Friday, June 17, 2011
Springtime in NY
On the first night of our tour, we converged at the avant-garde Café Orwell in Brooklyn wiith Amy X Neuburg, playing for a lively young crowd . The next night we played at the historical Gershwin Hotel as part of Vicky Chow's Contagious Sounds, a new music series focusing on adventurous contemporary artists and composer. The concert was in an intimate, old and lustrous ballroom - while it was only one third of its original size, it is definitely an acoustical “find” in Manhattan.
A third concert took place the following afternoon-Easter Sunday-in the beautiful penthouse home of Jonathan Vincent, where some young fans were dyeing elaborate Easter eggs before the concert. There were spectacular panoramic views and pictures of his late grandfather, famed singer Theodore Upmann, everywhere you turned.
For our final concert, we played closing night of the Cutting Edge New Music Festival curated by Victoria Bond at Symphony Space. Composers Reza Vali, Ben Johnston, Ronald Bruce Smith and Amy X Neuberg participated in person to introduce their piece in a lively dialogue with Bond. (Amy X additionally performed with us as part of her first string quartet!) Despite the physical absence of 85-year-old Ben Johnston (at home in Wisconsin), we were able to include him in the concert via Skype video, which proved to be quite delightful. Despite the difficulties of Ben’s meticulous and complex use of "just intonation," with great patience and perseverance, we made the piece our own to an enthusiastic New York reception.
A (non) Winter Trip to DC
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
We're Back!
Monday, July 13, 2009
Summer 2009
2. “You Are Hear” at San Francisco International Airport
3. Other Minds Festival 14
4. Virginia Waring International Piano Competition
5. “Mestizaje” Del Sol’s Home Season Concerts
6. “Wet Ink” Concert
7. Garden of Memory
8. CD Reviews
1. Del Sol String Quartet’s New York Debut
We will perform our first concert at Symphony Space in New York City on October 1st, co-presented by the Polish Cultural Institute. We will play string quartets by two contemporary Polish composers, Pawel Mykietin and Pawel Szymanski. Also on the program will be the New
York premiere of “Esencia,” written for us by Cuban-American composer Tania León, through a commission from the Fromm Music Foundation, as well as a work by Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz. The following day, October 2nd, we will present a lecture-concert at New York’s Korean Cultural Service, featuring music by Paul Yeon Lee as well as other Korean composers. Stay tuned for more details this fall!
2. “You Are Hear” at San Francisco International Airport
This summer Del Sol treats travelers to an eclectic program of music, new and old, as they pass through SFO. Presented by Tarmac Music, this performance series brings great Bay Area musical groups to SFO every Friday through the summer. The Quartet’s next airport performance will be on August 21st, 11am-2pm. For those of you traveling that day, please come visit us in Terminal 3!
3. Other Minds Festival 14
Del Sol played to packed houses for all three nights of the Other Minds Festival of new music in San Francisco in March. Del Sol’s cellist, Hannah Addario-Berry, recalls: We spent the weeks leading up to the festival immersing ourselves in composer/pianist Michael Harrison’s glorious and challenging ‘Tone Clouds’. This piece, written for Del Sol, uses a ‘just intonation’ tuning system, which required us to retrain our ears and fingers to match his specially-tuned piano. He joined us to perform the world premiere of ‘Tone Clouds’ for String Quartet and Piano, and we look forward to recording the piece someday!”
In addition to Harrison’s piece, we performed the world premiere of “Gondola”, a new work written for Del Sol by Toronto-based Linda Catlin Smith (and commissioned through the Canada Council for the Arts). Also, it was wonderful to get to know the young Polish composer, Dobromila Jaskot, on her first trip to the U.S., and perform her quartet “Linearia.” And of course, we greatly enjoyed the opportunity to work with composer Chinary Ung and perform his “Spiral X: In Memoriam” again. In a review of the festival, London Financial Times critic Allan Ulrich wrote: "Chinary Ung’s Spiral X: In Memoriam recalls the Cambodian holocaust through lush string texturespunctuated by the wailing and keening of the members of the Del Sol String Quartet, the dedicatees and superb interpreters of the piece. A true cry from the heart."
