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The violinists
Gabor Takacs-Nagy and Karoly Schranz with the
violist Gabor Ormai and
the cellist Andres Fejer were all students in Budapest, Hungary, at the Music Academy, when they formed the string quartet Takacs in 1975.
Karoly Schwartz was the final addition as
the other three had previously performed as a trio.
After playing
together for a year or two they were the winners of the Critic’s
Prize and the First Prize at the International String Quartet Competition that
was held in Evian, France.
This brought them to the attention of an international audience and
led to them winning several other competitions that included the 1978
Budapest String Quartet Competition, the 1979 Bordeaux and Plymouth Competitions and the 1981
Bratislava Competition.
In 1982 they
gave their first tour of North America and the following year they made the
decision to relocate to the United States where they became the
quartet-in-residence at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
After ten
years in the United States Gabor Takacs-Nagy left the quartet and was succeeded by
Edward Dusinberre in 1993. The following year the violist Roger
Tapping became another replacement after Gabor Ormai was diagnosed with terminal cancer and sadly died
in 1995.
After the
line-up changed they recorded several albums which all met with
success. These were the
complete Beethoven quartet cycle, Borodin’s quartets, Bartok’s six quartet cycle and Smetana’s quartets.
Roger Tapping
left the quartet in 2005 in order to devote more time to his family. This led to him taking up teaching
and has recently been on the faculty of the New England Conservatory where
he teaches chamber music.
Roger was
replaced by the Principal Violist of the San Francisco Sympony
Orchestra, Geraldine Walther in 2005 and that same year they took on the
position of Associate Artists at the South Bank Centre.
In 2007 they
appeared at Carnegie Hall with Philip Seymour Hoffman in the production Everyman. They have also accompanied the poet
Robert Pinsky on a tour of the United States.
In 2010 they
started work with the playwright David Morse and the Colorado Shakespeare
Theatre on the production about the latter part of Beethoven’s life
entitled Quartet.
Their studio
performances aside from the ones listed above have included CDs of Franz
Schubert’s string quartets “Rosamunde”
and “Death and the Maiden” and Brahms String Quartet No. 2, Op.
51 and their total list of recordings to date in 2011 is sixteen.
Aside from
their work at the University of Colorado at Boulder the quartet also attend the Guildhall
School of Music as the Visiting Quartet and hold summer residencies at the Music Academy of the West, Santa Barbara and Aspen Festival.
Winning
several awards during their time together they have received a Gramophone
Award for their Bartok: The Six String Quartets, Grammy
Award for Best Chamber Performance for their Beethoven quartet cycle and a
Grammy Award nomination for Brahms String Quartet No.2.
They were
honoured in 2010 when they were recognised by the Faculty Assembly at the University of Colorado at Boulder for their “Excellence in Research
and Creative Work”. In
2011 they were the recipients of the Royal Philharmonic Society Award For
Chamber Music and Song in the UK and also in 2011 they were honoured by Hungary when they received The Commander’s
Cross of the Order of Merit.
Sources:
- http://www.takacsquartet.com/
- http://www.takacsquartet.com/press_group.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tak%C3%A1cs_Quartet
- http://music.colorado.edu/departments/strings/
- http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/a.asp?a=A1355&name=takacs
- http://cupresents.org/default/index.cfm?action=results&category=TAKACS
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