield, CT)
Program:
Beethoven: String Quartet in F major, Op. 18, No. 1
Bond: Blue and Green Music
Fanny Mendelssohn: String Quartet in E-flat major

Concert preceded by a wine and cheese reception at 4 pm

Funding for programs that include contemporary music are made possible in part by: The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, and Amphion Foundation

Cassatt SQ performs Gerald Cohen on innova

Cassatt String Quartet is featured on new release of music by Gerald Cohen

Cohen’s Voyagers album includes world premiere recordings of 21st century works for string quartet, clarinet and trombone 

Released July 21, 2023 on innova Records

“[Gerald Cohen’s music] reveals a very personal modernism that...offers great emotional rewards.” Gramophone

For over a decade, the Cassatt String Quartet has collaborated with the composer Gerald Cohen. On July 21, 2023, innova Recordings releases “Voyagers” (innova 090); music by Gerald Cohen performed by the Cassatt String Quartet and guest artists. 

“Telling stories through music is central to all I do as a composer and performer – most explicitly in my operas and vocal works, but also in purely instrumental works such as those on this album,” said Gerald Cohen. “This album is the culmination of the voyage I have taken with the Cassatt String Quartet during the past decade. I will always be grateful for the collaboration with these wonderful colleagues.”

The title work is inspired by the Voyager spacecraft that carried the Golden Record, an audio time capsule intended to give extra-terrestrial beings an impression of human culture on Planet Earth. The performance also features Narek Arutyunian on clarinet and bass clarinet.

Playing for Our Lives is a contemporary memorial and tribute to the musical life of the Nazi concentration camp Terezín (Theresienstadt), near Prague. The work uses elements from from the Yiddish folk song Beryozkele, Hans Krasa’s opera Brundibar, and Verdi’s Requiem. Both Voyagers and Playing for Our Lives were written for the Cassatt String Quartet. The album concludes with Preludes and Debka, featuring trombonist Colin Williams. 

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.

"an extraordinary quartet" – The New York Times

Gerald Cohen: Voyagers

Cassatt String Quartet
(Muneko Otani & Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Ah Ling Neu, viola; Elizabeth Anderson, cello)

Narek Arutyunian, clarinet & bass clarinet
Colin Williams, trombone

innova Recordings (innova 090)
Release date: July 21, 2023

TRACKS

Voyagers
[01] Cavatina (9:31)
[02] Bhairavi (6:57)
[03] Galliard (5:39)
[04] Beyond the Heliosphere (7:15)

Cassatt String Quartet
Narek Arutyunian, clarinet and bass clarinet

Playing for our lives
[05] Beryozkele (7:29)
[06] Brundibar (6:15)
[07] Dies Irae (8:40)

Cassatt String Quartet

[08] Preludes and Debka (13:01)

Cassatt String Quartet
Colin Williams, trombone

Biographies

Composer Gerald Cohen has been praised for his “linguistic fluidity and melodic gift,” (Gramophone Magazine); his music “is filled with vibrant melody, rhythmic clarity, drive and compositional mastery” (Gapplegate Review). His past discography includes Generations (New World Records, 2001) and Sea of Reeds (Navona, 2014). In addition to Voyagers (innova, 2023), a studio recording of the opera Steal a Pencil for Me is being released in 2024.

Cohen is a noted synagogue cantor and baritone; his experience as a singer informs his dramatic, lyrical compositions. His opera Steal a Pencil for Me received its world premiere production by Opera Colorado in January 2018, and his chamber and choral works have been performed in important venues in the United States and internationally. Recognition of Cohen's body of work includes commissioning grants from Meet the Composer, National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, and American Composers Forum.

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, including three discs that were named “10 Best Classical Recordings” in The New Yorker. The CSQ, comprised of Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Rosemary Nelis, viola; and Gwen Krosnick, cello, is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt.

Violinists Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violist Ah Ling Neu and cellist Elizabeth Anderson are the members of the CSQ performing on the “Voyagers" album.

