Simin
Ganatra, violin; Masumi Per Rostad, viola; Sibbi Bernhardsson, violin;
Brandon Vamos, cello
The Pacifica Quartet
September 23, 2007
The Pacifica, often heard on Saint Paul Sunday,
won the 1998 Naumburg Award and is rated among the most respected
American string quartets. Kyle MacMillan said of them, "These
four closely knit musicians bring freshness, inner vibrancy and
an open, radiant sound to their playing, not to mention a seemingly
unerring ability to capture the innate mood and character of whatever
they take on." This will be a homecoming for cellist Brandon
Vamos, and the Pacifica will play for us the most monumental of
all quartets, Beethoven's Op. 130 with the Great Fugue.
Recognized for its virtuosity, exuberant
performance style, and daring repertory choices, the Pacifica Quartet
has carved out a compelling musical path. Since the ensemble first
came together in 1994, it quickly swept top prizes in several leading
international competitions, including the 1998 Naumburg Chamber
Music Competition. In 2002 the Pacifica was appointed to Chamber
Music Society of Lincoln Center’s CMS Two program for gifted
young musicians, and it was further honored with Chamber Music America’s
coveted Cleveland Quartet Award. In May 2006 the Pacifica received
a prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant, only the second chamber
music ensemble ever to be selected.
The Pacifica Quartet tours extensively throughout
the United States, Europe, and the Far East. It can also be heard
on many of the nation’s most prominent radio broadcasts, including
Chicago’s WFMT, National Public Radio’s Performance
Today, and Minnesota Public Radio’s St. Paul Sunday. In the
2005-2006 season, the Pacifica embarked on a European tour that
included a re-engagement at Wigmore Hall in London and debut appearances
in Brussels and Stuttgart. Two concerts in New York’s Lincoln
Center highlighted U.S. touring engagements, which included performances
across the country from Boston to New Orleans to Tucson. The Pacifica
collaborated with a number of distinguished artists during the season,
including the Emerson and St. Lawrence string quartets and pianists
Menahem Pressler, Wu Han, and Ursula Oppens.
Prolific in the recording studio, the Pacifica
Quartet recently released Declarations: Music Between the Wars showcasing
music composed by Leos Janacek, Paul Hindemith, and America’s
Ruth Crawford Seeger during the turbulent 1920s and 1930s. The Quartet’s
earlier recordings of the complete string quartets of Felix Mendelssohn
have been praised by critics in the US and abroad. The April 2006
edition of Gramophone magazine featured the Pacifica on its cover
and described it as "one of the finest and most energetic quartets
of the younger generation.”
The Pacifica Quartet is an ardent advocate
of contemporary music, commissioning and performing as many as eight
new works a year. It has championed Elliott Carter’s string
quartets and has distinguished itself in performances of the complete
cycle of five Carter quartets in New York, San Francisco, Chicago,
and Cleveland, and abroad in Japan, Germany, and the Edinburgh International
Festival. The New York Times wrote glowingly of the “astounding
performances” and the Chicago Tribune praised the Quartet’s
“astonishing talent, energy, and dedication.” Through
its affiliation with Contempo, one of the country’s leading
contemporary music organizations, the Quartet presents a series
of concerts each year devoted to new music.
The members of the Pacifica Quartet live
in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, where they were appointed to the
faculty of the University of Illinois in 2004 and serve as Faculty
Quartet in Residence. Reflecting their dedication to musicians and
music lovers of the next generation, they are frequently invited
to visiting residencies at universities nationwide, and they teach
and perform at summer festivals, including Fontana Chamber Arts,
Music in the Vineyards, Interlochen Arts Camp, and the Madeline
Island Music Festival. They are also resident performing artists
at University of Chicago and the Longy School in Boston. The Quartet
was instrumental in creating the Music Integration Project, an innovative
program that provides musical performances and teacher training
to inner-city elementary schools.
The members of the Pacifica Quartet share
a history of personal and musical friendship. First violinist Simin
Ganatra, cellist Brandon Vamos, and violinist Sibbi Bernhardsson
played together while they were all teenagers. Sibbi later introduced
his friend violist Masumi Rostad to the group. Originating on the
West Coast, the Quartet takes its name from the awe-inspiring Pacific
Ocean. Throughout their journey as a string quartet, its members
strive to be Distinct as the billows/yet one as the sea (James Montgomery). |