I will never forget playing the Brahms E minor for Jacqueline back in 1967. She insisted I play it on her beautiful Davidov Stradivarius cello. I was pretty thrilled. At first I did not feel worthy and said "Oh...that's ok." and smiled. She said, "Christine, you do not say no to the chance to play on the Davidov!" And so I smiled and took the cello and played it for her. She was 22 and I was 17. She was newly engaged to Daniel Barenboim and had his photos with her plastered all over the hotel mirror. We talked and talked and she ordered up some hot chocolate and biscuits for us. It was an afternoon I will never forget. We also wrote to one another after that. It is always a great joy rereading her letters! I am 68 now....so many years ago and yet it sometimes seems like it was yesterday. Some day I must see that they get into the right hands for all to appreciate.
What a beautiful story for us other dregs of humanity to inspire us to keep on plodding on in our meaaningless accountancy of empires lost; Madame Newland et Madame Barenboim, nee du Pre, you contributions will make our unmarked deaths so much less painful - like Hans Canstorp's [Magic Mountain - Der Zauberberg - Thomas Mann] when Castorp was hurling himself to certain destruction of himself and ancient Europe while singing to himself the soothing tunes of der Lindenbaum by Schubert . . . What is life worth without beauty . . .
Christine, thank you so much for telling us bout such a wonderful memory. I think I went to a concert at the Royal Festival Hall where Jacqueline was playing the Elgar, although I'm not certain. I have a real passion for classical music. I play the piano (just improvise - not professionally!). You and I are of the same generation.
As a cellist, i am jealous that the violin have got more beautiful pieces than the cello. And in orchestra, the violin got almost all the melodies while cellist are just playing the baseline. And most of the non-musicians only know what is the violin while think that the cello is a big violin. :(
This is my favourite performance os this piece, this sonata is just perfect. I wish I could have listened Du Pre when she was still alive. It's a shame, but at least her music keeps her alive. For me, the best cellist of the XXth century. I admire her so much... An example.
For me, she is and always will be the best! She bared her soul and became the music when she performed. I saw her a few times and I went on stage with her to turn pages for her husband Daniel. She was a powerhouse of emotion and creative energy! She let me play on her cello when we met for the first time in 1967.
Agree fully ! I know nothing about music, but listened to her while resting from studying for exams, I was in my late 50's studying Chinese medicine. I had been a fan of Piatigorsky, but after I heard her, that was it. Once in a century such greatness comes.
I literally weep when I am hearing this glorious Brahms Cello Sonata. I weep even more when I think of Jacqueline du Pre putting up this majestic performance. Her playing can make anyone cry, such is her passion! I am 68 and to know that sometimes life is so cruel as to snatch this diamond from us the music lovers is unforgivable! I miss you greatly Jacqueline and your wonderful smile will forever be embedded in my heart and mind!
This is exquisite! Jacqueline du Pre was the most gifted cellist ever. No other artist interprets the Brahms Cello Sonata in E minor like she did. I am glad that I got to attend one of her concerts at Carnegie Hall.
+Ikoikjji I attended one of Jacqueline du Pre's concerts at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1968 when I was a 12 year old cello student. I went backstage to meet her on a long receiving line with my mother, a concert pianist, and Jacqueline du Pre wished me good luck with my music studies. She was beautiful with her long blonde hair wearing a modern, simple silk gown. Jacqueline du Pre was so inspiring and I remember practicing much harder after that concert. My parents, both musicians, took me to see all the greats in concert. It was easy because we lived in NYC. It was a great concert!.
+Ikoikjji I have never played the cello professionally but I have always enjoyed playing it at home. When I was teaching school for many years I gave many cello demonstrations and small recitals in class. I still play cello for fun!
+Vivienne Courtney Wow!!!What a nice memory!!! I am astonished to listen Jacqueline du Pre playing Bach when she is young. If she had lived longer, she should have been sublime in performance as much as Pierre Fournier.
I bow to you, Johannes Brahms, for such autumnal beauty! I bow to you, Jacqueline du Pre and Daniel Barenboim, for such masterly playing! This is a precious precious recording!
