2022 Season Brochure

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Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival July 17–August 22, 2022 Season 49

505.982.1890 SantaFeChamberMusic.com


OPPOSITE PAGE: Clockwise from bottom right: Jennifer Frautschi, John Storgårds, Tony Arnold. ON THE COVER: Clockwise from bottom right: Fleur Barron, Julius Drake, Escher String Quartet.


WELCOME TO OUR 2022 SEASON!

We’re so excited to present our 2022 season—our 49th!—this summer, from July 17 through August 22. Over the course of six weeks, in our longtime venues of St. Francis Auditorium in the New Mexico Museum of Art and The Lensic Performing Arts Center, we’re offering more than 40 unforgettable concerts, which feature dozens of thrilling highlights, including: • the Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio, in their Festival debut, performing a cycle of the groundbreaking Beethoven Piano Trios; • the return of John Storgårds, chief guest conductor of the BBC Philharmonic and principal guest conductor of Canada’s National Arts Centre Orchestra, who conducts two works— Knussen’s Requiem: Songs for Sue, featuring soprano Tony Arnold, and Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony in E Major— and plays violin in Shostakovich’s Piano Trio in E Minor; • solo recitals by violinist Leila Josefowicz and pianists Zoltán Fejérvári, Kirill Gerstein, Benjamin Hochman, Gilles Vonsattel, and Haochen Zhang; • piano-vocal recitals by tenor Paul Groves and pianist Bradley Moore, mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron and pianist Julius Drake, and soprano Susanna Phillips and pianist Craig Terry; • the Festival debut—on the season-opening program—of conductor James Gaffigan, whose numerous appointments include serving as music director of the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia, Spain, and principal guest conductor of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra;

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• the return of clarinetist Carol McGonnell, who plays Stockhausen’s In Freundschaft and joins Kirill Gerstein, Leila Josefowicz, and Paul Watkins for Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time; • Festival debuts by pianist Nicolas Namoradze, the Beijing Guitar Duo, and Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Principal Clarinet YaoGuang Zhai; • premieres of Festival-commissioned works by Kaija Saariaho, Shulamit Ran, Detlev Glanert, and the two participants in our annual Young Composers String Quartet Project; • the New Mexico premiere of a piano quintet by Festival Artistic Director Marc Neikrug; and • return appearances by violinists Martin Beaver, Jennifer Frautschi, Paul Huang, Ida Kavafian, and Daniel Phillips; violists Che-Yen Chen, Paul Neubauer, and Steven Tenenbom; cellists Eric Kim, Peter Stumpf, and Peter Wiley; harpist June Han; flutist Tara Helen O’Connor; oboist Liang Wang; clarinetist Todd Levy; bassoonist Christopher Millard; hornist Jennifer Montone; and the Dover, Escher, FLUX, and Miami string quartets, among many others. And that’s just for starters! Throughout this brochure, you’ll find everything you need to immerse yourself in our season—from concert details and subscription packages to seating charts and individual-ticket prices. Thank you for your support, now and always. We can’t wait to see you this summer!

Steven Ovitsky Executive Director

Marc Neikrug Artistic Director

All Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival concerts will be presented in compliance with the most up-to-date COVID safety practices, which may include wearing a mask and providing proof of vaccination. For the latest requirements, please call our Ticket Office at 505.982.1890 or visit SantaFeChamberMusic.com/COVID-Updates.


SE AS ON SP O T L IGH T

THE BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS

For the first time in its history, the Festival presents a cycle of the Beethoven Piano Trios performed over the course of a single season (on August 7 and August 8, August 10, and August 14). The revolutionary, groundbreaking works reveal not just Beethoven’s talents as a composer and piano virtuoso but also his visionary spirit and gift for redefining every form and genre he explored. The newly formed Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio plays nine works, beginning with Beethoven’s Op. 1, No. 1, and ending with his towering Archduke Trio. The Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio comprises pianist Gloria Chien and violinist Soovin Kim, co-artistic directors of Chamber Music Northwest, and Paul Watkins, cellist of the acclaimed Emerson String Quartet.

THE RETURN OF MUSIC AT NOON WEDNESDAYS Music at Noon, the Festival’s most popular series, is once again offering concerts on Wednesdays!

In 2022, the Wednesday Noon concerts include three piano-vocal recitals—featuring tenor Paul Groves and pianist Bradley Moore (July 27), mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron and pianist Julius Drake (August 3), and soprano Susanna Phillips and pianist Craig Terry (August 10)—and one solo piano recital, featuring Haochen Zhang (August 17).

WORLD AND NEW MEXICO PREMIERES

As the Festival heads toward its 50th anniversary season in 2023, the celebration begins this summer with premieres of commissioned works—written in honor of this very special occasion—by three of the world’s leading composers: Kaija Saariaho (July 17 & 18), Shulamit Ran (August 4), and Detlev Glanert (August 5). The Festival also premieres commissioned works by Benjamin Scheer and Marco-Adrián Ramos, the two participants in our 2022 Young Composers String Quartet Project (August 5), and presents the New Mexico premiere of Festival Artistic Director Marc Neikrug’s Piano Quintet No. 2, performed by pianist Haochen Zhang and the Dover Quartet (August 21). OPPOSITE PAGE: Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio

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TUESDAY, JULY 19 [NT] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART ESCHER STRING QUARTET

SUNDAY, JULY 17 [S] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MONDAY, JULY 18 [M] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MOZART & SAARIAHO

The Festival’s season-opening program features debuts by conductor James Gaffigan, music director of the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia, Spain, and Nicolas Namoradze, winner of the 2018 Honens International Piano Competition, as well as return appearances by pianist Zoltán Fejérvári and the Escher String Quartet. In addition to pioneering works by Mozart and Franck, the program includes the New Mexico premiere of a Festival-commissioned work: Kaija Saariaho’s Semafor for Eight Instruments. KAIJA SAARIAHO Semafor for Eight Instruments (Festival Co-Commission, New Mexico Premiere) MOZART Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, K. 493 FRANCK Piano Quintet in F Minor James Gaffigan, Zoltán Fejérvári, Nicolas Namoradze, L. P. How, Paul Huang, Che-Yen Chen, Joseph Johnson, Peter Stumpf, Leigh Mesh, Escher String Quartet (Adam Barnett-Hart, Brendan Speltz, Pierre Lapointe, Brook Speltz), Bart Feller, Todd Levy, Ted Soluri Sunday approximate length: 2 hours (with presentation) Monday approximate length: 1 hour and 45 minutes

