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Violist Dana Kelley, celebrated chamber musician and associate principal of the National Symphony, goes in depth exploring works being performed during the Schneider Concerts 2025-2026 season at The New School in four pre-concert talks in December, January, March, and April. Join us for one or all four.
On Sunday, March 22, Dana introduces the works to be performed by the Ulysses Quartet and pianist Olga Kern at 2pm [separate ticket required for concert.]
$5 pre-concert talk
For their second concert, the award-winning Ulysses Quartet invites pianist Olga Kern to join them in a performance of Dvorak's Piano Quintet No. 2 on a program that includes works by Caroline Shaw, Fanny Mendelssohn, and a New York Premiere of a Christina Bouey's quartet "Soul."
Caroline Shaw: String Quartet "Valencia" (2012)
Christina Bouey: String Quartet "Soul" (2024)—New York Premiere
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet in E-flat Major (1834)
Antonín Dvořák: Piano Quintet No. 2 in A major, Op. 81 (1887)
This event is part of the Schneider Concerts 2025-26 season — 6 mainstage concerts featuring exceptional emerging ensembles, plus pre-concert talks, livestreams, and free short programs at community partner venues.
Explore the season here.
Presented by New School Concerts
- $90: 6-concert season subscription
- $20: single concert, general admission
- $17: single concert, seniors and those with disabilities
- $ 5: student stand-by (available on concert day at box office with presentation of student ID)
- Pay-what-you-wish simultaneous on-line broadcast ($0 - $20)
- $ 5: 12:30 pm preconcert talk with Dana Kelley (separate ticket purchase required)
- New School students, faculty, and staff: Use your N# and New School email address to register for a free, non-transferable ticket. You will be asked to present New School ID upon entry to event.
NOTE: Seats are not assigned and physical tickets will not be mailed in advance.
You will receive email confirmation and we will begin checking in ticket holders at the venue one hour before the concert.
The Auditorium at 66 W. 12th Street address is accessible
step-free to the lobby and entry-level auditorium.
Large print programs and assistive listening devices available without advance request.
A wheelchair accessible unisex restroom is located on the lobby level; additional accessible restrooms are available on the 4th floor. Other bathroom facilities use steps for access.
Seats are not assigned. Use a wheelchair, a walker, or have other seating requirement? Please reserve accessible seating at time of ticket purchase so we can ensure you get the set you need.
Note that walkers cannot be left in theater aisles and theater representatives may be unable to assist patrons to their seats, so it is best for those with walkers to keep that in mind and make any needed seating requests at time of ticket purchase.
Requests for additional accommodations can be made at time of ticket purchase.
Recently appointed associate principal viola of the National Symphony, Dana has been a member of the Orchestra of St. Luke's and Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, and performed as guest principal viola of the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra and as a member of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. Praised for her rich and beautiful tone, Dana has been a top prizewinner in the Sphinx Music Competition, the Irving M. Klein International String Competition, the M-Prize Chamber Arts Competition and the Concert Artists Guild Victor Elmaleh Competition. She is a former member of the Argus String Quartet. She serves on the viola faculty of the Mannes School of Music at The New School.
Dana received an Artist Diploma in String Quartet Studies with the Argus Quartet as the 2017-2019 Graduate Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School. Dana was a 2014-2016 Fellow in Ensemble Connect - a performance and teaching program of Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and The Weill Music Institute. She received her Bachelor’s of Music from the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University, and completed her Master’s of Music degree as student of Kim Kashkashian’s at the New England Conservatory.
Founded at The New School in 1957 as New School Concerts with the mission to offer outstanding, affordable chamber music, the series was renamed in 1993 to honor its founding artistic director, Alexander “Sasha” Schneider—violinist, conductor, and member of the Budapest String Quartet.
The Schneider Concerts commitment to accessible, excellent chamber music still is anchored in affordable pricing, but now also includes support for early-career artists, outreach to older New Yorkers, and a strong commitment to accessibility and inclusion. The series now actively welcomes artists and audiences from all backgrounds, with programming that honors and celebrates tradition and embraces innovation.
Director Rohana Elias-Reyes is supported by an music advisory committee of esteemed musicians: John Dalley, Pamela Frank, Jaime Laredo, Cho-Liang Lin, Anthony McGill, Kurt Muroki, Tara O’Connor, and Arnold Steinhardt.
Notable series alumni who made debuts and early career appearances on the series include Peter Serkin, Yo-Yo Ma, and the Guarneri, Dover, and Calidore string quartets. More recently, we've presented the New York debuts of the Viano, Balourdet, Isidore, and Ivalas string quartets.
