Agnieszka Laska-Dickson String Quartet
A remarkable family band tackles some serious strings.
July 1st, 2009
Punch Brothers | Chamber Music Northwest gets patriotic.0 comments
June 24th, 2009
Risk/Reward New Performance Festival | Hand2Mouth marries art pop and pop art. 0 comments
June 17th, 2009
Inviting Desire (Dance Naked Productions) | Whips, gangbangs, fisting and Obama.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
Store For A Month | Art bargains and food for thought—now available at a “store” near you.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
The Blue Room (Portland Actors Conservatory) | Sex, drugs and rampant regret.0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Rush + Robbins (Oregon Ballet Theatre) | The insect women will devour you!0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Grey Gardens (Portland Center Stage) | Jerry may like your corn, but I do not.0 comments
May 20th, 2009
Everyone Who Looks Like You | Hand2Mouth’s family life: Food, fights and farts.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Rigoletto (Portland Opera) | Murder with a side of Hunchback.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Three Sisters (Artists Rep) | Who shot Baron Nikolai Lvovich Tusenbach?0 comments
![]() DICKSON QUARTET |
[June 18th, 2008]
When the piano-playing siblings the Five Browns began packing concert halls for their performances of popular classics, their story—a truly musical family—was just as responsible for their early acclaim as their undeniable talent.
Now, Portland is cultivating its own family ensemble of musical prodigies with a similar combination of talent and narrative allure. For six years, the Dickson String Quartet, comprising the older siblings of Dickson family—including Benjamin (viola, 19), Brandon (violin, 19), Ashley (violin, 18) and Daniel (cello, 15), all home schooled in Battleground, Wash.—has played at everything from the Rose Festival Royal Rosarians queen luncheon to musical programs for cancer patients.
Portland composer Jack Gabel heard the group tackle Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 8 at an Oregon Pro Arte concert last year and marveled at “the sheer audacity of such young musicians tackling so monumental a work.” Shostakovich wrote the quartet, one of the 20th century’s most powerful chamber works, after witnessing the aftermath of the horrific, unconscionable firebombing of Dresden during World War II, and dedicated it to the victims of fascism.
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Gabel told his wife, choreographer Agnieszka Laska, about the group, and after hearing them play the Quartet in recital, she decided to create a new dance—“The Terror That Is Named the Flight of Time”—set to their passionate rendition.
Laska’s company will also dance her new choreography to three of Tomas Svoboda’s “Etudes in Fugue Style,” with pianist Christopher Schindler, along with other pieces (see dance listing, this page).
But the centerpieces will be the Dickson family and Shostakovich’s searing masterpiece. Pro Arte director Cindy Petty says despite their youth, the ensemble is up to the challenge: “They are an aural painting and play with an intensity that will draw you into the heart of the music and leave you breathless.”
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Agnieszka Laska-Dickson String Quartet”
It isn't every day that we get to experience a local artist who has survived the repression of Communism only to suffer the tyranny of the box office in our free market economy, but that is just what ...
Agnieszka Laska; a name to remember, dancing I will never forget. One of the fortunate ones who took Agnieszka Laska up on her $5.00 promotional at IFCC last April, (sounded too good to be true),I am ...
The strength and professionalism of the Agnieszka Laska Dance Company and the original compositions of Jack Gabel motivate me to travel to Portland from the Bay Area to see their performances.
The Agnieszka Laska Dance Company is truly a delight and I hope they will receive the support they need to continue here in Portland. The last program "The Terror that is named the flight of time...









