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Track(s) taken from CDA67541/2

Cello Suite No 2 in D minor, BWV1008

composer
? early 1720

Steven Isserlis (cello)
Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
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Recording details: December 2005
Henry Wood Hall, London, United Kingdom
Produced by Andrew Keener
Engineered by Simon Eadon
Release date: May 2007
Total duration: 17 minutes 24 seconds

Cover artwork: Photograph of Steven Isserlis by Graham Topping.
 

Other recordings available for download

David Kenedy (cello)
Alban Gerhardt (cello)

Reviews

‘Thoughtful, respectful, inspirational playing, a perfectly-placed recording, stimulating notes … this is a fine achievement’ (BBC Radio 3 CD Review)

‘Some of the best Bach playing I've heard since Casals’ (BBC Radio 3 CD Review)

‘This is the most wonderful cello-playing, surely among the most consistently beautiful to have been heard in this demanding music, as well as the most musically alert and vivid … few will fail to be charmed by Isserlis's sweetly singing tone, his perfectly voiced chords and superb control of articulation and dynamic—the way the final chord of the First Prelude dies away is spellbinding. There are so many other delights: the subtle comings and goings of the Third Prelude, the nobly poised Fifth Allemande, the swaggering climax into the Sixth Gigue—I cannot mention them all. Suffice to say that Isserlis's Bach is a major entrant into an already highly distinguished field, and a disc many will want to return to again and again’ (Gramophone)

‘His judicious ornaments sensitively decorate—never distort—Bach’s lines … rhythmically he’s impeccable. The free ‘phantasticus’ style of the first four Preludes is gloriously fluent, capturing the harmonic flow implied within the single cello line. The fifth, a French Overture, is free of bombast and its subsequent quasi-fugue lyrical and unhurried. Isserlis plays the sixth suite, intended for a five-string instrument, on a normal four-string cello, negotiating the stratospheric range with astonishing ease … his sense of style is matched by an outstandingly secure technique. He has no need for those impassioned tenutos behind which others hide the terrors of multiple-stopping … recording quality is excellent—two-channel stereo is all that’s required, and it’s excellently balanced between immediacy and spaciousness. Casals (re-issued on Naxos) started it all in 1936—Beamish’s Catalan folk-song arrangement is a charming tribute to him. Ter Linden (Harmonia Mundi) provides a fine period-instrument account, and Hugh (Kevin Mayhew) a somewhat reverberant but perceptive ‘modern’ option. But for me, Isserlis and Hyperion provide a completely new and inspiring benchmark for this unique tour de force’ (BBC Music Magazine)

‘This landmark recording combines bravura technique with scholartly research to produce a new interpretation … pushing each rhythmic possiblity to the limit but never sacrificing grace, charm and elegance’ (The Observer)

‘These are the cellist's Everest, and Isserlis has waited a long time to commit them to disc: his superb interpretations now put him in that great line of cellists that stretches back to Casals’ (The Independent)

‘Isserlis's dance-movements, particularly the jaunty Gigues, have a verve that is often missing from the 'classic' performances, and his Sarabandes, most of all the sublime 'Crucifixion' of No 5, are serene moments of repose and reflection in these thought-provoking and magnificently played accounts of these corner-stone works’ (International Record Review)

‘Isserlis is a passionate musician, but never thoughtless or frivolous, and the delicacy of his responses on this wonderful set sometimes take the breath away. If your soul fails to quiver in the quiet depths of the fifth suite’s sarabande, then you must be a robot in disguise. Yet he’s not on his knees always worshipping: time and again Isserlis asserts the music’s dance roots, whether through his thrusting accents or by sweeping through with a winning lilt … just listen to Isserlis, Bach and your heart, and the music that never dies’ (The Times)

‘A worthy successor to Casals in every way. He creates the satisfying sense of a musical journey through the Suites … Isserlis's interpretation treads the path between profound intellectual understanding and a sense of spontaeous expression, both qualities that the music requires … this is an outstanding recording of some of the greatest works of classical music and a disc that every music-lover should own’ (Classic FM Magazine)

