The
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center is both a music organization and chamber ensemble consisting of about 35 core members who perform both large and small chamber works, while often collaborating with guest artists. The
CMS is also involved in educational programs that offer family concerts, teen concert series, lectures, school-based events, and various other outreach endeavors. The
CMS also offers a residency course for talented youth called Chamber Music Society Two, which provides a three-year training program to prospective members. The
CMS is one of 11 resident organizations based at the Lincoln Center complex in New York City. Among the others are the
New York Philharmonic Orchestra, the
Metropolitan Opera, and Juilliard School of Music. The
CMS schedule offers over 50 concerts and includes Baroque, fall, and winter festivals. In addition, the
CMS makes annual national and international tours and has appeared on numerous recordings for such labels as Delos, Virgin Classics, and CMS Studio Recordings. The
CMS regularly commissions works from some of the leading contemporary composers. Past commissions have included efforts by
Bernstein,
Barber,
Menotti,
Milhaud,
Ginastera, Harbison,
Corigliano,
Bolcom, and many other major composers. It appears regularly on the PBS television series Live from Lincoln Center, on the radio series Performance Today, and on its own radio program Chamber Music Society, which typically presents concerts derived from the previous season.
At the suggestion of composer
William Schuman, the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center was founded in 1969 by pianist Charles Wadsworth, who then served as the
CMS music director for two decades. The ensemble's first concert took place on September 11, 1969, at Alice Tully Hall.
Initially the
CMS consisted of just nine core members, all of whom, however, were highly regarded string, wind, and keyboard players. The
CMS quickly drew critical acclaim and among its first important recordings were a 1975 four-LP compilation on the Classics Record Library label that featured music by
J.S. Bach,
Haydn,
Schumann, Moszkowski,
Elliott Carter, and others, and a 1980 Musical Heritage Society LP of
Mozart and
Beethoven works.
Over Wadsworth's 20-year tenure, the
CMS gradually expanded both in number and in educational and cultural projects. In 1989 cellist
Fred Sherry succeeded Wadsworth.
Sherry served until 1993, when clarinettist David Shifrin was appointed music director. With the 2003-2004 concert season the
CMS inaugurated its radio show, initially offering 13 one-hour programs and later expanding to 26. In 2007 cellist
David Finckel and pianist
Wu Han were named co-music directors of
CMS, succeeding Shifrin.
That same year CMS Studio Recordings, the ensemble's own recording label, was launched with the issuance of its first CD,
Dvorák's Terzetto (Op. 74) and piano quartet (Op. 87), and
Beethoven's Op. 16 Piano Quartet, in performances featuring
Han and
Finckel, as well as violinists
Arnaud Sussman and
Erin Keefe and violist Beth Guterman. The touring concert schedule for the 2011-2012 season was typical for the
CMS, as it included 50 concert dates spread across the U.S., Canada, Columbia, U.K., Germany, and Denmark.