The Met Orchestra Chamber Ensemble
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The Met Orchestra Chamber Ensemble: Also performing , and , and April 6, , and April 28, , and May 11, , and October 16, , and November 16, , and January 12, 2026, , and March 1, 2026, , and April 20, 2026, , and and May 18, 2026.
Performers
The Met Orchestra Chamber Ensemble
Paul Appleby, Tenor
Program
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Nonet in F Minor, Op. 2
BRITTEN Phantasy for Oboe Quartet, Op. 2
BRITTEN Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings, Op. 31
SHOSTAKOVICH Two Pieces for String Octet, Op. 11
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately two hours, including one 20-minute intermission.At a Glance
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Nonet in F Minor, Op. 2
As a pupil at London’s Royal Conservatory of Music in the 1890s—some 40 years before Benjamin Britten—Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was schooled in the Romantic idiom of composers like Brahms and Charles Villiers Stanford. Their influence can be heard in this singular and preternaturally assured early chamber work for winds, strings, and piano.
BRITTEN Phantasy for Oboe Quartet, Op. 2
Although the archaically spelled title of Britten’s 1932 Phantasy evokes the instrumental fantasies of Renaissance England, its musical language was thoroughly up-to-date for its time. Scored for oboe and string trio, this early work helped establish Britten’s reputation as a leading British modernist.
BRITTEN Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings, Op. 31
The nocturnal, elegiac mood of Britten’s song cycle for tenor, horn, and strings closely tracks the six English poems on which it’s based. The Serenade was composed while Britten was at work on his opera Peter Grimes, which crystallized his signature theme of the individual in conflict with society.
SHOSTAKOVICH Two Pieces for String Octet, Op. 11
Like Britten’s Phantasy, Shostakovich’s Op. 11 is a student work that displays many of the composer’s mature stylistic hallmarks in embryonic form. A eulogy for a recently deceased friend, the string octet pairs a funereal Prelude with a manic Scherzo.