Dover Quartet
Joseph Conyers, double bass
The Howard Family Concert & The Reiko T. and Yuan C. Lee Fund for Outstanding String Performers
Location: Shriver Hall
“Few young American ensembles are as exciting an accomplished as the Dover Quartet,” raves The New Yorker. An alum of SHCS’s Discovery Series, this stunning group returns to Baltimore with Philadelphia Orchestra double-bassist Joseph Conyers, “a lyrical musician who plays with authenticity that transcends mere technique” (Grand Rapids Press). Following string quartets by Haydn and Pulitzer Prize winner George Walker, the Quartet and Conyers unite for Dvořák’s lush, richly textured Op. 77 Quintet.
“Meticulously balanced, technically clean-as-a-whistle and intonationally immaculate.” —The Strad
About the sponsor
A member of Shriver Hall Concert Series' Board of Directors from 1987 to 2012, Dr. J. Woodford Howard, Jr. is the Thomas P. Stran Professor Emeritus at The Johns Hopkins University where he taught in and chaired the Department of Political Science. At SHCS, Dr. Howard, or "Woody," was for many years Chair of the Music Committee. In his capacity as Chair, Woody used his encyclopedic knowledge of chamber music to help select artists and repertoire. Mrs. Howard has also assumed an active role in volunteering for many SHCS projects. The Howard Family concert, established in 2001 by Woody and Jane, with their daughter and son-in-law, Elaine and Jeffrey Christ, is designated for performances by string quartets.
Drs. Reiko T. and Yuan C. (“Ed”) Lee, faculty in The Johns Hopkins University Department of Biology endowed this annual concert in 2005. Biochemists and amateur string players, the Lees have been subscribers since SHCS’s first season. The Lee Fund supports concerts by the world’s greatest string players. The first concert supported by this gift was the 2005-06 appearance by Pinchas Zukerman and was dedicated to Reiko’s father, Tomotake Takasaka, Professor of Agricultural Engineering at National Taiwan University and an avid self-taught amateur string player. He was also one of the first musicians to bring Western music to Taiwan. He held weekly gatherings of chamber music lovers at his home and it was at one of these that Reiko and Ed, who played viola, met. They came to the U.S. in 1958, earning their Ph.D.s in biochemistry at the University of Iowa. After three years at U.C. Berkeley, they arrived in Baltimore in 1965 to start their Hopkins—and Shriver Hall Concert Series—careers.
Dover Quartet
Joel Link, violin
Bryan Lee, violin
Julianne Lee, viola
Camden Shaw, cello
Named one of the greatest string quartets of the last 100 years by BBC Music Magazine and “the next Guarneri Quartet” by the Chicago Tribune, the two-time Grammy-nominated Dover Quartet is one of the world’s most in-demand chamber ensembles. The group’s awards include a stunning sweep of all prizes at the 2013 Banff International String Quartet Competition, grand and first prizes at the Fischoff Chamber Music Competition, and prizes at the Wigmore Hall International String Quartet Competition. Its honors include the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant, Chamber Music America’s Cleveland Quartet Award, and Lincoln Center’s Hunt Family Award. The Dover Quartet is the Penelope P. Watkins Ensemble in Residence at the Curtis Institute of Music and Quartet in Residence at Northwestern University’s Bienen School of Music.
The Dover Quartet’s 2024-25 season includes premiere performances throughout North America of newly commissioned works by Jerod Impichchaachaaha' Tate; collaborative performances with pianists Michelle Cann, Marc-Andre Hamelin, and Haochen Zhang; and tours to Europe and Asia. Recent collaborators include Leif Ove Andsnes, Emanuel Ax, Inon Barnaton, Ray Chen, Anthony McGill, Edgar Meyer, the Pavel Haas Quartet, Roomful of Teeth, and Davone Tines. The quartet has also recently premiered works by Mason Bates, Steven Mackey, Marc Neikrug, and Chris Rogerson.