Cassatt SQ - Seal Bay Festival 2023

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The Cassatt String Quartet gives performances across Maine at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music July 25-August 5

Programs feature works by Pulitzer-prize winner Zhou Long, Chen Yi, Florence Price, Astor Piazzolla, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and more

"an extraordinary quartet"  – The New York Times

The world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet performs in Maine July 25 through August 5, 2023 as the longtime ensemble of the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music. From the island of Vinalhaven to Portland and Brunswick, the quartet performs over a dozen concerts across the state over 12 days, including public performances and community concerts. 

The 2023 festival brings composers Chen Yi, Zhou Long and Anthony De Ritis to Maine for concerts in Vinalhaven, Belfast and Portland on August 1, 2 and 3, respectively. Along with guest artists Wang Guowei (erhu) and Peter Weitzner (bass), the CSQ performs works by these guest composers alongside music by the American composer Dorothy Rudd Moore (1940-2022).

Founded in 1994, the Seal Bay Festival fosters the relationship between American composers, performers, and audiences. At SBF’s annual Composer Institute, world-renowned composers Chen Yi and Zhou Long are mentors to composers who are at the beginning of their careers. Music by these Fellows is premiered by the Cassatts on July 31, after several days of workshop rehearsals.

In addition to these concerts, the Cassatt String Quartet with guest bassist Peter Weitzner gives nearly a dozen community performances at retirement homes, churches, and community centers throughout Portland, Brunswick, Topsham, North Haven, Vinalhaven, Westbrook and Gorham.

Complete program and venue information is below.

Pictured above: Erhu player Wang Guowei

Seal Bay Festival

Calendar Listing and Program Details

Visual Artist Presentation with Master Printmaker Christopher Clark
July 29
, 3 pm:
 Vinalhaven
Free admission

Must register in advance (muneko@gmail.com or 212-932-9449); address provided upon registration

Open rehearsal with Cassatt String Quartet and Wang Guowei (erhu)
July 30,
1 pm:
Vinalhaven Library (6 Carver St, Vinalhaven)
Free admission

Erhu demonstration
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite for erhu and string quartet (with Wang Guowei, erhu)
Preview of new quartets by Woody Mo, Yun Li, Leyou Wang, and Maja Maklakiewicz

Partners in Island Education Fundraising Concert with Cassatt String Quartet, Peter Weitzner (Bass), and Wang Guowei (erhu)
July 30
at 7 pm:
Union Church (25 East Main St, Vinalhaven)*

Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
TBA: Erhu solo performed by Wang Guowei
Zhou Long: Chinese song (with Wang Guowei, erhu)
Bottesini: Bass Quintet (with Peter Weitzner, bass)
Piazzolla (arr. Shirish Korde): Oblivion
Piazzolla (arr. Shirish Korde): Libertango 

Emerging Composer’s concert, presented by Composers Institute at Seal Bay Festival with Cassatt String Quartet
July 31
, 6 pm:
Vinalhaven School, Smith Hokanson Recital Hall (22 Arcola Ln, Vinalhaven)*

World premiere of quartets by Woody Mo, Yun Li, Leyou Wang, and Maja Maklakiewicz

Seal Bay Festival Concerts with Cassatt String Quartet and Wang Guowei (erhu)

August 1, 7 pm: Vinalhaven School, Smith Hokanson Recital Hall (22 Arcola Ln, Vinalhaven)*
August 2, 7 pm: The First Church of Belfast (8 Court St, Belfast)*
August 3, 7:30 pm: Woodfords Congregational Church (202 Woodford st, Portland)*

Zhou Long: Song of the Ch'in for string quartet
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite for erhu and string quartet (with Wang Guowei, erhu)
Anthony De Ritis: Passion's Continuum
Dorothy Rudd-Moore: Modes

*denotes suggested donation for admission (all other concerts are free)

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, including three discs that were named “10 Best Classical Recordings” in The New Yorker. The CSQ, comprised of Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Rosemary Nelis, viola; and Gwen Krosnick, cello, is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Seal Bay Festival is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, Davis Family Foundation, Maine Arts Commission, and Amphion Foundation

May 13: Cassatt String Quartet in Ossining

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May 13: The Cassatt String Quartet in Ossining, NY

Works by Florence Price, Dorothy Rudd Moore, and Mozart at Bethany Arts Community

  • 4 pm: Free pre-concert wine & cheese reception for ticket holders

  • 5 pm: Concert

"an extraordinary quartet" – New York Times

The world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet returns to Bethany Arts Community for an afternoon reverie of music on May 13, 2023 at 5 pm (preceded by a reception at 4 pm). The program features Mozart’s last string quartet alongside music by two Black American pioneers; Florence Price and Dorothy Rudd Moore.

