Opus 76 Quartet performing on stage. Words overlaid - Eat, Drink, Play

'Eat, Drink, Play!' with Opus 76 Quartet April 2022

April 27, 2022 - May 7, 2022 | VIRTUAL EVENT

Past Event


Create a date night at home with beautiful chamber music and a fabulous recipe from a local chef.


Beautiful chamber music paired with fantastic chef recommendations!

Midwest Trust Center and the Opus 76 Quartet invite you to “Eat, Drink, Play!” on Wednesday, April 27. After purchase, a link to the recital will be sent 24 hours before the first day of access and will be available on demand through May 7.

This unique “date night in” is approximately an hour long and features the quartet’s performance, filmed in Yardley Hall. The recipe from a featured chef will be sent to ticket purchasers prior to the broadcast.

Opus 76 Quartet

Known for their entertaining and energetic interpretations of the classics, the Opus 76 Quartet has been called “Kansas City’s gem of a quartet” by The Kansas City Star. In 2021, the group was named MTC’s first-ever digital artists-in-residence and continues as artists-in-residence in 2022.

Earlier this fall, the quartet appeared as guest artists with the Kansas City Ballet, performing works by Philip Glass in the Ballet’s season opening performance of “Wunderland” at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts. They also released the album, “The Six Quartets Dedicated to Haydn by W.A. Mozart,” recorded by Kansas Public Radio at the Midwest Trust Center.

In 2020, the quartet released its live album in celebration of Beethoven’s 250th anniversary, “Beethoven: The Complete String Quartets,” which included his 18 string quartets. The group has given master classes at the Juilliard School, the Royal Academy of Music in London, Missouri State and Missouri Western State University. In 2019, they were invited to perform at the Ad Astra Music Festival in Russell, Kansas. The ensemble is coached by Károly Schranz, the recently retired founding member of the Takács Quartet.

Program

  • Quartet No. 14 in D minor, D. 810, “Death and the Maiden,” by Franz Schubert
  • Quintet No. 2 in G major, Op. 111, by Johannes Brahms