When they play together the chemistry ignites, in no uncertain fashion; this performance of so vibrant, rich a work of Brahms proves the claim, as do many others in the chamber music repetoire. Indeed it could be said that Daniel Barenboim never plays better, with more flair, verve and boldness, than he does with Jaqueline du Pré, equals on a par.
Yes, but so does the entire first movement. I doubt anyone has played it so well. Perhaps Mischa. You must also like the second movement of the Double Concerto.
This is a marvellously assured and emotionally infused rendition of a much loved repertoire piece - thumbs all the way from the start to the end - there is no doubt about it - the spirits of sublime artists and maestros such as Du Pre live on in their works - how wonderful and fitting!
In spite of other masterpieces, for instance Beethoven's 4th and 5th, Debussy's, Grieg's, I do consider that the two greatest cello/piano sonatas of the music history are this one and Beethoven's third op. 69, which obviously greatly inspired this one. Beethoven's 4th and 5th more or less mark the so-called Beethoven's "third period" beginning, which was one of the absolute tops of the music history with the late Bach. In my mind, "they rank aside", but the majesty and inventive symmetry of his op. 69, which we retrieve in this sonata; have some kind of olympic and apollinian features. Note that the two sonatas lack of a properly lyric slow central movement; they have alternatives of their own. In this sonata, some critics considered that it was not so good to write a fugue in a cello/piano sonata, exchanging the subject between the two instruments, but on the opposite I do consider that it is a quite creative mark, within a rather austere association of two quite different instruments (an organist playing a fugue by Bach makes most often use of contrasting registrations. You can also find some similar features in some movements of Bach's Brandeburg concerts, which obviously Brahms knew.
Wonderful depth of lyricism. She was one in a billion, or even more. I played this once with Rostropovitch. Really. Her reading far outshone his. He also did a Rachmaninoff with Horowitz in Carnegie Hall. Again, he could not compete at all with Horowitz' lyricism, sensitivity, depth. Not to trash Slava, of course. He was unmatched in many other ways. In this recording, Barenboim is fantastic, too. He, like her , is very rare phenomenon.
The whole of this sound architecture is a flight into the Sublime. It is a very beautiful music played with exceptional skill and an impressive inner feeling. A delightful listening and therapeutic experience .
Rostropovich and Du Pre are my all time favorite cellists that I look to constantly for inspiration and insight. This is one rare instance where I can't decide which bits of whose interpretation to base mine off of. They both play Brahms so beautifully (I'm not sure why everyone seems to dislike Rostropovich playing Brahms and worship Jacqueline, not that hers isn't gorgeous). I just fucking love this aaaa
Both of them are hilarious. Yet I had the pleasure of listening to Martha Argerich and Mischa Maisky. He so lives the moment. You can literally see him feel the music. So I‘d add him to the all time favorite cellists.
Escuché, o mejor dicho me inmergi en este inmenso mosaico de artesanía espiritual y me olvide, inclusive de mi, de la soberbia y hasta de ir a trabajar. Ya para que, necesito rozar suelos donde no llegue lo convencional...la paz ahora me arroja a un mundo, que si lo veo con los ojos del corazón, puede ser un lugar brillante, asombroso y aún bastante hermoso
Wenn Sie Brahms gerne mögen,gefällt Ihnen vielleicht auch das Folgende hier. Sonate für Cello und Klavier F-Dur. ua-cam.com/video/IbdR3Ea5CIU/v-deo.html
I see 200 dislikes. How can this be? Ignorant people? Or people that know something? I know this piece well and have not yet heard it played so absolutely sensitively. There is the space in this interpretation that many musicians ignore. Many see this as a virtuoso piece especially the first movement, and don’t think about all the dimensions that are actually in it. Beautiful beyond! Thank you for posting it!
probably some random person who doesn't like this type of music and accidentally clicked in the video expecting some rap music but ends up with classical which they probably dislike, so they disliked it.