Florence Price and Dorothy Rudd Moore were groundbreaking musicians and there has been a recent renaissance of interest in both composers. Price was the first African-American woman to have her music performed by a major orchestra. Moore, who lived in New York City until her death last year, was co-founder of the Society of Black Composers and taught at New York University.

CSQ cellist Gwen Krosnick says: "When I joined the quartet, one of the first projects I advocated for was Moore's string quartet, Modes. My colleagues listened to the work and were drawn in, as I had been, by her chromatic language, the deeply personal voice there, and her incredible skill at writing for string quartet. This quartet is unusual for many reasons, especially how much she is able to accomplish - emotionally and compositionally - in such a brief form. This is a short piece with the impact of a monument."

The evening at Bethany Arts Community will take place on Saturday, May 13, 2023 from 4-6PM. At 4pm, the audience is invited for a wine & cheese reception to meet the artists. The concert will begin at 5pm. Tickets are $30 general admission, $25 senior, and $10 student, and can be purchased at the Bethany Arts Community website

BIOGRAPHY

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, including three discs that were named “10 Best Classical Recordings” in The New Yorker

The Cassatt String Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; its annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. The CSQ, comprised of Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Rosemary Nelis, viola; and Gwen Krosnick, cello, is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Calendar Listing

Saturday, May 13, 2023

The Cassatt String Quartet

Bethany Arts Community (40 Somerstown Rd., Ossining, NY)

$30 general admission ($25 senior/$10 student) tickets available here

  • 4 pm: Wine & cheese reception

  • 5 pm: Concert

PROGRAM
Dorothy Rudd Moore Modes for String Quartet
W.A. Mozart String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price String Quartet No. 1

The Cassatt String Quartet
Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins
Rosemary Nelis, viola
Gwen Krosnick, cello 

The Cassatt String Quartet

Upcoming Concerts

May 13 at 5 pm: Ossining, NY
Bethany Arts Community (40 Somerstown Rd)
Program:
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

May 9 at 8 pm: Bennington, VT
Dean Carriage Barn at Bennington College (1 College Dr)
Program: 
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet

Part of Bennington College Residency (May 9 & 10)

May 14 at 4 pm: New Canaan, CT
Treetops Chamber Music Concert at Carriage Barn Arts Center (681 South Ave)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

July 25 - August 5: Seal Bay Festival in Maine

Programs include:
Anthony DeRitis: Passion's Continuum (ME premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite

Cassatt String Quartet concerts in New York State are supported by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of Governor and the New York State Legislature

Amherst concert sponsored by: Amherst College Music Department, Provost Lecture Fund, Arts at Amherst Initiative, Office of Provost: Faculty Development Fund

Additional funding for all programs that include contemporary music are made possible in part by: The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, and Amphion Foundation

Seal Bay Festival is also supported The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation

Insider interview with the Cassatt String Quartet

The Cassatt String Quartet, founded in 1985, performs a free concert at the Italian Academy at Columbia University on March 30, 2023

We spoke with the members of the CSQ about the March 30 program and about the history and mission of the group. 

Your March 30, 2023 program at Columbia University features works by three American women (Amy Beach, Dorothy Rudd Moore and Florence Price), your quartet is comprised of women musicians, and takes its name from Mary Cassatt, a woman famous for her impressionist artwork in the 19th and 20th centuries. Tell us how this confluence of women connects with the mission of your ensemble? 

CSQ cellist Gwen Krosnick: One central element of the CSQ’s mission and values is our focus on contemporary music - in particular on the music of people whose work may not yet have been as widely represented on stages as we believe it should be. We're delighted to highlight Amy Beach's gorgeous piano quintet, as well as two quartet works by the great Black American composers Florence Price and Dorothy Rudd Moore. Each of these women deserves to be part of the celebrated canon of artists in our field, and it's an honor and a joy to work on their music and bring it to audiences.

