San Francisco Conservatory’s Kaimana Quartet Returns to Hawai’i Festival

The San Francisco Conservatory of Music is expanding its reach. The Kaimana Quartet will head to Hawaiʻi for the 2026 Hawaiʻi Chamber Music Festival, blending elite training with hands-on teaching for young musicians.

This Marin County–flavored collaboration is anchored in community roots and Bay Area talent. It invites a broader audience to experience high-caliber chamber music in a tropical setting.

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Kaimana Quartet Heads to Hawaiʻi Chamber Music Festival: A Bay Area–Hawaiʻi Cultural Exchange

The Kaimana Quartet lineup for 2026 includes Cuna Kim and Qigong Ma on violins. Phoebe Lee plays viola, and Daniela Gonzales Siu handles cello.

This marks a multi-year partnership with the Hawaiʻi Chamber Music Festival (HCMF). It opens up new opportunities for young musicians in Hawaiʻi and gives SFCM students access to a tuition-free Young Artists Program in Honolulu.

For Marin families—from San Rafael to Sausalito and Mill Valley—the exchange creates a Bay Area–Hawaiʻi cultural bridge. The impact on local music education feels real and immediate.

Founder Christopher Yick, a 2024 SFCM graduate, wants the festival to stay rooted in the local community. He’s focused on elevating the experience with outside talent, too.

In towns like Tiburon, Fairfax, and Novato, that viewpoint resonates. Families want world-class music education and performance opportunities close to home.

  • This partnership stretches across several years. SFCM’s artistic rigor meshes with HCMF’s intimate audience settings in both Hawaiʻi and the Bay Area.
  • SFCM students take part in a teaching residency in Honolulu. They perform, teach, and mentor young musicians in the Young Artists Program.
  • The program supports youth development, diversity of repertoire, and exposure to professional guest artists—values Marin schools and cultural centers echo locally.
  • Attendance at HCMF keeps growing. There’s clearly a strong appetite for high-level arts within the Marin-to-Hawaiʻi travel belt.

Teaching Residency: Students Learn by Performing and Teaching in Honolulu

SFCM students spend a week in Honolulu as part of the residency. They perform for HCMF audiences and teach in the festival’s tuition-free Young Artists Program.

This model really mirrors Marin’s own approach to experiential learning. Think of Marin opera programs in Sausalito or youth orchestras in Novato—students gain from direct, hands-on instruction by seasoned professionals.

HCMF’s artistic leadership includes Stefan Jackiw, who’s kept ties with SFCM. Jackiw has given masterclasses and led an artistic residency at the conservatory.

The 2026 festival opens with a tribute to Henry Miyamura. Miyamura, a long-time Hawaiʻi Youth Symphony director and educator, has a legacy that resonates with Marin’s own music educators in towns like San Anselmo and Larkspur.

Community Growth and the Marin Connection: Why This Matters to Local Audiences

Attendance and community engagement have surged for HCMF, with more than 1,500 patrons in 2025. Regular venue capacities sit around 300–400 seats, which feels just right for the atmosphere.

This momentum really matches the interest we see in Marin’s towns—from Ross to Corte Madera. Residents want accessible, top-tier cultural programming close to Mill Valley, Fairfax, and Greenbrae.

Yick describes the festival’s mission as delivering “Carnegie Hall caliber experiences” to local students. There’s a strong focus on youth development and bringing in high-level guest artists.

For families in San Rafael, Novato, and San Anselmo, this partnership feels like a real pipeline. Marin students can learn from SFCM’s artistic approach and then bring that energy back to their own school concerts, community theaters, and local arts events.

In Marin, we know how valuable it is to connect classrooms with concert halls. The Kaimana Quartet’s Hawaiʻi residency and SFCM’s outreach help reinforce that connection.

They bridge the gap between elite training in San Francisco and hands-on teaching in Honolulu. Meanwhile, they’re keeping local communities engaged from Sausalito to Fairfax.

Bay Area arts coverage keeps spotlighting cross-cultural collaborations from Mill Valley to Corte Madera. Honestly, this Marin-forward partnership stands out as a model for how inspired youth development, generous philanthropy, and high-caliber artistry can actually thrive together in one of California’s most scenic counties.

 
Here is the source article for this story: The San Francisco Conservatory of Music Kaimana Quartet Returns to the Hawai’i Chamber Music Festival

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Joe Hughes
Joe Harris is the founder of MarinCountyVisitor.com, a comprehensive online resource inspired by his passion for Marin County's natural beauty, diverse communities, and rich cultural offerings. Combining his love for exploration with his intimate local knowledge, Joe curates an authentic guide to the area featuring guides on Marin County Cities, Things to Do, and Places to Stay. Follow Joe on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
 

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