A near-miraculous performance! I first heard Brahms op. 99 nearly 20 years ago, with Casals and Horszowsky...and have heard it played since by many artists. NONE have approached this level of inspiration, technique, and musicality. She made the cello sing like no other, and in the upper registers (notoriously difficult...hard to avoid sounding stiff) she sounded as smooth and supple as a violin! Remarkable...
respect et hommage a mme du pré une virtuose du violoncelle , un des génies du 20 ème siècle , une femme musicienne au talent bien trop rare qui respirait la musique dans chacune de ses fibres , une merveille de poésie , de sensibilité , de grâce qui nous a quitté bien trop tôt , un grand merci vers les hauteurs célestes ou doit encore jouer la douce et tendre jacqueline , merci pour tout
Missing you dear Jackie. I have read and re-read your letters and both smile and cry each and every time! Sending love to you on the other side and hope we will meet again one day. ox
@@cindymcfarlane9371 I met her in 1967 when I was 17 and she was 22. My cello teacher played in the Toronto Symphony and arranged for me to spend an afternoon with her. She was playing a concerto with the TSO. We hit it off and stayed in touch. She let me play her Davidoff cello and asked me to turn pages for a recital with her pianist/conductor husband Daniel Barenboim, who still conducts today. I was very blessed to have her as a friend and treasure her letters to me. :)
Christine Newland that’s incredible...what an immense pleasure and forever gift 💝....I’m sure she was an incredible person. I’ve loved her music for many years.
Christine Newland I would keep those letters in a safe! She passed away many years before I was born, but she is one of the most impactful people in my life and I love her so deeply, she has shaped who I am and my future aspirations, I often find myself thinking, "what would Jackie do?"
I am in love withe Jacquelines love of music, her ability to show how much on her face , playing with absolute Joy. We are so lucky to be able to hear her play.
Also she was in love with her beautiful husband. She was very blessed with her sister and her parents. Blessed she was very beautiful too. Multiple Sclerosis is horrible, I have multiple Sclerosis from age 15. Jacqueline's lovely husband is a genius too.
@@user-qr9uh1fd8g If only , for a moment I could feel music to play will full love of music. I believe Jacqueline was content 😌 for many year's . She had love , joyous creativity, and deep desire to make her music real Wonderful Artist and here forever will she remain
Jacqueline Du Pre not The greatest cellits Ever! The greatest cellits Are really=Gaspar Cassado ( The most beautiful Cello sound tone! Much Better than Du Pre) Gary Hoffman ( The King) Danil Shafran ( The God) Arto Noras ( The biggest Cello tone ever! Du Pre a small tiny tone in The Big concert hall!) Karine Georgian! The really Bad cellists Are=Yo-Yo Ma ( The most Boring Ever) Mischa Maisky ( The most over-rated ever) Natalia Gutman ( Bad vibrato! The Bad sound). Stephen Isserlis Truls Mork ( Mork) Peter Whispelway! Sol Gabetta!
He cheated on Jackie while she was dying in hospital of MS. He fathered 2 out-of-wedlock children w/his homewrecker (who is now his current wife).When a journalist asked him about this, DB replied, " I don't think Jackie knew about it." Yeah, right...
Super treasure, and if I am not mistaken about the page turned - he was not a bad musician himself. What a performance by the two, the highest of levels.
Con esta obra se enamoraron ambos en su representación en la Nochevieja de 1966. 20 años casados hasta q ella falleció de esclerosis múltiple con 42 años en 1987. Dos grandes músicos sin duda alguna.
Jacqueline Du Pre not The greatest! The greatest cellits Are really=Gaspar Cassado ( The most beautiful sound Ever! Much Better sound than Du Pre!) Gary Hoffman ( The King) Danil Shafran ( The God) Arto Noras ( The biggest tone ever! Du Pre a small tiny tone!) Karine Georgyan! The really Bad cellists Are really= Yo-Yo Ma ( The most Boring Ever) Mischa Maisky ( The most over-rated ever!) Natalia Gutman! Bad vibrato) Stephen Isserlis Truls Mork ( Mörk)
I turned pages for Daniel once at a recital they did here. Jackie invited me. It was my very first time turning pages for anyone. Very exciting and a most treasured memory!
She actually stopped playing the Davydov quite early because she didn't want to treat it with the unrelenting force of her musicality and got a specially made Cello that mimic the sound of the Davydov Strad.
