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1989 March 1989 Historic Bach Solo Cello Suites, BWV1007-12. |
EMI References mono (Mid price) (CD) CHS7 61027-2 (two discs, nas: 130 minutes: ADD). |
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No. 1 in G major (from HMV DB3671/3, 2/39); No. 2 in D minor (DB3399/401, 6/38); No. 3 in C major (DB3402/04, 6/38); No. 4 in E flat major (DB6538/40, 8/48); No. 5 in C minor (DB6541/4S, 8/48); No. 6 in D major (DB3674/7, 2/39). |
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Young music-lovers today may find it difficult to believe that, 50 years ago, major works by Bach were considered to be of such specialized appeal that recordings could be obtained only in a limited "Society" edition. The cello suitesnowadays available in about a dozen versionshad never been recorded until Fred Gaisberg, after protracted efforts, finally persuaded Casals to play them for HMV: Nos. 2 and 3 in London in November 1936, the rest in Paris in July 1938 and July 1939. Casals had hesitated for 35 years before committing to disc these workslong regarded as unplayable, and never performed in their entiretywhich he had discovered at the age of 13 and worked on for 12 years before playing them to an astonished public. To do so he had had to evolve new techniques and, intellectually, to delve deeply into the character and inner structure of the music. He stressed the dance basis of the movements; and his vitality, rhythmic flexibility (to clarify the shape of phrases) and tonal nuance, and the vigour and variety of his bowing, still leap from the discs to impress the listener. |
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From the profound contemplative quality of the G major Sarabande or the C minor Allemande to the zest of the C major Bourree, the breadth and grandeur of the D minor Suite's Prelude and the gravity of its Sarabande, the lightness of the E flat Allemande and Bourrees or the C minor Gavotte, the raptness of the C minor Sarabande, and the lucidity of thought behind the elaborate D major Allemande, EMI's term "References" could not be more apt, since these performances remain the classic yardstick by which all later ones must be judged. |
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The digitally remastered transfers from the original 78s, yielding an astonishingly clean ambience to the cello, represent another technical triumph for Keith Hardwick; but listeners with acute ears will notice that the Courante of the E flat Suite and the Gavotte of the C minor were recorded at a slightly sharper pitch than the movements preceding them. |
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LS |
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