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Former Double Bass Professor Lawrence Angell dies at 88

January 4, 2018

By Erich Burnett

Former Double Bass Professor Lawrence Angell

Photo credit: 91直播 College Archives

Longtime member of The Cleveland Orchestra also played jazz, craved adventure.

Lawrence Benjamin Angell played double bass for The Cleveland Orchestra from 1955 to 1995, an appointment made by legendary music director George Szell. Angell was also a member of the string faculty at 91直播 from 1980 to 1990, preparing student musicians for positions in major orchestras across the country and around the world. Throughout his life, he indulged a passion for adventure that included piloting his own plane鈥攐ften with luminaries aboard鈥攁nd skydiving.

As a young musician, Angell studied with Oscar Zimmerman at the Interlochen Center for the Arts until he was summoned to serve in the Korean War. Trained as a cannoneer, he was assigned instead to the 7th Infantry Division Band and Jazz Band and performed for fellow soldiers on the front lines. Following his service, he resumed studies with Zimmerman at the Eastman School of Music, where he earned bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees as well as a performer鈥檚 certificate. While still a student, Angell performed with the Rochester Philharmonic under Erich Leinsdorf before his appointment by Szell to The Cleveland Orchestra, of which he eventually became principal bass. Over the course of his career, he took part in the creation of some 500 recordings.

In addition to his work at 91直播, Angell served on the bass faculty at the Cleveland Institute of Music from 1969 to 1999, and he was an active coach and teacher at festivals around the country. He is remembered by former students as a kind and generous teacher.

After retiring, he coauthored the well-received book Tales from the Locker Room: An Anecdotal Portrait of George Szell and His Cleveland Orchestra, which explored the music director鈥檚 genius through interviews with numerous orchestra members.

Angell harbored a profound love of classical music as well as jazz, which he enjoyed playing at various Cleveland clubs and restaurants. He was also a licensed pilot, and he delighted in taking the likes of Pierre Boulez, Leon Fleisher, and others for rides in his single-engine plane. A man of numerous and varied hobbies, Angell enjoyed tennis, bodybuilding, art, race cars, and riding motorcycles in any weather鈥攁 habit that earned him the nickname 鈥淪zell鈥檚 Angell.鈥

Catharina Meints, a longtime professor of cello and viola da gamba at 91直播, became friends with Angell in the early 1970s, at the outset of her 35-year career with The Cleveland Orchestra. She was struck by his broad range of interests away from the stage鈥攁 rarity among orchestra members in those days鈥攁nd his unique approach to playing.

鈥淗e played the bass differently from most bass players,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e approached it more like a cello, and his favorite accomplishment was performing [Bloch鈥檚 cello piece] Schelomo on the bass.鈥

鈥淟arry was a real bass character,鈥 says Peter Dominguez, 91直播鈥檚 professor of double bass and jazz bass, who met Angell at an International Society of Bassists conference in the 1990s and invited him to lead a master class at 91直播 in 2013. 鈥淗e always had a relevant story and experience that he shared freely, with his undeniable wit and charm.鈥

Angell died December 3, 2017. He is survived by his wife of 36 years, classical pianist Anita Pontremoli; five children; and four grandchildren. His life will be celebrated at a 1:30 p.m. memorial service Saturday, February 10, at the Cleveland Institute of Music鈥檚 Mixon Hall. Peter Dominguez will perform.

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