Jacqueline Du Pre is long gone but I could hear her cello today. Yoyo Ma played her Stradivarius cello, The cello is vibes well just like when it was played by Du pre. Yoyo played this sonata with Emanuel Ax on the piano. My wife and me thought about her when I saw and hear this Stradivarius.
El inicio de la sonata nº 2 en Fa mayor comporta la conclusión irrevocable y, a modo de esos recitativos que preludian pugnas fructuosas, nos predispone al trance. Desde el segundo movimiento, el piano acompaña o ensalza las cuerdas a las que Jacqueline arranca una expresividad estremecedora; hasta abandonarse al unísono en manso final. ¿Qué caudal no sueña con entregarse al mar? ¡Dúo inolvidable! […] Ambos intérpretes recitan ese poema sin palabras, del que don José Chacón andaba empeñado en explicarnos cuánto se acercaba a la conjunción amorosa. Conjunción que, hoy lo entiendo, precede al orgasmo liberador -éxtasis final que eros reserva a los amantes que escalaron conjuntados la senda fervorosa de un dios que de ordinario se muestra un tanto esquivo. Libres ya, las aguas conocen el destino último de fundirse en el todo
Hmm, the opening to the second movement sounds very similar to the second movement of Schubert's Unfinished Symphony. Another similarity that nobody else on Wikipedia or Google seems to have noticed ...
Jacqueline du Pré 🖤 🎻 26 de janeiro de 1945 - 19 de outubro de 1987 Uma das maiores violoncelistas de todos os tempos. Sua carreira foi interrompida pela esclerose múltipla, que a forçou a parar de atuar aos 28 anos; ela morreu 14 anos depois, aos 42 anos
Thomas Stenborg +1 musicians sometimes get overly dependent on sheet music... I suppose even the greats. Du Pre clearly knew what she was doing with or without the printed music on the stand. As an aside, the kind of crappy lightweight stand she was using is something one only uses as a spare that's always packed with your "performance kit" to make sure you HAVE a stand, so there's always the possibility that this recording session was someone's last minute idea, as also evidenced by their rather notable page turner who was a good friend who might be counted on to do a sudden favor.
As a cellist myself, having music on the stand, even when you've memorized it for a sonata is considered a courtesy to the pianist, who, rather than just being an accompaniment, is just as important as the solo cello. Basically a sonata for cello and piano. :)
The pianist plays with a full score and usually plays continuously in the classical-romantic style, whereas the cellist reads from her part and has silences in which to turn pages.
A much larger temporal stretch of music can be fit onto two pages for the cellist, who only has one stave, whereas the pianist has three (two for piano + one for cello).
This performance, and Jacqueline's subsequent destruction, illustrate the terrible dichotomy of deism: either god does not exist, or god is an insanely jealous, cruel, and vindictive tyrant who will react murderously to any demonstration of divinity from a mere mortal. Occam's razor provides the answer to the paradox.
I have already done that. Obviously, I was once full of hate for an omnipotent god who would fill the world with suffering and terror, not just by imperfect design, but by specific intent. Finally I realized that I was angry at literally nothing--a figment of other people's perverted imaginations. I came to understand that while the natural world does include suffering and apparent injustices, there is no one to blame and no need for blame. Suffering is part of the natural world, and no being, divine or otherwise, is responsible for that. Peace at last.
SugarTomAppleRoger Precisely. Other people get MS, so there is no need to hate a non-existent god. Jacqueline's talent was not god-given, but a victory of the human spirit.
As Creep-a-Zoid of the Century, DB is bad every day of the week! He cheated on Jackie while she was dying in hospital, and fathered 2 bastard kids by his (now-present) wife. Some people are so cold-blooded, they don't care who they hurt...
0:00 - First movement
6:40 - Second movement
14:13 - Third movement
21:48 - Fourth movement
et alors ?
1) Allegro vivace
2) Adagio affettuoso
3) Allegro appassionato
4) Allegro
A near-miraculous performance! I first heard Brahms op. 99 nearly 20 years ago, with Casals and Horszowsky...and have heard it played since by many artists. NONE have approached this level of inspiration, technique, and musicality. She made the cello sing like no other, and in the upper registers (notoriously difficult...hard to avoid sounding stiff) she sounded as smooth and supple as a violin! Remarkable...
