Sharing the Gift of Music
An endowment accompanying rare instruments lets them be heard in performances and on recordings
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, August 1998, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Appropriately, the Chamber Music Society's quartet, known first as the Smithson, then as the Party of Four, now is officially named the Axelrod Quartet — the same name given to those glorious Strads they get to play.
"I can't tell you," Sturm marveled, "how it feels to play them, the smoothness, the ease with which you can draw out a rich sound. You just don't have to work so hard."
Well now, maybe that was my problem. I played the violin from the age of 4 until I discovered girls, and I practiced for an hour every day, struggled with the high school orchestra, sweated over the annual solo performance, and it was hard work, all right. It was agony every minute, trying to keep it from squeaking, the way a violin will.
Maybe if I'd had a Strad . . .
By Michael Kernan
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