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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Emerson String Quartet will perform
in the Moody Music Building Concert Hall at The University of Alabama
Sept. 30 at 7:30 p.m. as part of the UA’s School
of Music Celebrity Series sponsored by the Gloria Narramore Moody Foundation.
Although formed during the American bicentennial, the Emerson
String Quartet’s four members have been playing together
since 1979. To keep their sound fresh and vibrant, Eugene Drucker
and Phillip Setzer alternate as first violin. Another innovation
by the group has the two violinists and violist Lawrence Dutton
stand while playing; cellist David Finckel performs from a podium.
Using this radical stance and positioning themselves farther apart
on stage gives the musicians greater projection while providing
greater clarity to the music.
Last year the Emerson String Quartet was awarded the Avery Fisher
Prize. Their selection underscores their strengths as individual
instrumentalists, as previously only soloists were eligible, and
highlights their collective achievements as recognized by six Grammy
awards. The quartet is the only chamber ensemble to win the Avery
Fisher Prize for best classical recording and they have received
it twice in 28 years.
Celebrity Series subscriptions are $72 and $55. Single ticket
prices for the concerts are $22 and $15 for general admission and
$7 for students. They are available for purchase at the box office
at 205/348-7111.
About the Gloria Narramore Moody Foundation: The Moody Foundation
was founded in 1990 by Gloria Moody and her husband, the late Tuscaloosa
businessman Frank McCorkle Moody, to support the arts and music.
In addition to bringing world-class performers to Alabama, the
Moody Foundation has endowed scholarships at UA and has supported
arts organizations elsewhere in the United States.
This is the 17th year the Moody Foundation has brought internationally
acclaimed talent to Alabama and underwritten the performances of
world-class performers such as the Guarneri String Quartet, pianist
Awadagin Pratt, soprano Benita Valente of the New York Metropolitan
Opera, violinist Itzhak Perlman and cellist Yo-Yo Ma with pianist
Emanuel Ax in a joint recital at The University of Alabama.
The UA School of Music is part of the College of Arts and Sciences,
the University’s largest division and the largest public
liberal arts college in the state with 6,600 students and 360 faculty.
Students from the college have won numerous national awards including
Rhodes Scholarships, Goldwater Scholarships and memberships on
the “USA Today” Academic All American Team.
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