Sold Date:
January 9, 2022
Start Date:
October 25, 2018
Final Price:
$69.99
(CAD)
Seller Feedback:
7429
Buyer Feedback:
294
****Welcome to our listing, thanks very much for looking! ****See our own website! We have lots of out of print LPs and CDs! Find us on the web at - hearthedifference.net ****Please see our other listings - new items added {almost} daily! ****Shipping
cost is only an estimate - it depends on the actual weight and size of
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shipping costs, so if we overcharge, we will refund the difference back
to you. It's always best to wait for our invoice before paying for your
item. We will combine shipping for multiple items purchased. Background -
At 14 Starker made his professional debut playing the Dvorák concerto. He left the conservatory in 1939. After the war, when musical activities resumed, Starker became principal cellist of the Budapest Opera and the Budapest Philharmonic orchestras. Soviet Red Army forces had occupied the country, and the Communist Party was gaining dominance. Starker left the country in 1946 when relatively free travel was still possible.
He gave a successful concert in Vienna, then remained there to prepare for the Geneva Cello Competition, held in October 1946. He won only a bronze medal. "I played like a blind man," he said. "What happens to the bird who sings and doesn't know how it sings? That's what happens to child prodigies." Starker set out to rebuild his technique. He analyzed all aspects of playing, from breathing to the physics of applying muscular force to the bow and the instrument, to phrasing, bowing, and fingering. By October of the following year he had regained his confidence. He decided to stay in the West due to the deteriorating political situation in Hungary, and headed for the United States, where Hungarian musicians had important positions.
Antal Dorati, music director of the Dallas Symphony, made Starker the orchestra's principal cellist. A year later Starker accepted Fritz Reiner's invitation to become principal cellist of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra. In 1953 Reiner began a brilliant period as music director of the Chicago Symphony, and brought Starker with him to lead the cello section. Starker remained in Chicago until 1958, becoming a U.S. citizen in 1954 and bringing his family to the country. In 1958 he resigned his Chicago position in order to pursue his solo career. In the meantime, he had already begun making important recordings, including an early set of Bach suites. Easing the transition was an offer from Indiana University School of Music to join the faculty on a two-year trial basis. Starker quickly found Bloomington a congenial base, and attracted exceptionally talented students.
Starker's stage demeanor and public persona were rather restrained and undemonstrative. The unwary draw the same mistaken conclusion that also plagued Jascha Heifetz, charging Starker with coldness and lack of emotion. Discerning critics, however, have always tended to speak of the warmth and expressiveness of his playing. Another similarity to Heifetz lies in Starker's very focused tone, with a light, narrow, and quick vibrato. He proclaimed himself happier if, after a concert, people say "What beautiful music Schubert wrote" rather than "How well Starker plays." Similarly, he considered it at least as important to turn out the next generation of fine cello teachers as the next generation of star players. - Joseph Stevenson LP made by SAGA Records, in the UK / England / Great Britain
LP released in 1964
LP recorded in STEREO Record Catalog Number: XID 5164 Record
Labels are primarily PURPLE with SILVER lettering, and has the
"SAGA" records logo on the record labels.
This listing is for a rare, out of print LP - an OPENED and in Excellent Plus condition set PRESSED and ISSUED by SAGA Records of a highly collectible title from their catalog - a superb title featuring -
Brahms // Janos Starker
Cello Sonatas: No. 1 & 2
Track Listing -
A1. Sonata For Cello And Piano No. 1 In E Minor, Opus 38For best results, always properly clean your LPs before playing them.
The
LP is an audiophile quality pressing (any collector of fine MFSL, half
speeds, direct to discs, Japanese/UK pressings etc., can attest to the
difference a quality pressing can make to an audio system).
Do not let this
rarity slip
by!