His early recordings of Bach, Beethoven and Brahms were fundamental in the growth of my delight in chamber music.
Janos Starker RIP
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Black Swan
Truly sad news. I grew up near Bloomington, Indiana and had several opportunities to hear Starker in recitals at Indiana University where he was a member of the faculty. I have several recordings of him playing chamber music and concerto's.
RIP
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Richard Tarleton
My first notes of unaccompanied Bach came from his recording of the 6th suite, played to me "blind" by a friend, never forgotten.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostThose wonderful Mercurys!... Dvorak, Schumann, Saint-Saens, Lalo, Tchaikovsky, Bruch...
At the moment I am remembering him by playing the Beethoven Triple where he is partnered by Claudio Arrau and Henryk Szeryng.
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I'm pretty sure the recording I have of Kodaly's extraordinary solo cello sonata is by Starker - unsurpassable wouild be my verdict.
My father had the Columbia LP of him doing the Dvorak concerto coupled with Faure's Elegie - the picture of Starker on the front always reminded me of Bernard Bressau.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm pretty sure the recording I have of Kodaly's extraordinary solo cello sonata is by Starker - unsurpassable wouild be my verdict.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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amateur51
My first encounter with Starker was the early Saga set of Beethoven cello sonatas, and the JS Bach cello suites.
Once heard, never forgotten.
Thank you, Maestro
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostAnd mine! One of the greatest bargain LPs ever (Saga), coupled with K's Duo for violin and cello Op7 - sheer magic. RIP.
Sad indeed, though in truth I didn't realise he was still with us until recently. He features quite a bit in the Mercury box set - some great stuff in there.
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Originally posted by Black Swan View PostTruly sad news. I grew up near Bloomington, Indiana and had several opportunities to hear Starker in recitals at Indiana University where he was a member of the faculty. I have several recordings of him playing chamber music and concerto's.
RIP
I was just playing his Mercury recordings (remastered for SACD) of the Dvorak, Lalo, and Schumann Concertos this week, and marveling at the purity of his sound.
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