The Escher String Quartet— one of today’s most in-demand ensembles—plays Dvořák’s gorgeous String Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 51, known for its Czech influences, and Ives’s arresting String Quartet No. 2, a seminal work in the American chamber music repertoire. IVES String Quartet No. 2 DVOŘÁK String Quartet in E-flat Major, Op. 51 Escher String Quartet (Adam Barnett-Hart, Brendan Speltz, Pierre Lapointe, Brook Speltz) Approximate length: 1 hour

WEDNESDAY, JULY 20 [W] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART KNUSSEN REQUIEM

BBC Philharmonic Chief Guest Conductor John Storgårds leads soprano Tony Arnold—renowned for her interpretations of contemporary and cuttingedge music—and an ensemble of Festival musicians in Oliver Knussen’s Requiem: Songs for Sue, which honors the 21stcentury master’s late wife. Mr. Storgårds also plays violin in Shostakovich’s tumultuous Piano Trio in E Minor, most of which the composer wrote while mourning the sudden death of a close friend. FAURÉ Sonata in A Major for Violin and Piano, Op. 13 KNUSSEN Requiem: Songs for Sue, Op. 33 SHOSTAKOVICH Piano Trio in E Minor, Op. 67 Tony Arnold, John Storgårds, Zoltán Fejérvári, Nicolas Namoradze, Paul Huang, Che-Yen Chen, Theresa Rudolph, Alastair Eng, Joseph Johnson, Peter Stumpf,

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w eek 1 The Festival’s 49th season begins with debuts by pianist Nicolas Namoradze and conductor James Gaffigan, a recital by pianist Zoltán Fejérvári, a performance of the beloved “Bach Double” violin concerto, and the return of the Escher String Quartet.

Leigh Mesh, Grace Browning, Rachel Blumenthal, Bart Feller, Todd Levy, YaoGuang Zhai, Taylor Eiffert, Jennifer Montone, Julia Pilant, Gregory Zuber Approximate length: 1 hour and 40 minutes

THURSDAY, JULY 21 [NTH] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART ZOLTÁN FEJÉRVÁRI PIANO RECITAL

Award-winning Hungarian pianist Zoltán Fejérvári plays dance-themed works by Schubert, Ravel, and Bartók as well as Bach’s virtuosic Partita in C Minor, BWV 826, on a program that spans the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. BACH Partita in C Minor, BWV 826 SCHUBERT Valses nobles, D. 969 RAVEL Valses nobles et sentimentales BARTÓK Dance Suite Zoltán Fejérvári Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes

SATURDAY, JULY 23 [B] 5 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BACH DOUBLE VIOLIN CONCERTO

On this wonderfully satisfying, Baroque-centered program, violinists John Storgårds and Paul Huang play one of the most cherished works of the violin repertoire—the so-called “Bach Double”; violist Che-Yen Chen and cellist Peter Stumpf solo in concertos by Telemann and C. P. E. Bach, respectively; and the Escher String Quartet plays Mozart’s starkly beautiful arrangement of Bach’s Fugue in E Major, BWV 878, from The Well-Tempered Clavier. J. S. BACH/MOZART Fugue in E Major, BWV 878, from The Well-Tempered Clavier/ K. 405, No. 3 TELEMANN Viola Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9 C. P. E. BACH Cello Concerto in A Major, Wq. 172, H. 439 J. S. BACH Concerto in D Minor for Two Violins, BWV 1043 Paul Huang, John Storgårds, Che-Yen Chen, Peter Stumpf, Escher String Quartet (Adam Barnett-Hart, Brendan Speltz, Pierre Lapointe, Brook Speltz), Leigh Mesh, Kathleen McIntosh Approximate length: 1 hour and 5 minutes

LEFT: Clockwise from top right: Zoltán Fejérvári, James Gaffigan. OPPOSITE PAGE: Nicolas Namoradze. ●

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SUNDAY, JULY 24 [S] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MONDAY, JULY 25 [M] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART HAYDN & SCHOENBERG

TUESDAY, JULY 26 [NT] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BENJAMIN HOCHMAN PLAYS BEETHOVEN

Conductor John Storgårds leads an ensemble of Festival musicians in an early-20thcentury masterpiece— Schoenberg’s pivotal Chamber Symphony No. 1—on a program that also includes Haydn’s String Quartet in G Major, Op. 77, No. 1 (one of his last such works), and Arensky’s dark-hued Quartet in A Minor, written by the young composer as an homage to Tchaikovsky after his death. HAYDN String Quartet in G Major, Op. 77, No. 1 SCHOENBERG Chamber Symphony in E Major, Op. 9 ARENSKY Quartet in A Minor for Violin, Viola, and Two Cellos, Op. 35

Pianist Benjamin Hochman plays three extraordinary sonatas that Beethoven wrote over the course of three consecutive years toward the end of his life. BEETHOVEN Sonata in E Major, Op. 109 BEETHOVEN Sonata in A-flat Major, Op. 110 BEETHOVEN Sonata in C Minor, Op. 111 Benjamin Hochman Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes

John Storgårds, L. P. How, Paul Huang, Che-Yen Chen, Eric Kim, Peter Stumpf, Leigh Mesh, Miami String Quartet (Benny Kim, Cathy Meng Robinson, Scott Lee, Keith Robinson), Bart Feller, Liang Wang, Robert Ingliss, Todd Levy, YaoGuang Zhai, Taylor Eiffert, Christopher Millard, Lewis Kirk, Jennifer Montone, Julia Pilant Approximate length: 1 hour and 40 minutes

ABOVE: Clockwise from right: Ida Kavafian, Eric Kim. OPPOSITE PAGE: Clockwise from right: Benjamin Hochman, Paul Groves.

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w eek 2 During the second week of the Festival, tenor Paul Groves and pianist Bradley Moore give the first piano-vocal recital of the season, Benjamin Hochman plays three Beethoven piano sonatas, and the Beijing Guitar Duo makes their Festival debut.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 [NW] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART PAUL GROVES & BRADLEY MOORE RECITAL

Award-winning tenor Paul Groves—who’s starred in productions at leading opera houses around the world, from La Scala to The Met— joins forces with acclaimed pianist Bradley Moore for a powerhouse program that includes five songs each by Schubert and Duparc, four songs by Liszt set to poems by Victor Hugo, and Kreisler’s arrangement of three songs by Rachmaninoff, which also feature violinist Ida Kavafian. LISZT “Comment, disaient-ils” LISZT “S’il est un charmant gazon” LISZT “Enfant, si j’étais roi” LISZT “Oh! Quand je dors” SCHUBERT “Lachen und Weinen,” D. 777

