Korine Fujiwara
Sponsored by John Jamison & Kathy Wildermuth
Montana native Korine Fujiwara is a founding Carpe Diem String Quartet member, a devoted and sought-after chamber musician and teacher, and a gifted composer and arranger.
One of the most unique and sought-after chamber ensembles on the concert stage today, the Carpe Diem String Quartet is a boundary-breaking ensemble that has earned widespread critical and audience acclaim for its innovative programming and electrifying performances. Carpe Diem defies easy classification with programming that includes classical, tango, folk, pop, rock, and jazz-inspired music.
The quartet appears on traditional concert series (Carnegie Hall, NYC; Jordan Hall, Boston, MA; National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; Chautauqua Institute, Chautauqua, NY; Asolo Theater, Sarasota, FL) as well as unconventional venues (Poisson Rouge, NYC; Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society, Half Moon Bay, CA; The Redlands Bowl, Redlands, CA; The Mug & Brush, Columbus, OH). Carpe Diem has been awarded five transformative grants from the PNC Foundation for their community outreach in Central Ohio. Carpe Diem has become one of America’s premiere “indie” string quartets without sacrificing its commitment to the traditional quartet repertoire and continues to rack up accolades and awards.
The group has completed recording the complete cycle of the nine string quartets of Sergei Taneyev for Naxos. New recording projects include:
Claudel.
The musical score for a ballet commissioned by Columbus Dance Theatre (composed by Ms. Fujiwara).
The complete string quartets by Jonathan Leshnoff.
Ms. Fujiwara can be heard on 20 commercially available CD recordings, with three more recordings now in production.
Ms. Fujiwara was the Artist-in-Residence for the string program at the Tacoma School of the Arts and teaches violin at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, WA. She served for many years on the music faculty of Ohio Wesleyan University and is in great demand for master classes and clinics throughout the United States. Korine’s students have been accepted into the performance programs of such institutions as Indiana University, Cincinnati College Conservatory, and Northwestern University to continue their musical studies.
She performs annually with the Snake River Chamber Players in Keystone and Dillon, CO, and was a founding member of the Marble Cliff Chamber Players, based in Ohio.
She has been heard throughout the Northwest United States on public radio as a performer at the Olympic Music Festival in Seattle, WA with the Philadelphia String Quartet members. Critics have described her performances as “engaging” and “with finesse and perfection.” She has been invited to participate in numerous international music festivals, including the MidAmerica Chamber Music Festival, the Victoria International Festival, the Aspen Music Festival, the Focus! Festival of 20th Century Music at Lincoln Center, and the Summergarden Festival at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC, where she collaborated with composer John Cage. She is a sought-after and well-respected adjudicator and teacher, and she has served as an artist/teacher-in-residence with the Icelandic Youth Orchestra in Reykjavik, Iceland.
Ms. Fujiwara is a gifted violin and viola performer and holds degrees from The Juilliard School and Northwestern University, where she studied with Joseph Fuchs and Myron Kartman, respectively. Her other mentors include Harvey Shapiro, Robert Mann, and Joel Krosnik. Ms. Fujiwara is a member of the music honorary society Pi Kappa Lambda.
Korine began her orchestral career with the Brooklyn Philharmonic and served as a principal player and soloist with the ProMusica Chamber Orchestra of Columbus. She is also a former member of the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, where she held the position of Acting Assistant Principal Second Violin.
Korine performs on a 1790 Contreras violin and a 2004 Kurt Widenhouse viola and bows by three of today’s finest makers: Paul Martin Siefried, Ole Kanestrom, and Charles Espey, all of Port Townsend, WA, USA.