I do hope that the painter Mary Cassatt - whose work was so often undeservedly lumped together with other impressionists as a footnote because she was a woman – would, if she were still alive, approve of this concert’s total focus, front and center, on an exuberant and diverse array of artistry that features American women, both in the programming and in the personnel!

 How did you choose the three works on the program? What attracted you to each of them? 

CSQ violinists Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower: In celebration of the 100th anniversary of women’s right to vote, we incorporated Amy Beach’s Piano Quintet into our 2020-2021 season, and we had the pleasure of working with two different pianists: Ursula Oppens and Lydia Artymiw. Beach’s Quintet has gorgeous melodies, rich harmonies and lush Romantic writing. We are looking forward to reuniting with the pianist Magdalena Baczewska, who brings a fresh perspective and artistry to our performances.

Krosnick: With programming, in a string quartet, there's a wonderful balance of individual passions. This program, music by Price, Moore, and Beach, is very much representative of that – there were lots of thoughtful discussions before settling on this together!

It's been a joyful discovery process, with each work individually and also in seeing how the works dialogue with each other, illuminate each other, and come even more alive in each other's presence.

The G major Quartet by Florence Price is a truly great program opener, full of tenderness, miraculously beautiful tunes, and all kinds of experimentation in form: two movements only, the first of which is an adventurous sonata-form structure and the second featuring a gorgeous, hymn-like A section that alternates with an irresistible chromatic tune in the viola. The Dorothy Rudd Moore string quartet, Modes (more about that below), is an exceptionally personal and emotional statement in an entirely different language all her own: deeply chromatic, full of rhythmic choices that add lilt, thorns, and excitement. It is hauntingly beautiful, from beginning to end - or at least until the opening of the third movement, at which point the quartet explodes into joyous dance. The Piano Quintet by Amy Beach is full of high drama and sweeping romance: in some ways emblematic of the romantic chamber music language so many audience members already know and love, but again in a very personal, highly original take. All three of these composers deal in elements we may recognize - gorgeous melody, intricate counterpoint, deep attention to form and meter - but in their hands, each in a different and wonderful way, these elements reveal themselves anew.

You perform the Piano Quintet by Amy Beach with pianist Magdalena Baczewska.  Tell us about your history and association with her. 

Otani and Leshnower: Magdalena and the Cassatt have enjoyed working together over the past six or seven years. Our paths crossed at Columbia University, where she and Muneko are colleagues. She is a very thoughtful artist with great flexibility.

Krosnick: As a newer member of the CSQ, this project is my first time playing with Magdalena. She's a lovely colleague, a beautiful pianist, and a generous collaborator. Because of the Columbia University connection between Magdalena and Muneko, Magdalena is almost like extended family.

Especially in the past several years, we’ve been hearing about, and hearing the music of, the composers Florence Price and Amy Beach. Dorothy Rudd Moore is a less familiar name in American music. Tell us a little bit about her, and how you discovered her string quartet Modes.

Krosnick: I fell in love with Dorothy Rudd Moore's music in 2020; since then I have shared it as much as possible. From the first notes I heard - an astonishing recording of From The Dark Tower, her song cycle for mezzo-soprano, cello, and piano - there has been something in her music, her voice, that I find heart-stopping, irresistible, and so deeply personal. Her Baroque Suite for Unaccompanied Cello is one of my favorite program openers on solo recitals (and I’m performing it this season in New York, Boston, and Ohio).

When I joined the Cassatt Quartet, one of the first projects I advocated for was Moore's string quartet, Modes. My colleagues listened to the work and were drawn in, as I had been, by her chromatic language, the deeply personal voice there, and her incredible skill at writing for string quartet. This quartet is unusual for many reasons, especially how much she is able to accomplish - emotionally and compositionally - in such a brief form. This is a short piece with the impact of a monument.

I believe deeply that Dorothy Rudd Moore is one of the great American composers ever to live. Her chromatic language - horizontal, vertical, melodic, harmonic – is so personal in every moment; her command of form, phrase structure, meter, rhythm are unique. Most importantly, though, like the greatest of all composers one loves: the great skill with which she uses all these distinct, beloved compositional elements to her own undeniable, personal, deeply vivid emotional ends - this big, emotional impact of Moore’s music is hers alone. Her music does not sound like anyone else’s but her own.

