Bach: Six (6) Suites for Solo Violoncello BWV 1007-1012 [CDs plus Blu-ray audio]

 
Bach: Six (6) Suites for Solo Violoncello BWV 1007-1012 [CDs plus Blu-ray audio] cover
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J. S. BACH
Bach: Six (6) Suites for Solo Violoncello BWV 1007-1012 [CDs plus Blu-ray audio]
Pierre Fournier (cello)

[ Deutsche Grammophon Archiv 2 CDs + Blu-ray Audio / 3 CD/Blu-ray Disc ]

Release Date: Friday 4 March 2022

Pierre Fournier's recordings of Bach's Cello Suites have been landmark interpretations ever since their first release in 1961, when they were presented in one of Archiv Produktion's iconic linen boxes with silver sticker. Last year's deluxe vinyl reissue quickly sold out, but our Bach333 celebrations are a perfect occasion to revisit these remarkable recordings again and listen afresh to them now at a higher resolution than we previously could in a new 24bit/192kHz remastering on Blu-ray Audio disc. This new reissue also includes two CDs and comprehensive editorial.

"Of all the great cellists, Pierre Fournier came closer to the heart of the music than almost any other. He seems to have possessed all the virtues of his fellow cellists without yielding to any of their self-indulgences. He could be brilliant in execution - his technique was second to none, as he proves throughout this set - profound in utterance, aristocratic in poise and wonderfully coherent in his understanding of Bach's articulation and phrases.
We need look no further than the Prelude of the First Suite in G major to find the supreme artistry which characterises each and every moment of these performances. There are very occasionally notes which fail to reach their centre but they're few and far between, and Fournier's intonation compares favourably with that of some of his virtuoso companions.
Fournier's rubato is held tightly in rein and when he does apply it, it's in the interests of enlivening aspects of Bach's formal writing.
He can sparkle too, as he does in many of the faster dance-orientated movements such as courantes, gavottes and bourrées; in the sarabandes, he invariably strikes a note of grandeur coupled with a concentration amounting at times almost to abstraction. Above all, his Bach playing is crowned with an eloquence, a lyricism and a grasp of the music's formal and stylistic content which will not easily be matched. Fine recorded sound and strongly commended on virtually all counts." (Gramophone on original CD reissue)