Tear in my eyes whenever I listen to Du Pre's performance
The same here...
Me too, since years ago
respect et hommage a mme du pré une virtuose du violoncelle , un des génies du 20 ème siècle , une femme musicienne au talent bien trop rare qui respirait la musique dans chacune de ses fibres , une merveille de poésie , de sensibilité , de grâce qui nous a quitté bien trop tôt , un grand merci vers les hauteurs célestes ou doit encore jouer la douce et tendre jacqueline , merci pour tout
Missing you dear Jackie. I have read and re-read your letters and both smile and cry each and every time! Sending love to you on the other side and hope we will meet again one day. ox
Christine Newland how blessed you are to have those! Her music has inspired me for 50 years,,,❤️
Christine Newland so how did you meet and know her?
@@cindymcfarlane9371 I met her in 1967 when I was 17 and she was 22. My cello teacher played in the Toronto Symphony and arranged for me to spend an afternoon with her. She was playing a concerto with the TSO. We hit it off and stayed in touch. She let me play her Davidoff cello and asked me to turn pages for a recital with her pianist/conductor husband Daniel Barenboim, who still conducts today. I was very blessed to have her as a friend and treasure her letters to me. :)
Christine Newland that’s incredible...what an immense pleasure and forever gift 💝....I’m sure she was an incredible person. I’ve loved her music for many years.
Christine Newland I would keep those letters in a safe! She passed away many years before I was born, but she is one of the most impactful people in my life and I love her so deeply, she has shaped who I am and my future aspirations, I often find myself thinking, "what would Jackie do?"
Elle n'a jamais été égalée! Elle nous a donné tellement de bonheur durant sa courte carrière. Ce fut un ange.
I am in love withe Jacquelines love of music, her ability to show how much on her face , playing with absolute Joy.
We are so lucky to be able to hear her play.
브람스의첼로와피아노의 만남 경이롭기까지 합니다.🎉😂(정빈)
Also she was in love with her beautiful husband. She was very blessed with her sister and her parents. Blessed she was very beautiful too. Multiple Sclerosis is horrible, I have multiple Sclerosis from age 15. Jacqueline's lovely husband is a genius too.
@@user-qr9uh1fd8g If only , for a moment I could feel music to play will full love of music.
I believe Jacqueline was content 😌 for many year's .
She had love , joyous creativity, and deep desire to make her music real
Wonderful Artist and here forever will she remain
When Du Pre plays open strings, she just lets the cello take over. What a talent!
Who gave this incredible artist a thumbs down? Insanity.
With page-turner Pinchas Zukerman (who is also violinist and violist).
And also the greatest page-turner
JDP turns her own pages.
@@mikescheibinger5191 because she was multitasking ❤️
@@MariaVirginiaIturriPerez "Rapid Toggling"
Indeed❤!
My favorite performance of this piece
the second movement is beautiful
¡Muchas gracias por compartir el video de estos queridos músicos!
Strongest female cellist I've ever seen, Du Pre may be the greatest woman cellist of the 20th century! ... Excellent job of work! DGM/
the greatest female cellist -> the greatest cellist who is woman.
Jacqueline Du Pre not The greatest cellits Ever! The greatest cellits Are really=Gaspar Cassado ( The most beautiful Cello sound tone! Much Better than Du Pre) Gary Hoffman ( The King) Danil Shafran ( The God) Arto Noras ( The biggest Cello tone ever! Du Pre a small tiny tone in The Big concert hall!) Karine Georgian! The really Bad cellists Are=Yo-Yo Ma ( The most Boring Ever) Mischa Maisky ( The most over-rated ever) Natalia Gutman ( Bad vibrato! The Bad sound). Stephen Isserlis Truls Mork ( Mork) Peter Whispelway! Sol Gabetta!
I love the videos of her performances.
Two great musicians at their best!
+Alfredo Naffah Neto Agreed. Danny was the business then. He is still great, but it seemed more natural then.
He cheated on Jackie while she was dying in hospital of MS. He fathered 2 out-of-wedlock children w/his homewrecker (who is now his current wife).When a journalist asked him about this, DB replied, " I don't think Jackie knew about it." Yeah, right...
a person
Alfredo Naffah Neto Three,if you want to include the composer,Brahms...😕(not insignificant...😊🎻🎹)
@@andrewkennaugh1065 Four musicians. The page turner is Pinky Zucherman.