The Cassatt String Quartet was founded in 1985, so you are approaching 40 years of music-making. What keeps you going as an ensemble, and to what do you credit your longevity?

Otani and Leshnower: The joy of making music and the opportunity to collaborate with great artists keeps us inspired and challenged. Commissioning and recording works by living composers, many of whom are now long-standing friends and musical partners, has always been a core component of our mission. Teaching also fulfills us. We are honored to serve as a bridge to the next generation.

Krosnick: I'm turning 37 in a few weeks, so I'm admittedly not (yet) the one to answer how one stays present and engaged for four decades doing this! But I will say that at least one common element struck me from my first moments with each one of my CSQ colleagues: a real love not only of the music we play, but of the process of working and trying to come to a new vision and understanding of the pieces together. String quartet life is complex: different egos, priorities, and backgrounds are always at play, sometimes at battle, often at odds. But there's a foundational level of respect for each other and for the act of playing chamber music that I believe we share, and that we try to center in on, even in our busiest and most exhausted moments. I think this helps us keep going!

There will never be enough time to play all the great music for string quartet - old, new, and yet to be composed. The well of inspiration is very literally endless, and it is a privilege just to be able to drink from it each day.

March 30: American Women Play American Women

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March 30: American women play American women

Pianist Magdalena Baczewska and the Cassatt String Quartet perform music by Florence Price, Amy Beach, and Dorothy Rudd Moore

Italian Academy at Columbia University

"an extraordinary quartet" – New York Times

On March 30, 2023, at 7:30 pm, the pianist Magdalena Baczewska brings the renowned Cassatt String Quartet to the Italian Academy at Columbia University (1161 Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan) to perform music by three American women—Amy Beach, Florence Price, and Dorothy Rudd Moore. The concert is free, and advance reservations (via this link) are recommended. Further details are on the Italian Academy's website.

In 2019, Ms. Baczewska and the Cassatts performed at the Italian Academy to a completely full audience, who "were clearly moved by the music and offered standing ovations," wrote Rick Whitaker, Italian Academy concert manager in Columbia News. "It was a concert I always describe as the best we've ever presented," he said.

All three composers on the program were pioneers and groundbreaking musicians. Price was the first Black woman to have her music performed by a major orchestra. Moore, who lived in New York City until her death last year, was co-founder of Symphony of the New World, the first racially-integrated orchestra in the United States. Beach is known for being the first woman to have a symphony performed by a major orchestra in 1896.

On the program, the CSQ performs Moore's "Modes" and Prices' String Quartet No. 1, and is joined by Baczewska for Beach's Piano Quintet in F-sharp minor. Baczewska also performs a solo piano work by Price.

This spring, the Cassatt String Quartet performs a number of programs in the Northeast, including another concert with pianist Magdalena Baczewska in New Canaan, CT on May 14. Details about the CSQ's upcoming concerts are below.

Calendar Listing

Thursday, March 30, 2023 at 7:30 pm
AMERICAN WOMEN PLAY AMERICAN WOMEN

The Cassatt String Quartet and pianist Magdalena Baczewska

Italian Academy at Columbia University
1161 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY

Admission is free; advance reservations (via this link) are recommended.

PROGRAM
Florence Price String Quartet No.1 in G major
Florence Price Fantaisie nègre, No. 1, for piano solo
Dorothy Rudd Moore Modes for String Quartet
Amy Beach Piano Quintet in F-sharp minor Op 67

The Cassatt String Quartet
Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins
Rosemary Nelis, viola
Gwen Krosnick, cello 

The Cassatt String Quartet Upcoming Concerts

May 7: Amherst, MA
Amherst College's Buckley Recital Hall (53 College St)
Music by Dylan Schneider:
PANDEMIC (world premiere)
with saxophonist Jonathan Hulting-Cohen
GOES A-H-H-H: Quartet Bossa Nova
Dancer at an Exhibition
 (Written for the Cassatt String Quartet)
Part of Amherst College Residency (May 5-8)

