Event Concerts and Performances Schoenberg at 150: Quatuor Diotima, Program II

Date and Location

Part of Concerts from the Library of Congress

The event is free, but tickets are required, and there may be special restrictions. Click the "Get Tickets" link below for more information and to secure your ticket.

Request ADA accommodations five business days in advance at (202) 707-6362 or ADA@loc.gov.

Musicians 
Yun-Peng Zhao, violin 
Léo Marillier, violin 
Franck Chevalier, viola 
 Alexi Descharmes, cello

In honor of the 150th anniversary of Arnold Schoenberg’s birth, we will survey many of his works for string quartet held in manuscript at the Library of Congress. The eloquent and indefatigable Quatuor Diotima offers two striking programs over the course of two days that are not to be missed, putting on display the passion, wit, and craft of this oft-misunderstood artist. The quartet’s second program includes the exciting third quartet by Erich Korngold, whose collection is held at the Library. We will also hear two more Schoenberg quartets: the third quartet from 1927, which was also commissioned by Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, and the first string quartet, composed over twenty years earlier—a monumental endeavor cast in a single movement. 

Preconcert Conversation with the Artists 
12:30pm, Whittall Pavilion 

Schedule

Program 
ERICH KORNGOLD 
String Quartet no. 3, op. 34 

ARNOLD SCHOENBERG 
String Quartet no. 3, op. 30 
String Quartet no. 1, op. 7 

Ticketing Information

  • Concerts: Seating is ticketed in advance; be aware that more tickets may become available as people cancel their reservations.
  • Seat reservations are only valid until 5 minutes prior to the event start time.
  • Please add your name to the waitlist if a concert is sold out, and we will contact you to let you know if a batch of tickets is released.
  • RUSH passes will be available to walk-up patrons who do not have tickets. We strongly encourage guests who do not have a ticket to come for a RUSH pass, as we anticipate being able to admit many patrons due to no-shows and cancellations.