During the first decade of the 21st century, the New York-based string quartet
Ethel moved into a position analogous to that held by the
Kronos Quartet during the 1980s and 1990s: stretching the boundaries of the conventions of string quartet literature by incorporating new technologies as well as the aesthetics of progressive popular music. While the
Kronos has focused more and more on the realm of non-Western musics in the new century,
Ethel has made technology an integrated element of its style and has developed the depth and breadth of its engagement with Western vernacular music. It draws it repertoire from pieces written as early as the last third of the 20th century, but it concentrates most strongly on music written since the mid-1990s.
Ethel was founded in 1998 by violinists
Todd Reynolds and Mary Rowell, violist
Ralph Farris, and cellist
Dorothy Lawson. In 2005, violinist
Cornelius Dufallo, who had been a member of the
Flux Quartet, replaced
Todd Reynolds, and
Jennifer Choi, formerly of the Miró Quartet, replaced Mary Rowell in 2011. All of the group's founding and current members had studied at Juilliard.
Collaboration is a foundational principal on which
Ethel operates, whether with composers and choreographers, classical performers like
Ursula Oppens,
Colin Currie, and
Iva Bittová, as well as ensembles
Bang on a Can,
Ensemble Modern, and Lionheart, or rock musicians such as
Todd Rundgren,
David Byrne,
Joe Jackson, and
Kurt Elling. The long list of composers with whom the group has worked includes
John Zorn,
Phil Kline,
Julia Wolfe,
Osvaldo Gólijov, John King,
Pamela Z,
Don Byron,
David Lang,
Kenji Bunch, Randall Woolf,
Judd Greenstein, and
Marcelo Zarvos.
Ethel has collaborated with choreographer Annie-B Parson and with the Dusan Tynek Dance Company. A significant aspect of its collaborative initiative and commitment to outreach is its ongoing involvement with the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Program as Ensemble-in-Residence at the Grand Canyon Music Festival, where it nurtures and performs the work of young Native American composers.
The quartet regularly performs with amplification and is dedicated to exploring the use of emerging technologies. It has been involved at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center in Urbana, IL, and the Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) Conference, where it was the house band in 2010.
Ethel has performed on several dozen recordings by other artists and is featured artist on a number of albums, including
Phil Kline's
John the Revelator,
Julia Wolfe's
String Quartets,
Mary Ellen Childs'
Dream House,
Neil Rolnick's Extended Family, and John King's AllSteel. The quartet has released three solo albums,
ETHEL (2003),
Light (2006), and
Heavy (2012).