A Night at the Movies: Buster Keaton’s “The General”
On this season’s marquee is a screening of Keaton’s classic silent film The General with Stephen Prutsman’s original score, played live by Prutsman and members of NEXUS Chamber Music.
On this season’s marquee is a screening of Keaton’s classic silent film The General with Stephen Prutsman’s original score, played live by Prutsman and members of NEXUS Chamber Music.
Violinist Kento Hong, recipient of the prestigious 2024 Meadowmount School of Music Gurrena Fellowship, is joined by pianist Nelson Padgett for a program of contrasts that will showcase this compelling and impressive emerging talent.
In honor of the late composer, arranger, and conductor Cliff Colnot, we’re adding an all-Brahms program to our 2025 concert calendar, featuring two powerhouse pieces of the Romantic era.
Chicago-based composers and artists join forces in Nova Linea Musica’s season finale featuring In Triplicate, along with pianist Chelsea Wang, and violinist Rabia Brook.
NEXUS Chamber Music Co-artistic Directors Alexander Hersh and Brian Hong are offering music lovers a special opportunity to experience the process of concert preparation in two open rehearsals.
NEXUS Chamber Music Co-artistic Directors Alexander Hersh and Brian Hong are offering music lovers a special opportunity to experience the process of concert preparation in two open rehearsals.
NEXUS Chamber Music returns to the North Shore with Re:ignite, performing works by Luigi Boccherini, Eleanor Alberga, and Arnold Schoenberg in the stunningly beautiful Winnetka Congregational Church.
The celebrated Borromeo String Quartet performs Ludwig van Beethoven's towering and transcendent late quartets in our Beethoven Immortal series, presented over the course of two evenings.
On Hydrogen Day (10/08 after the atomic mass of hydrogen = 1.008), fan-favorite soprano Kristina Bachrach returns to Guarneri Hall with a wide-ranging program inspired by the celestial lights that hydrogen fuels.
The 1945: At War's End series concludes with a pair of deeply reflective works by Dmitri Shostakovich and Benjamin Britten, both of whom were profoundly impacted by the war’s devastation and the liberation of the death camps in 1945, as well as a contemporary work by Michiru Ōshima.