PACM 080 - Thibaud and Cortot - French Violin Sonatas French
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Jacques Thibaud, violin
Alfred Cortot, piano
Recorded 1927-1931

Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer: Mark Obert-Thorn
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Thibaud and Cortot
Special thanks to Donald Manildi and the International Piano Archives at the University of Maryland (IPAM) for providing the Fauré discs

Total duration: 65:54
©2012 Pristine Audio.

Download ID: 1553663-64

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"This is grand chamber-music playing and thinking" - Gramophone

Fabulous, iconic French chamber music recordings in new Obert-Thorn transfers

 

  • FRANCK Violin Sonata in A major [notes / score]
    Recorded 27 & 28 May 1929 in the Salle Chopin, Paris
    Matrix nos.: CS 3724-1, 3725-2, 3726-2, 3727-1, 3728-2, 3729-2, 3730-1 and 3731-3
    First issued on HMV DB 1347 through 1350


  • FAURÉ Violin Sonata No. 1 in A major, Op. 13 [notes / score]
    Recorded 23 June 1927 in Queen’s Hall, London
    Matrix nos.: CR 1420-2, 1421-1, 1422-2, 1423-1, 1424-3 and 1425-3
    First issued on HMV DB 1080 through 1082


  • FAURÉ Berceuse, Op. 16 [notes / score]
    Recorded 2 July 1931 in the Salle Chopin, Paris
    Matrix no.: 2G 982-1. First issued on HMV DB 1653



  • DEBUSSY Violin Sonata in G minor [notes / score]
    Recorded 7 June 1929 in Small Queen’s Hall, London
    Matrix nos.: Cc 16962-2A, 16963-2 and 16964-2
    First issued on HMV DB 1322 and 1323


  • DEBUSSY (arr. Hartmann) - Minstrels (from Préludes - Book I) [notes / score]
    Recorded 7 June 1929 in Small Queen’s Hall, London
    Matrix no.: Cc 16965-2. First issued on HMV DB 1323



    Jacques Thibaud
    violin
    Alfred Cortot piano

FLAC Downloads includes PDF scores of all works

 

REVIEWS

This is a re-recording of the old DB785-8. Each movement is on one side [he means to say "disc" here!]. This is grand chamber-music playing and thinking. Our usual regret has to be expressed : Cortot does not record as well as many pianists of smaller capacity of mind and heart. Yet in the most vigorous work in this sonata he will, I think, be esteemed as highly as the finest recorder, for he has a great brain and a nervous sensibility of uncommon power and penetration. Those who do not know the work may perhaps try the second and fourth records. There is a queer harmonic in the piano's final chord. In the breadth of the rhapsodical playing, and the right appreciation of the work's size and scope, these two players seem to me splendidly matched, Cortot perhaps taking first place for his intellectual grasp. It is a pity that the tone with which the first side opens is not very good. That must not be allowed to put people off, nor must the thought of the music, much of which is gloriously direct. That last canonic tune, for example, is the sort of thing that sticks ; you find yourself humming it days afterwards.

W. R. ANDERSON - The Gramophone, March 1930 (review of original 78rpm issue of the Franck)
For what it's worth, we disagree wholeheartedly with Anderson's criticism of the tone of this recording! In this case we have to allow him a certain leeway - the equipment he had for reviewing recordings would be a long way away from modern reproduction standards! Furthermore, the quieter pressings used for Mark Obert-Thorn's transfers may also contribute greatly to the fine sound quality heard in this new issue, as our online sample demonstrates.

 

The French duo remind us that Fauré's music has a very considerable toughness of character, and Cortot in particular brings this quality out by the rhythmic strength of his playing, and by ensuring that each note in the piano part is given its full value and importance - Fauré was an economical composer and every detail of his scoring tells effectively. The expressive, almost passionate quality of the music is also superbly realized, yet Thibaud and Cortot know how to balance the Sonata's emotional content with its classicism and Gallic restraint.

Debussy's startlingly original, pathetic, ironic Sonata, the last work of a mortally ill genius in despair at the events of the First World War, is brilliantly caught by Thibaud and Cortot, who respond with great sensitivity to the work's rapid changes of pulse and mood. In the Franck Sonata Thibaud's portamento, slowish vibrato and warmth of tone suit the piece to perfection, and again he and Cortot illuminate the work with their insight into the composer's world. These two players spent their formative years in a musical environment which all three composers inhabited and their performances are immensely satisfying and highly authoritative.

A.S. - Gramophone, July 1989 (review of CD reissue - excerpt)

 

Notes on the recordings:

The sources for the transfers were pre-war American Victor shellacs: “Z” pressings for the Franck and Debussy items and “Orthophonic” pressings for the scarce Fauré Sonata and the Berceuse.

Mark Obert-Thorn

 


Click here to view additional notes

 

Jacques Thibaud

Biographical notes from Wikipedia

 

Jacques Thibaud (27 September 1880 – 1 September 1953) was a French violinist.

Thibaud was born in Bordeaux and studied the violin with his father before entering the Paris Conservatoire at the age of thirteen. In 1896 he jointly won the conservatory's violin prize with Pierre Monteux (who later became a famous conductor). He had to rebuild his technique after being injured in World War I. In 1943 he and Marguerite Long established the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud International Competition for violinists and pianists, which takes place each year in Paris. From 2011, it will include singers and be known as the Long-Thibaud-Crespin Competition, in honour of the soprano Régine Crespin.

Thibaud was noted not only for his work as a soloist, but also for his performances of chamber music, particularly in a piano trio with the pianist Alfred Cortot and cellist Pablo Casals. He undertook concert tours with pianist Yves Nat and George Enescu. He was a friend of violinist Eugène Ysaÿe, who dedicated his second sonata for solo violin to him. Among his students were Eric Rosenblith and Joan Field.

On 1 September 1953, Thibaud and 41 others died in the crash of an Air France Lockheed Constellation airliner. The aircraft, registration F-BAZZ, was on final approach to Nice when it crashed into Mt Cemet in the French Alps. His 1720 Stradivarius violin was destroyed in the crash. The accident investigation established "controlled flight into terrain (CFIT)" as the cause.

 

Notes from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Thibaud


 

 

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