It's not that these people are ignorant but they are illerate as far as classical music goes! They would be better served if they listen to the garbage music that's dished out today!
une passion à quatre jacqueline , barenboim , brahms et le violoncelle sublime de jacqueline ,, on ne s'en lasse pas jamais , commentse lasser d'un brahms quand il est ciselé avec l'art du joaillier de génie qui sans chercher le luxe immanent trouve par miracle l'alchimie éthérée qui fait l'unicité de brahms merci
IMO this is the version all others will be forever compared to and no others I've heard yet come close. Du Pré is up there with Casals when it comes to pure emotion, tone and musicality. And hats off to Barenboim who plays the perfect dynamic counterpart.
I grew up with the du-Pre/Barenboim Brahms cello sonatas. Their interpretation has not been surpassed and still lives for me, and I've heard plenty of recordings by others since. Thank you for sharing -
Thanks Lance - I must be honest to say that I have not heard the Feuermann/Piatigorsky, but imagine that would be great also. I'll look out for it, thanks -
An Extraordinarily poetic vision, which Jacqueline du Pre captures from her very first statement. Daniel Barenboim gives us a deeply poignant and ultra sensitive collaboration. It's a peak experience from him, and shows his receptivity to her vision. This is not the Barenboim who recorded the entire Mendelssohn Songs Without Words it is said, at one sitting. Thank you Davit Stepanyan. Perhaps Brahms thanks all three of you.
It is a great responsability to play with this most gifted du Pré. Her play is deep and alive, never heart it elsewere. Now Barenboim can acompany du Pré just by hemself not hindered by an inactive London Symphony Orchestra as when they played Cello Concerto in B minor, Op. 104, B. 191 by Antonín Dvořák. This Brahms is the only peace I can play by heart (mediocre cello player as I am), I love it.
Cuando conocí el trabajo musical y la vida de Jacqueline Du Pre quedé maravillado. Escuchar la ejecución de su música y pensar en ese bello talento me asombra. Gracias igualmente a Daniel Barenboim por ser un pianista y director extraordinario.
Il suono del violoncello entra nell'anima e poi come lo esprime la Dupre' è meraviglioso! Grazie Brahms Duprè e Barenboim e grazie per la pubblicazione.
Потрясающе!Мой муж пианист Сергей Форостяный играл эту сонату с виолончелистамиРоманом Стороженко и Глебом Степановым.Гениальная музыка!!!Моя дочь впервые услышала ее в материнской утробе и потом вспомнила,услышав на концерте,будучи уже подростком и взрослой...
2:15 I swear Tigran Hamasyan must have taken inspiration from this line. I forget what song he uses a very similar idea, but it sounds just as ominous and powerful in both contexts.
Jacqueline Du Pre. Me cautivas hoy y siempre. Qué belleza. La prueba de que Dios existe es que hay personas que se acercan a una perfección inimaginable para nosotros, el resto de los mortales. Son como ángeles que nos mandan para que aliviemos nuestros dolores y podamos amar a la vida que es tan dura y dolorosa. Gracias Davit. Gracias Jacqueline desde el cielo tocando un cello espiritual para todos los mortales. A veces te escucho.
+Chino Canibal respeto su punto de vista. No lo comparto. El talento es una palabra y una capacidad muy pequeña para albergar tanto. No le hacemos honor a esos genios cuando le decimos que tienen o tenían talento. Todos tenemos talento. Todo niño tiene talento. Usted y yo tenemos talento. Pero no importa, antes que discutir e incluso dialogar, yo me alegro y conformo con escuchar a Dios a través de Jacqueline. Escuche usted lo que le den sus oídos, yo busco algo más allá de la sensación física. Vivimos de Fe no de Vista. Gracias y que Dios lo Bendiga.
Siempre recuerdo Jacqueline du Pré con una mezcla de tristeza y admiración.Tristeza por su muerte después de haber sufrido 17 años una esclerosis múltiple.Admiración por su excelencia interpretativa De Barenboim me siento orgulloso como connacional por sus interpretaciones de música argentina y por todo lo demás: un grande
lemandjwzz: I sincerely hope that this piece (and many, many others) will open a new horizon for you. This is a wonderful world that one should not miss. On the other hand, in my experience, it will ruin your desire to listen to most other, non-classical music (excluding the Beatles).
