Italian immigrant Albert Bellson was considered Minnesota's master mandolin player and teacher in the 1920s and '30s, an era when big string orchestras were all the rage.
Despite his lofty stature, Bellson took time every week to walk from his downtown St. Paul instrument shop and music school to the Rondo neighborhood. That's where he coached, cajoled and conducted a group of mostly African-American girls known as Taylor's Musical Strings.
Former students said Bellson was quite formal, always wearing a suit and tie and taking meticulous care of his nails. He'd head over to Rondo to give the girls private lessons on mandolin, mandola, mandocello, guitar and bass guitar.
Today, mandolins are known mostly for adding the plinky sound to bluegrass music. Back then, they were classical instruments and more.
The girls' "repertoire included J.S. Bach, Stephen Foster songs, Sousa marches, gospel tunes, and, when their elders were not listening, the blues," according to Amy Shaw, an expert from St. Catherine University, who wrote a definitive story on the mandolin mania in Minnesota History magazine in 2001 under her married name, Amy Kreitzer (tinyurl.com/MNmandolins).
One of Bellson's pupils, a young mandocellist named Evelyn Fairbanks, remembered how his style swung from subtle to animated — sometimes within seconds.
"He raised both hands chest-high with his elbows sticking out," Fairbanks wrote in her 1990 book, "The Days of Rondo."
"He looked at each of us, one at a time, to make sure he had our attention. Then he made the slightest movement with his baton and we started to play. …