May 9 at 8 pm: Bennington, VT
Dean Carriage Barn at Bennington College (1 College Dr)
Program: 
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet
Part of Bennington College Residency (May 9 & 10)

May 13 at 5 pm: Ossining, NY
Opening Night Concert at Bethany Arts Community (40 Somerstown Rd)
Program:
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

May 14 at 4 pm: New Canaan, CT
Treetops Chamber Music Concert at Carriage Barn Arts Center (681 South Ave)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

July 25 - August 5: Seal Bay Festival in Maine
Programs include:
Anthony DeRitis: Passion's Continuum (ME premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite

About the Artists

Hailed by the press as “One of the most innovative, even radical classical keyboardists in the U.S.,” pianist and harpsichordist Magdalena Baczewska [pronounced ba-CHEV-ska] enjoys a versatile career as a concert and recording artist, educator, speaker, and administrator. Since her debut at age 12 with the Silesian Philharmonic, she has performed with some of the world’s leading orchestras, including the Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Vancouver Symphony and China National Symphony.

Baczewska is the Director of the Music Performance Program and Senior Lecturer in Music at Columbia University, where she mentors and provides performance opportunities for the student musicians, teaches Music Humanities (a part of Columbia’s famed Core Curriculum), and works with the Columbia-Juilliard Exchange students in Performance Seminar. She is a recipient of the Outstanding Achievement Award from the Polish Minister of Culture and National Heritage for promoting Polish culture abroad. Baczewska is a Yamaha Artist. 

Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, including three discs that were named “10 Best Classical Recordings” in The New Yorker

The Cassatt String Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; its annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. The CSQ, comprised of Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Rosemary Nelis, viola; and Gwen Krosnick, cello, is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 


Cassatt String Quartet announces 2023 Spring Season

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Cassatt String Quartet announces spring 2023 concerts and residencies

Performances across the United States, residencies at Columbia University, Amherst College, Bennington College, and West Texas

"an extraordinary quartet" – New York Times

The Cassatt String Quartet, formed in 1985, announces its spring 2023 season. Through concerts and residencies, violinists Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violist Rosemary Nelis, and cellist Gwen Krosnick perform throughout the year in New England, New York, and Texas. Season details are below.

Violinist Muneko Otani says, “We are thrilled to continue to have opportunities to tour the country, bringing concerts, masterclasses, workshops, and community events to audiences across the United States. Also, two recording projects will be released in 2023: an album of works by Gerald Cohen, and another of music by Daniel S. Godfrey." These new recordings add to the quartet's discography of 40 titles, which includes the 2022 releases Andy Teirstein's Restless Nation, Victoria Bond's Blue and Green Music.

Performance highlights include the world premiere of Passion's Continuum by Anthony De Ritis in Boston on February 19, in a program that includes Daniel S. Godfrey’s Toward Light for Guitar and String Quartet with guest artist Eliot Fisk. The following week, the CSQ and Eliot Fisk head to Mechanics Hall in Worcester, MA to record Godfrey’s Toward Light, produced by multi-GRAMMY award-winning producer Judith Sherman.

Also this spring, the quartet is in residence at Columbia University in New York City, culminating in a concert on March 31 at The Italian Academy on Columbia's campus. The spring residency at Amherst College includes a concert on May 7 of works by Amherst professor Dylan Schneider.

The quartet visits West Texas twice in 2023 for its bi-annual residency Cassatt in the Basin. The January visit included programs in Midland and Odessa, and a concert at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Since 2005, Cassatt in the Basin has reached over 20,000 people, enriching the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region.

This summer, the quartet returns to the Seal Bay Festival in Maine, where it is in its 20th season as ensemble-in-residence. The festival brings unique exposure to contemporary American chamber music to audiences in coastal Maine.


Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, spanning the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels – including three discs that have been named by Alex Ross to his “10 Best Classical Recordings” feature in The New Yorker

The Cassatt Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; its annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. 

