Quogue Chamber Music Presents Kenari Quartet On June 18 - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1340177

Quogue Chamber Music Presents Kenari Quartet On June 18

icon 1 Photo

authorJon Winkler on Jun 13, 2016

Quogue Chamber Music has revealed its two-concert lineup for the summer.

The new season will kick off on Saturday, June 18, with a performance by the Kenari Quartet. The team of saxophonists, formed at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, will perform works by Bach, Astor Piazzolla and others. Next will be a performance by The Attacca Quartet on Saturday, September 10. The string quartet, formed at Juilliard in 2003, will perform “Haydn String Quartet, Op. 76, #5,” “Janacek String Quartet, #1” and “Beethoven String Quartet, Op. 59, #3.” Quogue Chamber Music will also be giving a children’s concert at the Quogue Field Club on August 10.

Those hoping to attend these shows can buy tickets for $40 per person or $100 for access to the show and the post-concert celebration. The student price is $5 per ticket.

Quogue Chamber Music has a history of hosting musical acts similar to Kenari and Attacca. Last year, Quogue hosted the Cavani String Quartet, which performed works by Mozart and Debussy. Quogue Chamber Music has also hosted the likes of the American Brass Quintet, the Claremont Trio, the Dorian Wind Quintet with Gayle Martin Henry on piano and composer Peter Schickele. The nonprofit organization was founded by Jane Deckoff in the fall of 2009 and now puts on performances both in Quogue and on Park Avenue in New York City.

The talent that the company attracts is impressive, and this season is no exception. The Attacca Quartet won top prizes at both the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition and the Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. They were recently named the Quartet in Residence for New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Kenari Quartet formed in 2012 and has earned top-prize at various competitions: the M-Prize Chamber Music Competition, the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition, the Plowman Chamber Music Competition and others.

Steven Banks, the Kenari Quartet’s 22-year-old baritone saxophonist, is glad to play a wide variety of music with his friends Bob Eason, Kyle Baldwin, and Corey Dundee, he said. After being together for four years, the group’s ability to synchronize with each other is still growing.

“I would say how in sync we are is an on-going process,” Mr. Banks said over the phone. “It did take about a year, year-and-a-half to get in that groove of getting to know each other. But we know how everyone’s gonna cue each other in when we play.”

The quartet recently completed work recording their debut album for Naxos Records. They recorded works by French composers including Gabriel Pierné, Florent Schmitt and Eugène Bozza. Recording took place in Auer Hall at the Jacobs School of Music.

“It was an amazing experience,” Mr. Banks said. “We just learned a lot about microphones and how many takes needed to find that groove. We’re very humbled and honored that this will be available for all the students at the Jacobs School.”

The quartet plays the works of classical composers along with jazz and soul. For Mr. Banks, playing classical music is not only a preference but something he believes is educational.

“I like to show the world that the sax is a classical instrument.”

The Kenari Quartet will kick off the new season of Quogue Chamber Music on Saturday, June 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the Quogue Community Hall. Call 631-728-3407 or visit quoguechambermusic.com to purchase tickets or for more information.

You May Also Like:

Come Home for the Holidays With The Lords of 52nd Street

The Suffolk welcomes back The Lords of 52nd Street for a holiday show “Miracle on ... 11 Dec 2024 by Staff Writer

Joy Jan Jones Sings Holiday Jazz

Joy Jan Jones, a highly praised jazz singer who has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln ... 10 Dec 2024 by Staff Writer

'A Christmas Carol' Reading by Laura Jasper

Laura Jasper, a local actor and theater artist, will present a one-woman reading of “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens on Sunday, December 15, at 1 p.m. at the Masonic Temple in Sag Harbor. Take a journey to the London of 1843 and get to know Dickens’s perennial characters: Scrooge, Jacob Marley and the other ghosts, who in Dickens’s words “may haunt you pleasantly.” This wonderful tale of the essence of the holiday season is suitable for all audiences. This is a free reading, however a donation of a canned food is appreciated for the local food pantry. The Masonic ... by Staff Writer

The Magical 'Zima!' Returns to LongHouse Reserve

Winter officially arrives on the East End next week, and let’s be honest, there are ... 9 Dec 2024 by Annette Hinkle

Iconic Lichtenstein Sculptures Restored

The Parrish Art Museum has completed a major restoration of “Tokyo Brushstroke I & II,” ... by Staff Writer

Holiday Harmony by Duchess at LTV Studios

LTV Studios and the East End Underground Live Concert Series, in association with The Art ... by Staff Writer

'The Bonackers' Documentary Screens at LTV

LTV Studios, in association with The Bonackers Project and The Peter Matthiessen Center, presents the ... by Staff Writer

Science on Screen in 'The Shape of Homes to Come'

While acting and directing are obvious essentials to making a great movie, architecture is also ... by Jon Winkler

Omo Moses Discusses 'The White Peril'

The finale for the Bridgehampton Child Care & Recreational Center’s 2024 Black Film Festival will ... by Staff Writer

Time for 'A Classical Christmas'

The Suffolk welcomes back “A Classical Christmas,” featuring the Long Island Concert Orchestra, on Friday, ... 4 Dec 2024 by Staff Writer