The Afiara String Quartet perform the fourth movement of Mendelssohn's Op. 44 quartet.
Winner of the 2008 Concert Artists Guild International Competition, the Afiara String Quartet has been praised as a terrifically unified, versatile, and moving ensemble with startling intensity and a powerful, keen-edged collective sound (San Francisco Classical Voice). This all-Canadian group has been named The Juilliard Schools new graduate resident string quartet beginning in 2009-10, including studies with and assistant duties to The Juilliard String Quartet and a Lincoln Center recital in May 2010. Complimented for its energy, style and pizzazz by David Harrington of the Kronos Quartet, the Afiara appeared at Carnegie Hall on the Kronos: Signature Works series and Chamber Music Americas National Conference tribute to the Kronos.
In addition to its win at the 2008 CAG Competition, the Quartet claimed a top prize at the prestigious Munich ARD International Music Competition in the same year. From 2007-2009, the Quartet was the Morrison Fellowship Quartet-in-Residence at San Francisco State University's International Center for the Arts (ICA), where the members were teaching assistants to their mentor ensemble, the Alexander String Quartet. One of two fellowship quartets at the 2008 Aspen Festival's Center for Advanced Quartet Studies, the Afiara Quartet also serves as Artist-in-Residence at Lake Tahoe Music Festival's Education and Outreach Program and is an Affiliate of San Francisco Friends of Chamber Music. The ensemble has been heard on Bavarian Radio, CBC Radio 2, KALW, and was featured in the Road to Banff documentary profiling its participation in the 2007 Banff International String Quartet Competition.
Season highlights for 2009-10 include the Quartets debut at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall on the CAG Winners series, as well as concerts at the Library of Congress, Lincoln Centers Alice Tully Hall, Schneider Concerts at the New School, Purdue University Convocations Series, Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts, and in California at Montalvo Arts Center and Morrison Artist Series. In Canada, the ensemble performs at the Mooredale Concert Series and at Festival of the Sound, and enjoys return engagements with the Montreal and Ottawa International Chamber Music Festivals. The Afiara Quartet also begins a new Visiting Quartet Residency of concerts and teaching with the Glenn Gould School at Torontos Royal Conservatory of Music.
In 2008-2009, the Afiara Quartet performed for the San Jose Chamber Music Society, Sierra Chamber Society Chamber Music in Occidental, Old First Church Concerts and in Canada with the Calgary ProMusica Series and the Montreal International Chamber Music Festival. The Quartet also appears on San Francisco Performances at Herbst Theatre (Mendelssohn Octet with the Alexander String Quartet), with pianist Stephen Prutsman in San Jose and at Nevada City's Music in the Mountains, as well as with Bonnie Hampton at the Starcross Festival (Schubert Cello Quintet). Under the auspices of the ICA, the Afiara Quartet releases its debut CD on the Foghorn Classics label in Fall 2009, featuring quartets by Mendelssohn and Schubert, and the Mendelssohn Octet with the Alexander Quartet.
To date, the Afiara String Quartet has given the world premieres of Brett Abigana's Une Grande Messe and Jason Bush's Visions in San Francisco (the latter of which was written for the Afiara), and the East Coast premiere of Peteris Vasks' String Quartet in New York. Together with timpanist Louis Siu, they commissioned and premiered chamber music repertoire for string quartet and tenor timpani. The ensemble also gave the world premiere of Huck Hodge's String Quartet No. 2 in New York with the support of the American Composers Forum and the Jerome Foundation.
In addition to their studies with the Alexander String Quartet, the Afiara players have worked with numerous musicians including the American, Cavani, Emerson, Kronos, Takacs and Ying Quartets, Earl Carlyss, James Dunham, Henk Guittart, Bonnie Hampton, Geoff Nuttall, Barry Shiffman and Scott St. John, and at the San Francisco Conservatory with Paul Hersh, Mark Sokol and Ian Swensen. They also collaborate and perform with the rap group Blunt Delphix.
Formed in 2006, the Afiara String Quartet takes its name from the Spanish fiar, meaning to trust, a basic element vital to the depth and joy of its music-making. The ensemble is committed to education, connecting with diverse audiences and sharing music with those less fortunate. The Quartet has served as faculty at Chamber Music of the Rockies and Canada's Southern Ontario Chamber Music Institute. Bringing urban elements into its outreach activities, the ensemble bridges the gap between Haydn and hip-hop.
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