The Dover Quartet’s highly acclaimed three-volume recording, “Beethoven Complete String Quartets” (Cedille Records), was hailed as “meticulously balanced, technically clean-as-a-whistle, and intonationally immaculate” (The Strad). The quartet’s discography also includes “Encores” (Brooklyn Classical), a recording of 10 popular movements from the string quartet repertoire; “The Schumann Quartets” (Azica Records), which was nominated for a Grammy; “Voices of Defiance: 1943, 1944, 1945” (Cedille Records); and an all-Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart debut recording (Cedille Records), featuring Michael Tree, the late, long-time violist of the Guarneri Quartet. The quartet’s recording of Steven Mackey’s theatrical-musical work Memoir, recorded with the percussion group arx duo and narrator Natalie Christa Rakes, was released on Bridge Records in August 2024. A recording of the Tate commissions and Antonin Dvořak’s String Quartet in F major, Op. 96 (“American”) will be released in 2025 on Curtis Studio, the record label of the Curtis Institute of Music.
The Dover Quartet draws from the lineage of the distinguished Guarneri, Cleveland, and Vermeer quartets. Its members studied at the Curtis Institute of Music, Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, the New England Conservatory, and the Conservatoire Superieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris. They were mentored extensively by Shmuel Ashkenasi, James Dunham, Norman Fischer, Kenneth Goldsmith, Joseph Silverstein, Arnold Steinhardt, Michael Tree, and Peter Wiley. The Dover Quartet was formed at Curtis in 2008; its name pays tribute to Dover Beach by fellow Curtis alumnus Samuel Barber.
The Dover Quartet plays on the following instruments and proudly endorses Thomastik-Infeld strings:
- Joel Link: a very fine Peter Guarneri of Mantua, 1710-15, on generous loan from Irene R. Miller through the Beare’s International Violin Society
- Bryan Lee: Nicolas Lupot, Paris, 1810;
Samuel Zygmuntowicz, Brooklyn, 2020 - Julianne Lee: Robert Brode, 2005
- Camden Shaw: Joseph Hill, London, 1770
The ensemble’s website is doverquartet.com, and it can be found on Instagram at @doverquartet
"Expert musicianship, razor-sharp ensemble, deep musical feeling and a palpable commitment to communication." -Chicago Tribune
Joseph Conyers
Joseph Conyers was appointed assistant principal bass of the Philadelphia Orchestra in 2010 and has been acting associate principal since 2017. He previously held tenures with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra; the Grand Rapids Symphony, where he served as principal bass; and the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra.
Mr. Conyers has performed with many orchestras as soloist, including the Alabama, Flagstaff, and Richmond symphony orchestras; the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia; and the Sphinx Symphony Orchestra, having won second prize at the 2004 Sphinx Competition. In 2008 John B Hedges wrote a concerto for him—Prayers of Rain and Wind—commissioned by the Grand Rapids Symphony.
Mr. Conyers is an artist of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Other chamber music festivals and collaborations have included the Ilumina Festival, the Festival Internacional de Música de Esmeraldas, and chamber music festivals in Savannah, Charlottesville, Kingston, and Lexington.
In 2019 Mr. Conyers received the Sphinx Organization’s Medal of Excellence. In 2018 he received the C. Hartman Kuhn Award from the Philadelphia Orchestra and was named one of Musical America’s 30 Professionals of the Year. In 2015 he was the recipient of the inaugural Young Alumni Award from the Curtis Institute of Music, and in 2007 was named one of “30 Leaders 30 and Under” by Ebony magazine. In 1999 he was one of the first guests on a pilot taping of NPR’s From the Top.
Mr. Conyers has served as adjunct faculty at Calvin University and Clark Atlanta University. He is currently on the faculty at Temple University and has been music director of Philadelphia’s All City Orchestra since 2015. He has taught at numerous summer music festivals including the Philadelphia International Music Festival, the Wintergreen Summer Music Festival and Academy, and the National Repertory Orchestra. He has given master classes and lectures across the country, including at the Colburn School, the Curtis Institute of Music, New England Conservatory, Yale University, Ohio State University, the University of Georgia, and Peabody Conservatory.
Mr. Conyers is the founder of the nonprofit Project 440. Through its nationally recognized curricula, Project 440 uses music as a tool to engage, educate, and inspire young musicians, providing them with care and life skills to become tomorrow’s civic-minded, entrepreneurial leaders.