In so many ways! Jackie was so loving sweet and kind...and a bit of a prankster. lol! Danny was handsome and brilliant and also very sweet! I was so thrilled Jackie asked me to turn pages for him at one of their recitals in London. :)
I will never forget playing the Brahms E minor for Jacqueline back in 1967. She insisted I play it on her beautiful Davidov Stradivarius cello. I was pretty thrilled. At first I did not feel worthy and said "Oh...that's ok." and smiled. She said, "Christine, you do not say no to the chance to play on the Davidov!" And so I smiled and took the cello and played it for her. She was 22 and I was 17. She was newly engaged to Daniel Barenboim and had his photos with her plastered all over the hotel mirror. We talked and talked and she ordered up some hot chocolate and biscuits for us. It was an afternoon I will never forget. We also wrote to one another after that. It is always a great joy rereading her letters! I am 68 now....so many years ago and yet it sometimes seems like it was yesterday. Some day I must see that they get into the right hands for all to appreciate.
Wow! what was her cello like to play on? She sounds like such a wonderful amazing person :)
What a beautiful story for us other dregs of humanity to inspire us to keep on plodding on in our meaaningless accountancy of empires lost; Madame Newland et Madame Barenboim, nee du Pre, you contributions will make our unmarked deaths so much less painful - like Hans Canstorp's [Magic Mountain - Der Zauberberg - Thomas Mann] when Castorp was hurling himself to certain destruction of himself and ancient Europe while singing to himself the soothing tunes of der Lindenbaum by Schubert . . . What is life worth without beauty . . .
Christine, thank you so much for telling us bout such a wonderful memory. I think I went to a concert at the Royal Festival Hall where Jacqueline was playing the Elgar, although I'm not certain. I have a real passion for classical music. I play the piano (just improvise - not professionally!). You and I are of the same generation.
Christine....I am highly jealous of your experience! How WONDERFUL! Oh....to have known her.......
Thank you a lot for that incredible story!
The Davidov Stradivarius cello, Brahms, and Jacqueline du Pre lined up to enrich our civilization. We are blessed.
man as a violinist I just always get a little bit jealous when i hear that rich sound the cello produces
It is not to late to switch ;)
@@AzazelCain nah i fell in love with the violin, not with the cello!
Can relate lol
As a cellist, i am jealous that the violin have got more beautiful pieces than the cello. And in orchestra, the violin got almost all the melodies while cellist are just playing the baseline. And most of the non-musicians only know what is the violin while think that the cello is a big violin. :(
As a cellist I always get a little jelous at all those lovely tunes you get in orchestra 🤣
I don't play nor do I read music but cello touches my soul so deeply that at times I go into a trance.
Jacqueline du Pre was a consummate artist and ranks among the cello greats. Thanks so much for posting this great performance.
This is my favourite performance os this piece, this sonata is just perfect. I wish I could have listened Du Pre when she was still alive. It's a shame, but at least her music keeps her alive. For me, the best cellist of the XXth century. I admire her so much... An example.
For me, she is and always will be the best! She bared her soul and became the music when she performed. I saw her a few times and I went on stage with her to turn pages for her husband Daniel. She was a powerhouse of emotion and creative energy! She let me play on her cello when we met for the first time in 1967.
Agree fully ! I know nothing about music, but listened to her while resting from studying for exams, I was in my late 50's studying Chinese medicine. I had been a fan of Piatigorsky, but after I heard her, that was it. Once in a century such greatness comes.
1st Movement: 0:00
2nd Movement: 12:23
3rd Movement: 18:16
Hope this helped!
Thank youuuu
@@MariaVirginiaIturriPerez -- Yes indeed....and Mil Gracias desde San Agustinillo, Oaxaca!
Why is this comment not pinned?😂
P@@MariaVirginiaIturriPerez
Brahms melodies are so emotive, and strong, so decisive. Really inspiring.
Ending of the first movement has got to be one of the most beautiful things ever.
Jacqueline du Pre is simply amazing and the piano accomplice! :), (Daniel Barenboim) is perfect!
I literally weep when I am hearing this glorious Brahms Cello Sonata. I weep even more when I think of Jacqueline du Pre putting up this majestic performance. Her playing can make anyone cry, such is her passion! I am 68 and to know that sometimes life is so cruel as to snatch this diamond from us the music lovers is unforgivable! I miss you greatly Jacqueline and your wonderful smile will forever be embedded in my heart and mind!