Soul written by Ulysses Quartet’s own Christina Bouey is meant to awaken the listener’s emotions and feel whatever their essence needs to feel in that moment. When Christina felt inspired to write the piece, she was on a walk by the Hudson River in Manhattan and was pondering what it meant to live, experience and encounter different aspects of life with deep meaning and intention.
There is something exquisite about the construction of an ordinary orange. (Grocery stores around the country often offer the common "Valencia" as the standard option.) Hundreds of brilliantly colored, impossibly delicate vesicles of juice, ready to explode. It is a thing of nature so simple, yet so complex and extraordinary. In 2012, I performed at the MoMA with the musician and performance artist, Glasser — a song which she described as being about the simple beauty of fruit. Later that summer I wrote Valencia, for a concert I was playing with some good friends in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts. I decided to channel Glasser's brave and intuitive approach to melody and texture, such that Valencia became an untethered embrace of the architecture of the common Valencia orange, through billowing harmonics and somewhat viscous chords and melodies. It is also a kind of celebration of awareness of the natural, unadorned food that is still available to us.
— Caroline Shaw
The Fourth String Quartet of Béla Bartók is a landmark example of his compositional ethos, synonymous with all of the stylistic traits of his mature writing. It combines his sharp formal and technical mastery of pre-and post-twentieth century musical language and his devotion to folk music traditions of his native Hungary and beyond as one of the first modern ethnomusicologists. Above all else, his work reflects his prioritizing the myriad possible uses of symmetry in music. This quartet is groundbreaking in introducing various symmetries as the fabric of the main thematic material, the pitch centers of the five movements, and the function of each movement in the overall form of the piece. Bartok had a keen interest in arch form, congruous halves melded together around a central point, and the Fourth Quartet is the quintessential example of this form at all levels. All of these elements enhance a unique expressivity also apparent in the work’s scintillating energy and wide range of colors.
The first and the fifth movement pair as high energy movements presenting music as rhetoric — pitch motives going back and forth in discourse between voices, sometimes argumentatively.
They feature the same symmetrical motif throughout both movements, as well as an
Arabian-inspired tune heard gently in the first movement and roaringly in the last. Even within the intellectual discourse of the movements, a dance element is omnipresent. The second and fourth movements are hushed interludes which demonstrate music as a form of serious play, delicate yet full of inextinguishable energy. The second movement is a highly chromatic, eerie, and devilishly fast scherzo. The fourth is entirely plucked, with some of Bartók’s trademark snap-pizzicato and other extended techniques creating a unique sound world. At the center of the arch lies a serene and otherworldly slow movement that fits Bartók’s textural genre of “night music.” This third movement begins with the unfolding of a 6-note drone, featuring a delayed vibrato effect one can imagine as pulsating heat waves on a hot summer evening. The lengthy cello solo is said to emulate a Hungarian reed instrument called the Tárogató, and the subsequent solos of the other instruments vividly portray bird calls and even insects. The movement returns to tranquility at the end, with each instrument poetically dropping out in the reverse order they first entered.
Thank you to our audience, Jessie Montgomery, The New School, the Schneider Concert Series, and the New England Conservatory for allowing us to perform for you today. It is a pleasure to play these works and a very special occasion to perform “Strum” by the Mannes School of Music’s newest violin and composition faculty member, Jessie Montgomery.
— Notes by the Balourdet String Quartet, except where otherwise noted.
Her profoundly felt works have been described as “turbulent, wildly colorful and exploding with life” (The Washington Post).
Her growing body of work includes solo, chamber, vocal, ballet, and orchestral works. Some recent highlights include Shift, Change, Turn… (2019) commissioned by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Passage (2019) a ballet commissioned by Dance Theatre of Harlem, Coincident Dances (2018) for the Chicago Sinfonietta, and Caught by the Wind (2016) for the Albany Symphony and the American Music Festival.
The New York Philharmonic has selected Montgomery as one of the featured composers for their Project 19, which marks the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, granting equal voting rights in the United States to women. Other forthcoming works include a cadenza for the Brahms Violin Concerto, to be premiered by Hilary Hahn; a cello concerto for Thomas Mesa jointly commissioned by Carnegie Hall, New World Symphony, and The Sphinx Organization; and a new orchestral work for the National Symphony.
A founding member of PUBLIQuartet and recent member of the Catalyst Quartet, she continues to maintain an active performance career as a violinist appearing regularly with her improvising duo Big dog little dog with bassist Eleonore Oppenheim.
Montgomery’s teachers and mentors include Sally Thomas, Ann Setzer, Alice Kanack, Joan Tower, Derek Bermel, Mark Suozzo, Ira Newborn, and Laura Kaminsky. She holds degrees from the Juilliard School and New York University and is currently a Graduate Fellow in Music Composition at Princeton University. Montgomery is on both the composition and violin faculty at Mannes.