Samuel Gray

Violin

Samuel Gray is a New York-based violinist, violist, educator, producer, and music contractor. Sam currently holds concertmaster positions at Regina Opera Company, Centre Symphony, and Protestra—an orchestra that advocates for social justice through classical music—and is a member of Parlando Chamber Orchestra, Bronx Arts Ensemble, and Rendez-Vous Orchestra. He performs regularly at venues throughout New York City, including Merkin Hall, 54 Below, Tenri Cultural Institute, and the DiMenna Center.

A fervent believer that music is healing to the soul, Sam produces intimate chamber music performances in unconventional places around New York. He is the co-producer and co-founder of Mini Masterworks, an annual series of living room concerts, in collaboration with cellist, singer, and composer Anthime Miller.

Sam began his musical studies at the age of nine. He currently studies with Ming-Feng Hsin and Gary Kosloski, and his formative teachers include Patricia Cosand, Steven Moeckel, and Sarah Plum.

Sam performs on two modern instruments: a 2014 Samuel Zygmuntowicz on loan from Jay and Michiko Jones and a 1972 John Sipe on loan from an anonymous sponsor.

Robin Zeh

Violin

Acclaimed by the New York Times for her “stylish, committed playing”, violinist Robin Zeh enjoys a career that reflects a diverse involvement in the contemporary musical life of New York City. A longtime member of the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, she is also a member of the American Ballet Theatre Orchestra, where she has performed as Acting Concertmaster at the Metropolitan Opera House.

She is an accomplished soloist of standard and contemporary concerto repertoire, appearing with several New York regional orchestras, and for ten years was first violinist with the American Modern Ensemble. Robin is equally at home in Broadway pits, currently as concertmaster of MEREDITH WILLSON’S THE MUSIC MAN and serves as concertmaster of the annual Tony Awards broadcast.

She is an alumna of Oberlin College and Conservatory and the Mannes School of Music and is one of the final pupils to study under renowned chamber musician Felix Galimir. She and her husband, violinist and fiddler Paul Woodiel, live in South Orange, NJ, and are co-founders of Montrose Music, a teaching studio, as well as producers of a series of house concerts in the elegant homes of the Montrose Historic District.

Wen Qian

Violin

Ms. Wen Qian was hailed by China Daily as “one of China’s most promising young violinists” and in a 2004 Strad magazine review titled “Rare rill” featuring Ms. Qian ater her Carnegie Hall recital, music critic Dennis Rooney commented “ it was performed with enough insight and panache to thrill a listener while at the same time raising the question of why such results are so rarely achieved.“.

Ms. Qian has served as the acting Assistant Concertmaster at the Metropolitan Opera for numerous years since 2000 and also a member of the first violin since 1997. On top of her busy schedule at the Met, Ms. Qian also enjoys an active career as a soloist, chamber musician and educator throughout China, America and Europe.

Ms. Qian began to shine as concertmaster under Valery Gergiev in 1994 at the Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra, her solos in “Scheherazade” had brought her to the front page of German newspaper “Kieler Nachrichten”. e featured review read: ” whose tenderness was as much musically correct as it was sensual; as much technically perfect as it was expressive, Wen Qian, the young concertmistress demonstrated a true sensibility and self-confidence.”. Since then she has been invited to be a guest concertmaster with the Philharmonia of the Nation of Germany, Jupiter Symphony of New York, Hong Kong Sinfonietta, Tianjin

SymphonyOrchestraandShenzhenSymphony. Asasoloist,Ms. Qian has performed with orchestras such as the Central Philharmonic of China, Beijing Symphony, Shanghai Symphony, Guangzhou Symphony, South Shore Symphony, the Centre Symphony, the Met Orchestra Ensemble and the Mannes Orchestra.

Ms. Qian has also been an avid chamber musician, she has performed in music festivals and concert series including the Marlboro, Tanglewood, Sarasota festivals, and the Met Chamber Music series at Carnegie Hall as well as the Young Concert Artist Series presented by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. She has collaborated with numerous world renowned musicians including Andras Schif, Mitsuko Uchita, Leslie Parnas, Nobuko Imai, James Levine, and the members of the Beaux Arts Trio, Guarneri Quartet and Juilliard Quartet. In the past few summers, Ms. Qian performed and coached at the Talis Music Festival in Switzerland, and Cadenza Festival in Beijing, China.

Now a Violin Professor at Mannes College of Music at the New School University, the demands for Ms. Qian’s teaching have brought her to Master Classes and coachings at the New World Symphony in Miami, New York Youth Symphony, NYU, the Central Conservatory of Beijing, Shanghai Conservatory, and various music schools in Taiwan. Since 2000, Ms. Qian has taught the Violin Class

at Mannes that focuses on orchestra auditions, and some graduates of her class have won jobs at the MET Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, Pittsburgh Symphony, Houston Symphony, Detroit Symphony and New Orleans Symphony. In 2019, she was the Artist in Residence at the NYO China, coaching the top young musicians inChina. Duringthepandemic,Ms.QianwenttoTaiwanwithher family, both her husband Ming Feng Hsin, accomplished Taiwanese violinist and conductor, were invited to give over 40 masterclasses in top music schools there and also together were the Artists in Residence in National Tsinghua University.

Ms. Qian started her violin study with her uncle at age 7. Ms. Qian studied with Felix Galimir at the Mannes College of Music in New York City where she obtained her Bachelor and Master of Music degrees as well as her Professional Studies Diploma, she was awarded the highest honor of the Excellence in Performance Award upon graduation. Ms. Qian has served as the vice president of the William Lincer Foundation, and been on the panel of the New York State Council of the Arts.