Exactly how I feel.
@@Michajeru Thank you. I am sure you will agree with me that Jacqueline is the greatest women Cellist's that ever lived! She is my idol!
Du Pre's cello sings. Incredible artist
This is exquisite! Jacqueline du Pre was the most gifted cellist ever. No other artist interprets the Brahms Cello Sonata in E minor like she did. I am glad that I got to attend one of her concerts at Carnegie Hall.
U got to c her???!!! Lucky duck ! When did u see her?
+Ikoikjji I attended one of Jacqueline du Pre's concerts at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1968 when I was a 12 year old cello student. I went backstage to meet her on a long receiving line with my mother, a concert pianist, and Jacqueline du Pre wished me good luck with my music studies. She was beautiful with her long blonde hair wearing a modern, simple silk gown. Jacqueline du Pre was so inspiring and I remember practicing much harder after that concert. My parents, both musicians, took me to see all the greats in concert. It was easy because we lived in NYC. It was a great concert!.
wow that s amazing!!!
do u still play cello?
+Ikoikjji I have never played the cello professionally but I have always enjoyed playing it at home. When I was teaching school for many years I gave many cello demonstrations and small recitals in class. I still play cello for fun!
+Vivienne Courtney Wow!!!What a nice memory!!! I am astonished to listen Jacqueline du Pre playing Bach when she is young. If she had lived longer, she should have been sublime in performance as much as Pierre Fournier.
This cello sonata is the most representative of the brahm romanticisme. It is sensational........
I bow to you, Johannes Brahms, for such autumnal beauty! I bow to you, Jacqueline du Pre and Daniel Barenboim, for such masterly playing! This is a precious precious recording!
@@hapalmah It is true. Her mom was her pianist until Jaqueline meet Baremboim
Such a masterpiece by Brahms. And the interpreters...
Du Pre, always with intensity and feeling using the strings of the cello to sing the strings of her heart.
When they play together the chemistry ignites, in no uncertain fashion; this performance of so vibrant, rich a work of Brahms proves the claim, as do many others in the chamber music repetoire. Indeed it could be said that Daniel Barenboim never plays better, with more flair, verve and boldness, than he does with Jaqueline du Pré, equals on a par.
Sublime, passionate and unequalled performance.
Sublime, divine..no words to describe the magic dust Jackie sprinkles around my ears. Divino, no hay palabras....
She would love that you said that...I can see her smiling!
The second theme of the 1st movement is so singular....its musical equivalent of a person who lost a great love....an anguish from the heart
Yes, but so does the entire first movement. I doubt anyone has played it so well. Perhaps Mischa. You must also like the second movement of the Double Concerto.
Simply superb! Both cellist and pianist; thank you for sharing it with us. Brahms, always Brahms -sad, melancholic but always genial.
cello is so fucking rocking me right now
bravo!!! Barenboim&Jacqueline . how wonderful team!!! i was deeply touched and moved!
This is a marvellously assured and emotionally infused rendition of a much loved repertoire piece - thumbs all the way from the start to the end - there is no doubt about it - the spirits of sublime artists and maestros such as Du Pre live on in their works - how wonderful and fitting!
Love this comment.
In spite of other masterpieces, for instance Beethoven's 4th and 5th, Debussy's, Grieg's, I do consider that the two greatest cello/piano sonatas of the music history are this one and Beethoven's third op. 69, which obviously greatly inspired this one. Beethoven's 4th and 5th more or less mark the so-called Beethoven's "third period" beginning, which was one of the absolute tops of the music history with the late Bach. In my mind, "they rank aside", but the majesty and inventive symmetry of his op. 69, which we retrieve in this sonata; have some kind of olympic and apollinian features. Note that the two sonatas lack of a properly lyric slow central movement; they have alternatives of their own. In this sonata, some critics considered that it was not so good to write a fugue in a cello/piano sonata, exchanging the subject between the two instruments, but on the opposite I do consider that it is a quite creative mark, within a rather austere association of two quite different instruments (an organist playing a fugue by Bach makes most often use of contrasting registrations. You can also find some similar features in some movements of Bach's Brandeburg concerts, which obviously Brahms knew.