4. Virginia Waring International Piano Competition
Also in March, Del Sol traveled to Palm Desert, California to perform as the quartet-in-residence for the Chamber Music Round, at the Virginia Waring International Piano Competition. In three intense days and two concerts, the quartet members rehearsed and performed piano quintets by Brahms, Schumann, and Franck with the 12 finalists in the competition. “It was a treat to perform some old masterworks with a variety of incredibly talented young pianists and interpreters. We look forward to seeing their careers blossom in the coming years.” (Charlton Lee, Del Sol Violist)
5. “Mestizaje” Del Sol’s Home Season Concerts
In May we presented our Bay Area Home Season concerts in Point Reyes Station and San Francisco, including world premieres of two brand-new works written especially for Del Sol by composers Paul Yeon Lee (Korea) and Tania León (Cuba). Both composers came out from New York City to join the Quartet for the San Francisco concert and educational outreach activities. The Quartet, together with Lee and León, presented their pieces to young music students at San Francisco’s Community Music Center and School of the Arts, followed by an
interactive conversation among the students, Quartet members and composers. The Home Season program also included Linda Catlin Smith’s “Gondola” (premiered in March at the OM Festival), and the String Quartet No. 5 by Philip Glass. San Francisco Classical Voice reviewer Beeri Moalem wrote that Del Sol’s “commitment to new music is essential to keeping our classical music community living and breathing, with current composers who write from the depths of their soul as well as the profundity of their brain.”
6. “Wet Ink” Concert
In June Del Sol visited Grass Valley, CA to perform at the “Wet Ink” concert hosted by the Music in the Mountains Summer Festival. The Quartet had the opportunity to work with four composers from the Nevada City Composers Cooperative, Jay Sydeman, Mark Vance, Jerry Grant, and Randy McKean, and performed the world premieres of each of their string quartets on a beautiful evening at the Nevada County Fairgrounds.7. Garden of Memory
Del Sol performed again at this year’s annual Summer Solstice event “Garden of Memory” at the Chapel of the Chimes in Oakland. Taking place in the beautiful Julia Morgan-designed columbarium, this event is a wonderful bazaar of new music ensembles, composers, electric and acoustic musicians. Audience members wander through the maze of hallways and alcoves and chapels, stopping to sit and listen to their favorite ensemble or a newly discovered treasure. The Quartet performed a wide range of music from Glass to Gershwin and was thrilled to reconnect with didjeridoo master, Stephen Kent, to play Peter Sculthorpe’s beautiful piece for string quartet and didjeridoo.
8. CD Reviews
Del Sol’s two recent CDs have been a hit with the reviewers!
“First Life” (2009), which features world premiere recordings of rare early works for string quartet and solo piano by Marc Blitzstein was released by Other Minds Records this April. (OM 1017-2): “... the Del Sol players produce a gloriously opulent, full-throated tone that prevents exuberantly inventive writing from catching an expressive chill. Warmly recorded and perceptively played, this is music well worth getting to know.” (Strad magazine)
“Ring of Fire-Music of the Pacific Rim” (2008) (OM-1016-2) “No fault-lines in this spirited musical journey around volcano country” Gramophone called Del Sol “masters of all musical things surveyed on this disc” (Gramophone magazine)Full reviews and links can be found on our website.
Monday, February 9, 2009
Happy Year of the Ox!
2. Blitzstein CD: "First Life"
3. Chamber Music America
4. "Composing Together" Schools Program
5. Rave Reviews for Ring of Fire
6. Commissioning Joan Jeanrenaud
7. Your Support is Crucial
1. Other Minds Festival 14
Del Sol plays the music of Chinary Ung, Michael Harrison, Dobromila Jaskot, and Linda Catlin Smith at the Other Minds Festival 14 on March 5-7, 2009 at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco. Three of the composers wrote their works specifically for Del Sol, and the Quartet will be performing on all three nights of the Festival, including two world premieres and one U.S. premiere. Check out the remarkable tuning system of Michael Harrison, who will play his specially tuned, “just-intonation” piano with the Quartet in his piece, "Tone Clouds," on the Festival’s closing night. The Quartet’s participation in the Festival is supported, in part, by a generous grant from the Clarence E. Heller Charitable Foundation.The Trio con Brio Copenhagen and the Amsterdam Cello Octet are also coming to town for the three-day Festival, along with a host of other performers and composers. Concerts take place March 5-7: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings at 8 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco. The specific programs for each evening’s concert are listed at www.otherminds.org. For tickets, call the JCCSF Box Office at (415) 292-1233 or order online.
