Karen Tuttle

Karen Tuttle (March 28, 1920 – December 16, 2010) was an American viola teacher, famous for her "coordination" technique, which emphasizes being comfortable while playing the instrument. She was originally a violinist who chose to become a violist when she wanted to study with William Primrose, whose technique and ease in playing the viola she greatly admired. Her coordination technique is often considered to be an analysis of Primrose's technique. She was a frequent participant at the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont. In 1955, she was invited by Pablo Casals to perform chamber music with him at the Casals Festival in Prades, where she returned for at least seven subsequent festivals. She made her Carnegie Hall recital debut in February 1960. Her recital was reviewed by Harold Schonberg, a leading reviewer for the New York Times. He wrote, "About as large an audience as Carnegie Recital Hall has ever held jammed it yesterday evening at 5:30 to hear Karen Tuttle's recital. The violist, with Artur Balsam at the piano, gave a concert that seemed to be attended by every string player in town."[1] She was a member of the Galimir, Gotham, and Schneider Quartets, as well as the American String Trio. In 1994 she was recognized by ASTA with the Artist Teacher Award. Curtis Institute of Music awarded her an honorary doctorate in 2005.[2]

She taught at the Peabody Conservatory of Music, Curtis Institute of Music, Mannes College and at Juilliard, and several of her students now teach at prominent universities and music conservatories: Christine Rutledge, Sheila Browne, Caroline Coade, Susan Dubois, Jeffrey Irvine, Kim Kashkashian, Michelle LaCourse, Katherine Murdock, Ashan Pillai, Lawrence Power, Lynne Ramsey, André Roy, Karen Ritscher, Carol Rodland, Kate Hamilton, Masumi Per Rostad, and Stephen Wyrczynski. There is a "Karen Tuttle Coordination Workshop" held each summer in the USA.

Ms. Tuttle died on December 16, 2010 after a long illness.[3][4]

Recordings

Karen Tuttle made many recordings throughout her career, both private and commercially released. Her discography includes:

References

  • Dew, Dr. Robert (2002). "In Response to Instinct -- Karen Tuttle's Insights into the Coordinated Action -- Its Mechanisms, Articulation, and Prerequisites". Journal of the American Viola Society. 18 (1): 51–54. 
  • Dew, Dr. Robert (2002). "The Coordinated Action, Part 2: Instinctive Responses". Journal of the American Viola Society. 18 (2 & 3 (double issue)): 63–69. 
  • Rodland, Carol (May 2004). "In Honor of Karen Tuttle as She Retires". American String Teacher. 54 (2): 45–47. 
  • "ASTA Awards". American String Teacher. 54 (3): 78–79. August 2004. 

Notes

  1. Schonberg, Harold (February 28, 1960). "RECITAL IS GIVEN BY KAREN TUTTLE; Violist Plays Hindemith, Bach and Vaughan Williams at Carnegie Recital Hall". New York Times. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  2. "Curtis Mourns the Loss of Karen Tuttle, Emerita Faculty". Curtis Institute of Music. December 18, 2010. Retrieved December 19, 2010.
  3. "Curtis Mourns the Loss of Karen Tuttle, Emerita Faculty". Curtis Institute of Music. December 18, 2010. Retrieved December 19, 2010.
  4. Fox, Margalit (December 27, 2010). "Karen Tuttle, Spirited Violist and Teacher, Dies at 90". New York Times. Retrieved January 2, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.