SCHUBERT “Du bist die Ruh,” D. 776 SCHUBERT “Die Forelle,” D. 550 SCHUBERT “Nacht und Träume,” D. 827 SCHUBERT “Rastlose Liebe,” D. 138 DUPARC “Le Manoir de Rosemonde” DUPARC “Chanson triste” DUPARC “Soupir” DUPARC “Extase” DUPARC “Phidylé” RACHMANINOFF “V molchan’i nochi taynoy,” Op. 4, No. 3 RACHMANINOFF “Zdes’ khorosho,” Op. 21, No. 7 RACHMANINOFF “Ne poy, krasavitsa, pri mne,” Op. 4, No. 4 Paul Groves, Bradley Moore, Ida Kavafian Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes


WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 [W] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART TCHAIKOVSKY SOUVENIR DE FLORENCE

THURSDAY, JULY 28 [NTH] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BARBER & FAURÉ

The Miami String Quartet plays Barber’s String Quartet— whose second movement the composer famously arranged as his profoundly moving Adagio for Strings—and Benjamin Hochman joins three of the ensemble’s members for Fauré’s Piano Quartet in G Minor, Op. 45, a work that bursts with passion and energy.

Internationally renowned violinist and violist Ida Kavafian joins forces with the Miami String Quartet and cellist Eric Kim for Tchaikovsky’s passionate, Italy-inspired Souvenir de Florence on a program that also includes Schubert’s sparkling Trio in B-flat Major and Mozart’s moody Wind Serenade. SCHUBERT Trio in B-flat Major, D. 471 MOZART Wind Serenade in C Minor, K. 388 TCHAIKOVSKY Souvenir de Florence, Op. 70 Ida Kavafian, Eric Kim, Miami String Quartet (Benny Kim, Cathy Meng Robinson, Scott Lee, Keith Robinson), Robert Ingliss, Liang Wang, Todd Levy, YaoGuang Zhai, Julia Harguindey, Christopher Millard, Jennifer Montone, Julia Pilant Approximate length: 1 hour and 35 minutes

BARBER String Quartet in B Major, Op. 11 FAURÉ Piano Quartet in G Minor, Op. 45 Benjamin Hochman, Miami String Quartet (Benny Kim, Cathy Meng Robinson, Scott Lee, Keith Robinson) Approximate length: 1 hour

SATURDAY, JULY 30 [B] 5 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BEIJING GUITAR DUO

The internationally acclaimed Beijing Guitar Duo—praised for their “elegant clarity, sumptuously beautiful tone production, and emotional contrast” by the San Francisco Classical Voice—makes their Festival debut with a program of Baroque masterworks by Bach and Scarlatti. SCARLATTI Sonata in B Minor, K. 173 SCARLATTI Sonata in D minor, K. 141 BACH Prelude, Fugue, and Allegro in E-flat Major, BWV 998 BACH Suite No. 4 in E Major, BWV 1006a BACH/BUSONI Chaconne from Partita No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1004 Beijing Guitar Duo (Meng Su, Yameng Wang)

ABOVE: Beijing Guitar Duo. OPPOSITE PAGE: Gilles Vonsattel.

Approximate length: 1 hour ●

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w eek 3 Gilles Vonsattel plays solo piano works by Debussy, Ravel, and Heinz Holliger; mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron and pianist Julius Drake perform songs by Brahms and Dvořák; and Festival musicians are featured in Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5.

SUNDAY, JULY 31 [S] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MONDAY, AUGUST 1 [M] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART SCHUBERT, RAVEL & BRAHMS

This gorgeous program— performed by six longtime Festival musicians—begins with violinist Jennifer Frautschi and pianist Benjamin Hochman playing Schubert’s delightful Sonatina in G Minor and also includes Ravel’s hypnotic Piano Trio in A Minor and Brahms’s dramatic String Quintet in G Major, Op. 111. SCHUBERT Sonatina in G Minor for Violin and Piano, D. 408 RAVEL Piano Trio in A Minor BRAHMS String Quintet in G Major, Op. 111 Benjamin Hochman, Jennifer Frautschi, Ida Kavafian, Daniel Phillips, Steven Tenenbom, Eric Kim Approximate length: 1 hour and 40 minutes

TUESDAY, AUGUST 2 [NT] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART GILLES VONSATTEL PIANO RECITAL

Gilles Vonsattel plays solo piano works by Ravel and the Swiss composer Heinz Holliger as well as several pieces by Debussy, including his Images suite, which Debussy (rightfully) predicted would “find [its] place in the literature of the piano…to the left of Schumann or to the right of Chopin.” RAVEL Sonatine DEBUSSY Images, Books I and II HEINZ HOLLIGER Elis—Three Nocturnes DEBUSSY Masques DEBUSSY D’un cahier d’esquisses DEBUSSY L’Isle joyeuse Gilles Vonsattel Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3 [NW] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART FLEUR BARRON & JULIUS DRAKE RECITAL

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3 [W] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BEACH & BEETHOVEN

In their Festival debuts, mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron and pianist Julius Drake perform several powerhouse miniatures, including Brahms’s atmospheric “Nachtwandler” and Ives’s distinctive arrangement of “At the River” as well as the Chinese folk song “Northeast Lullaby” and the Uyghur art song “Ananurhan,” which Zubaida Azezi wrote for Ms. Barron. The program also features Chen Yi’s two-song collection Meditation, which draws its text from ancient Chinese poetry, and two landmark song cycles: Berg’s Four Songs, Op. 2—a youthful, exploratory work that dates from Berg’s student days with Schoenberg—and Dvořák’s much-loved Cigánské melodie, Op. 55. BERG “Schlafen, schlafen,” Op. 2, No. 1 BRAHMS “Wie traulich war das Fleckchen,” Op. 63, No. 7 BERG “Schlafen trägt man mich,” Op. 2, No. 2 BRAHMS “O wüßt ich doch den Weg zurück,” Op. 63, No. 8 BERG “Nun ich der Riesen stärksten überwand,” Op. 2, No. 3 BRAHMS “Nachtwandler,” Op. 86, No. 3 BERG “Warm die Lüfte,” Op. 2, No. 4 DVOŘÁK Cigánské melodie, Op. 55 CHEN YI “Know You How Many Petals Falling?” from Meditation IVES “My Native Land” ZUBAIDA AZEZI “Ananurhan” IVES “At the River” CHEN YI “Monologue” from Meditation TRADITIONAL “Northeast Lullaby” Fleur Barron, Julius Drake Approximate length: 1 hour

