Poster Violinist Robert Mann
Violinist Robert Mann accepts a Recording Academy Lifetime Achievement award on behalf of the Juilliard String Quartet in Los Angeles in 2011.
Noel Vasquez/Getty Images via NPR

Robert Mann, a founder of Juilliard String Quartet, dies at 97

MPR News (2005): Founder of Juilliard String Quartet talks about music making
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Artists in Concert (1985): Juilliard String Quartet

Robert Mann, a violinist and one of the founders of the Juilliard String Quartet, died on Monday at home in Manhattan. He was 97.

When he was a youngster in Portland, Oregon, Mann dreamed of being a forest ranger. But destiny apparently had other plans for him: Instead, he became a legendary musician.

Robert Mann went to Juilliard to teach after serving in the Army during World War II, starting his group with other returned GIs in 1946. He told Performance Today in 1993 about how he'd talked Juilliard's then-president, the composer William Schuman, into creating a resident quartet, for which he would play first violin.

"I told him," Mann recalled, "that I hoped our quartet would play the classical music as if it had been just composed, and the contemporary music as if it were classical."

And that is just what the Juilliard String Quartet did. The ensemble recorded everything from Bach to the string quartets of Bela Bartok. Along the way, they became one of the world's premier chamber ensembles, winning four Grammy Awards for their work, plus a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy — the first classical group to win that prize.

For more than 50 years, Mann remained the constant in the Juilliard String Quartet, while other musicians came and went. He was a performer, composer, educator, conductor — and an institution. Mann mentored generations of musicians who followed in his footsteps; among them were the Emerson and Brentano string quartets.

In a 2014 documentary film about him, Mann threw out a rough estimate of how many performances he'd given with his group.

"I've played only about six thousand concerts with the quartet — six thousand! And you learn not from the people's praise, but from the people, the critics and the people in the audience's criticism, you learn over the years what works and what doesn't work."

And like the Juilliiard String Quartet itself, Mann became an institution.

Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org.

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