Meg and Liz grew up playing string quartets
with their two brothers, Ben and J. Rehearsals were
often quite raucous, but they grew to love chamber music
during weekly coachings with Oliver Edel, a wonderful
cellist and teacher who taught generations of students
in the Washington, D.C., area. Nelson also comes from
a musical family–both of his parents are pianists
(his father also conducts) and his twin sisters, Alicia
and Andrea, play clarinet and cello. Although Daniel
originally wanted to be a violinist, he ended up on
the cello because the organizers of his first strings
program declared that he had “better hands for
the cello.” He remains skeptical of this comment
(he was, after all, only five), and suspects they may
just have needed more cellists, but is happy that he
ended up where he did. Daniel, Nelson, and Meg met at
the Cleveland Institute of Music, and when they were
searching for a violist Meg suggested they might consider
her sister Liz, who was at nearby Oberlin College. The
quartet finished up their schooling together at the
New England Conservatory of Music, where they were in
the Professional String Quartet Training Program. They
currently reside in Boston, Massachusetts.
The quartet chose its name because Jupiter was the
most prominent planet in the night sky at the time of
its formation, and the astrological symbol for Jupiter
resembles the number four. There are also musical references
(for example, Holst’s The Planets, in which Jupiter
is “the bringer of jollity”) that emphasize
the connotations of happiness and strength associated
with the Roman god Jupiter. The quartet owes much of
its musical philosophy to the influences of the original
Cleveland Quartet and the current Takacs Quartet, in
which all four members form a dynamic and democratic
union. The Jupiters spent many of their formative years
under the instruction of these eminent chamber musicians,
and continue to adhere to many of their central principles
today. While enjoying the opportunity to work with living
composers, they still feel a strong and fundamental
connection to the core string quartet literature, particularly
the wonderful set of sixteen quartets by Beethoven and
the six quartets of Bela Bartok. In addition to its
formal concert schedule, the Jupiter String Quartet
places a strong emphasis on developing relationships
with future classical music audiences through outreach
work in the school systems and other educational performances.
They believe that chamber music, because of the intensity
of its interplay and communication, is one of the most
effective ways of spreading an enthusiasm for “classical”
music to new audiences.
The Jupiters have been fortunate to receive several
recent chamber music honors, including first prize in
the Banff International String Quartet Competition,
grand prize in the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competion,
membership in Lincoln Center’s Chamber Music Society
Two, and Chamber Music America’s Cleveland Quartet
Award, which “honors and promotes a rising young
string quartet whose artistry demonstrates that it is
in the process of establishing a major career.”
The quartet also won the 2005 Young Concert Artists
International auditions and now holds YCA’s Helen
F. Whitaker Chamber Music Chair. Most recently, they
were honored to receive an Avery Fisher Career Grant.
The quartet concertizes across the United States, Canada,
Europe, Mexico, and South America. They have enjoyed
playing in such venues as New York’s Carnegie
Hall and Lincoln Center, Boston’s Jordan Hall,
Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes, and Washington,
D.C.’s Kennedy Center, Corcoran Gallery, and Library
of Congress. Other recent concerts include debuts in
Albuquerque, Austin, Birmingham, Boulder, Buffalo, Calgary,
Chicago, Cincinnati, Davis, Dayton, Detroit, Edmonton,
Jacksonville, Joplin, Palo Alto, Raleigh-Durham, San
Antonio, San Diego, Tallahassee, Toronto, Vancouver,
and Winnipeg, among others. They have also been enthusiastically
received at several major music festivals, including
the Aspen Music Festival, the Vancouver Chamber Music
Festival, the Caramoor International Music Festival,
the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, the Honest Brook
Festival, the Skaneateles Festival, and the Yellow Barn
Music Festival.
The quartet is managed by Bill Capone of the Arts Management
Group.
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