The rhapsodic Piano Quintet of late-Romantic American master Amy Beach is at the center of this exciting program, which includes Three Romances by the Germanborn piano virtuoso Clara Schumann and Beethoven’s Storm Quintet, whose nickname comes from its evocative final movement. CLARA SCHUMANN Three Romances, Op. 22 BEACH Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 BEETHOVEN String Quintet in C Major, Op. 29, Storm Soyeon Kate Lee, Gilles Vonsattel, Jennifer Frautschi, Ida Kavafian, Daniel Phillips, Steven Tenenbom, Eric Kim Approximate length: 1 hour and 40 minutes

THURSDAY, AUGUST 4 [NTH] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MENDELSSOHN & RAN

Flutist Tara Helen O’Connor, violist Max Mandel, and harpist June Han give the world premiere of a Festivalcommissioned work by Pulitzer Prize–winning composer Shulamit Ran on a program that also includes Mendelssohn’s fiery Piano Trio in C Minor. SHULAMIT RAN New Work for Flute, Viola, and Harp (Festival Commission, World Premiere) MENDELSSOHN Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 66 Soyeon Kate Lee, Jennifer Frautschi, Max Mandel, Eric Kim, June Han, Tara Helen O’Connor Approximate length: 1 hour

POST-CONCERT TALK

Composer Shulamit Ran 10 ●


FRIDAY, AUGUST 5 [MM] 5 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART PRE-CONCERT TALK

Composers Detlev Glanert, Marco-Adrián Ramos, and Benjamin Scheer

FRIDAY, AUGUST 5 [MM] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART NEW MUSIC WITH FLUX QUARTET

The FLUX Quartet premieres Festival-commissioned works by the acclaimed German composer Detlev Glanert, who’s well known for his operas, and this year's participants in the Festival’s internationally renowned Young Composers String Quartet Project, Marco-Adrián Ramos and Benjamin Scheer. The concert also includes the string quartet Experiments in Living by the pioneering American composer George E. Lewis. MARCO-ADRIÁN RAMOS New Work for String Quartet (Festival Commission, World Premiere) BENJAMIN SCHEER New Work for String Quartet (Festival Commission, World Premiere) GEORGE E. LEWIS String Quartet No. 1.5: Experiments in Living DETLEV GLANERT String Quartet No. 3 (Festival Commission, World Premiere) FLUX Quartet (Tom Chiu, Conrad Harris, Max Mandel, Felix Fan) Approximate length: 1 hour

RIGHT: Soyeon Kate Lee

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6 [B] 5 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BACH BRANDENBURG CONCERTO NO. 5

This delightful program features three gems of the Baroque repertoire, including Handel’s Harp Concerto, with soloist June Han, and Bach’s perennially popular Brandenburg Concerto No. 5. HANDEL Harp Concerto in B-flat Major, Op. 4, No. 6 BACH Orchestral Suite in B Minor, BWV 1067 BACH Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D Major, BWV 1050 Gilles Vonsattel, L. P. How, Daniel Jordan, Daniel Phillips, Toby Appel, Alastair Eng, Mark Tatum, June Han, Bart Feller, Tara Helen O’Connor Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes


SUNDAY, AUGUST 7 [S] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART MONDAY, AUGUST 8 [M] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 1 Over the course of three programs, the Chien-KimWatkins Trio performs a cycle of the Beethoven Piano Trios, beginning here with the composer’s Op. 1, No. 1, followed by his popular Ghost Trio, whose nickname comes from its eerie second movement.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10 [NW] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART SUSANNA PHILLIPS & CRAIG TERRY RECITAL

Acclaimed soprano Susanna Phillips—known for her standout performances with the world’s leading opera houses and orchestras—makes her highly anticipated return to the Festival with an intimate recital with pianist Craig Terry. Program to be announced. Susanna Phillips, Craig Terry Approximate length: 1 hour

BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in E-flat Major, Op. 1, No. 1 BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in D Major, Op. 70, No. 1, Ghost BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in E-flat Major, Op. 70, No. 2

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10 [W] 6 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 2

For the second of three programs presenting the Festival's cycle of the Beethoven Piano Trios, the Chien-KimWatkins Trio plays three works, including the Piano Trio in C Minor, which reveals the awakening of Beethoven’s revolutionary spirit.

Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio (Gloria Chien, Soovin Kim, Paul Watkins) Approximate length: 2 hours

TUESDAY, AUGUST 9 [NT] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART DEBUSSY SONATAS

BEETHOVEN Variations on an Original Theme in E-flat Major for Piano Trio, Op. 44 BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3 BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in G Major, Op. 1, No. 2

This all-Debussy program features all three of the composer’s chamber music sonatas, which he wrote for a diverse set of instruments and display his signature elegance and spirit of innovation.

Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio (Gloria Chien, Soovin Kim, Paul Watkins)

DEBUSSY Sonata in D Minor for Cello and Piano, L. 144 DEBUSSY Sonata for Flute, Viola, and Harp, L. 137 DEBUSSY Sonata in G Minor for Violin and Piano, L. 148

Approximate length: 1 hour and 45 minutes

Gilles Vonsattel, Martin Beaver, Paul Neubauer, Peter Wiley, June Han, Tara Helen O’Connor Approximate length: 1 hour

ABOVE: Leila Josefowicz. OPPOSITE PAGE: Susanna Phillips. ●

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w eek 4 Violinist Leila Josefowicz appears in her first-ever Festival recital, and the newly formed Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio, in their Festival debut, plays the first two (of three) programs on the Beethoven Piano Trios series.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 11 [NTH] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART LEILA JOSEFOWICZ VIOLIN RECITAL

In this solo recital, violinist Leila Josefowicz—winner of a prestigious MacArthur Fellowship and one of today’s foremost champions of contemporary classical music—plays German composer Matthias Pintscher’s La Linea Evocativa: A Drawing for Violin Solo (which she premiered in New York City in 2020 via a virtual performance) and arguably Bach’s best-known work for solo violin: the Partita No 2 in D Minor. MATTHIAS PINTSCHER La Linea Evocativa: A Drawing for Violin Solo (New Mexico Premiere) BACH Partita No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1004 Leila Josefowicz Approximate length: 1 hour

SATURDAY, AUGUST 13 [B] 5 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART BAROQUE CONCERTOS

Concertos by the two bestknown Baroque masters— Bach and Vivaldi—showcase the virtuosic talents of pianist Kirill Gerstein, violinist Martin Beaver, and cellist Peter Wiley. VIVALDI Cello Concerto in G Minor, RV 417 TELEMANN Concerto in E Major for Flute, Oboe d’Amore, and Viola BACH Violin Concerto in A Minor, BWV 1041 BACH Keyboard Concerto in D Major, BWV 1054 Kirill Gerstein, Kathleen McIntosh, Martin Beaver, L. P. How, Daniel Jordan, Margaret Dyer Harris, Paul Neubauer, Alastair Eng, Peter Wiley, Mark Tatum, Bart Feller, Robert Ingliss Approximate length: 1 hour and 15 minutes


