The 92nd Street Y (92NY) will host the Isidore String Quartet on Saturday, 2 May 2026, marking the ensemble’s return to New York following its widely noted mainstage debut in 2024. The performance will take place at Buttenwieser Hall within the Arnhold Center, reinforcing the venue’s role as a key platform for internationally emerging chamber groups.
Tickets for the event begin at $45 for in-person attendance, with a livestream option available from $25, reflecting a hybrid access model increasingly adopted by major cultural institutions to broaden audience reach.
The New York-based quartet has rapidly progressed from a relatively new ensemble, formed in 2019, into what organisers describe as “one of the world’s most in-demand chamber groups.” Their trajectory has been supported by significant industry recognition, including a 2023 Avery Fisher Career Grant and first prize at the 2022 Banff International String Quartet Competition—both widely regarded as indicators of future commercial and artistic success within the classical music sector.
Central to the group’s identity is a philosophy shaped by the influence of the Juilliard String Quartet, with a stated commitment to “approaching the established as if it were brand new, and the new as if it were firmly established.” This approach underpins their programming strategy, which blends canonical repertoire with contemporary commissions.
The upcoming 92NY programme reflects this balance. It features Franz Joseph Haydn’s String Quartet in B-flat Major, Op. 76, No. 4, “Sunrise,” alongside Johannes Brahms’s String Quartet No. 3 in B-flat Major, Op. 67. Positioned between these works is the New York premiere of String Quartet No. 4, American Mosaic, by Billy Childs.
The Childs work, commissioned by Music Accord in partnership with multiple presenting organisations including 92NY, signals the quartet’s ongoing investment in contemporary repertoire. The ensemble has developed a sustained relationship with Childs, having previously performed his earlier quartets across North America and Europe. The February 2026 debut of American Mosaic further cements that collaboration, with the New York performance expected to attract both critical and commercial attention.
From a business perspective, the quartet’s growth mirrors broader trends within the classical music industry, where younger ensembles are leveraging international touring, cross-institutional partnerships, and new commissions to build brand recognition. The Isidore String Quartet’s 2025/26 season includes appearances in major North American markets such as Philadelphia, Cleveland, and Washington, D.C., as well as return engagements in cities including Montreal, Berkeley, and Houston.
Their European footprint is also expanding, with previous performances at Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw and venues across Germany. Upcoming debuts at the Philharmonie in Paris and Wigmore Hall in London—one of the UK’s most prestigious chamber music venues—highlight their increasing penetration into key European markets.
The quartet’s collaborative network further strengthens its commercial positioning. It has worked with established artists including James Ehnes and Jeremy Denk, and is set to undertake new collaborations with clarinetist Anthony McGill, cellist Sterling Elliott, and the Miró Quartet. Such partnerships are often critical in expanding audience bases and attracting promoter interest across territories.
Beyond performance, the ensemble has emphasised community engagement as part of its broader mission. It is “deeply invested in connecting with youth and elderly populations, and with marginalized communities who otherwise have limited access to high-quality live music performance.” This aligns with funding and sponsorship priorities increasingly seen across the arts sector, where outreach and accessibility initiatives are tied to both public and private support.
The group also notes that it approaches music as a “playground” and seeks to break down barriers to collaboration and creativity—language that reflects a shift within the industry towards more inclusive and audience-oriented programming strategies.
The name “Isidore” itself references violinist Isidore Cohen, an early member of the Juilliard String Quartet, reinforcing the ensemble’s lineage within a respected pedagogical and performance tradition. A lighter historical anecdote—linking the name to a Greek monk associated with the first vodka recipe in Moscow—adds an element of branding distinctiveness, though the quartet’s market position is firmly anchored in its artistic credentials.
As 92NY continues to programme internationally recognised ensembles alongside emerging talent, the return of the Isidore String Quartet underscores both the institution’s curatorial strategy and the ensemble’s accelerating trajectory within the global chamber music market.