‘His vibrato-light tone is soft-grained but seems infinitely malleable. He can dance with the grace of perfect strength and physique, and sing plaintively, or from the heart, or in celebration, as if it were the most natural thing in the world for him. In short, he's brought off that most remarkable of feats: making Bach's six great cello suites sound as if they might well have been written for him. This is unmissable music-making’ (The Irish Times)

‘These performances grab you with their intimacy and full-bodied embrace, their simple dedication and emotional truthfulness—an elusive juxtaposition of opposites that Isserlis captures better than most. You never sense he is playing for mood or effect—dynamic and expressive contrasts are modest—but he brings wonderful vigour and connectedness to the dance-like figurations. The sound makes you feel Isserlis is sitting four yards away, not just enjoying himself but also completely bound up in the technical and quasi-improvisatory challenges of Bach's world’ (Financial Times)

‘In a radically organic approach, Steven Isserlis takes the works back to their meditative core … the inner voice is on the whole wondrously refreshing, laced with flashes of wit and dazzling insight. I am still finding surprises on third hearing’ (The Evening Standard)

‘The Bach Cello Suites are the Everest to be conquered by every cellist, and the latest assault has been made by Steven Isserlis, with triumphant success … with this cellist's ability to catch exactly the rhythmic movements and contrast them with the steady beauty of the slow passages, this is a specially fine account’ (Liverpool Daily Post)

‘A beautiful, absorbing, must-have set of performances, with some delightful little add-ons, notably Sally Beamish's exquisite arrangement of a Catalan folk song, included by Isserlis as a homage to Pablo Casals. This will be a record of the year’ (The Herald)

‘This is the finest recording of Bach's cello suites that I've heard. The playing is enthralling, the production superb; nearly every detail sounds just right. Steven Isserlis has bided his time to record these suites and he comes to them with technique and sensibility finely honed, all of it evident in his richly dark tone, fluent phrasing, lithe dance rhythms and lovingly crafted lyricism … one of the year's outstanding recordings’ (Goldberg)

‘Staying true to the Baroque ideal of free instrumental expression, he stamps his own unconventional wisdom on these almost three-centuries-old standards. No two interpreters will ever agree on the Allemande in Suite No 2 … Isserlis, for his part, cuts loose with a rollicking, stylized jig that puts to bed the prior brooding Prelude. He teases out the individual personalities in each of the dances and trumpets them, molding each suite into a fuller, organic whole. Isserlis impeccably controls his slow movements, and his focused, restrained use of vibrato is perfectly in character’ (Time Out Chicago)

‘Steven Isserlis achieves the ideal synthesis between the old-fashioned approach to Bach's solo pieces and newer, supposedly more authentic notions. Listening to Mr. Isserlis, you may find yourself enjoying these six works more than you ever have before. His rhythmic élan is downright infectious, and he finds the heart of the music without getting maudlin. A clear first choice for these much-recorded suites’ (The Dallas Morning News)

‘These are … meticulously prepared accounts of a highly personal and reverent nature. Listeners will immediately warm to Isserlis’s genial way with the First Suite and the solemn majesty applied to the Third. And while Isserlis may have the sub-text, the suites work with or without that in mind. Steven Isserlis knows the detailed history of these suites, both in performance and in composition, and applies his years of research and familiarity without omission to disc. The project has clearly been a labour of love and comes across that way—a set of recordings made from compulsion, not duty’ (Classical Source)

‘It has taken him years to face up to the monumental challenge that is the Bach Cello Suites, but Steven Isserlis comes up trumps in a deeply intelligent traversal with a tremendous emotional pay-off’ (FirstPost.com)

