The quartet was formed at the department of chamber ensemble and quartet in the class of R.R. Davidyan, by fourth-year students Andrei Shishlov [ru], Alexander Balashov, Alexei Dyachkov and Alexander Korchagin. In their first concert on April 1, 1967 in the White Hall of the Conservatory (now the Myaskovsky Concert Hall), the musicians performed the first quartet of Beethoven, the third quartet of Hindemith and the fifth quartet of Shostakovich. In November 1967, the ensemble received the first prize at the Competition of the Moscow Conservatory and the Union of Composers of the USSR, dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Soviet state. In 1968, the Quartet was admitted to an assistantship-internship for four full-time places (supervisor - R.R.Davidyan). At the same time, they were invited to work in the Moscow Regional Philharmonic.[1] A few years later, the cellist and quartetist, Professor Sergei Shirinsky, a member of the Beethoven Quartet, played a significant role in the formation of the young ensemble.[2]
A number of competition prizes followed, in particular third prize at the XIX ARD International Music Competition in Munich in 1970, and first prize at the XIII Leo Weiner International competition in Budapest in 1973. On February 23, 1979, by the Decree of the Government of the RSFSR, the team was named after Dmitri Shostakovich.[1]
Touring
The Quartet toured extensively- initially within the USSR, to venues both in larger and in more remote communities- and abroad- it toured in 47 countries on 4 continents, visiting several of them many times, for example the Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy, the USA, Canada, Australia, and Japan.[1]
The music of Shostakovich featured strongly in the quartet's output. The artists performed a cycle of his 15 quartets at the Edinburgh Festival (1988), in Amsterdam (Concertgebouw Music Center, Kleine Zaal, 1984-85), at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival (USA, 1991), at the Adelaide Festival of Arts ( Australia, 1986), at the Asolo Musica festival in Italy (1992), at the Kuhmo Chamber Music Festival (Finland, 1995); as well as in Paris (twice), Antwerp, Rotterdam, Utrecht (multiple times), Tokyo, Malmö, Rome, Naples, Palermo, Moscow (multiple times).[1]
Recordings
The Quartet also carried out studio work. They furnished the All-Union Radio Fund with many sound recordings. Over 50 records and CDs of the Quartet were released by Melodiya, Russkiy Disk, Vista Vera, Boheme (Russia); "Olympia", "Regis", "Alto" (Great Britain); Deutsche Grammophon (Germany), Ricordi (Italy), MFSL (USA), Toshiba EMI and Sacrambow (Japan).[1]