Super treasure, and if I am not mistaken about the page turned - he was not a bad musician himself. What a performance by the two, the highest of levels.
+classicalalways Pinchas Zukerman?
“Not a bad musician himself”
Bruh
Had an awesome time listening it.
Beautiful! Thank you for posting!
So beautiful, I like first mov
Con esta obra se enamoraron ambos en su representación en la Nochevieja de 1966. 20 años casados hasta q ella falleció de esclerosis múltiple con 42 años en 1987. Dos grandes músicos sin duda alguna.
I love her.
I love her and Barenboim 🥰
One of the best cello players ever.
Impressive. Increadible!!!
Paulo Oliveira Incredible,even...!😊😅
amazing cellist
Beautiful ❤️ ❤️ this is music.
Meraviglioso concerto.....
No one else like her
Natalie Clein???
+volo libero not even close
Jacqueline Du Pre not The greatest! The greatest cellits Are really=Gaspar Cassado ( The most beautiful sound Ever! Much Better sound than Du Pre!) Gary Hoffman ( The King) Danil Shafran ( The God) Arto Noras ( The biggest tone ever! Du Pre a small tiny tone!) Karine Georgyan! The really Bad cellists Are really= Yo-Yo Ma ( The most Boring Ever) Mischa Maisky ( The most over-rated ever!) Natalia Gutman! Bad vibrato) Stephen Isserlis Truls Mork ( Mörk)
The page turner is Zukerman
I turned pages for Daniel once at a recital they did here. Jackie invited me. It was my very first time turning pages for anyone. Very exciting and a most treasured memory!
It does help by playing one of the most beautiful sounding cellos in existence. But she tamed it1
She actually stopped playing the Davydov quite early because she didn't want to treat it with the unrelenting force of her musicality and got a specially made Cello that mimic the sound of the Davydov Strad.
+Justin Reagan Jacqueline is an unrelenting force of musicality
+Justin Reagan Thank you for clarifieng
Oh yes,just like Roger Federer uses a good tennis racket...!😅
A permanent bravo!
Wonderful phrase!
Jacqueline Du Pre is long gone but I could hear her cello today. Yoyo Ma played her Stradivarius cello, The cello is vibes well just like when it was played by Du pre. Yoyo played this sonata with Emanuel Ax on the piano. My wife and me thought about her when I saw and hear this Stradivarius.
The second movement begins with a kind of jazz.
There's jazz and heavy metal too. And beauty and sentiment as well. You get a bit of everything with Brahms.
23:02 incluso cuando se le caen las partituras es genial jaja ♡...
Fantastici 👏👏👏
Du Prè, a Goddess.
El inicio de la sonata nº 2 en Fa mayor comporta la conclusión irrevocable y, a modo de esos recitativos que preludian pugnas fructuosas, nos predispone al trance. Desde el segundo movimiento, el piano acompaña o ensalza las cuerdas a las que Jacqueline arranca una expresividad estremecedora; hasta abandonarse al unísono en manso final. ¿Qué caudal no sueña con entregarse al mar? ¡Dúo inolvidable! […] Ambos intérpretes recitan ese poema sin palabras, del que don José Chacón andaba empeñado en explicarnos cuánto se acercaba a la conjunción amorosa. Conjunción que, hoy lo entiendo, precede al orgasmo liberador -éxtasis final que eros reserva a los amantes que escalaron conjuntados la senda fervorosa de un dios que de ordinario se muestra un tanto esquivo. Libres ya, las aguas conocen el destino último de fundirse en el todo
Such a sad loss to the music world. Never been equalled
Meraviglioso
Marvelous performance!!!!!
My God, sublime.
Sempre Bellissima la Du Pre
Good here. Very good beautifully nice good looking for me.thanks. ❤❤❤
Daily consumption 🌞❤️
Magistral interpretación del Magistral Dúo .
…..Trio!!
Perfect 1st movement tempo. Why does everyone insist on playing this movement so slowly? I'll never understand people.
Because it’s hard?
maintenent,elle joue avec des anges
Hmm, the opening to the second movement sounds very similar to the second movement of Schubert's Unfinished Symphony.
Another similarity that nobody else on Wikipedia or Google seems to have noticed ...
Que guapo era el que pasa las páginas, wow!!!!! Barenboim nada tonto, Todos jóvenes y frescos al menos.
