Maud: Jeffery Music Foundation- What have you DONE????

Ethel: You look distraught. Whatever is the matter?

Maud: Have you SEEN the chamber group The Jeffery Concerts has brought to London for Friday, March 13th? AAAAARGH!!!

Previewed by Daina Janitis

(Pictured: The Poiesis Quartet.)

Ethel: Yes, Maud- and how lucky are we in London to have this Jeffery Foundation board of music lovers, music teachers, and music performers bringing amazing talents that we’d otherwise have to travel to see and hear. That’s the Poesis Quartet. As the newly crowned winners of the 2025 Banff International String Quartet Competition, the Poiesis Quartet’s arrival in London is a momentous point in their career, bringing the kind of risk-taking, collaborative artistry that keeps chamber music alive for new generations.

Their Jeffery debut at Metropolitan United Church is not our grandmothers’  “subscription” recital, but a chance for Londoners of all ages to encounter four young musicians who treat the string quartet as a living laboratory for sound, story, and social connection.

Maud: But just LOOK at their outfits and piercings- and their use a mixed bag of pronouns. And the program? Chamber concerts are for the B’s- Bach and those other gentlemen of classical music! What kind of name is Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate?

Ethel: I don’t know where he was born- but the Jeffery Foundation bringing that music and those musicians to London, Ontario is enacting Canadian core values: public access to culture, support for emerging talent, and a belief that serious art belongs not in gated institutions but in the shared spaces of a city. In a world where U.S. arts centres are increasingly entangled with partisan politics and boycotts, the Jeffery series offers something different: a locally rooted, not-for-profit platform where excellence is measured in artistic integrity and community impact, not donor glamour.

Maud: Are they at least going to dress up in dignified concert black as they play?

Ethel: Oooh- I doubt it. And I hope they let their freedom in concert dress reflect the freedom in bending and improving traditions of all kinds, bring that beautiful stage at The Met to new life! Try meeting some of them first … look up their own website: Poiesis Quartet

Or, let’s let one of them tell us about him/her/they!

(Pictured: Drew Dansby.)

Drew Dansby, cello, Drew Dansby (he/him) is a recent double-degree graduate of Oberlin College and Conservatory, with degrees in cello performance under Darrett Adkins and chemistry with minors in Comparative American Studies and sociology. Drew joined the cello section of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra full-time beginning in the 2023-24 season, becoming the youngest member of the orchestra at 22. He has served as an acting cellist in the Charlotte Symphony, associate principal cellist of the New York String Orchestra, and principal cellist of the Verbier Festival Orchestra. Originally from Charlotte, NC, Drew made his solo debut with the Charlotte Symphony at age 15. Drew is also a founding member of the Charlotte Piano Trio, which has performed 14 concerts over 5 years across North Carolina, and was the founder and director of the 2022 Myers Park Summer Series. Drew has been recognized as a National YoungArts winner and gold medalist in the Cleveland Cello Society competition. Drew was a member of the National Youth Orchestra of the USA for three summers, including as a violinist in 2018 and as principal cellist in 2019, and he was the first member in the history of the orchestra to be accepted on two instruments. As a winner of Oberlin’s concerto competition, he performed David Baker’s Concerto for Cello and Jazz Band with the Oberlin Jazz Ensemble in April 2024.

And the rest of them are just as impressive in their achievements – so with the Poesis Quartet, we are getting a quadruple whammy of inspiration!

Maud: But the music? Will I be able to tolerate any of it?

Ethel: Listening to music of any era should not be centred on your pain threshold, honey. You may have to adjust your hearing aids and your expectations a bit, but the piece that won THE 2025 Banff Festival prize certainly didn’t scare those judges!

Maud: I didn’t know about that Banff Festival. Is it a big thing???

Ethel: A biggie, indeed. The Banff International String Quartet Competition was organized in 1983. It is now recognized as one of the world’s major string quartet competitions. 

Ten quartets from around the world are selected to take part in the semi-final competition. All members of the quartets must be under the age of 35. After playing various styles of both traditional and modern chamber music before audiences over a period of several days, three finalist groups are chosen. After further performances, these are judged and a winner chosen.

And here’s a photo of them receiving the 2025 Banff award.

As arts reporter Keith Powers said about the 2025 competition, “Each repertoire choice had a tell: of a quartet’s confidence, technique, history — all subtle, all different. For the Poiesis Quartet, this competition was not only a test of mettle, but it was also a forum for identity. The eventual competition winner cemented a place in the finals with a spectacular performance at the conclusion of the open competition: Bartók’s String Quartet No. 5 (the first work the group ever learned!). Then Poiesis stole the finals with royally inclusive and distinctive choices: quartets by Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ TateBrian Raphael NaborsKen Hisaishi, and Kevin Lau.

“The final round presents our ensemble, our values,” cellist Drew Dansby said. “We feel like everything we’ve done is being fulfilled with this.”

Want to hear the piece they played in the final round, Maud? Get ready …

Maud???  Maud???  Maud???

IF YOU GO:

What: The Jeffery Concerts presents the Poiesis Quartet

When: Friday, March 13, at 7:30pm.

Where: Metropolitan United Church, 468 Wellington Street, London, ON.

Tickets: The Jeffery Concerts – 2025/26 Season | The Grand Theatre

Previewed by Daina Janitis.

Leave a comment