James
Dunham is an internationally known soloist, chamber musician and
teacher. Formerly violist of the Grammy Award winning Cleveland
Quartet, he has collaborated with such renowned artists as Emmanuel
Ax, Joshua Bell, Richard Goode, Lynne Harrell, Cho-Liang Lin, Sabine
Meyer, Bernard Greenhouse and members of the American, Guarneri,
Juilliard, Takacs and Tokyo Quartets. He has also worked with such
composers as Milton Babbitt, Elliott Carter, Paul Chihara, John
Corigliano, Osvaldo Golijov, Libby Larsen, Stephen Paulus, Mel Powell,
Bernard Rands, Christopher Rouse, Gunther Schuller and Joan Tower.
Ms. Larsen has written a sonata for Mr. Dunham (2001) which he premiered
at the Aspen Music Festival in July 2001 and has recorded for an
upcoming Naxos CD release.
Mr.
Dunham is a frequent guest artist with groups such as Houston Friends
of Music, Da Camera of Houston, Musicians from Marlboro, the Boston
Chamber Music Society and the Borromeo, Cassatt, Cavani, Colorado,
Fine Arts, Mendelssohn, Miami, Pacifica and Ying Quartets. In addition
to his chamber music activities, Mr. Dunham has given concerto and
recital performances throughout the U.S. and served as guest principal
viola with the Boston Symphony under Seiji Ozawa and the Dallas
Symphony under Andrew Litton in their home cities as well as at
Carnegie Hall.
Currently Professor of Viola and Chamber Music at Rice University’s
Shepherd School of Music, he directs their Advanced Quartet Studies
Program. Mr. Dunham formerly taught at the New England Conservatory
where he also Chaired the String Department. A devoted teacher,
he frequently presents viola and chamber music master classes at
leading schools and universities including Tokyo’s Toho School,
Freiburg’s Hochschule für Musik, Beijing’s Central
Conservatory, Boston and Northwestern Universities, USC, UCLA and
the Royal Conservatory in Toronto.
Mr. Dunham was violist of the renowned Cleveland Quartet from 1987
through its final recordings and concerts in December 1995. The
Quartet won the 1996 Grammy for “Best Chamber Music Performance”
for their Telarc recording of John Corigliano’s String Quartet,
written for their final tour. As a member of the Cleveland Quartet
he also served as Professor of Viola at the prestigious Eastman
School of Music. An Honors graduate of the Interlochen Arts Academy,
Mr. Dunham studied liberal arts at Carleton College before receiving
his Bachelor and Master of Fine Arts degrees from California Institute
of the Arts. While at Cal-Arts, he was a founding member of the
Sequoia Quartet, winners of the 1978 Naumburg International Chamber
Music Award, and in 1991 he received the Cal-Arts Music School’s
first Distinguished Alumni Award.
Mr. Dunham is much sought after as a jurist for events such as the
Fischoff, Coleman and William Primrose Competitions, and has also
been a featured soloist at the International Viola Congress. His
summer activities include teaching and performing at many festivals,
including those of Marlboro, Domaine Forget, Aspen, Sarasota, Amelia
Island (FL), Yale at Norfolk and Musicorda. He served as principal
violist of the San Diego Mainly Mozart Festival for ten seasons,
and is a regular participant in the Festival der Zukunft in Ernen,
Switzerland. He is featured on an album of recent music for viola
and winds on the Crystal Records label, and has recorded with the
Sequoia Quartet for Nonesuch and Delos, and with the Cleveland Quartet
exclusively for Telarc.
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