Wonderful depth of lyricism. She was one in a billion, or even more. I played this once with Rostropovitch. Really. Her reading far outshone his. He also did a Rachmaninoff with Horowitz in Carnegie Hall. Again, he could not compete at all with Horowitz' lyricism, sensitivity, depth. Not to trash Slava, of course. He was unmatched in many other ways. In this recording, Barenboim is fantastic, too. He, like her , is very rare phenomenon.
This comment is only appropriate to write someone who played with Rostropovich, respect.
Deeply admire and respect you, sir.
The whole of this sound architecture is a flight into the Sublime. It is a very beautiful music played with exceptional skill and an impressive inner feeling. A delightful listening and therapeutic experience .
Rostropovich and Du Pre are my all time favorite cellists that I look to constantly for inspiration and insight. This is one rare instance where I can't decide which bits of whose interpretation to base mine off of. They both play Brahms so beautifully (I'm not sure why everyone seems to dislike Rostropovich playing Brahms and worship Jacqueline, not that hers isn't gorgeous). I just fucking love this aaaa
Both of them are hilarious. Yet I had the pleasure of listening to Martha Argerich and Mischa Maisky. He so lives the moment. You can literally see him feel the music. So I‘d add him to the all time favorite cellists.
Escuché, o mejor dicho me inmergi en este inmenso mosaico de artesanía espiritual y me olvide, inclusive de mi, de la soberbia y hasta de ir a trabajar. Ya para que, necesito rozar suelos donde no llegue lo convencional...la paz ahora me arroja a un mundo, que si lo veo con los ojos del corazón, puede ser un lugar brillante, asombroso y aún bastante hermoso
Einzigartig - Danke fürs teilen !! 😢 und 💛 🙏🌤 🌞 🌟
Wenn Sie Brahms gerne mögen,gefällt Ihnen vielleicht auch das Folgende hier. Sonate für Cello und Klavier F-Dur.
ua-cam.com/video/IbdR3Ea5CIU/v-deo.html
fantastic , magic , music of haeven ,, we lesson brahms himself , thanks jacqueline du pré , love for ever ,
So beautiful....Jackie was such a genuine soul! I treasure her friendship until my final day. :)
1. Allegro non troppo - 00:00
2. Allegretto quasi Menuetto & Trio - 12:24
3. Allegro - 18:15
I was searching the comments for this haha thank you!
What a wonderful work by my 2 favorite musicians! Thank you so much for sharing this . . .
I see 200 dislikes. How can this be? Ignorant people? Or people that know something?
I know this piece well and have not yet heard it played so absolutely sensitively. There is the space in this interpretation that many musicians ignore. Many see this as a virtuoso piece especially the first movement, and don’t think about all the dimensions that are actually in it. Beautiful beyond! Thank you for posting it!
probably some random person who doesn't like this type of music and accidentally clicked in the video expecting some rap music but ends up with classical which they probably dislike, so they disliked it.
Maybe ya know, they just don't like the piece? Or they have their own personal OPINIONS?
It's not that these people are ignorant but they are illerate as far as classical music goes! They would be better served if they listen to the garbage music that's dished out today!
what does it matter? our ears know better, and more still our hearts
They are bums, PERIOD!!!
une passion à quatre jacqueline , barenboim , brahms et le violoncelle sublime de jacqueline ,, on ne s'en lasse pas jamais , commentse lasser d'un brahms quand il est ciselé avec l'art du joaillier de génie qui sans chercher le luxe immanent trouve par miracle l'alchimie éthérée qui fait l'unicité de brahms merci
this cello sonata is dank as fuc homie
Oh yeah, this cello sonata is off the hizzle
meme master 69 Big bomberclot chune, seeeen.
+John Murray i seee the Jamaican influence
+1952mclean Explain, please
+1952mclean yes it means that this sonata awsome is :D
In my youth, I loved Beethoven. In my old age, it's Brahms
May you share why? And Mozart ?
I would also like to now pwease :3
Jacqueline du Pré plays lovingly with a great economy of mouvement. She's almost motionless throughout the whole performance.
