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BISQC Concert 3: 21st Century Haydn Round

Isidore String Quartet at BISQC 2022

Isidore String Quartet, winners of BISQC 2022. Photo by Rita Taylor. 

 

Two quartets will perform a complete work by Franz Joseph Haydn, as well as a complete quartet written on or after January 1, 2000. 

Quartet KAIRI

Franz Joseph Haydn: String Quartet Op. 74, No. 1 in C Major 
Toshio Hosokawa: Floral Fairy (2003) 

Intermission 

Poiesis Quartet

Sky Macklay: Many Many Cadences (2015) 
Franz Joseph Haydn: String Quartet Op. 71, No. 2 in D Major 
 

The Quartets

Quartet KAIRI

Quartet KAIRI. Photo by Saya Ota.

Taiga Sasaki (he/him) - violin, Japan
Yu Mita (he/him) - violin, Japan
Jiliang Shi (he/him) - viola, China
Hotaka Sakai (he/him)- cello, Japan

The Quartet KAIRI is a Salzburg-based string quartet currently studying under Professor Rainer Schmidt (Hagen Quartett) and Professor Cibrán Sierra Vázquez (Cuarteto Quiroga) at the Universität Mozarteum Salzburg. They began working as an ensemble during their studies at the Tokyo College of Music under the guidance of professor Saiko Azuma.

In winter 2023, Chinese violist Jiliang Shi joined the quartet's founding members: Taigaa Saski, Yu Mita and Hotaka Sakai.

January 2024, the Quartet KAIRI were invited to collaborate with the Salzburg Marionette Theatre during the "Mozartwoche" Music Festival. Additionally they were also part of the Fuji Mountain Music Festival, during which they performed with a renowned clarinettist Peter Schmidl (Former Principal Clarinetist of the Vienna Philharmoniker).

In Fall 2024, the Quartet KAIRI won first prize at the International Competition "Premio Annarose Taddei" in Rome.

They also received second prize (first prize not awarded) at the Japan Classical Music Competition in Tokyo.

They have participated in numerous masterclasses by renowned artists such as Günter Pichler during the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival and Jonathan Brown at the Guadix International String Quartet Seminar.

The word "Kairi" (Japanese) can be translated as a sea mile. The name of the quartet represents the strong will to cross human and musical boundaries of the sea and land in order to make music accessible to everyone despite of one's background. They strongly believe in the universality of the musical language that can be "spoken" and understood by each and every one of us. 

Poiesis Quartet

Poiesis Quartet. Photo by Eden Davis.

Sarah Ying Ma (she/they) - violin, USA
Max Ball (he/they) - violin, USA
Jasper de Boor (they/them) - viola, USA
Drew Dansby (he/him) - cello, USA

The Poiesis Quartet is the 2023 Grnd Prize winner of the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition and winner of the 2024 Concert Artists Guild Competition. Within eight months of their founding at Oberlin Conservatory, they also received Fischoff's Lift Every Voice Prize as well as Gold Medal and BIPOC Prize at the 2023 St. Paul String Quartet Competition. Poiesis has toured internationally, including in Uruguay in 2023, as well as Italy in 2024 for a residency at the Emilia Romagna Festival. As an ensemble passionate about new music, the recent release of their debut album as we are on the Bright Shiny Things label features world premiere recordings of works by Clint Needham and Richard Stout alongside mezzo-soprano Nancy Maultsby. In the 2024-25 season, they also served as ensemble-in-residence with concertnova, a collective presenting multi-sensorial and multi-disciplinary concert experiences, where they collaborated with composer Sarah Hannies, violinist Benjamin Beilman, and visual artist XUAN. The Poiesis Quartet is the current Graduate Quartet-in-Residence at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music studying with the Ariel Quartet. As graduates of Oberlin Conservatory, they were previously mentored by Sibbi Bernhardsson of the Pacifica Quartet and the Verona Quartet. 

The name Poiesis is derived from the ancient Greek word ποιεῖν, which means "to make". Poiesis seeks to program music of all styles and genres with an emphasis on platforming works by emerging and underrepresented composers, creating unique moments of synchronicity and verve in each performance.