Yale Quartet

The Yale Quartet was a string quartet based at Yale University composed of musicians in the Yale School of Music and formed and led by Broadus Erle (formerly of the New Music Quartet)[1] from the time he arrived in Yale in 1960.[2] It is especially noted for a set of recordings of the late Beethoven quartets, made during the late 1960s and early 1970s.[3] .[4] When Erle died prematurely in Spring 1977, the quartet disbanded, although the violinist Syoko Aki & violoncellist Aldo Parisot still teach at Yale (as of 2012). The Tokyo Quartet was the quartet-in-residence at Yale for most of the period since Erle's death, until the Brentano String Quartet was appointed to the position in 2013.[5] The Yale Quartet's recordings of the late Beethoven works have been reissued on compact disc (twice), as has their recording with André Previn of the Brahms Piano quintet, but their only other recording, of two Mozart quartets, has not been yet.

Personnel

1st violin:

2nd violin:

Viola:

Cello:

Recordings

References

  1. Broadus Erle biography
  2. B.H. Haggin, 'Music Chronicle' in The Hudson Review Vol 22 no 4 (Winter 1969-70) pp 687-697.
  3. Classics Today Review
  4. Classics Today Review


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