Bruno Cocset Explained

Bruno Cocset (born in 1963 in France) is a baroque cello player.[1] After studying in National Conservatory of Tours, he received classes from Anner Bylsma,[2] Jaap Schröder and Christophe Coin. He has worked with many of the most important "historically informed" groups of Europe, having recording mainly with Jordi Savall's Le Concert des Nations before he created his own baroque ensemble: Les Basses Réunies. He is well known for the "rescue" of forgotten composers, such as Jean-Baptiste Barrière or Evaristo Felice Dall'Abaco, two examples of a vast corpus of recordings including innovative versions of Bach Cello Suites and Vivaldi Cello Concerti and Sonatas.

Notes and References

  1. WIEBKE THORMÄHLEN . Cambridge Journals Online - Eighteenth-Century Music - Abstract - FRANCESCO GEMINIANI (1687–1762) SONATES POUR VIOLONCELLE AVEC LA BASSE CONTINUE OPUS V Bruno Cocset (violoncello), Luca Pianca (theorbo)/Les Basses Réunies Alpha ALPHA 123, 2008; one disc, 67 minutes . Eighteenth-Century Music . Journals.cambridge.org . September 2009. 6 . 2 . 287–289 . 10.1017/S1478570609990170 . 194096628 . 2014-05-19.
  2. Web site: Bruno Cocset. . 2023-12-12 . Bach Cello Suites . en-US.