Aug 17: Fenimore String Quartet

Cherry Valley Star Theatre: Artworks Concert Series

15th Anniversary Concert and Celebration

  • August 17, 2025, 7:30 pm, doors open at 7:00 pm
  • Star Theater, 44 Main St., Cherry Valley, NY
  • Admission: $25 for general public, $20 for Glimmerglass staff, free for Glimmerglass Orchestra Musicians, includes champagne reception. Click here to purchase tickets.

The Fenimore String Quartet

  • Ruotao Mao, violin I
  • Robyn Quinnett, violin II
  • Amy Tompkins, viola
  • Ruth Berry, cello
  • Jeremiah Blacklow, guest artist, viola

Join us for a radiant evening of music, memory, and celebration as the Fenimore String Quartet returns to Cherry Valley Artworks, the place where it all began in 2011. Over the past 15 summers, the Quartet has evolved into one of the summer season’s most beloved chamber ensembles—praised for its expressive depth, technical precision, and the unmistakable warm of long-standing musical relationships.

Every summer, members of the Fenimore String Quartet converge in beautiful upstate New York, where several perform with the Glimmerglass Festival Orchestra and all immerse themselves in chamber music whenever time allows. The Quartet blends the seasoned experience of world-class chamber musicians with the joy of personal connection, creating collaborations that are both artistically rich and deeply human. Their performances have become a cherished highlight of the Cherry Valley Artworks series and surrounding communities.

The program begins with Pannonia Boundless by Aleksandra Vrebalov, whom followers of Glimmerglass will recognize from her opera The Knock, commissioned by the Festival. Here, Vrebalov conjures the windswept spirit of the Pannonian Plain, evoking a sense of place, ancestry, and expansiveness—a perfect metaphor for the Quartet’s own journey through landscapes both musical and personal.

At the heart of the gala is Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet in F major, the very piece that launched the Quartet’s debut in 2011. Shimmering, rhythmic, and full of nuance, it stands as a signature of the group’s interpretive voice—a voice that gains new dimensions with each passing season.

The evening culminates with W.A. Mozart’s String Quintet in G minor, K. 516, featuring guest violist Jeremiah Blacklow. Inspired in part by Michael Haydn’s innovation of adding a second viola, Mozart elevated the form to unprecedented heights. A favorite instrument of Mozart’s in chamber settings, the viola’s inner voice opportunities and harmonic richness anchor a work now recognized as a landmark of 18th-century chamber music. Like his greatest operas, the quintet captures the art of conversation (not just in sound, but in action)through solo “arias,” spirited ensemble exchanges, flashes of wit, and deep introspection. Its emotional breadth and structural brilliance mark it as one of Mozart’s most iconic and influential achievements.

Program

Pannonia Boundless (1999)

Aleksandra Vrebalov (b. 1970)

String Quartet in F major (1903)
I. Allegro moderato – très doux
II. Assez vif – très rythmé
III. Très lent
IV. Vif et agité

Maurice Ravel (1875–1937)

Intermission

String Quintet in G minor, K. 516 (1787) for two violins, two violas, and cello
I. Allegro
II. Menuetto: Allegretto
III. Adagio ma non troppo
IV. Adagio – Allegro

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)

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Aug 4: Fenimore String Quartet

Cherry Valley Star Theatre: Artworks Concert Series

  • August 4, 2024, 7:30 pm
  • Star Theater, 44 Main St., Cherry Valley, NY
  • Admission: $20 general public, $15 Glimmerglass Orchesta/Staff

The Fenimore String Quartet

  • Ruotao Mao, violin I
  • Robyn Quinnett, violin II
  • Amy Tompkins, viola
  • Ruth Berry, cello
  • Anna Betka, piano

The Fenimore Quartet blends the experience of seasoned chamber players with the richness of long friendships to create a perfect backdrop for the exciting musical collaborations which are fast becoming an eagerly awaited summer treat at the Cherry Valley New York Artworks Concert Series and the surrounding area communities in beautiful upstate New York.

