The Brodsky Quartet
International Fellows in Chamber Music
Daniel Rowland
Violin I
Ian Belton Violin II
Paul Cassidy Viola
Jacqueline Thomas Cello
Ian Belton Violin II
Paul Cassidy Viola
Jacqueline Thomas Cello
The Brodsky Quartet are at the forefront of the international chamber-music scene. Their
love and mastery of the traditional string quartet repertoire is evident from their highly
acclaimed performances of composers ranging from Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert and Tchaikovsky to
Shostakovich, Bartok, Britten and Respighi, as well as from their extensive, award-winning
discography.
At the same time, the Quartet are known for their pioneering work with a diverse range of
performing artists, from singers Elvis Costello, Anne Sofie von Otter and Björk, to Complicite
Theatre Company and Icelandic poet Sjón, while their many collaborations with distinguished
composers, including John Tavener, Lutosławski, Peter Sculthorpe, Django Bates, Sally Beamish, Dave
Brubeck and Julian Nott, have given them an unrivalled opportunity to influence and inspire some of
the newest work for string quartet.
Their passion to embrace “all good music” has been the driving force behind their success and
has kept their approach fresh and their enthusiasm high for thirty years. In March 2005 the
Quartet was proud to launch their own record label, Brodsky Records, with the release of two
CDs: String Quartets Nos2 and 3 by Tchaikovsky, and the album
Moodswings, featuring a broad range of songs for string quartet and voice. Recent awards
for recording include the Diapason d’Or and the CHOC du Monde de la Musique for their recordings of
string quartets by Benjamin Britten, while for their outstanding contribution to the world of music
the Brodsky Quartet has received a Royal Philharmonic Society Award.
The Quartet is named after the Russian violinist Adolf Brodsky, who played an important role
in musical life in Manchester and at the Royal Northern College where the quartet
studied.
Daniel Rowland plays a violin made by Lorenzo Storioni of Cremona in 1793; Ian Belton’s violin
is by Gio. Paolo Maggini c.1615; Jacqueline Thomas plays a cello made by Thomas Perry in 1785; Paul
Cassidy’s viola, ‘La Delfina’ c.1720, courtesy of Señora Delfina Entrecanales.


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