Mr. Conyers received his bachelor’s degree from the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied with both Harold Robinson and Edgar Meyer. Other mentors have included David Warshauer, Daniel Swaim, and Albert Laszlo. He performs on the “Zimmerman/Gladstone” 1802 Vincenzo Panormo double bass, which he has affectionately named “Norma.” His website is josephconyers.com.
Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
String Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 33, No. 2, "The Joke"
View NotesHaydn’s reputation as the “father” of the string quartet reflects not only his extraordinary productivity—he wrote no fewer than 68 quartets, as well as a number of quartet arrangements—but also his pivotal place in music history. In 1732, the year Haydn was born, the Baroque masters Bach and Vivaldi were still in their prime. By the time he died, 77 years later, Beethoven was diligently ushering in the Romantic Era. Haydn’s lifetime thus neatly encapsulated the Classical Era, and his music reflects the “classical” virtues of equilibrium, clarity, and seriousness of purpose, tempered with a playfulness and often earthy humor that have delighted audiences ever since.
Although Haydn’s influence was felt throughout Europe, he spent virtually his entire career either in Vienna or in the idyllic seclusion of Prince Nikolaus Esterházy’s country estate in Eisenstadt. His earliest quartets, dating from the mid- to late 1750s, are closely related to the string sonatas, sinfonias, and lightweight divertimenti that were perennially popular with midcentury European audiences. In such works the cello was largely confined to continuo-style harmonic accompaniment, on the Baroque model. In Haydn’s hands, however, both the bass line and the two inner voices became increasingly active and independent. In the second of his six Op. 33 Quartets, written in 1781 and dedicated to Grand Duke Paul of Russia, the cello still plays a supporting role for the most part. Even so, Haydn turns convention on its head in the slow movement by allowing the two lower instruments to introduce the sweetly majestic theme.
The first violin starts the ball rolling at the outset of the quartet with an amiable melody in E-flat major whose signature motif—a brisk upbeat figure comprised of two rising sixteenth-notes—underpins the entire Allegro moderato. With characteristic economy, Haydn ingeniously varies and extends this simple thematic idea, transferring it from one voice and register to another in a lighthearted game of hide and seek. The jovial Scherzo is equally sophisticated in its unassuming way: Haydn plays with the eight-bar phrase structure by repeatedly inserting “extra” bars that thwart the listener’s expectation of predictable regularity. The Largo sostenuto, in B-flat, picks up the triple meter of the Scherzo, but this time in a radiantly lyrical vein, with sudden dynamic contrasts and sharply accentuated syncopations providing a hint of drama. Listen for the half-step oscillations in the accompanying voices, another subtle thematic link to the Scherzo. The high-spirited Finale is the first violin’s show from start to finish, right up to the whimsical false endings that give the quartet its nickname, “The Joke.”
© Harry Haskell, 2022
George Walker (1922-2018)
String Quartet No. 1
View NotesGeorge Walker was trailblazing musician and composer whose works influenced American classical music during the latter half of the 20th century. Born in 1920 in Washington, D.C., the precociously talented Walker gave his first public performance at age of 14 at Howard University and won a scholarship to Oberlin Conservatory in the same year. He went on to Curtis Institute, where he studied piano with Rudolf Serkin and composition with Samuel Barber, before moving to Paris to study with Nadia Boulanger and then earning a doctorate from Eastman School of Music in 1956.
Walker made his professional debut in 1945 at New York’s storied Town Hall, where he was the first African American performer on that stage. The next year he went on to be the first African American soloist to appear with The Philadelphia Orchestra in a performance of Rachmaninoff’s Concerto No. 3. He toured extensively both in the U.S. and abroad. In the 1960s, Walker’s focus shifted to a long and distinguished teaching career. He was the first African American tenured professor at Smith College and held appointments at other schools, including The Peabody Institute. Among his honors were Fulbright, Whitney, Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and MacDowell fellowships, honorary doctorates from six institutions, and a Pulitzer Prize in Music—the first African American composer to receive this honor.