Program

String Quartet in G minor, Op. 10
Animé et très décidé
Assez vif et bien rythmé
Andantino, doucement expressif
Très modéré – En animant peu à peu – Très mouvementé et avec passion
Claude Debussy (1862 –1918)
Intermission  

Piano Quintet , Op. 44
I. Allegro brillante
II. In modo d’una marcia. Un poco largamente
III. Scherzo: Molto vivace
IV. Allegro ma non troppo

Robert Schumann (1810 – 1856)

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Aug 6: Fenimore String Quartet & Friends

Cherry Valley Star Theatre: Artworks Concert Series

  • August 6, 2022, 7:30 pm
  • Star Theater, 44 Main St., Cherry Valley, NY
  • Admission: $20. Click here to purchase tickets.
  • Works by Felix Mendelssohn and Max Bruch

The Fenimore String Quartet and Friends

  • Ruotao Mao, violin
  • Robyn Quinnett, violin
  • Amy Tompkins, viola
  • Ruth Berry, cello

Guest artists:

  • Sasha Margolis, Debrah Devine, violins
  • Angelika Teng, viola, Jon Pascolini, double-bass

The Fenimore Quartet blends the experience of seasoned chamber players with the richness of long friendships to create a perfect backdrop for the exciting musical collaborations which are fast becoming an eagerly awaited summer treat at the Cherry Valley New York Artworks Concert Series and the surrounding area communities in beautiful upstate New York.

Program

String Quartet No. 6 in f minor, Op. posth. 80
I. Allegro vivace assai
II. Allegro assai
III. Adagio
IV. Finale: Allegro molto
Felix Mendelssohn (1809–1847)
String Octet in B-flat Major, op. posthumous
I. Allegro moderato
II. Adagio
III. Allegro molto
Max Bruch (1838–1920)

There are some interesting facts about this combination of pieces and composers in tonight’s program:

Mendelssohn’s String Quartet in f minor was written in 1847 and Bruch’s String Octet in B-flat Major for 4 violins, 2 violas, cello and double-bass was written in 1920. Both works are the final major works of their composers. However, the quartet was published in1848, a year after Mendelssohn’s death, and the octet was not published until 1996. It is believed that Mendelssohn wrote this quartet as an homage to his sister, Fanny Mendelssohn, who died earlier that year. Coincidentally, Bruch’s wife, Clara, died the year before he composed the octet. The choice of somber E-flat minor for the second movement seems to reflect his emotions toward his recent loss.

One often finds Mendelssohn and Bruch paired in a compact disc featuring their violin concertos. And if a string octet is featured in a program, most of the time it would be the famous Mendelssohn Octet. Tonight, we will feature the same two composers but with a Mendelssohn Quartet and the Bruch Octet.

Mendelssohn’s string quartet in f minor is filled with high intensified passion and fire which is rarely found in his earlier works. The first movement is characterized by tremolo-like sixteenth notes throughout the movement. The second movement is a scherzo in form, but it, too, is highly dramatic with rhythmical complexities (the outer sections) and clashing of contrasting characters (the middle section). The third movement is a beautiful, heart-felt Adagio followed by a stormy and almost angry final movement characterized by syncopated rhythm in the main theme.

Bruch’s Octet is in three movements, much like Mozarts’s Divertimentos but on a larger scale. The first movement opens with a gorgeously lyrical viola solo, and that lyrical character carries through the whole movement even during highly dramatic sections. The second movement is in a darker key, E-flat minor. It opens with a march-like motiv which becomes the accompaniment figure under a first violin melody. The middle section is marked “Andante con molto di moto” (leisure speed with a lot of motion) and has been called “the highlight of the work” by some critics. The final movement combines characters of playful, noble (2nd theme on the cello) and triumphant. The playfulness gives one a balanced sense of scherzo which is “missing” in the work. Overall, it’s a top level masterpiece which was relatively unknown and seldom performed before its first publication just 27 years ago.

(Program Notes by Ruotao Mao)

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