top of page

Megumi Stohs Lewis

Co-Artistic Director, Violin

Megumi Stohs Lewis

Raised in Portland, Oregon, Megumi Stohs Lewis started playing the violin at age three, but grew up with a dream of studying agricultural science. The summer she turned sixteen, she attended the Olympic Music Festival, held on a beautiful farm in Washington State, and realized that music and the countryside were a perfect combination. Since then, Megumi has soloed with orchestras throughout the US and Japan, and has toured with ensembles throughout Australia, New Zealand, and Europe. Now residing in Boston, she is a co-founder of A Far Cry Chamber Orchestra; has been a guest with Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the Radius Ensemble, and the Boston Pops; and plays regularly with the Aurea Ensemble. Starting in 2008, Megumi picked up the baroque violin and quickly fell for the gut strings and a variety of period bows. This love has led to performances with Boston Baroque, the Handel and Haydn Society, Les Bostonades, and the formation of Antico Moderno, a period instrument ensemble actively commissioning contemporary works. She also loves to fiddle and play rock and has regularly toured with Britain’s Jethro Tull. Megumi’s primary influences include her teachers Lucy Chapman at the New England Conservatory and Camilla Wicks and Ian Swensen at the San Francisco Conservatory. Especially in chamber music and period performance, Roger Tapping, Martha Katz, Phoebe Carrai, Manfredo Kraemer, and Mark Sokol have been significant mentors. Megumi is on the violin, viola, and chamber music faculty at Gordon College in Wenham, MA. She is currently satisfying her longing for agriculture through heirloom vegetable gardening.

© 2023 by Sheffield Chamber Players

a 501(c)3 non-profit organization

Sheffield Chamber Players

PO Box 301512

Boston, MA 02130

  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

We are proud to participate in Mass Cultural Council's Card to Culture program in collaboration with the Department of Transitional Assistance, the Department of Public Health's WIC Nutrition Program, the Massachusetts Health Connector, and hundreds of organizations by making cultural programming accessible to those for whom cost is a participation barrier.

 

EBT, WIC, and ConnectorCare cardholders receive free admission (4 per card) to any self-presented public concert. Please email info@sheffieldchamberplayers.org to reserve your tickets or claim your tickets at the door.

 

See the complete list of participating organizations offering EBTWIC, and ConnectorCare discounts.

Supported in part by...

Copy of BCC_FullLogo_green.jpeg
Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture.png
hitsdd_photo_gal__photo_968418578.png
16x9-Mass-Cultural-Council-.jpeg
bottom of page