MARIAN
ANDERSON STRING QUARTET
BELIEVES CLASSICAL MUSIC IS FOR EVERYONE
Award-winning String Ensemble is Devoted to Community Outreach
They
are the first African American music ensemble to win a major competition
in the field of classical music. But what's even more wonderful
about the Anderson String Quartet is their devotion to community
outreach.
They have given concerts at Alice Tully Hall in New York and
the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., as well as soup kitchens
and institutions for the criminally
insane. They have given a concert at the Chateau Cantanac-Brown in Bordeaux,
France and performed live on "Good Morning America" after performing at President
Clinton's 1992 inauguration. They've also performed at juvenile correctional
facilities. They teach on a regular basis in inner city classrooms.
The Anderson Quartet takes seriously its philosophy that classical
music is literally meant for everyone. "We're trying to break down that barrier, the
belief that classical music is elitist," says cellist Michael Cameron.
Even when giving "formal" concerts, they will schmooze between
the playing of each musical work.
They entered Rice University's Shepherd School of Music this fall to study
in the Quartet -more- Training Program under the direction of Professor of
Cello Paul Katz, and will study at Rice for two years.
Marianne Henry, a founding member of the group, says that the musicians originally
came together because they were friends who happened to be African American.
But once they saw the response they were getting from minority audiences they
realized that they were role models.
They see their time with the children as being more than teaching scales.
"It's so much bigger than the music," says Lawrence. "They're budding human beings
and everything you do with them is important: The way you speak to them, look
at them, hug them. When I take the girls to the ladies' room, I always have them
look in the mirror and remind them of how beautiful they are. These are the kind
of things that count for life."
Their own lives have certainly not been short on variety. In '93, they performed
at the inaugural celebration for President Clinton. A few years earlier, when
they lived in New York City, the female members of the quartet performed on
the sidewalk for tips and drew huge crowds that spilled into the street. They
would often get marriage proposals from strangers. In '97, Lawrence received
and accepted a proposal from someone she knew-- Cameron.
When they lived in New York City, they spent considerable time working with
children at the Harlem School of the Arts. The quartet members will be in Manhattan
this summer and plan to spend more time at the school.
Winner of the International Cleveland Quartet Competition, the group
is named after the legendary contralto Marian Anderson.
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