March 17, 1997
Press Contact: Helen Dalrymple (202) 707-1940
Concert Line: (202) 707-5502
Library of Congress To Honor Robert Mann on April 7
The Library of Congress will celebrate Robert Mann's 50
years as founder and first violinist of the Juilliard String
Quartet with a special concert on Monday, April 7, at 8 p.m.
The concert will be presented at the National Academy of
Sciences auditorium, 2100 C St. N.W. There will be a
reception immediately following the concert.
Mr. Mann will join his colleagues in the Juilliard
Quartet that evening for a program featuring Franz Joseph
Haydn's Quartet in D major, Op. 76, No. 5; Ralph Shapey's
Quartet No. 8; and the Quartet in A minor, Op. 51, No. 2 of
Johannes Brahms. The National Academy of Sciencesš Arts in
the Academy program is co-sponsoring the concert with the
Library of Congress. The concert is free and open to the
public; no tickets are required, and seating is by general
admission.
"Robert Mann has been a great friend to the Library of
Congress for almost five decades," said Jon Newsom, chief of
the Library's Music Division. "We are proud that the
Juilliard String Quartet has been in residence at the
Library of Congress since 1962. But our relationship with
Robert Mann began with the early days of the quartet; he
first performed in our Coolidge Auditorium on Dec. 10, 1948,
when the Juilliard String Quartet was brand-new. Since then
he has made more than 550 appearances here with the
Juilliard -- playing our Stradivari violins.
"Robert Mann has also appeared at the Library in
several other roles," Mr. Newsom continued. "We've heard
him perform as a soloist, and as a duo violinist with his
son, Nicholas; we've also known him as a composer and as a
co-host of our radio broadcast series. It would be hard to
exaggerate his importance to our concert series over the
years.
Robert Mann is a well-loved figure at the Library, and
we are now in the process of establishing a Robert Mann Fund
for Chamber Music to honor his 50 years of distinguished
music-making here."
Born in 1920 in Portland, Ore., Robert Mann began his
study of the violin at age nine; at 13, he was accepted into
the class of Edouard Hurlimann, concertmaster of the
Portland Symphony. In 1938, he moved to New York City to
enroll in the Juilliard School, where he studied violin with
Edouard Dethier, composition with Bernard Wagenaar and
Stephan Wolpe, and conducting with Edgar Schenkman. Mr.
Mann won the prestigious Naumburg Competition in 1941 and
made his New York debut two days after the attack on Pearl
Harbor. Shortly after his graduation from Juilliard, he was
drafted into the army.
At the invitation of Juilliard's president, William
Schuman, Robert Mann formed the Juilliard String Quartet in
1946, and he has been the ensemble's first violinist ever
since. The quartet, which celebrates its Golden Jubilee
this season, has played approximately 5,000 concerts and
performed more than 450 works, including some 75 premieres.
Its discography includes recordings of more than 100
compositions.
Mr. Mann has composed more than 30 works for narrator
with various instruments that he performs with his wife, the
actress Lucy Rowan; several have been recorded on the
Musical Heritage label. He has also composed an Orchestral
Fantasy performed by Dimitri Mitropoulos with the New York
Philharmonic, the Vienna Philharmonic, and at the Salzburg
Festival; a Duo for Violin and Piano premiered at Carnegie
Hall by Itzhak Perlman and Samuel Sanders; and a string
quartet included in the repertoires of both the La Salle and
the Concord string quartets. Other works include a Duo for
Cello and Piano written for Joel Krosnick and Gilbert
Kalish, a Concerto for Orchestra, and "Lament" for two solo
violas and orchestra.
Robert Mann's solo discography includes Béla Bartók's
Solo Violin Sonata, the Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano,
and Contrasts; Beethoven's complete violin sonatas (with
pianist Stephen Hough); many of Mozart's violin sonatas,
with pianist Yefim Bronfman; and Elliott Carter's Duo for
Violin and Piano, with Christopher Oldfather.
Mr. Mann has conducted throughout his professional
career; he led the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a Peter
Bartók recording of Béla Bartók's Piano Concerto No. 1.
He made his public debut as a conductor with the Seattle
Symphony during the 1988-89 season, and conducted the
Jupiter Symphony, a musical group, the following season in
New York City.
As a mentor to younger generations of string musicians,
Mr. Mann has worked intensively with the Alexander,
American, Concord, Emerson, New World, Mendelssohn, Tokyo,
Brentano, Lark, and St. Lawrence strings quartets, as well
as with members of the Cleveland String Quartet and other
ensembles. In recent years, he has expanded his teaching to
include violin majors at the Juilliard School. Among his
students are Juliette Kang, who recently won the
Indianapolis International Violin Competition, and Mark
Steinberg, the first violinist of the Brentano String
Quartet.
Founder and first artistic director of the Ravinia
Institute for Young Artists at Chicago's Ravinia Festival,
Mr. Mann has also served as chairman of the Chamber Music
Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts. He is
currently a member of the Board of Directors of the New York
Philharmonic, and president of the Walter W. Naumburg
Foundation. In 1990, Mr. Mann was honored as the recipient
of the Chamber Music America Service Award and the annual
award of the American String Teachers Association. He has
received honorary doctorates from Oberlin College, Michigan
State University, Earlham College, Jacksonville University,
and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.
Mr. Mann's son, Nicholas, a violinist and violist with
whom Mr. Mann often plays duo recitals, is a founding member
of the Mendelssohn String Quartet.
In recognition of his contributions to the arts, Robert
Mann was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences in April 1996.
For further information about the special April 7
concert in Robert Mann's honor, please call the Library of
Congress Concert Line at (202) 707-5502.
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PR 97-45
3/17/97
ISSN 0731-3527