As a young violinist studying at the Juilliard School, Harumi Rhodes watched as many of her classmates formed string quartets of their own. Each group came together for this reason or that, uniting for the common purpose of performing some of the most cherished music ever written.
But as those quartets came and went, Rhodes never found her family of four.
鈥淚 always hoped to be in a string quartet. But after a certain time I began to think, 鈥榃hat are the chances that four likeminded people鈥攚ho are complementary and completely devoted to a life in quartet playing鈥攚ould find one another?鈥欌
Through graduate studies at New England Conservatory, teaching positions at Juilliard and Syracuse University, and a prolific chamber music career as founding member of Trio Cavatina and with the East Coast Chamber Orchestra, Boston Chamber Music Society and Music from Copland House鈥攖o name a few鈥擱hodes made beautiful music and developed an abiding love of teaching, but still the quartet eluded her. 鈥淚t was with a little bit of sadness that I assumed that the stars would never align in that way.鈥
Then came the opportunity to teach in the same department as one of the most revered string quartets on the planet.
A path revealed
The prospect of becoming close colleagues with violist Geraldine Walther, cellist Andr谩s Fej茅r and violinists Edward Dusinberre and K谩roly Schranz was thrilling to Rhodes when she came to the College of Music as assistant professor of violin in 2015.
鈥淚鈥檝e been a fan of theirs for as long as I can remember,鈥 Rhodes says. 鈥淥ne of the reasons I always knew about the college was because of the Tak谩cs residency. The idea of serving on the faculty alongside them was a huge magnet.鈥
Over the course of two and a half years, Rhodes performed with the quartet a number of times, including at the Ravinia Festival and for Austin Chamber Music. Then in February 2018, Schranz announced that after more than 40 years with the quartet鈥攚hich he co-founded with Fej茅r, G谩bor Tak谩cs Nagy and G谩bor Ormai鈥攈e would retire at the end of that听season.
And Rhodes was named his successor as second violinist. 鈥淚 was听beyond excited. One of the things I鈥檝e always admired about the Tak谩cs is their warmth of sound, their playful and spontaneous playing. I鈥檝e always been very attracted to that philosophy of string quartet playing.鈥
Especially Schranz, she says, whose shoes she is honored to fill. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a musical hero of mine. So to be sitting in his chair is mindblowing.鈥
Falling into place
Rhodes played her first concerts as the Tak谩cs Quartet鈥檚 second violinist last summer in London, Vienna and New York. She says the part suits her personality perfectly. 鈥淭he position is multifaceted. You have to know when to come out and be an individual, when to support and make other people shine, when to blend, how to provide color and harmony and melody and rhythm,鈥 she explains.
You could say it鈥檚 a role she was born to play: Rhodes鈥 mother, Hiroko Yajima, was second violinist of the Galimir Quartet for more than 20 years, while her father, Samuel Rhodes, played viola in the Juilliard Quartet for four decades. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 something about the role of the second violinist. I relate to it in terms of my own temperature and personality. Leading from within and being inside the texture, that鈥檚 my own temperament.鈥
It seems fitting, then, that she join a group known for its unique style鈥攁t once unified yet individual, and always displaying the utmost skill and understanding of the works it presents.
鈥淢any great composers chose the string quartet as the ultimate medium to express their most intimate and complex ideas. But quartet playing is a different animal. It鈥檚 not something that people program casually. The idea of having a life of playing this repertoire is a dream come true.鈥
Dual passions
Despite a demanding worldwide performance schedule, Rhodes is pleased to be able to continue to teach violinists at the College of Music. It鈥檚 a busy life she enjoys with gratitude and excitement, as this longtime admirer of the string quartet finally finds her own.
鈥淲hen you have three other people by your side, and you鈥檙e all immersed in what you consider to be one of the utmost artforms, exploring it together, it feels like a group mission. You鈥檙e tied together by this sense of love and shared values for something larger than yourselves.鈥
Rhodes still听teaches in her tenure-track position at the College of Music; Schranz now plays a larger teaching role as senior instructor of violin.