Cellist Marie-Elisabeth Hecker made her international breakthrough with
her sensational success at the 8th Rostropovich Competition in Paris in
2005, where she became the first contestant in the event's history to
win the first prize as well as two special prizes. Since then Hecker has
become one of the most sought-after soloists and chamber musicians of
her generation, recognised for her deep expression and natural affinity
for the cello, with Die Zeit describing her playing as "heartbreakingly
sad and instinctively beautiful".
After making several discs of chamber music by Brahms and Schubert, the
cellist Marie-Elisabeth Hecker now records a large-scale concerto,
showing the full range of her talent. Composed between 1918 and 1919,
Elgar’s Concerto Op.85 was poorly received at its first performance but
has since become established as one of the key works in the cello
repertoire. To complete the programme, Marie-Elisabeth Hecker rejoins
her chamber music partners, the violinists Carolin Widmann and David
McCarroll, the violist Pauline Sachse and the pianist Martin Helmchen,
in Elgar’s Piano Quintet, composed at the same time as the Concerto and
premiered in London in 1919.
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