Mary L. Bahr spent her life devoted to her first love: the violin.
Whether she was performing or teaching hundreds of kids in the Twin Cities, Bahr shared her craft with everyone she met.
Jay Fishman, executive and artistic director conductor of the Minnesota Sinfonia and who worked with Bahr for nearly 30 years, said even after she left the orchestra about 10 years ago, concertgoers continued to ask about her.
"She had quite a following," Fishman said.
And even though many of her former students played violin only through high school, several went on to study the instrument in college. Bahr, of Minneapolis, had a way of making her students fall in love with it.
"My fondest memories of her was seeing her with the kids and teaching them violin. It brought her so much joy," said her sister Candace Sather.
Bahr died on May 27 after a long illness. She was 60.
Sather remembers the first time her younger sister picked up the violin.