‘Isserlis has done the impossible. He has given the listener something new, and indeed something outstandingly good … this recording can sit proudly on the shelf alongside the great recordings of Casals and Rostropovich. In fact, I may find myself picking it up as the favourite’ (bbc.co.uk)
In contrast to the wide-open expanses of harmony traversed in the opening of the first suite, this prelude seems to speak of physical effort, tension, contraction. The initial gesture, a closely spaced D minor triad, is gradually, chromatically pushed to expand beyond its limits, only to collapse back into the home key. Some of the other movements, too, demand a particular sort of concentrated labour from the player. The pair of minuets, interposed here between the traditional grouping of allemande–courante–sarabande and the closing gigue, represents perhaps the most up-to-date dance form to appear in these suites. They would be expected to project the kind of ease and nonchalance associated with the fashionable ‘galant’ style. Yet the frequent chord shifts and string crossings, especially in the first minuet, require a certain degree of awkward physical exertion from the player: the kind of virtuosity, in other words, that ideally remained hidden beneath a surface of perfectly controlled poise. In the courante, on the other hand, virtuosic display can easily become the sole focus of a listener’s attention, depending on the speed at which the performer’s bow darts along. At full tilt, the movement certainly does ample justice to its generic title—the ‘running’ dance.

from notes by Bettina Varwig © 2019

Contrairement aux vastes étendues d’harmonie traversées au début de la première suite, le prélude semble parler d’effort physique, de tension, de contraction. Le geste initial, un accord parfait serré de ré mineur, va peu à peu chromatiquement au-delà de ses limites, pour aboutir finalement à un retour dans la tonalité d’origine. Certains autres mouvements exigent aussi un genre de concentration spécifique de la part de l’instrumentiste. Les deux menuets, interposés ici entre l’enchaînement traditionnel allemande–courante–sarabande et la gigue finale, représentent peut-être la forme de danse la plus moderne qui apparaisse dans ces suites. Ils sont supposés projeter le genre d’aisance et de nonchalance correspondant au style «galant» à la mode à cette époque. Pourtant, les fréquents enchaînements d’accords et changements de cordes, surtout dans le premier menuet, requièrent un certain effort physique qui pèse sur l’instrumentiste. Autrement dit, c’est une sorte de virtuosité qui, idéalement, doit restée cachée derrière une aisance parfaitement maîtrisée. Par ailleurs, dans la courante, la virtuosité peut facilement accaparer toute l’attention de l’auditeur, selon la vitesse à laquelle s’élance l’archet de l’instrumentiste. À vive allure, ce mouvement rend amplement justice à son titre générique—la danse «qui court».

extrait des notes rédigées par Bettina Varwig © 2019
Français: Marie-Stella Pâris

Im Gegensatz zu dem weiten harmonischen Feld, das zu Beginn der ersten Suite durchschritten wird, scheint dieses Prélude körperliche Anstrengung, Spannung und ein Sich-Zusammenziehen zu vermitteln. Die Anfangsgeste, ein enger d-Moll-Dreiklang, wird allmählich und chromatisch ausgedehnt und über seine Grenzen hinweg gedrängt, nur um dann wieder in seine Ausgangstonart zurückzusinken. Auch einige der anderen Sätze fordern dem Ausführenden eine besondere Art konzentrierter Arbeit ab. Das Menuett-Paar, das hier zwischen die traditionelle Gruppierung von Allemande–Courante–Sarabande und die Schluss-Gigue eingefügt ist, repräsentiert möglicherweise die modernste Tanzform in den Suiten. Es wäre zu erwarten, dass sie dieLeichtigkeit und Nonchalance des modernen „galanten“ Stils vermitteln, doch verlangen die häufigen Akkordverschiebungen und Saitenwechsel, besonders im ersten Menuett, eine gewisse unbequeme körperliche Anstrengung von dem Spieler. Anders ausgedrückt, eine Art von Virtuosität, die idealerweise unterhalb der Oberfläche einer mustergültig beherrschten Contenance versteckt bleibt. In der Courante hingegen kann die virtuose Darstellung durchaus in den Mittelpunkt der Aufmerksamkeit des Zuhörers rücken, je nachdem mit welchem Tempo der Bogen des Ausführenden umherflitzt. Mit voller Geschwindigkeit wird der Satz seinem Titel mehr als gerecht—der „rennende“ Tanz.

aus dem Begleittext von Bettina Varwig © 2019
Deutsch: Viola Scheffel

Other albums featuring this work

Bach: Cello Suites
SIGCD0912CDs Download only
Bach: The Cello Suites
Studio Master: CDA68261/22CDsStudio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
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