He composed throughout his career and was commissioned by such major organizations as the New York Philharmonic. While his musical influences as a composer came from mainstream trends of 20th-century classical music such as serialism, the works of Debussy and Stravinsky, and African American spirituals, blues, and jazz, Walker has his own distinct musical voice. He commented, “I had to find my own way, a way of doing something that was different, something that I would be satisfied with.” His music is marked by intellectual rigor rather than an overt display of emotion. His musical concerns are for formal construction and an emphasis on counterpoint and chromaticism.
Walker’s String Quartet No. 1 dates from 1946 and was one of his first major works. The opening Allegro is an extended essay in sonata form. The principal theme immediately establishes the composer’s compellingly individual voice—muscular, neo-Romantic, mildly dissonant but essentially tonal, somber, serious, and, above all, astoundingly confident for a 24-year-old. The ensuing Molto adagio is an intensely lyrical lament for Walker’s grandmother, who died while he was writing the Quartet. (In his subsequent arrangement for string orchestra, titled Lyric for Strings, the slow movement would become Walker’s signature work, analogous to Samuel Barber’s popular Adagio for Strings of 1936, which similarly originated as a string quartet.) The finale is another propulsive and intricately motivic Allegro, this time marked “con fuoco” (with fire). An urgent, crisply rhythmicized theme alternates, rondo fashion, with passages of a more lyrical and relaxed character.
© Harry Haskell, 2022
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904)
String Quintet in G major, Op. 77
View NotesThe year 1875 marked a watershed in Dvořák’s life. Hitherto, his reputation had hardly reached beyond the city limits of Prague, where he earned a modest living as a piano teacher and church organist. A few of his songs and chamber works had been performed locally, and his comic opera King and Charcoal Burner had been well received at the Czech opera house. But Dvořák’s career finally took off when the Austrian government awarded him a prestigious stipend in 1875. In addition to providing a measure of financial security, the prize brought him to the attention of Johannes Brahms, who warmly recommended the little-known Czech composer to his own publisher in Berlin. Soon Dvořák was inundated with so many requests for publications and commissions that he had trouble keeping up with them.
So it was that the G-major String Quintet, composed in early 1875 and first performed in Prague a year later, didn’t see the light of print until 1888. Dvořák, as was his wont, comprehensively revised the score for its belated publication. Among other things, he scrapped the original slow movement, which he had recycled from one of his early string quartets. The final version of the Quintet thus took its place among the great chamber works of Dvořák’s maturity, midway between the Piano Quintet in A major of 1887 and the Piano Quartet in E-flat major of 1889. It had its premiere in Boston on Nov. 25, 1889.
As a violist, Dvořák might have been expected to employ the standard quintet ensemble of two violins, two violas, and cello. (In fact, the first work that he deemed worthy of an opus number was a two-viola Quintet in A minor, written when he was in his early twenties.) In the event, he chose the unconventional combination of string quartet plus double bass, a scoring that recalls the bottom-heavy textures of Schubert’s “Trout” Quintet and the C-major Quintet for two cellos. Not coincidentally, perhaps, Dvořák felt a special affinity for Schubert’s chamber music. “Schubert,” he once wrote, “does not try to give his chamber music an orchestral character, yet he attains a marvelous variety of beautiful tonal effects. Here, as elsewhere, his flow of melody is spontaneous, incessant and irrepressible.”
A swaying seven-note motif, presented by the upper strings in the opening bars of the Quintet, generates much of the first movement’s fiery energy and rhythmic incisiveness. Listen for its two conjoined figures, one sharp and angular, the other soft and rounded: Dvořák weaves them ingeniously into the colorful musical fabric, combining drama and lyricism in true Schubertian fashion. The explosive Scherzo, with its driving, folklike theme and restless syncopations, is characterized by fluid shifts between major and minor tonalities (another Schubertian trait) and duple and triple rhythms. In the Poco andante, a tender C-major melody, rising stepwise and then falling back on itself, casts a sweetly melancholy mood. A magical modulation to E major takes us on a lengthy detour, with the first violin’s ecstatic melody soaring above interlocking rhythmic figures in the lower voices. The spitfire Finale, darkly urgent in tone, harks back to the thematic material of the first two movements.
© Harry Haskell, 2022