The
Juilliard String Quartet was founded in 1946 by
William Schuman, who was the president of the Juilliard School in New York. The original members of the quartet were violinists
Robert Mann and Robert Koff, violist
Raphael Hillyer, and cellist Arthur Winograd. The members of the quartet have changed a number of times over the course of the ensemble's career, but after more than 50 years of performances and recordings, the
Juilliard Quartet has remained one of the most famous and well-respected string quartets in the world.
The
Juilliard Quartet was born out of a need for committed performances of modern music and for a revitalized approach to the standard string quartet repertoire. When
William Schuman, then the new president of the Juilliard School, proposed the formation of a resident string quartet to the board of directors in 1947, it was with the understanding that this group would, in his words, "embrace the entire repertoire of music," with the only stipulation being that its name would not be changed, no matter who the players were. The debut performances of the quartet were astonishingly successful, and critics remarked on the group's vigorous, dynamic playing, and the overwhelming intensity of each performance. More recent reviews continue to cite the
Juilliard Quartet's passion, but also its "homogeneity" and "secure" sound, no doubt a product of its long and distinguished history.
The quartet has been recognized for giving equal reverence to both 20th-century music and past masterworks and has successfully performed not only works by
Beethoven,
Mozart,
Haydn, and
Brahms, but also the music of
Bartók,
Berg,
Schoenberg, and
Shostakovich. The quartet is well-known in particular for its performances of the
Beethoven string quartet cycle, but, it is also recognized as an important champion of contemporary American music, on average premiering one new work each year, if not more. Its American repertory includes music by
Elliot Carter,
Aaron Copland,
Roger Sessions, and
Milton Babbitt.
The
Juilliard Quartet is, of course, the quartet in residence at Juilliard, but also at the Library of Congress (since 1962) and at Michigan State University (since 1977). The library loaned the quartet its set of Stradivarius instruments as part of the residency. The quartet members are not only performers, but also apologists for modern music and teachers at Juilliard. They have helped nuture many other quartets, including the
Emerson,
Tokyo, La Salle, and Lark quartets. The ensemble has toured extensively throughout the world, and was the first American string quartet to visit the Soviet Union in 1961.
The quartet's discography includes recordings of the complete cycle of
Beethoven string quartets; the
Mendelssohn quartets; the string quartets of
Haydn,
Verdi,
Schubert, and
Sibelius; and the quintets of
Mozart and
Brahms. The quartet has also recorded music by
Schoenberg, Webern, Beach,
Barber,
Carter,
Smetana,
Gould,
Franck, and numerous other modern composers. For its recordings, the group has received four Grammy awards, a German Record Critics lifetime achievement award, Musical America's Musician of the Year (1996), and been inducted into the National Academy Recording Arts and Sciences' Hall of Fame.