Mary Ruth “Vi” Ray

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Mary Ruth “Vi” Ray

Birth
Knoxville, Knox County, Tennessee, USA
Death
29 Jan 2013 (aged 56)
Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Cremated, Ashes scattered. Specifically: Ashes scattered at Jamaica Pond, a place she dearly loved, in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Violist Mary Ruth Ray was an internationally renowned classical musician who received critical acclaim throughout the United States, Europe and Russia.

As co-founder and violist of the Lydian String Quartet she was awarded prizes at competitions in France, England and Canada, and was a 1984 winner of the Naumburg Award for Excellence in Chamber Music. During her 33-year career she performed at such world-class venues as Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center and the Library of Congress.

Ms. Ray was a recording artist with CRI, Nonesuch, Centaur, Harmonia Mundi, New World, and Tzadik Records. Several of her 30-plus recordings with the Lydian String Quartet were chosen "Best of the Year" by the New York Times.

She performed as guest artist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Fromm Series at Harvard University, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, the Bard Music Festival, Apple Hill Chamber Players, Boston Musica Viva, Juneau Jazz and Classics, and was invited to present a featured concert/demonstration of the Bach Cello Suites for the 13th International Viola Congress.

Ms. Ray also played on the motion picture soundtrack of "Saving Private Ryan (composed and conducted by John Williams), and appeared on screen as violist-performer in the movie "Yes, Giorgio" (starring Luciano Pavarotti, with the Boston Pops Orchestra).

As a member and soloist with Emmanuel Music in Boston, she performed the complete cycle of over two hundred sacred cantatas by J.S. Bach as well as chamber music of Debussy, Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, and John Harbison on its acclaimed "encyclopedic exploration of great composers" series.

Known to friends and colleagues as "Violet," "Vi" and "U.V.," Professor Ray was a beloved faculty member at Brandeis University where she taught viola and chamber music from 1980 until her untimely death from breast cancer in 2013. She was appointed Chair of the Music Department at Brandeis in 2005 and held that position for the last eight years of her exceptionally well-lived life.

Mary Ruth is greatly missed by those who knew her personally and professionally. Visit her public Facebook tribute page featuring hundreds of memorial statements, photos, videos and audio clips posted by her many colleagues, friends, family members and fans in loving celebration of her inspirational life.
Violist Mary Ruth Ray was an internationally renowned classical musician who received critical acclaim throughout the United States, Europe and Russia.

As co-founder and violist of the Lydian String Quartet she was awarded prizes at competitions in France, England and Canada, and was a 1984 winner of the Naumburg Award for Excellence in Chamber Music. During her 33-year career she performed at such world-class venues as Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center and the Library of Congress.

Ms. Ray was a recording artist with CRI, Nonesuch, Centaur, Harmonia Mundi, New World, and Tzadik Records. Several of her 30-plus recordings with the Lydian String Quartet were chosen "Best of the Year" by the New York Times.

She performed as guest artist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Fromm Series at Harvard University, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, the Bard Music Festival, Apple Hill Chamber Players, Boston Musica Viva, Juneau Jazz and Classics, and was invited to present a featured concert/demonstration of the Bach Cello Suites for the 13th International Viola Congress.

Ms. Ray also played on the motion picture soundtrack of "Saving Private Ryan (composed and conducted by John Williams), and appeared on screen as violist-performer in the movie "Yes, Giorgio" (starring Luciano Pavarotti, with the Boston Pops Orchestra).

As a member and soloist with Emmanuel Music in Boston, she performed the complete cycle of over two hundred sacred cantatas by J.S. Bach as well as chamber music of Debussy, Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, and John Harbison on its acclaimed "encyclopedic exploration of great composers" series.

Known to friends and colleagues as "Violet," "Vi" and "U.V.," Professor Ray was a beloved faculty member at Brandeis University where she taught viola and chamber music from 1980 until her untimely death from breast cancer in 2013. She was appointed Chair of the Music Department at Brandeis in 2005 and held that position for the last eight years of her exceptionally well-lived life.

Mary Ruth is greatly missed by those who knew her personally and professionally. Visit her public Facebook tribute page featuring hundreds of memorial statements, photos, videos and audio clips posted by her many colleagues, friends, family members and fans in loving celebration of her inspirational life.

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