SUNDAY, AUGUST 14 [S] 6 PM LENSIC BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 3

The Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio brings the Festival’s Beethoven Piano Trios series to a close with a program that includes one of the composer’s most extraordinary works: the groundbreaking Archduke Trio. BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in B-flat Major, Op. 11 BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in G Major, Op. 121a, 10 Variations on ‘Ich bin der Schneider Kakadu’ BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in B-flat Major, Op. 97, Archduke Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio (Gloria Chien, Soovin Kim, Paul Watkins) Approximate length: 1 hour and 45 minutes

MONDAY, AUGUST 15 [M] 6 PM LENSIC QUARTET FOR THE END OF TIME

Pianist Kirill Gerstein, violinist Leila Josefowicz, cellist Paul Watkins, and clarinetist Carol McGonnell perform Messiaen’s transcendent Quartet for the End of Time— which the composer wrote during World War II, while being held in captivity— and Ms. McGonnell performs another standout 20th-century work: Stockhausen’s In Freundschaft. Ms. McGonnell and Mr. Gerstein also join forces with violist Paul Neubauer for Mozart’s charming and innovative Kegelstatt Trio. STOCKHAUSEN In Freundschaft (In Friendship) MOZART Trio in E-flat Major, K. 498, Kegelstatt MESSIAEN Quartet for the End of Time Kirill Gerstein, Leila Josefowicz, Paul Neubauer, Paul Watkins, Carol McGonnell Approximate length: 1 hour and 45 minutes

TUESDAY, AUGUST 16 [NT] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART KIRILL GERSTEIN PIANO RECITAL

Kirill Gerstein plays two stunning works: Schubert’s Beethoven-influenced Sonata in C Minor, which the composer wrote during the last months of his short life, and Liszt’s trailblazing Sonata in B Minor, which, despite being shunned by Liszt's peers, is widely considered his greatest piano composition.


w eek 5 Clarinetist Carol McGonnell—hailed as "a clarinet genius" by TimeOut New York—plays works by Mozart, Stockhausen, and Messiaen; Haochen Zhang, Kirill Gerstein, and Benjamin Hochman give solo piano recitals; and the Dover Quartet returns.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17 [W] 6 PM LENSIC SCHUBERT

SCHUBERT Sonata in C Minor, D. 958 LISZT Sonata in B Minor, S. 178 Kirill Gerstein Approximate length: 1 hour

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17 [NW] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART HAOCHEN ZHANG PIANO RECITAL

For this single-work program, Haochen Zhang, who won the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition at the age of 19, plays the stunningly difficult Transcendental Études by Liszt—one of history’s greatest piano virtuosos. In a testament to the rarefied talent this work demands, Schumann, another well-known pianist, described the études as “studies in storm and dread for, at the most, ten or twelve players in the world.” LISZT Études d’exécution transcendante (Transcendental Études) Haochen Zhang

Nicknamed the Arpeggione Sonata after the six-stringed, bowed guitar that was (briefly) popular in the early 19th century, Schubert’s Sonata in A Minor is often performed today in its cello-and-piano transcription, as it is here. This program also features two other works by Schubert, written within the final year of the composer’s life: the Allegretto in C Minor, played by pianist Haochen Zhang, and the beloved String Quintet in C Major. SCHUBERT Allegretto in C Minor, D. 915 SCHUBERT Sonata in A Minor for Cello and Piano, D. 821, Arpeggione SCHUBERT String Quintet in C Major, D. 956 Haochen Zhang, Martin Beaver, Leila Josefowicz, Paul Neubauer, Paul Watkins, Peter Wiley Approximate length: 1 hour and 45 minutes

Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes

Programs continue after the calendar.

ABOVE: Clockwise from right: Peter Wiley, Carol McGonnell. OPPOSITE PAGE: Kirill Gerstein. ●

15 ●


31

24

6 pm @ NMMA

SCHUBERT, RAVEL & BRAHMS

6 pm @ NMMA

HAYDN & SCHOENBERG

25

6 pm @ NMMA

SCHUBERT, RAVEL & BRAHMS

AUGUST 1

6 pm @ NMMA

HAYDN & SCHOENBERG

6 pm @ NMMA

Noon @ NMMA

Noon @ NMMA

Noon @ NMMA

VONSATTEL PIANO RECITAL

HOCHMAN PLAYS BEETHOVEN

2

26

19

ESCHER STRING QUARTET

18

MOZART & SAARIAHO

JULY 17

6 pm @ NMMA

MOZART & SAARIAHO

Tue

Mon

Sun

6 pm @ NMMA

BEACH & BEETHOVEN

Noon @ NMMA

BARRON & DRAKE RECITAL

6 pm @ NMMA

SOUVENIR DE FLORENCE

3

27

20

GROVES & MOORE RECITAL

Noon @ NMMA

6 pm @ NMMA

KNUSSEN REQUIEM

Wed Noon @ NMMA

Noon @ NMMA

MENDELSSOHN & RAN

Noon @ NMMA

BARBER & FAURÉ

FEJÉRVÁRI PIANO RECITAL

4

28

21

Thu

6 pm @ NMMA

NEW MUSIC WITH FLUX

5

29

22

Fri 5 pm @ NMMA

5 pm @ NMMA

BRANDENBURG CONCERTO NO. 5

5 pm @ NMMA

BEIJING GUITAR DUO

6

30

BACH DOUBLE VIOLIN CONCERTO

23

S at


21

14

6 pm @ LENSIC

BERNSTEIN CLARINET SONATA

6 pm @ LENSIC

BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 3

6 pm @ NMMA

BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 1

7

15

6 pm @ LENSIC

HAYDN & SCHUMANN

Noon @ NMMA

GERSTEIN PIANO RECITAL

Noon @ NMMA

DEBUSSY SONATAS

9

16

Noon @ NMMA

6 pm @ LENSIC

SCHUBERT

Noon @ NMMA

ZHANG PIANO RECITAL

6 pm @ NMMA

BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 2

17

PHILLIPS & TERRY RECITAL

10

Noon @ NMMA

DOVER QUARTET

Noon @ NMMA

JOSEFOWICZ VIOLIN RECITAL

18

11

6 pm @ NMMA

INDIAN MARKET CONCERT—FREE

19

12

20

13

HOCHMAN BAROQUE RECITAL 6 pm @ LENSIC

5 pm @ NMMA

BAROQUE CONCERTOS

Programs and artists are current as of Tuesday, January 4, 2022, but are subject to change. For up-to-date information, please visit the Festival’s website at SantaFeChamberMusic.com.

