Arnold
Steinhardt, Violin
John Dalley, Violin
Michael Tree, Viola
Peter Wiley, Cello
The renowned Guarneri String Quartet has circled the
globe countless times since it was formed in 1964, playing in the
world's most prestigious halls in North and South America, Mexico,
Europe, Asia and Australia.
The 2002-2003 season finds them touring extensively
throughout the United States and Europe as well as the Far East for
performances in Shanghai and Taipei. They also continue their annual
Metropolitan Museum of Art six-concert series, instituted in 1965, as
well as their longstanding series and residency at the University of
Maryland.
In addition to mastering the finest works in the
existing quartet repertoire, the Guarneri String Quartet is committed to
performing and popularizing works by today's foremost composers. In the
2001-2002 season, the Guarneri gave the first performances of String
Quartet #5, written for them by Lukas Foss. The National Symphony
Orchestra commissioned a concerto for string quartet and orchestra,
written expressly for the Guarneri String Quartet by the award winning
American composer, Richard Danielpour. The piece was premiered with the
National Symphony Orchestra at Washington DC's Kennedy Center on January
13,14, and 15, 2000, under the direction of Leonard Slatkin, and given
its New York premiere at Carnegie Hall on January 25, 2000.
The Quartet has been featured on many television and
radio specials, documentaries and educational presentations both in
North America and abroad. They have been interviewed by Charles Kuralt
on CBS' nationwide television program, "Sunday Morning." A
full-length film entitled "High Fidelity - The Guarneri String
Quartet" was released nationally, to great critical and public
acclaim, in the fall of 1989. (The film was directed and produced by
Allan Miller who was also the director/producer of the Academy
Award-winning documentary, "From Mozart to Mao," which dealt
with Isaac Stern's visit to China). The quartet is also the subject of
various books including Quartet by Helen Drees Ruttencutter (Lippincott
& Crowell, 1980), The Art of Quartet Playing: the Guarneri in
Conversation with David Blum (Alfred A. Knopf, 1986) and Arnold
Steinhardt's Indivisible by Four: A String Quartet in Pursuit of Harmony
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998).
In 1982, Mayor Koch presented the Quartet with the
first New York Seal of Recognition. The Quartet was awarded Honorary
Doctorate degrees by the University of South Florida (1976) and the
State University of New York (1983). In 1992, the Guarneri String
Quartet became the only quartet to receive the prestigious Award of
Merit from the Association of Performing Arts Presenters in New York
City. The Quartet is also on the faculty of the University of Maryland.
The Guarneri String Quartet currently records for
Surroundedby Entertainment, which released its first CD in Spring 2001
of Quartets by Ravel, Debussy and Fauré. Several of its recordings on
both RCA Red Seal and Philips have won international awards, including
its recent recording of Juan Crisostomo de Arriaga's String Quartet nos.
1-3 (Philips), which won the 1996 Deutsche Schallplattenkritik Award in
Germany. Among its other award-winning recordings are collaborations
with such artists as Artur Rubinstein, Pinchas Zukerman; and Boris Kroyt
and Mischa Schneider of the Budapest Quartet. They have also recorded
for the Arabesque label, Mendelssohn's String Quartet No. 3 and its
first ever recording of the great Mendelssohn Octet, Op. 20, in
collaboration with the Orion Quartet.
September 2002