Concord String Quartet

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The Concord String Quartet was an American string quartet established in 1971. The members of the quartet were Mark Sokol and Andrew Jennings, violins; John Kochánowski, viola; Norman Fischer, cello. They gave their last regular concert on May 15, 1987. An anniversary concert was given in December 1996 at the Naumburg Foundation.

Farewell Concert Program Notes (partial) May 7, 1987

The Concord String Quartet was born in 1971 when its members, each a self-professed quartet "fanatic," agreed over the telephone to try forming an ensemble. Coming from four different parts of the country – Mark from Oberlin and Seattle, Andy from Buffalo, John from South Bend, and Norman from Plymouth, Michigan – each Concord had been playing the quartet repertoire with family, friends, and colleagues for many years, but none of them knew all three others. However, each had studied or played with the Juilliard Quartet's founding violinist Robert Mann, who encouraged their aspirations and recommended them to each other. They enrolled in a summer program for nascent string quartets at SUNY, Binghamton, where they met for the first time and began rehearsing with an awkward discord (one of them had been practicing the wrong music). Even as they were selecting the name Concord out of the dictionary (with its resonant associations – Ives' "Concord, Mass." sonata; the opposite of discord), the foursome launched itself into its contemporary repertoire with a vengeance. This was fueled by a commitment, arranged on the recommendation of friends, to record a three-record VOX BOX of avant-garde American quartets. Their intensive summer in Binghamton was broken only by their first introduction to Dartmouth in August – a two-week rehearsing residency funded by the Friends of Hopkins Center which culminated with an informal "thank you" performance in Rollins Chapel. The next two years saw the Concord taking part in a special program at SUNY, Binghamton and in a touring residency sponsored by the Hudson Valley Philharmonic Society. Throughout that period the quartet consolidated its reputation as champions of contemporary American music, while exploring both the well-trodden paths and the odd byways of the standard repertoire. Their award-winning albums of contemporary quartets established the Concords at the forefront of contemporary quartet performance, and unloosed a steady stream of new quartets by hopeful composers that arrived in their mailbox several times a week for years. For much of that time their policy was to give every new work at least a quick run-through, and their commitment to new works has never varied. Numerous quartets have been written for or dedicated to the Concords. Early on, as winners of the Walter W. Naumburg Chamber Music Award in the fall of 1971, the Concords were entitled to commission a new quartet. They chose to approach composer George Rochberg, who produced his String Quartet No. 3. One of the earliest works written in the then-revolutionary "collage" technique that has since been dubbed "Neo-Romantic," the Rochberg quartet, and the Concord's performances and recording of it, landed them smack in the middle of an international musical controversy that continued through a seven-work association with that composer. In 1974, following several more concerts at Dartmouth, then director of the Hopkins Center Peter Smith asked the Concord to become string quartet-in-residence. Among the quartets Smith considered, he wrote, the Concords "displayed a refreshing adventurousness in their approach to repertoire. made it clear they wanted to teach and had every confidence they would enjoy it. Nobody could miss their energy or their basic good spirits." In the ensuing years, the Concords not only enriched the College's and the community's musical lives immensely, but continued to amass an enviable national and international reputation, buoyed by well-received recordings of both the standard and the non-standard repertoire. The quartet has played over eleven hundred concerts in forty-one states and the District of Columbia, three Canadian provinces, and six other foreign countries. They celebrated the end of their first three-year residency at Dartmouth with a performance of the complete Beethoven quartets – considered the pivotal challenge for any string quartet, and later performed that cycle around the country, including sellout Beethoven series in New York's Alice Tully Hall in three successive seasons. They have also performed a complete Bartok cycle, and participated in a summer devoted largely to Schubert chamber music. Never far from public sight, the Concords made news in 1976 when they rehearsed with composer Lukas Foss in the lounge of the Pan American terminal at Kennedy International Airport – the only place where the busy quartet and composer could cross paths during hectic touring schedules. They were again in the headlines in 1982 when Jennings' Stradivarius violin was stolen after a concert on Nantucket Island – and it was recovered on the mainland several days later. In 1977 the quartet won the first of two Emmy Awards (for the New England Region) for its three-part PBS broadcast "The Concord String Quartet Plays Bartok and Haydn." At Dartmouth, each has held a position of Adjunct Associate Professor of Music, combining teaching and instrumental instruction duties with busy concert schedules. As individuals, they have performed at Dartmouth and throughout the region with great frequency. Members of the quartet have soloed with the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra in major concerti, have appeared in solo recital, and have performed with other faculty and visiting artists in a variety of chamber music contexts. In addition to their Beethoven, Bartok, and Schubert celebrations, other significant Dartmouth performances have included a concert of new works by faculty members Jon Appleton, Lauren Levey, and Christian Wolff, a performance with their "Godfather," Robert Mann, of some of his own music, a continuing series devoted to Mozart quartets and quintets, and concerts with celebrated guest artists including Gervase de Peyer, Richard Goode, Claude Monteux, Gilbert Kalish, Leslie Guinn, Menahem Pressler, Bernard Greenhouse, and Walter Trampler. Last December, the quartet announced that it would disband following the 1986–87 concert season, so that its members could pursue other teaching and performing activities that were incompatible with being a fulltime string quartet. They leave the stage as one of the few world-class quartets that has maintained its original membership throughout its lifetime.

Discography

Awards

Premiers (World and American)

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