El que pasa las páginas es Pinchas Zuckerman, violinista y violista
I wish to leave a gift as she did
Jacqueline du Pré 🖤 🎻 26 de janeiro de 1945 - 19 de outubro de 1987 Uma das maiores violoncelistas de todos os tempos. Sua carreira foi interrompida pela esclerose múltipla, que a forçou a parar de atuar aos 28 anos; ela morreu 14 anos depois, aos 42 anos
Почему??...
Почему эта чудесная , полная жизни и чувств девушка должна была так страдать???
За что Бог послал ей это ужасное испытание??......
Wow!
haha, 23:03 She just carries on like nothing happened.
Thomas Stenborg +1 musicians sometimes get overly dependent on sheet music... I suppose even the greats. Du Pre clearly knew what she was doing with or without the printed music on the stand. As an aside, the kind of crappy lightweight stand she was using is something one only uses as a spare that's always packed with your "performance kit" to make sure you HAVE a stand, so there's always the possibility that this recording session was someone's last minute idea, as also evidenced by their rather notable page turner who was a good friend who might be counted on to do a sudden favor.
As a cellist myself, having music on the stand, even when you've memorized it for a sonata is considered a courtesy to the pianist, who, rather than just being an accompaniment, is just as important as the solo cello. Basically a sonata for cello and piano. :)
By the late 1960's, her MS had already begun to take hold. This would never have happened in years past (and never did). RIP, dear Jackie...
Is that pinchas turning pages?
Partagé sur google+
6:43
+Mehra Ahsan 13:24
+Mehra Ahsan 14:13
+Mehra Ahsan 16:31
Perché non eseguire il ritornello?
Braw! 🏴
Don't tell me, Pinchas Zuckerman (or his look alike) is turning Borenboim's pages?
Barenboim has a page-turner but Du Pre does not. The hands of both are equally busy. Is there some reason a pianist needs one more than a cellist?
The pianist plays with a full score and usually plays continuously in the classical-romantic style, whereas the cellist reads from her part and has silences in which to turn pages.
Name of said page-turner?
Pinchas Zukerman,friend with the both and a very respectable virtuoso on both the violin and viola :)
A much larger temporal stretch of music can be fit onto two pages for the cellist, who only has one stave, whereas the pianist has three (two for piano + one for cello).
Ah, thank you. I hadn't thought of that.
120 AÑOS DE FALLECIDO DICE JORGE ALBERTO BARON
This performance, and Jacqueline's subsequent destruction, illustrate the terrible dichotomy of deism: either god does not exist, or god is an insanely jealous, cruel, and vindictive tyrant who will react murderously to any demonstration of divinity from a mere mortal. Occam's razor provides the answer to the paradox.
+Hopelessand Forlorn
Do not try to understand God .
Try to understand yourself .
I have already done that. Obviously, I was once full of hate for an omnipotent god who would fill the world with suffering and terror, not just by imperfect design, but by specific intent. Finally I realized that I was angry at literally nothing--a figment of other people's perverted imaginations. I came to understand that while the natural world does include suffering and apparent injustices, there is no one to blame and no need for blame. Suffering is part of the natural world, and no being, divine or otherwise, is responsible for that. Peace at last.
+Hopelessand Forlorn
Yes . "apparent injustices" as you said ....
We don't know what God is doing , we do only see it .
And this is not much ....
+Hopelessand Forlorn Huh? Other people get MS. It is hard, I know.
SugarTomAppleRoger
Precisely. Other people get MS, so there is no need to hate a non-existent god. Jacqueline's talent was not god-given, but a victory of the human spirit.
Je me demande pourquoi des pouces en bas???
There are persons who would turn thumbs down if the Buddha and Christ were playing angelic sonatas.
Dommage que le son soit aussi affaibli!
Not a single note is left over
Cherish ……
14:16
Daniel was not so bad on that day .....
Yes,he showed exceptional promise...!!😊☺😅
As Creep-a-Zoid of the Century, DB is bad every day of the week! He cheated on Jackie while she was dying in hospital, and fathered 2 bastard kids by his (now-present) wife. Some people are so cold-blooded, they don't care who they hurt...
@@CLASSICALFAN100
Please, no misunderstanding .......... in front of Jackie, Barenboïm is only a good accompaniator
Just a couple of kids playing.
譜面めくりがズッカーマン!!!
6:15