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The Miró Quartet, one of America's brightest and most exciting young string quartets,
is the resident Faculty String Quartet at The University of Texas at Austin's Butler School
of Music. The members of the Miró Quartet, violinists Daniel Ching and Sandy Yamamoto,
violist John Largess, and cellist Joshua Gindele, teach and coach chamber
music there, while continuing their active international touring schedule.
Since winning First Prize at the 1998 Banff International String Quartet Competition
and the prestigious Naumburg Chamber Music Award in 2000, the Miró Quartet has captivated
audiences around the world, dazzling listeners with its youthful intensity and mature
interpretations. Formed in the fall of 1995, the Quartet met with immediate success,
winning the First Prize at the 50th annual Coleman Chamber Music Competition in
April 1996, and the following month taking both the First and Grand prizes at the
Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition.
The Miró enjoys an active international touring schedule and performs in some of
the world's most recognized concert venues. Highlights from this past season included
performances in Boston, New York City, Washington D.C., and cities in Germany. The
Miró Quartet was Quartet-in-Residence at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
Two and was named to the Distinctive Debut Series of Carnegie Hall, which included
a Weill Recital Hall performance as well as debut appearances in Cologne, Stockholm,
Brussels, London, Vienna, Amsterdam and Athens. The ensemble made its Tokyo debut
in 2001 in a concert benefiting the victims and families of the September 11th tragedy.
The Quartet has been heard on countless national radio broadcasts, including those
of National Public Radio's "Performance Today" and Minnesota Public Radio's "Saint
Paul Sunday." Internationally, the Miró has been featured on radio networks across
Europe, Israel and Canada. The Quartet has also been seen on NBC's "Today Show,"
ABC's "World News Tonight," as well as on various programs of the Canadian Broadcasting
Company. At the invitation of Isaac Stern, the Quartet performed in a live broadcast
at the Jerusalem Music Center in Israel and was featured in the recent American
Masters Documentary "Isaac Stern: Life's Virtuoso."
The members of the Quartet maintain a strong dedication to the next generation of
musicians and were previously on the faculty of the Hugh A. Glauser School of Music
at Kent State University, where they taught private students and coach chamber music.
The Miró was the Resident String Quartet of Kent/Blossom Music, Kent's annual summer
chamber music festival in cooperation with the Cleveland Orchestra. The Quartet
also continues to make regular appearances at the Norfolk Chamber Music Festival
and is the Quartet-in-Residence at the Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival, and Aritists-in-Residence
at the Lake Tahoe Music Festival. On short notice, the Quartet filled in for both
Henry Meyer and Isaac Stern, leading master classes in Switzerland and Germany.
In 2001, the Quartet teamed up with the Grand Canyon Music Festival and composer
Brent Michael Davids to form the Native American Composers Apprentice Project, which
teaches Native American students how to read and write music. The Miró Quartet also
serves on the Advisory Council of Community MusicWorks of Providence, Rhode Island,
an organization dedicated to enriching the lives of inner city youths and families
through classical music.
The Quartet's unyielding commitment to contemporary music has led to the commission
and performance of music of such composers as Brent Michael Davids, David Schober,
Chan Ka Nin, Maurice Gardner and Ezra Laderman.
The Quartet has recorded the music of Gunther Schuller and Rued Langgaard for Bridge
Records and is currently working on a recording of George Crumb's Black Angels,
also for release on that label. The Miró Quartet have also recorded Mendelssohn's
last quartet, and Schubert's Quintet in C with cellist Matt Haimovitz, for a release
in 2004 on the Oxingale label.
The Miró Quartet is named after the Spanish artist Joan Miró, whose surrealist works,
with subject matter drawn from the realm of memory and imaginative fantasy, are
some of the most original of the 20th century.
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