The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Upcoming Concerts

January 29 at 2 pm: Lubbock, TX
Texas Tech University at Kent R. Hance Chapel (2511 17th St)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Giovanni Bottesini: Gran Quintetto with Mark Morton, bass

Part of Cassatt in the Basin Residency (January 24-30)

FEBRUARY 19 CONCERT POSTPONED:

February 19 at 4 pm: Boston, MA
Northeastern University's Fenway Center (77 St Stephen St)
Program:
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Anthony De Ritis: Passion's Continuum (World premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Heitor Villa-Lobos: Cadenza for solo guitar (Eliot Fisk)
Daniel Strong Godfrey: Toward Light for guitar and string quartet (with Eliot Fisk)

March 30 at 7:30 pm: New York City
Italian Academy at Columbia University (1161 Amsterdam Ave)
Program:
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

Part of Columbia University Residency (March 29-31)

May 7: Amherst, MA
Amherst College's Buckley Recital Hall (53 College St)
Music by Dylan Schneider:
PANDEMIC (world premiere)
with saxophonist Jonathan Hulting-Cohen
GOES A-H-H-H: Quartet Bossa Nova
Dancer at an Exhibition
(Written for the Cassatt String Quartet)

Part of Amherst College Residency (May 5-8)

May 9 at 8 pm: Bennington, VT
Dean Carriage Barn at Bennington College (1 College Dr)
Program: 
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet

Part of Bennington College Residency (May 9 & 10)

May 13 at 5 pm: Ossining, NY
Opening Night Concert at Bethany Arts Community (40 Somerstown Rd)
Program:
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

May 14 at 4 pm: New Canaan, CT
Treetops Chamber Music Concert at Carriage Barn Arts Center (681 South Ave)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

July 25 - August 5: Seal Bay Festival in Maine
Programs include:
Anthony DeRitis: Passion's Continuum (ME premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite


Cassatt String Quartet concerts in New York State are supported by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of Governor and the New York State Legislature

Amherst concert sponsored by: Amherst College Music Department, Provost Lecture Fund, Arts at Amherst Initiative, Office of Provost: Faculty Development Fund

Additional funding for all programs that include contemporary music are made possible in part by: The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, and Amphion Foundation

Seal Bay Festival is also supported The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation

January: Cassatt String Quartet at Texas Tech and residency in West Texas

Cassatt String Quartet performance at Texas Tech in Lubbock

January 29 performance is part of the long-running Cassatt in the Basin program with guest artist Mark Morton on bass

Community program "Cassatt in the Basin" brings the quartet to West Texas twice a year for concerts and music education events in Odessa and Midland

"an extraordinary quartet” – New York Times

On January 29 at 2 pm, the Cassatt String Quartet performs at Kent R. Hance Chapel on the campus of Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Admission is free, details are here.

The New York-based quartet brings a special program to Lubbock, performing quartets by Mozart and Dorothy Rudd Moore. Mark Morton, professor of double bass at Texas Tech University, joins them for Giovanni Bottesini's "Gran Quintet for strings".

The concert is one of the events of Cassatt in the Basin. Since 2005, the quartet's bi-annual residencies in West Texas have enriched the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region.

The January 2023 visit by the Cassatt String Quartet includes a multitude of activities in Odessa and Midland, including:

  • Concerts at at Manor Park Retirement Home (1/25) and Heartland Home Assisted Living (1/28)

  • Coachings and side-by-sides with students at Odessa and Permian High Schools, and Compass Academy

  • Open rehearsal at Brookdale Senior Living (1/26)

  • Family program at the Ector County Library (1/30)

A full schedule of events is at CassattInTheBasin.com/Events


Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, spanning the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels – including three discs that have been named by Alex Ross to his “10 Best Classical Recordings” feature in The New Yorker Magazine. 

The Cassatt Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; their annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. 

The CSQ is named for the great Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Calendar Listing

Cassatt in the Basin presents

Cassatt String Quartet

with Mark Morton, bass

Muneko Otani, violin
Jennifer Leshnower, violin
Rosemary Nelis, viola
Gwen Krosnick, cello

Free Admission

January 29 at 2:00 pm

Kent R. Hance Chapel
2511 17th Street
Lubbock, TX

PROGRAM
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Giovanni Bottesini: Gran Quintet for strings
Mozart: String Quartet No.23 in F major, K.590

Details here