2. Blitzstein CD: "First Life"
This April, Other Minds Records will release "First Life," a CD featuring world premiere recordings of rarely-played early works by American composer, Marc Blitzstein (1905-1964), performed by the Del Sol String Quartet and pianist Sarah Cahill. Del Sol recorded Blitzstein's complete string quartet repertoire--Quartet for Strings "The Italian" (1930) and the Serenade for String Quartet (1932)--and Cahill plays the Piano Sonata (1927), Piano Percussion Music (1929), and the Scherzo "Bourgeois at Play" (1930).
"First Life" will be available for sneak-preview purchase at the Other Minds Festival this March, or online.3. Chamber Music America
In January, Del Sol violinist Kate Stenberg performed with pianist Eva-Maria Zimmermann in New York City at the closing "American Masterpieces" concert of the 2009 Chamber Music America National Conference. This concert honors chamber groups that have been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts in the past year. The duo played Ruth Crawford Seeger’s violin Sonata in the beautiful Saint Luke’s Church, on a program shared with the Harlem String Quartet, The Parker Quartet and the String Trio of New York. A few years ago Del Sol played Crawford Seeger’s masterful 1931 string quartet and have recorded the Andante movement on their “Tear” CD (2002).Violist Charlton Lee also attended the CMA Conference, joining Del Sol’s booking agent, Peter Robles of Serious Music Media, to meet with presenters on whose concert series the Quartet will perform in the coming seasons. They also enjoyed Kate’s and Eva-Maria’s concert from the audience. Charlton later spent a beautiful, snowy day with composer Michael Harrison, discussing and working on Del Sol’s upcoming premiere of his “Tone Clouds” piece for string quartet and piano. While in New York, the land of composers and food, Charlton also shared meals with two other composers writing works for Del Sol--Tania León and Paul Lee-- whose quartets will be premiered at our Home Season concerts in May.
photos from left to right: Kate Stenberg, Eva-Maria Zimmermann, Charlton Lee – photos by Charles Amirkhanian
4. "Composing Together" Schools Program
Del Sol collaborated with local composer and educator, Katrina Wreede, in a highly successful educational program last fall reaching traditionally under-served students in three public middle and high schools in San Francisco and the East Bay. In several classroom visits during the semester the Quartet members and Katrina provided students with hands-on mentoring to compose their own music through a process tailored to their varied musical experience, understanding and skill levels. At the end of the project the Quartet performed the students’ works in concerts at each school, which was recorded on CDs for the participants. In evaluating last year's program, one participating teacher commented: "I would do this project every year. This is a superb project for school musicians." We hope to continue and expand the program to five schools this fall if we can raise the required funding from foundations and other supporters.Washington High School students - photo by Jill Hendricks
5. Rave Reviews for Ring of Fire
Del Sol’s new CD, “Ring of Fire: Music of the Pacific Rim,” released in 2008 on the Other Minds label, has been praised by critics from San Francisco to the UK as “ear-opening” and a “bracing sampler, performed with sensitivity and flair.” (The Boston Globe). The December 2008 issue of Gramophone magazine published a glowing, half-page review with color photos, calling the Quartet “masters of all musical things they survey on this disc, playing with a combination of ferocious attack, riveting interplay and silken splendour.” See our website for complete reviews and to buy the CD.
This year we are beginning a new project with San Francisco composer, Joan Jeanrenaud, to write her first string quartet for Del Sol. The Quartet members are excited to work with Jeanrenaud, a new music champion and acclaimed former cellist of the Kronos Quartet. This project is supported by foundation grants awarded to us by the American Composers Forum and The San Francisco Foundation, along with generous matching gifts from several of our individual donors. We expect to premiere the new work at our 2010 Home Season concerts.
Left to right Kate Stenberg, Rick Shinozaki, Hannah Addario-Berry, Joan Jeanrenaud, Charlton Lee – photo by Frank Addario
7. Your Support is Crucial
We appreciate so much the generous response of donors to our 2008 Year-End solicitation. Because of the recession, like many other nonprofits, we began cutting costs last fall and have cut our 2009 budget further. We depend on the generosity of individuals like you to continue making contemporary chamber music accessible to the public through the Del Sol Quartet’s work. Your gifts support continuing our “Composing Together” collaboration in public schools this fall, our Home Season concerts in May, and two new multi-media projects that we hope to begin this year, plus our ongoing operations. You can donate online. Thank you to all of you who have continued to support us through hard times, and we hope that others also will give as generously as they can.
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Happy Summer!
