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Vanguard Concerts

Juilliard String Quartet
May 19 2012
Vanguard Concerts

The Vanguard Concerts 50th anniversary season comes to a stellar conclusion on May 19 with the return of the Juilliard String Quartet. The Juilliard String Quartet holds a special place in the history of the Vanguard Concerts series. The acclaimed ensemble also closed the first Vanguard Concerts season in the spring of 1963. The Quartet has returned to Dayton numerous times over the years.

“The Vanguard Concerts series in Dayton has been one of the longest standing concert series in the country thanks to the dedication of Vincent and Elana Bolling,” says Samuel Rhodes, JSQ violist. “It takes place in one of the most beautiful looking and grateful sounding halls in the U.S. I have wonderful memories of playing there on many different occasions with the Juilliard String Quartet. I congratulate the Bollings on their nurturing of a responsive and intelligent public in the service of chamber music.”

Read more: "Still Leading After All These Years" at DaytonCityPaper.com

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Since its inception in 1946, the Juilliard String Quartet has embodied the credo stated by founders Robert Mann and William Schuman to “play new works as if they were established masterpieces, and established masterpieces as if they were new.” The hallmarks of its distinctive sound – clarity of structure, beauty of sound, purity of line and an extraordinary unanimity of purpose – have been applied to virtually every era and genre in the literature, from Beethoven, Schubert and Bartók to Carter, Davidovsky, Babbitt and Wernick.

The Juilliard String Quartet continues its vibrant tradition of music-making and teaching in the 2011/12 season, with Joseph Lin as its new first violinist and colleague on the faculty of The Juilliard School. The Quartet appears worldwide in prestigious venues, including in New York City and Philadelphia, at the Ravinia Festival, at Cornell and Stanford Universities, and abroad in Munich, London, Tokyo, Osaka and Macau.

In recent seasons, the Quartet has performed at the Vienna Konzerthaus, the Konzerthaus Berlin, the International Beethoven Festival in Bonn, the Palacio Real in Madrid, the Cité de la musique in Paris, the Miyazaki Festival in Japan, the Moscow International Performing Arts Centre, London’s Wigmore Hall and Queen Elizabeth Hall, the Musica Viva Chamber Music Festival in Australia, and the Israel Festival in Jerusalem. In the United States, they have appeared at Carnegie Hall, the Tanglewood Festival, the Kennedy Center, the Library of Congress, Boston’s Jordan Hall, Los Angeles’s Disney Hall and San Francisco’s Herbst Theatre.

Great American composer William Schuman, then president of The Juilliard School, and violinist Robert Mann created the ensemble to perform contemporary works as well as the great classical repertoire, and to mentor the next generation of emerging musical quartets at Juilliard. These have been, and remain, the cornerstones of the JSQ mission.

During the course of its history, the JSQ has performed some 500 works, including the premieres of more than 60 pieces by American composers, with works by the country’s finest jazz musicians among them. The JSQ was the first ensemble to play all six Bartók quartets in the United States. The quartets of Schoenberg were rescued from obscurity by the ensemble’s performances.

With more than 100 releases to its credit, the JSQ is one of the most widely recorded string quartets of our time. The JSQ’s recordings of the complete Bartók quartets, the late Beethoven quartets, the complete Schoenberg quartets, and Debussy and Ravel quartets have all received Grammy Awards. Inducted into the Hall of Fame of the National Academy for Recording Arts and Sciences in 1986 for its first recording of the complete Bartók quartets, the Juilliard String Quartet was awarded the Deutsche Schallplattenkritik Prize in 1993 for Lifetime Achievement in the recording industry. In 2011, the Juilliard String Quartet became the first classical music ensemble to be honored by The Recording Academy with its Lifetime Achievement Award.

How To Go

Date: Saturday, May 19
Location: NCR Renaissance Auditorium
Time: 8:00 p.m.
Cost: $30 adults; $20 students 

Photo: Ronald Copes, Second Violin; Joel Krosnick, Cello; Joseph Lin, First Violin; Samuel Rhodes, Viola
Photo by Steve J. Sherman
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TUESDAY CLOSED
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