Erin Keefe is poised on the edge of her dressing-room practice chair, focused on a complicated section of the Beethoven Septet she will perform with a chamber group in the Orchestra Hall atrium in downtown Minneapolis later that Saturday night.
Her shiny auburn hair matches the burnished tones of her 1732 Gagliano violin so perfectly that it's hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. The rich sound emanating from her instrument shimmers even brighter.
"I've never played this one before," she said in the matter-of-fact manner that comes as naturally to her as putting bow to strings. "It's best to have more rehearsal time, but I tend to do well under pressure."
Keefe, 35, has just briskly summed up one of the key reasons she's so suited to her job as the Minnesota Orchestra's concertmaster. She is straightforward, centered and almost unnervingly calm as she prepares for another night onstage as the Twin Cities' most prominent violinist — now married to the orchestra's music director, Osmo Vänskä.
Although her position ranks second only to his, that status doesn't translate as it might in most work environments. She must communicate Vänskä's vision to the rest of the strings — the most important sections of an orchestra — while providing practical direction on bowing and performing solos.
The job is like landing a major role in a play, based more on talent for an art form than in climbing rungs on a management ladder.
Steven Copes, concertmaster for the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, has known Keefe for about 10 years, since they hit it off at a chamber music festival in Seattle. He calls her "exceptionally swift. She has a lot of antennae out and absorbs information about both people and music at a frighteningly quick speed."
Fate in a doorway
Keefe's career path could have been different if her girlhood home had had a wider entryway.