2. Ring of Fire CD
3. Memories of "Lines of Listening" Project
4. Memories of Quartetfest
5. Memories of Garden of Memory Summer Solstice
6. New Grants
7. Donate
1. "You Are Hear": Music at SFO
On August 1 the Quartet will inaugurate a new music series, "You Are Hear," presented by Tarmac Music at San Francisco Airport. We will play three sets of music from the Del Sol repertoire for travelers arriving, departing and waiting for flights in the International Terminal.2. Ring of Fire CD
It’s here! After six months of intensive work, we have released our new CD, “Ring of Fire: Music of the Pacific Rim” (on the Other Minds Records label). It includes “Spiral X: In Memoriam” by Chinary Ung, which Del Sol premiered at the Library of Congress this past fall, and pieces by other contemporary Pacific Rim composers such as Gabriela Lena Frank, Hyo-shin Na, Kui Dong and Jack Body. You can buy it through our website or from Other Minds. It will also be available from retailers later this summer.3. Memories of "Lines of Listening" Project
In collaboration with psychiatrist/filmmaker Laura Schwartz, on July 7 the Quartet was filmed and recorded at Skywalker studio in Marin County for an experimental, multi-media project exploring the creativity and psychology of sound and music making. Hannah recalls, "Laura presented us with a Glazunov string quartet, for which the scores had been severely disfigured. Our heads spun as we attempted to make sense- and music- out of the displaced notes, extra staff lines or lack thereof, and absence of clef. I've never been so relieved to see a 'normal' sheet of music as when we finally played through the piece with real, properly notated scores, and discovered what a lovely piece of music it is! All this in front of a team of camera crew and microphones. I'll be excited to see the final documentary!" Rick remembers, "We take for granted that music notation will be written in a format we are familiar with. What happens when the rules of notation are subtly or not-so-subtly twisted, and we are left to our own devices to decipher this newly-deformed sheet music? In front of a battery of video cameras? At the end of the day, we were able to reconstitute an obscure quartet by Glazunov, but only after a full day's effort and and an interesting adventure in problem-solving and group dynamics."
4. Memories of Quartetfest
For years, Del Sol has been leading a fabulous program for young chamber musicians, that has been the center-pin of their educational outreach in the Bay Area. Four groups meet for an intensive seminar of mainly modern quartet music coached by the Del Sol, which ends with a final public performance followed by a potluck dinner. The newly expanded 4-day QuartetFest workshop for kids (ages 10-18) was a refreshing experience for all who attended. They were excited to tackle the various challenges of this new music with its extended techniques and complex rhythms. The additional 2 days gave the Del Sol ample opportunity to expand the QuartetFest experience in several ways. Kate and Charlton expertly led morning classes in Chen Style Taiji to help the students relax and get their focus. Violinist and special guest artist Jeremy Cohen led the group in three intensive sessions on the Blues and Tango music, with it’s own extended instrumental techniques, leading up to an exuberant performance of the "Del Sol Blues" composed collaboratively by the entire class! The four student quartets also performed works of Shostakovich, Mozart, and Zhou Long. Deepest thanks to Steve and Sara Kahn, for allowing us use of their Pacific Heights house for QuartetFest!Photos by Rick Shinozaki. Clockwise from left: Hannah Addario-Berry, James Pak; Andrea Chung, Tara Sola, Kate Stenberg, Aku Sorensen, Erica Wong; Gabriella Smith, Eli Wirtshafter, Leon Truong, Charlton Lee. Not pictured: Dylan Mattingly.
5. Memories of Garden of Memory Summer Solstice
On June 21, one of the hottest days so far this year, the Quartet performed at the Chapel of the Chimes in Oakland for the annual “Garden of Memories” concert. Stephen Kent, famed didjeridu player, collaborated with the quartet on a couple of pieces. The all-day concert series included more than 30 different musicians and ensembles playing in various intriguing spaces within the famed Art Deco Columbarium building (designed by architect Julia Morgan). Kate Stenberg took flight down the stairs on her breaks to play one of Amirkhanian’s solo pieces “Rippling the Lamp” that he wrote for her to perform at the Other Minds “New Music Séance” last year. Rick recalls: "Throngs of music lovers lined the halls and milled around the Chapel of the Chimes for this annual event. Del Sol sweated it out in the aptly titled 'Chamber of Effulgence' for a warm audience (literally), in friendly competition with the widest variety of musical acts that the Bay Area has to offer. The positive energy and enthusiastic participation by all made 'Garden of Memories' a natural fit for Del Sol.
