Chamber Music Society of Mississauga

Chamber Music Society of Mississauga: Intimate Performances, Global Perspectives

March 6, 18 and April 17, 2026
Various Mississauga Locations

The Chamber Music Society of Mississauga continues to enrich the city’s cultural landscape with thoughtfully curated performances that bring world-class artistry into intimate community spaces. Presenting concerts at accessible venues such as the Unitarian Congregation in Mississauga and the Hazel McCallion Central Library, the organization champions both established masterworks and contemporary voices.

This spring’s line-up reflects a commitment to cultural dialogue, artistic excellence and community connection, offering audiences everything from Venezuelan-inspired jazz fusion to spiritually profound twentieth-century chamber music.

Eliana Cuevas and Angel Falls String Quartet
Friday, March 6, 2026
Unitarian Congregation in Mississauga – 84 S Service Rd – Mississauga

The March 6 programme brings a vibrant cross-cultural collaboration to Mississauga. Venezuelan-Canadian vocalist Eliana Cuevas joins the Angel Falls String Quartet for an evening that bridges Latin American tradition and contemporary jazz sensibilities.

Cuevas is celebrated for her luminous voice and evocative songwriting, drawing deeply from her Venezuelan heritage while embracing global influences. For this concert, her original compositions are reimagined for string quartet in arrangements by JUNO Award-winning pianist Jeremy Ledbetter, creating a textured dialogue between voice and strings.

The Angel Falls String Quartet—featuring violinists Jessica Deutsch and Praise Lam, violist Clara NguyenTran and cellist Lydia Munchinsky—brings both classical precision and improvisational fluency to the collaboration. Audiences can expect lush harmonies, rhythmic vitality and intimate storytelling. The performance promises a rich musical journey through themes of love, resilience and cultural memory, offering a soundscape that feels both rooted in tradition and vibrantly contemporary.

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Medusa Quartet – International Women’s Month Special
Wednesday, March 18, 2026 – 12–1 pm
Hazel McCallion Central Library – 301 Burnhamthorpe Rd W, Mississauga

As part of the “3rd Wednesdays at Maker’s Stage” series, the Medusa Quartet presents a free lunchtime concert celebrating International Women’s Month. Known for expressive intensity, imaginative programming and distinctive instrumentation, the ensemble brings a fresh voice to the chamber music stage.

This special programme highlights repertoire connected to women’s artistic contributions, honouring creativity, resilience and evolving perspectives within classical and contemporary traditions. The quartet balances precision with emotional depth, weaving lyrical passages with bold musical storytelling.

Set in the welcoming environment of Hazel McCallion Central Library, the midday concert invites audiences to pause during their week and engage with live music in an accessible setting. Whether seasoned concertgoers or curious newcomers, attendees can expect an inspiring hour that celebrates both community and the enduring impact of women in music.

Quartet for the End of Time: Messiaen & Morlock
Friday, April 17, 2026 – 8 pm
Unitarian Congregation in Mississauga – 84 S Service Rd

April’s concert, titled Time Unbound, pairs a twentieth-century masterpiece with a striking modern reflection. At its heart is Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time, written during his imprisonment in the Second World War. Scored for violin, clarinet, cello and piano, the work contemplates eternity, faith and transcendence through radiant stillness and ecstatic bursts of rhythm.

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Complementing this is Bird in the Tangled Sky by Canadian composer Jocelyn Morlock, a piece inspired by birdsong and fragility amid chaos. Morlock’s shimmering textures and lyrical gestures offer a contemporary meditation on freedom and vulnerability.

Performed by violinist Amy Hillis, clarinettist Anthony Thompson, cellist Bryan Holt and pianist Cheryl Duvall, the programme explores contrasts between captivity and liberation, devastation and beauty. Listeners can anticipate moments of breathtaking quiet, emotional intensity and profound reflection. It is chamber music at its most searching and transformative.


Through diverse programming and accessible ticket options, the Chamber Music Society of Mississauga continues to foster meaningful musical experiences. By bringing global influences and profound artistry into intimate local venues, the organisation reinforces chamber music’s enduring power to connect, reflect and inspire.



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