This is the first cello sonata I liked. I play classical piano for years but I actually listened to the Brahm's first cello Sontata and I like it
.
10:45 till the end of the first movement… the most beautiful minutes in the whole sonata ❤️
❤❤
IMO this is the version all others will be forever compared to and no others I've heard yet come close. Du Pré is up there with Casals when it comes to pure emotion, tone and musicality. And hats off to Barenboim who plays the perfect dynamic counterpart.
Barenboim is really good here.
I grew up with the du-Pre/Barenboim Brahms cello sonatas. Their interpretation has not been surpassed and still lives for me, and I've heard plenty of recordings by others since. Thank you for sharing -
+Michael Cowan I simply cannot find a better interpretation. And, if I do, I'll be very, very impressed that such an interpretation would ever exist.
+Lance Clark try Feuermann's and Piatigorsky's. Like this one too
Thanks Lance - I must be honest to say that I have not heard the Feuermann/Piatigorsky, but imagine that would be great also. I'll look out for it, thanks -
+Michael Cowan Did you hear Diaz/Sanders?
No Gus, but imagine it was pretty good. Thanks -
An Extraordinarily poetic vision, which Jacqueline du Pre captures from her very first statement. Daniel Barenboim gives us a deeply poignant and ultra sensitive collaboration. It's a peak experience from him, and shows his receptivity to her vision. This is not the Barenboim who recorded the entire Mendelssohn Songs Without Words it is said, at one sitting. Thank you Davit Stepanyan. Perhaps Brahms thanks all three of you.
Priceless~ thank you for posting this!☀️
Truly beautiful.
Thank you!
La migliore interpretazione di questa sonata...emozionante!
It is a great responsability to play with this most gifted du Pré. Her play is deep and alive, never heart it elsewere. Now Barenboim can acompany du Pré just by hemself not hindered by an inactive London Symphony Orchestra as when they played Cello Concerto in B minor, Op. 104, B. 191 by Antonín Dvořák. This Brahms is the only peace I can play by heart (mediocre cello player as I am), I love it.
Beautiful.
This is a reflection of my soul. 😭😭😭 it's so friggin beautiful.
beautiful is understood without a stand in swear word
This cello sonata is full-hearted human.
Cuando conocí el trabajo musical y la vida de Jacqueline Du Pre quedé maravillado. Escuchar la ejecución de su música y pensar en ese bello talento me asombra. Gracias igualmente a Daniel Barenboim por ser un pianista y director extraordinario.
No words...how can someone be so talented...she is the best of all the time
So beautiful,merci.
Miss her forever....永远怀念您!杜普蕾。。。
I wept openly I hadn't heard this piece of heaven for 35 years give or take. my bedroom in the Chilterns .
Imagine brahms going into a studio today. I'm all the way up!
What a lovely sonata! Amazing!
Absolutely beautiful.
Il suono del violoncello entra nell'anima e poi come lo esprime la Dupre' è meraviglioso! Grazie Brahms Duprè e Barenboim e grazie per la pubblicazione.
L'interpretazione di questa Sonata che peferisco in assoluto
Wow... such depth and feeling.
Das ist Musik. Danke J.
I love the sound of the Cello...
¡¡¡Hermosa melodía!!!. Muchas gracias por compartirla.
Gracias por subirlo,Gracias por los comentarios.Saludos desde Mendoza {Argentina}
Escucho esta melodía todos los días antes de dormir :)
Two great artist daniel y dupre amazing cello and pianist
Toca com a alma miss Du Pré! A melhor interpretação da primeira sonata de Brahms !
Simplemente maravilloso.¡¡
어떤 첼리스트의 연주에서도
느낄수 없는 브람스의 색깔은
넘 나 탁월하네요
신이 주신 재능을 공유할 수
있어서 감사드립니다
Heart breaking Beautiful
Magnifica sonata. Bravi!
Procurei por isso durante anos. Maravilhoso!
Դավիթ ջան, շնորհակալություն
This is how a genius sounds.
