Schumann Quartet and Martin Roscoe
  • Monday 18 January 2027, 7:00pm
  • Stoller Hall
  • Standard £29.50. U35 £20. Unwaged £11.50. Students £5
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Image Schumann Quartet and Martin Roscoe

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society 2026-27

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society’s concert season returns to the Stoller Hall with six world-class chamber recitals between September 2026 and March 2027.

Book a season ticket to all six concerts and get 15% off a full price ticket.

Book a Season Ticket

Book any three concerts in the season and get 10% off your full-price ticket (Discount applies automatically once the tickets are in your basket.)

Programme

HAYDN String Quartet, Op. 77 No. 2 Hob III: 82 ‘Lobkowitz’
GLASS String Quartet No. 3 ‘Mishima’
Interval
DVOŘÁK Piano Quintet no 2 in A major op 81

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society’s Music Director Martin Roscoe joins forces with the Schumann Quartet for Dvorak’s Piano Quintet No.2, widely regarded as one of the greatest masterworks of the quintet form. One of the UK’s best loved pianists in both intimate solo recitals and large scale orchestral performances, Martin Roscoe is both a regular and a firm favourite in both the MCCS season and more widely in the Stoller Hall programme. 

The three brothers Mark, Erik and Ken Schumann have been playing together since their earliest childhood. Joined by violist Matthew McDowell, this close-knit group of performers create ‘music-making of the highest order’ (Guardian, ★★★★★).

In the first half of the concert, the Schumann Quartet open with Haydn’s String Quartet, Op. 77, one of the composer’s last quartet works before his death. Haydn is known as the ‘father’ of the string quartet, and this work shows off all of his deep understanding of string quartet melody and form, giving each instrument time to shine.

Meanwhile Philip Glass’s ‘Mishima’ String Quartet is a radically different work, chosen to celebrate the composer’s 90th birthday year. Based on the score composer Philip Glass wrote for Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters, a 1985 biographical film about the controversial life and death of post-war Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, the music is filled with the pulsing, expansive and slowly evolving string textures that Glass is most famous for.

Please note that student ticket availability may be limited.

Image Credit
Schumann Quartet: Marco Borggreve
Martin Roscoe: Eric Robinson

 

Schumann Quartet and Martin Roscoe
  • Stoller Hall
  • Standard £29.50. U35 £20. Unwaged £11.50. Students £5

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society 2026-27

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society’s concert season returns to the Stoller Hall with six world-class chamber recitals between September 2026 and March 2027.

Book a season ticket to all six concerts and get 15% off a full price ticket.

Book a Season Ticket

Book any three concerts in the season and get 10% off your full-price ticket (Discount applies automatically once the tickets are in your basket.)

Programme

HAYDN String Quartet, Op. 77 No. 2 Hob III: 82 ‘Lobkowitz’
GLASS String Quartet No. 3 ‘Mishima’
Interval
DVOŘÁK Piano Quintet no 2 in A major op 81

Manchester Chamber Concerts Society’s Music Director Martin Roscoe joins forces with the Schumann Quartet for Dvorak’s Piano Quintet No.2, widely regarded as one of the greatest masterworks of the quintet form. One of the UK’s best loved pianists in both intimate solo recitals and large scale orchestral performances, Martin Roscoe is both a regular and a firm favourite in both the MCCS season and more widely in the Stoller Hall programme. 

The three brothers Mark, Erik and Ken Schumann have been playing together since their earliest childhood. Joined by violist Matthew McDowell, this close-knit group of performers create ‘music-making of the highest order’ (Guardian, ★★★★★).

In the first half of the concert, the Schumann Quartet open with Haydn’s String Quartet, Op. 77, one of the composer’s last quartet works before his death. Haydn is known as the ‘father’ of the string quartet, and this work shows off all of his deep understanding of string quartet melody and form, giving each instrument time to shine.

Meanwhile Philip Glass’s ‘Mishima’ String Quartet is a radically different work, chosen to celebrate the composer’s 90th birthday year. Based on the score composer Philip Glass wrote for Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters, a 1985 biographical film about the controversial life and death of post-war Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, the music is filled with the pulsing, expansive and slowly evolving string textures that Glass is most famous for.

Please note that student ticket availability may be limited.

Image Credit
Schumann Quartet: Marco Borggreve
Martin Roscoe: Eric Robinson

 

All dates & times

  • Monday 18 January 20277pm
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