Photo by Charles Amirkhanian. Left to right Stephen Kent, Kate Stenberg, Rick Shinozaki, Charlton Lee, Randy Fromme (substitute cellist)6. New Grants
The San Francisco Foundation awarded us $10,000 for "Composing Together," an arts education program we begin this fall to introduce public school kids in three Bay Area counties (SF, Contra Costa, and Alameda) to composing their own works, in collaboration with composer/educator Katie Wreede. We also received $500 in June from BMI Foundation, Inc. for general operations and the first installment of $9,600 on our grant awarded by the SF Arts Commission Cultural Equity Program for our 2009 Home Season concert next spring.
7. Donate
You can help support our mission to advance the classical music tradition by making a donation online!
Friday, June 13, 2008
Happy Summer!
1. Ring of Fire CD
2. Quartetfest
3. Memories of Ring of Fire Concert
4. Memories of Leakey Event
5. Spring Fundraising Drive
1. Ring of Fire CD

It’s here! After six months of intensive work, we have released our new CD, “Ring of Fire: Music of the Pacific Rim” (on the Other Minds Records label). It includes “Spiral X: In Memoriam” by Chinary Ung, which Del Sol premiered at the Library of Congress this past fall, and pieces by other contemporary Pacific Rim composers such as Gabriela Lena Frank, Hyo-shin Na, Kui Dong and Jack Body. You can buy it through our website or from Other Minds. It will also be available from retailers later this summer.
2. Quartetfest
June 30th – July 3rd
Del Sol String Quartet will be presenting an expanded 4-day intensive QuartetFest this summer, June 30th through July 3rd. It will take place at the beautiful Pacific Heights home of Steven and Sara Khan in San Francisco that they are so generously donating for the event.
As one of San Francisco's premier string quartet training workshops for young chamber musicians, QuartetFest is a great opportunity for young string players to immerse themselves in the art of rehearsal and performance of the string quartet repertoire. One of Del Sol’s delights is to expose the students to a variety of contemporary music and improvisation during the course of the workshop. Often the students not only perform on their stringed instruments but also demonstrate their talent as composers or improvisers or both!
This year, jazz violinist Jeremy Cohen joins the members of the Del Sol String Quartet as their special guest artist, offering his expertise in coaching improvisation and various jazz and tango styles. A fun event for all, the QuartetFest ends with a concert presented by the students followed by a festive potluck dinner. We even have QuartetFest t-shirts, designed by artist Kris Yenney, for participants, friends and family. Contact Kate Stenberg for more info.
left to right: Grace Lu (violin), James Stoner (violin), Edwin Lai (cello), Hannah "Bing" Addario-Berry photo by Rick Shinozaki
3. Memories of Ring of Fire Concert
It was a fabulous experience to finish this big project with our May 2008 Home Season concert and CD release party, with our commissioned composer—Chinary Ung—in attendance. The San Francisco Conservatory of Music’s intimate Recital Hall, in their new building at Civic Center, was a perfect venue for the concert. Our new CDs (received hot off the press just days before the concert) were available to purchase at the party afterwards. In honor of Chinary we served delicious Cambodian food from Angkor Borei Restaurant as we mingled with the audience. And, of course, we could not have done all of this without your support--our audience, donors, board members and volunteers--and your continuing interest in hearing new music written now by composers still living and breathing! Thank you!
4. Memories of Leakey Event

On May 30 Del Sol performed at the Jewish Community Center of SF for The Leakey Foundation, in collaboration with The California Academy of Sciences. The event featured a fascinating lecture, “The Musical Instinct,” by cognitive archaeologist, Dr. Steven Mithen (University of Reading, UK). He made a compelling case for the evolutionary value of music and why humans evolved as a musical species. The Quartet enlivened the lecture and demonstrated his points by playing various short pieces, from Bach to Blitzstein and other music from Del Sol’s contemporary repertoire.
left to right: Hannah Addario-Berry, Charlton Lee, Dr. Steven Mithen, Kate Stenberg and Rick Shinozaki
photo by Jane Kumin
5. Spring Fundraising Drive
Individual contributions to the Del Sol Performing Arts Organization made up 20% of our total revenues last year and are critical to our continuing operations as a nonprofit organization. It’s never too late or too little to donate—we greatly appreciate support at whatever level. Gifts from donors like you enable the DSPAO to continue bringing new chamber music to the Bay Area by funding composer commissions and expanding our educational outreach programs like QuartetFest (see above). Please return your tax-deductible contributions as soon as possible. For more information, or if you prefer to donate online, please visit our website and click on the link to a secure site for credit card contributions. We are extremely grateful for your support!