NMMA: St. Francis Auditorium in the New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave. LENSIC: The Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St.

22 CONCERT HALLS

QUARTET FOR THE END OF TIME

6 pm @ LENSIC

6 pm @ NMMA

BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS 1

8


THURSDAY, AUGUST 18 [NTH] 12 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART DOVER QUARTET

The Dover Quartet—dubbed “the young American string quartet of the moment” by The New Yorker—plays two affecting works: Mozart’s Dissonance String Quartet, whose unusual introduction yields the work’s nickname, and Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 4 in D Major, Op. 83, filled with complexities and contradictions that reflect the composer’s anguish over the atrocities of World War II and living under Stalin’s regime. MOZART String Quartet in C Major, K. 465, Dissonance SHOSTAKOVICH String Quartet No. 4 in D Major, Op. 83 Dover Quartet (Joel Link, Bryan Lee, Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt, Camden Shaw) Approximate length: 1 hour

SATURDAY, AUGUST 20 [B] 6 PM LENSIC BENJAMIN HOCHMAN BAROQUE RECITAL

Following appearances earlier in the season, pianist Benjamin Hochman returns with a rich recital program featuring works by two 16th-century Renaissance composers—the French-born Josquin des Prez and the English-born John Bull—two of Bach’s lively English Suites, and Oliver Knussen’s dreamlike Prayer Bell Sketch, a late-20th-century piece inspired by an intimate conversation Knussen had with his friend and fellow composer Toru Takemitsu. DES PREZ/WUORINEN Ave Christe BACH English Suite No. 2 in A Minor, BWV 807 BULL Fantasia, FVB 108 BULL Ut, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, FVB 51 KNUSSEN Prayer Bell Sketch, Op. 29 BACH English Suite No. 5 in E Minor, BWV 810 Benjamin Hochman Approximate length: 1 hour and 10 minutes

18 ●


f in a l e The Festival brings its 2022 season to a close with the New Mexico premiere of Marc Neikrug’s Piano Quintet No. 2, played by Haochen Zhang and the Dover Quartet, and cherished works by Bernstein, Ravel, Haydn, and Schumann.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 21 [S] 5 PM LENSIC PRE-CONCERT TALK

MONDAY, AUGUST 22 [M] 6 PM LENSIC HAYDN & SCHUMANN

Composer Marc Neikrug

SUNDAY, AUGUST 21 [S] 6 PM LENSIC BERNSTEIN CLARINET SONATA

Pianist Haochen Zhang and the Dover Quartet give the New Mexico premiere of Festival Artistic Director Marc Neikrug’s Piano Quintet No. 2—a work all five musicians premiered at The Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, in 2021— and the Dover also plays one of Ravel’s early masterpieces: the stunning String Quartet in F Minor. Clarinetist Todd Levy opens the program with Bernstein’s well-loved Clarinet Sonata, which was the iconic American composer’s first published work. BERNSTEIN Clarinet Sonata MARC NEIKRUG Piano Quintet No. 2 (New Mexico Premiere) RAVEL String Quartet in F Major

On the season-finale program, the Dover Quartet plays two exquisite works—Haydn’s lyrical Lark Quartet and Schumann’s exuberant Piano Quintet, featuring pianist Haochen Zhang—and Robert Ingliss, principal oboe of the New Jersey Symphony and The Santa Fe Opera Orchestra, solos in Mario Lavista’s enthralling Marsias for Oboe and Eight Crystal Glasses. MARIO LAVISTA Marsias for Oboe and Eight Crystal Glasses HAYDN String Quartet in D Major, Op. 64, No. 5, Hob. III:63, The Lark SCHUMANN Piano Quintet in E-flat Major, Op. 44 Haochen Zhang, Dover Quartet (Joel Link, Bryan Lee, Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt, Camden Shaw), Robert Ingliss Approximate length: 1 hour and 30 minutes

Haochen Zhang, Dover Quartet (Joel Link, Bryan Lee, Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt, Camden Shaw), Todd Levy Approximate length: 1 hour and 30 minutes

ABOVE: Haochen Zhang. OPPOSITE PAGE: Dover Quartet. ●

19 ●


V OIC E

Tony Arnold, soprano Susanna Phillips, soprano Fleur Barron, mezzo-soprano* Paul Groves, tenor

P I A NO

Julius Drake* Zoltán Fejérvári Kirill Gerstein Benjamin Hochman Soyeon Kate Lee Bradley Moore* Nicolas Namoradze* Craig Terry* Gilles Vonsattel Haochen Zhang

CELLO

Alastair Eng Joseph Johnson Eric Kim Keith Robinson Peter Stumpf Paul Watkins* Peter Wiley

DOUB L E B A S S Leigh Mesh Mark Tatum

GUI TA R

Roberto Capocchi

H A RP

Grace Browning June Han

H A R P S IC HOR D

Kathleen McIntosh Gilles Vonsattel

FLUTE

Rachel Blumenthal* Bart Feller Tara Helen O’Connor

V IOL IN

Martin Beaver Jennifer Frautschi L. P. How Paul Huang Daniel Jordan Leila Josefowicz Ida Kavafian Benny Kim Daniel Phillips John Storgårds

OB OE

Robert Ingliss Liang Wang

C L A RINE T

Todd Levy Carol McGonnell YaoGuang Zhai*

B A S S CL A RINE T

V IOL A

Taylor Eiffert

Toby Appel Che-Yen Chen Margaret Dyer Harris Ida Kavafian Scott Lee Max Mandel Paul Neubauer Theresa Rudolph Steven Tenenbom

B A S S OON

Julia Harguindey Christopher Millard Ted Soluri

C ON T R A B A S S OON Lewis Kirk ●

20 ●


2022 F es t i va l a rt is t s

HOR N

Jennifer Montone Julia Pilant

P E RC U S S ION

Gregory Zuber

G A L A C E L E B R AT ION ARTIST

Nicolas Namoradze, piano*

A R T I S T S ’ C IRC L E A R T I S T S

C ONDUC T OR

James Gaffigan* John Storgårds

Shai Wosner, piano Amy Yang, piano Danbi Um, violin Hsin-Yun Huang, viola Escher String Quartet

E N S E MB L E S

MOZ ART SOCIE T Y ARTIS T

Beijing Guitar Duo* Meng Su, guitar Yameng Wang, guitar Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio* Gloria Chien, piano Soovin Kim, violin Paul Watkins, cello Dover Quartet Joel Link, violin Bryan Lee, violin Milena Pajaro-van de Stadt, viola Camden Shaw, cello Escher String Quartet Adam Barnett-Hart, violin Brendan Speltz, violin Pierre Lapointe, viola Brook Speltz, cello FLUX Quartet Tom Chiu, violin Conrad Harris, violin Max Mandel, viola Felix Fan, cello Miami String Quartet Benny Kim, violin Cathy Meng Robinson, violin Scott Lee, viola Keith Robinson, cello

