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Bach: Suites for Cello
Johann Sebastian Bach
Bach: Suites for Cello
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #2

This is a welcome reissue of the Dutch cellist Jaap ter Linden's 1996 recording, made using two different period instruments: a standard four-string cello crafted between 1725 and 1730 by Carlo Bergonzi (Suites Nos. 1 thro...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Johann Sebastian Bach
Title: Bach: Suites for Cello
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Harmonia Mundi Fr.
Release Date: 11/16/1999
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Baroque (c.1600-1750), Classical (c.1770-1830), Instruments, Strings
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 794881484621

Synopsis

Amazon.com
This is a welcome reissue of the Dutch cellist Jaap ter Linden's 1996 recording, made using two different period instruments: a standard four-string cello crafted between 1725 and 1730 by Carlo Bergonzi (Suites Nos. 1 through 5), and a five-string instrument built by Antonius and Hieronymus Amati and dating from around 1600 (Suite No. 6). Ter Linden's playing is disciplined and informed, but in no sense dry. Indeed, his accounts sound almost improvisatory; without ever losing touch with the dance rhythms at the heart of the music, they seem quite freely phrased and rhapsodic in feeling. The cellist, while sparing in his use of vibrato, employs it very effectively as a way of giving lyrical profile to the line. And ter Linden is well served by both of his instruments. The tone of the Bergonzi cello is powerful but not too gruff at the bottom, a touch shallow in the middle, and gamba-like at the top, while that of the Amati is sweet and plangent, giving the D major suite an exquisitely bright sound. The recording is superbly engineered, and so revealing that we hear plenty of huffing and puffing as ter Linden negotiates the toughest passages in these supremely challenging pieces. --Ted Libbey
 

CD Reviews

Poised
Michael Filosek | Poland | 06/16/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Linden approaches this great music with poise and extreme control. Very slow tempos show the suites in a more contemplative light. The sustained notes reveal the emotional but also the intellectual Bach at his most consummate. Linden's extremely beautiful phrasing unswervingly hold its grip on the listener for over 140 minutes. Extreme clarity of the polyphonic texture, every single note extracted and yet fully blended into the whole of Bach's magnificent musical concept. Linden undoubtedly rates among those who have done justice to this monumental piece of music. The sound of the period cellos used by the performer is warm and woody and superbly recorded."
The absolute best recording available
andyrew2000 | Chesterfield, VA United States | 04/04/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jaap ter Linden is one of the best and most authentic baroque cellists in the world. Many fine cellists, even great ones like Rostropovitch, forget that Bach was a Baroque composer and try to perform his Cello Suites with an emotional romantic interpretation. Jaap ter Linden resists this temptation, and plays the suites like they were meant to be played by Bach. From bowings, to orniments, to dynamics, it almost sounds like he is playing on the Viola Da Gamba. Far from bland, these recordings are full of expression--the kind of expression that would have been used in Bach's day. Having studied the Bach Suites myself, I would definately recomend these recordings to anyone seeking to understand these remarkable pieces."
Extraordinaria interpretación
Leopoldo Parra Reynada | México City, D.F. Mexico | 08/28/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Pocas obras de Bach resultan tan sorprendentes como las 6 suites para violoncello solo, ya que en muchos aspectos marcaron un hito en la historia de la música; por ejemplo, aunque no es la única ni mucho menos, esta obra es la más conocida que se ha escrito para este instrumento sin acompañamiento de ninguna especie; además, su dificultad técnica es tal que durante muchos años los violoncellistas las usaban como ejercicio cotidiano para mantener la agilidad de sus dedos. A pesar de todo esto, las 6 suites fueron relegadas de las salas de concierto por mucho tiempo, hasta que a principios del siglo XX, Pablo Casals emprendió una verdadera cruzada para rescatarlas y colocarlas en el sitio que hoy gozan en la preferencia del público. La versión de Jaap Ter Linden a estas suites es verdaderamente sensacional, y no solo por la utilización de instrumentos de la época (entre ellos un violoncello de 5 cuerdas contruido por los Amati), sino que su calidad interpretativa está entre las mejores que he escuchado. La calidad de grabación es tan buena que incluso se llega a escuchar el sonido de los dedos desplazándose sobre las cuerdas en los pasajes especialmente difíciles (tal y como podríamos esperar de unos discos de Harmonia Mundi). Por todo esto, realmente se trata de una colección de dos discos muy recomendable y a un precio muy accesible, la cual sin duda alguna disfrutará ampliamente."