The Arion Trio

These three young ladies organized as a
chamber music group while attending
Oakland Technical High School in 1918. They first appeared on radio over Oakland's KLX in 1924, and they
soon became a program staple on that station. Their popularity led them across the Bay to NBC's
KGO (1924-1925),
and they were heard six days a week on the Pacific Coast networks during the 1930s.
The
trio originally consisted of violinist Josephine Holub, pianist Joyce Barthelson
and cellist Margaret Avery. According to the Encyclopedia of American Radio,
1920-1960, Auro Craverot replaced Margaret Avery (at right in the above
photo) when the trio began appearing on the NBC Pacific Network in 1929. In
later years, Barthelson became an acclaimed composer and arranger.
Avery, whose married name was Margaret Avery Rowell
(1900-1995), later served on the faculties
of the University of California, Stanford University, Mills College and
San Francisco State University. In the early 1950s, she helped found the
California Cello Club, the first organization of its kind in the nation.
Her "whole body" technique for playing the cello, known widely as the
Rowell Method, has been used to teach several generations of students
around the world. She was also an avid wilderness hiker and nature
enthusiast; her son,
Galen Rowell
(1940-2002), was a legendary wilderness photographer and adventurer
whose works were often featured in National Geographic. On the occasion of her eightieth
birthday, a concert featuring eighty cellists was performed in Mrs.
Rowell's honor
at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where she taught for
fourteen years. She retired from the Conservatory with an honorary
doctorate. In the photo, at right, taken around 1980, she is shown
conducting a class in her famed technique. |