Meng Su, guitar

PL ATINUM DINNER ARTIS T S Gloria Chien, piano Soovin Kim, violin *Festival debut Programs and artists current as of Tuesday, January 4, 2022 BELOW: Paul Huang



T HE F ES T I VA L’S 2022 GA L A CEL EBR AT ION Save the Date: Wednesday, July 13, 2022

The Festival’s 49th Season Gala Celebration is a pre-season opportunity to enjoy world-class music with friends and fellow music lovers amid the beauty and excitement of Santa Fe in the summer. On July 13, pianist Nicolas Namoradze, who makes his Festival debut this season, kicks off the celebration with a private recital in St. Francis Auditorium at the New Mexico Museum of Art. The evening is topped off with a cocktail reception and gourmet dinner at La Terraza at La Fonda on the Plaza.

JOIN US for this memorable evening, which supports all five of the Festival’s vital year-round music education programs: • Music in Our Schools, Strings in Our Schools, and Guitar in Our Schools • The Dream Big Private Lesson Program • Youth Concerts Proceeds from the weekend’s events will allow the Festival to share the gift of music with thousands of local schoolchildren, introducing them to the joys of listening to music and the thrill of hands-on music-making.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

about the Festival’s Gala Celebration, contact Cece Derringer, Director of Development, at 505.983.2075, ext. 108; 505.310.1103; or cderringer@sfcmf.org.

23 ●


24 ●


THE FESTIVAL’S ARTISTS’ CIRCLE & MOZART SOCIETY

THE ARTISTS’ CIRCLE

Become a member of the Festival’s Artists’ Circle and enjoy Festival recitals all year long! Members are invited to attend several intimate, private recitals—held throughout the year in Santa Fe’s most beautiful and historic venues—and mingle with the artists at the Artists’ Circle receptions.

2022 ARTISTS’ CIRCLE RECITALS Friday, January 21: Hsin-Yun Huang, viola Gerald Peters Contemporary This concert has been postponed in accordance with COVID safety protocols. For updates, please visit SantaFeChamberMusic.com. Friday, April 8: Danbi Um, violin, and Amy Yang, piano International Folk Art Museum Sunday, July 24: Escher String Quartet San Miguel Chapel Friday, October 21: Shai Wosner, piano Acequia Madre House

ADDITIONAL BENEFITS

Platinum and Diamond donors are also invited to attend our Platinum Dinner, which includes dinner and a private recital by at least one of the Festival’s artists. This year’s Platinum Dinner is on Tuesday, August 9, at La Posada de Santa Fe and features pianist Gloria Chien and violinist Soovin Kim.

ARTISTS’ CIRCLE MEMBERSHIP Silver:........................................................................$2,000–$2,999 Gold: .........................................................................$3,000–$4,999 Platinum: ..................................................................$5,000–$9,999 Diamond: ........................................................... $10,000 and above

25 ●


THE MOZART SOCIETY

Since its founding in 1972, the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival has brought together world-class musicians to perform stellar musical masterworks that resonate long after the final note is played. By including the Festival in your estate plans, you can be part of making that legacy live on for future generations. The Festival established The Mozart Society to thank donors who’ve made a commitment to the organization through a bequest, and every year the Festival celebrates its Mozart Society members with a private recital. In 2022, the recital is on Friday, July 29, at 5:30 p.m. at the School for Advanced Research and features guitarist Meng Su.

FOR DETAILS ON HOW TO JOIN

the Festival’s Artists’ Circle or Mozart Society, contact Cece Derringer, Director of Development, at 505.983.2075, ext. 108; 505.310.1103; or cderringer@sfcmf.org.


Communi t y E v en t s

FESTIVAL RADIO SERIES

If you missed a concert last season or want to hear one again, tune in to our national radio broadcasts, produced and distributed by the WFMT Radio Network and available on more than 350 affiliates. Check your local station’s schedule—if your station doesn’t carry the broadcasts, please ask them to—or visit SantaFeChamberMusic.com/radio-programs to stream performances from previous seasons.

YOUTH CONCERT–FREE!

The Festival’s Youth Concert series is a great way to get children interested in music and expand the musical knowledge they already have. The series features Festival musicians engaging children with fascinating storytelling— about composers, instruments, music, and musical styles— as well as performing repertoire drawn directly from the Festival’s regular programming.

MONDAY, JULY 25 10 AM NM MUSEUM OF ART HAYDN STRING QUARTET

Miami String Quartet Benny Kim, violin Cathy Meng Robinson, violin Scott Lee, viola Keith Robinson, cello Youth Concerts are generously sponsored by

INDIAN MARKET CONCERT–FREE! FRIDAY, AUGUST 19 6–7 PM NM MUSEUM OF ART

Roberto Capocchi, guitar These free Festival events are presented in partnership with the New Mexico Museum of Art.

27 ●


SUBSCRIPTION PACKAGES

Choose from one (or more!) of our eight subscription packages and get the best deals on prices and seats.

MUSIC AT NOON Need to Know

[S] SUNDAY SERIES

6 concerts: July 17, 24, 31; August 7, 14, 21 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art & Lensic

• There are 3 Music at Noon subscription series: Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. • Purchase a subscription to 1, 2, or all 3 series. • All concerts within a subscription package must be on the same day of the week (e.g., a Tuesday subscription package consists of only Tuesday concerts).

[M] MONDAY SERIES

6 concerts: July 18, 25; August 1, 8, 15, 22 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art & Lensic

[NT] MUSIC AT NOON TUESDAYS

5 concerts: July 19, 26; August 2, 9, 16 12 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art

THE BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS PACKAGE:

[NW] MUSIC AT NOON WEDNESDAYS

Sunday, August 7 & Monday, August 8, 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art

4 concerts: July 27; August 3, 10, 17 12 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art

Wednesday, August 10, 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art Sunday, August 14, 6 pm / Lensic

[W] WEDNESDAY SERIES

5 concerts: July 20, 27; August 3, 10, 17 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art & Lensic

Need to Know

• The Chien-Kim-Wakins Trio performs 9 Beethoven Piano Trios over the course of 3 programs. • Order early to improve your chances of having your first-choice seats for all 3 programs. • Choose from 3 price points, beginning at $90 for the least-expensive full package. • Subscribers to the Sunday, Monday, and Wednesday series receive a deeper discount and priority seating. If you’re a subscriber, please call the Festival Ticket Office for details. • Patrons who purchase the Beethoven Piano Trios package have priority seating over non-package ticket buyers.