Jacqueline Du Pre - the gift of Mother Nature to all of us.
plus Mother Culture
No- the gift of God, the Creator! PS Check out backtobasicsradio.com- excellent teaching of the Messiah! דליה אפרת
Потрясающе!Мой муж пианист Сергей Форостяный играл эту сонату с виолончелистамиРоманом Стороженко и Глебом Степановым.Гениальная музыка!!!Моя дочь впервые услышала ее в материнской утробе и потом вспомнила,услышав на концерте,будучи уже подростком и взрослой...
Прекрасное произведение !!Спасибо за вдохновенное исполнение.
Es como escuchar una sinfonía, tan extraordinaria!
Wonderful ! Thank you so much :)
прекрасно и совершенно...
светлая память великой виолончелистке...
Ах, как точно выбран темп! Великолепный ансамбль!
2:15 I swear Tigran Hamasyan must have taken inspiration from this line. I forget what song he uses a very similar idea, but it sounds just as ominous and powerful in both contexts.
du Pre...
I missed you so much !!!
Bravissima. Grazie Jacqueline ❤
a fantastic performance!!
Jacqueline Du Pre. Me cautivas hoy y siempre. Qué belleza. La prueba de que Dios existe es que hay personas que se acercan a una perfección inimaginable para nosotros, el resto de los mortales. Son como ángeles que nos mandan para que aliviemos nuestros dolores y podamos amar a la vida que es tan dura y dolorosa. Gracias Davit. Gracias Jacqueline desde el cielo tocando un cello espiritual para todos los mortales. A veces te escucho.
+Maruja Romero Se le llama talento y no tiene nada q ver con Dios.
+Chino Canibal respeto su punto de vista. No lo comparto. El talento es una palabra y una capacidad muy pequeña para albergar tanto. No le hacemos honor a esos genios cuando le decimos que tienen o tenían talento. Todos tenemos talento. Todo niño tiene talento. Usted y yo tenemos talento. Pero no importa, antes que discutir e incluso dialogar, yo me alegro y conformo con escuchar a Dios a través de Jacqueline. Escuche usted lo que le den sus oídos, yo busco algo más allá de la sensación física. Vivimos de Fe no de Vista.
Gracias y que Dios lo Bendiga.
Por favor no me vengas con berborrea si no quieres discutir o te sientes ofendida por no creer en un dios.
La practica es la más importante.
FANTASTICA SEMPRE ❤️
Siempre recuerdo Jacqueline du Pré con una mezcla de tristeza y admiración.Tristeza por su muerte después de haber sufrido 17 años una esclerosis múltiple.Admiración por su excelencia interpretativa De Barenboim me siento orgulloso como connacional por sus interpretaciones de música argentina y por todo lo demás: un grande
Спасибо за музыку. Очень прекрасная интерпретация!
Admirable, simplement...
Wish I owned a cafe so I could play this for everyone.
its beautiful
I'm not the biggest fan of classical music but this shit is a masterpiece man. So good
i loved your comment
Watch Mischa Maisky do it live ;)
Find Daniil Shafran performance. This is genius
Best comment!
lemandjwzz: I sincerely hope that this piece (and many, many others) will open a new horizon for you. This is a wonderful world that one should not miss. On the other hand, in my experience, it will ruin your desire to listen to most other, non-classical music (excluding the Beatles).
SIMPLEMENTE....DIVINO...!!!! BESITOS
wonderful!!!
My favorite
Daniel & Jacqueline...inspiring couple!!!
In so many ways! Jackie was so loving sweet and kind...and a bit of a prankster. lol! Danny was handsome and brilliant and also very sweet! I was so thrilled Jackie asked me to turn pages for him at one of their recitals in London. :)
Thank you for this!
1991春, 在武裝士兵的護衛下, 從局部戰亂中的寮國乘TOYOTA下到越南平靜, 再北上到河內, 旅館內, 立即把自己丟進浴缸, 泡去多天來長途跋涉的塵垢, 也釋放了緊繃的心緒, 黃昏, 對街餐廳用餐, 弦樂演奏中, 低音大提琴的撥弦, 隨伴鋼琴鍵的重擊, 將文明與野蠻' 戰亂與祥和, 活生生的拉進切割再攪合...這就是男人生存和奮鬥的價值嗎, 20年前往事, 今夜卻一一浮現...啊, CELLO...
It’s so beautiful