[NTH] MUSIC AT NOON THURSDAYS

5 concerts: July 21, 28; August 4, 11, 18 12 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art

[MM] MODERN MASTERS

1 Friday: August 5 6 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art

[B] BACH PLUS

5 Saturdays: July 23, 30; August 6, 13, 20 5 pm / New Mexico Museum of Art 6 pm / Lensic

28 ●


T ick e t s There are lots of ways you can see our concerts this season, whether you renew your subscription, become a brand-new subscriber, purchase a FlexPass, or buy individual tickets to a specific concert. Whatever you need, we’ve got you covered!

SUBSCRIBER BENEFITS Why should you become a subscriber? Many great reasons!

YOUR SAME SEATS, GUARANTEED, year

after year, for as long as you subscribe

BETTER SEATS and advance non-subscription ticketpurchase privileges SUBSCRIBERS TO ANY SERIES SAVE $5 when

adding any evening concert

NO HANDLING FEE on regular subscriptions

SIXPASS+: if you need more FLEXibility: • 6 or more evening concerts in Level 1 seating (not available for Music at Noon concerts) • 4% discount on orders of 6 or more evening concerts • Available only through the Festival Ticket Office FLEXPASS BENEFITS:

• Seat selection available at time of purchase • 4% discount on any additional evening concerts • Program notes emailed before the start of the season

THE FINE PRINT:

EASY TICKET EXCHANGE OR TICKET DONATION PROGRAM NOTES DELIVERED BY E-MAIL in

advance of the Festival season

FLEXPASSES

Can’t commit to a full subscription but want more than individual tickets can offer? A Festival FlexPass is the perfect solution.

THE 5-IN-7 PASS: a great

option if you’re staying in Santa Fe for a short period of time: • 5 concerts for $255 • Pass must be used within a 7-day period (starting any day of the week) and include 1 Sunday or Monday concert, 2 Music at Noon concerts, 1 Wednesday or Thursday evening concert, and 1 Saturday concert • Available only through the Festival Ticket Office ●

• FlexPasses available for purchase only through the Festival Ticket Office • Add-on discount available only through the Festival Ticket Office • Add-on discount applies only to evening concerts in the current season • $5-per-order handling fee (no fee for additional tickets purchased within the same season); $1 mailing fee; $4 exchange fee per ticket (available only through the Festival Ticket Office)

INDIVIDUAL TICKETS

If a subscription or FlexPass isn’t for you, you can buy individual tickets to any of our concerts. See the chart to the right for 2022 ticket prices.

29 ●


2022 PRICING Series

[S] [M]

# of Subscription Concerts Prices

Sunday Series

Monday Series

NON-SUBSCRIPTION TICKET LEVELS STARTING AT  1 2 3 4

6

$540

98

72

45

15

6

$540

98

72

45

15 15

[W]

Wednesday Series

5

$350

80

57

40

[B]

Bach Plus

5

$275

58

45

15

Music at Noon Tuesdays

5

$195

40

35

4

$156

40

35

5

$195

40

35

1

n/a.

[ NT ] [ NW ] [ NTH ] [ MM ]

Music at Noon Wednesdays Music at Noon Thursdays Modern Masters

General Admission $10

 Lensic performances only

 All pricing is current as of Tuesday, January 4, 2022. BEETHOVEN PIANO TRIOS PACKAGE 3-concert package

180

Individual concerts

132

90

Varies by performance

FEES: There is a Lensic Performing Arts Center Preservation Fee of $3 per ticket for any performance held at The Lensic.

ST. FRANCIS AUDITORIUM IN THE NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

107 W. Palace Ave., Santa Fe

stage

THE LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

211 W. San Francisco St., Santa Fe

stage

All Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival concerts will be presented in compliance with the most up-to-date COVID safety practices, which may include wearing a mask and providing proof of vaccination. For the latest requirements, please call our Ticket Office at 505.982.1890 or visit SantaFeChamberMusic.com/COVID-Updates.


order form 1. ORDER SERIES TICKETS # of Seats

Series Name

Series Price

Music at Noon Series:  Tue  Wed  Thu

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

Total Series 2. ADD BEETHOVEN TRIOS 3-CONCERT PACKAGE

Subtotal

$

$ $

Total Package

$

3. ADD INDIVIDUAL TICKETS (Subscribers: Remember to discount ticket prices $5 per ticket when adding any evening concert.) # of Seats

Concert Title

4. INDICATE PREFERRED SEATING (subject to availability): St. Francis Auditorium:  Main Floor  Balcony  Left The Lensic Performing Arts Center:  Main Floor  Mezzanine  Left 5. I would like my tickets (check one)  Mailed (early June 2022)

Price

Subtotal

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

 Right  Right

 Held at Will Call

6. LENSIC PRESERVATION FEE Please add $3 per ticket for any Lensic performance. Subscribers: Sunday/Monday/Bach Plus Series: $6 per subscription; Wednesday Series: $3 per subscription; Beethoven Trios Package: $3 per package

Order form continues on next page.

$


7. PLEASE SUPPORT the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival with a generous tax-deductible gift. Thank you!  Friend ($1–$99)  Donor ($100–$249)  Contributor ($250–$499)  Supporter ($500–$999)  Associate ($1,000–$1,999) Artists’ Circle:  Silver ($2,000–$2,999)  Gold ($3,000–$4,999)  Platinum ($5,000–$9,999)  Diamond ($10,000 and above)

Total Contribution

$

GRAND TOTAL

$

8. METHOD OF PAYMENT  Please charge my credit card. To pay by check, please contact the Festival Ticket Office at 505.982.1890. Credit Card #

Exp. Date

Name on Card (please print) Signature Name Mailing Address City

State

Day Phone

Cell Phone

Zip

E-mail Address (to stay up to date with Festival insider news and receive program notes)

THANK YOU!

4 EASY WAYS TO RENEW OR SUBSCRIBE PHONE:

505.982.1890

MAIL:

Tickets, Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival PO Box 2227, Santa Fe, NM 87504-2227

EMAIL:

tickets@sfcmf.org

IN PERSON:

Ticket Office, 208 Griffin St., Santa Fe

The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival is funded, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts and New Mexico Arts, a division of the Office of Cultural Affairs.



Beethoven’s Piano Trios.

and the Chien-Kim-Watkins Trio plays

mezzo-soprano Fleur Barron debuts,

Violinist Leila Josefowicz returns,

505.983.2075 or 888.221.9836 SantaFeChamberMusic.com

PO Box 2227 Santa Fe, NM 87504-2227


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