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"Gary Cooper
devised yet again a programme not just ingenious,
but scholarly in the best sense."
Conducting The Band of Instruments/Dido concert
[The Oxford Times, Feb. 00] |
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"..page after page of [this] characterful music driven by the
fabulously robust harpsichord playing of Gary Cooper."
Sonnerie/Radio 3 lunchtime
[Glasgow Herald, Feb. 00] |
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"Gary Cooper
is one of the country's finest young
harpsichordists. His reading of this monumental work was distinguished by
fluidity of technique which clarified the multi-layered strands of the
immensely complex musical structure, and by perfectly-judged
registrations..Lasting some ninety minutes in all, he clearly possesses both
the physical, and the intellectual qualities such a work makes on the
performer..the control of pace and mood was faultless. A memorable
evening."
The Goldberg Variations at the Tudeley Bach Festival
[Tonbridge Courier, Mar. 00] |
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""In [Buxtehude's] Toccata in g..Gary Cooper showed, in the
right hands, just how impressive and breathtaking this bold and dramatic music
can be."
Sonnerie concert, RSAMD
[Glasgow Herald, Apr. 00] |
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"..meticulous attention to phrasing and texture that was to be the
hallmark of the evening
Gary Cooper was a powerful soloist in Bach's
harpsichord concerto in d minor, driving the music of the outer movements with
perfectly controlled, yet compelling energy."
Soloist/director, Britten Pears Baroque Orchestra/Snape
Maltings
[East Anglia Daily Times, Apr. 00] |
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"The New Chamber Opera ensemble approach these works with
unfettered airiness and a pleasing domestic intimacy
the solo keyboard
pieces are performed throughout with great originality and skill
A
rewarding programme."
Soloist/director: Purcell's Gresham Autograph CD
[Gramophone, Apr. 00] |
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"The New Chamber Opera, directed by Gary Cooper
bring
attractive timbres, stylish ornamentation and a necessary depth of feeling to
the music, and one could not want livelier or more beautiful playing from the
instrumental ensemble."
Rameau Cantatas CD
[The New York Times, Apr. 00] |
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"Stylishness and expressive freedom
his solo performance of
the great Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue, full of light and shade, had about it
an effoertless authority which encompassed not only the powerful drama of this
extraordinary piece with its many changes of mood, but also all its decorative
flourishes - sometimes florid and at other times exquisitely delicate."
Bach chamber concert, Tudeley Festival
[Tonbridge Courier, July 00] |
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"
Bach with a twinkle in his eye, with Gary Cooper's free and
rhetorical harpsichord playing of the Ricercar a 3..relishing the exploratory
nature of the piece and savouring each moment before moving off onto another
idea."
Spitalfields Festival/Sonnerie, Musical Offering
[Early Music Review, Sept. 00] |
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"Every now and then there is a concert that goes beyond mere
critical review. Gary Cooper's triumphant performance of the Goldberg
Variations was one such - it was one of the finest I have heard. Like his
playing of the Ricercar a 3 a few days before, the opening Aria was languid and
rhetorical, with an improvisatory feel of exploration. But from the forcefully
played first variation onwards, he threw caution to the winds. Living
dangerously can be a disaster, but in this instance it worked, as we were
propelled through an emotional rollercoaster. Variation 11 was like mice
skittling over the keyboard, the twiddles in Variation 14 like pirouetting
spiders, Variation 19 like a summer downpour - the snapped ending like a clap
of summer lightening. The lengthy and chromatic Variation 25 was a spellbinding
climax, in contrast to the vivacious and humorous Variation 23. A fantastic
performance. I would like to think Bach played like this."
Spitalfields Festival/Goldberg Variations
[Early Music Review, Sept. 00] |
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" When a player has had words like "masterly",
"flawless", "unfailing elegance", and "stunning"
applied to his erformances, as Mr Cooper has...the prospect was enticing to say
the least. In the event it proved rewarding beyond expectations. Mr Cooper's
performance took place before an enthralled audience...to hear this cornerstone
of the keyboard repertory, under Mr Cooper's hands, was a privilege indeed...24
Preludes and Fugues might seem a dauntng prospect; not so in Mr Cooper's
reading. The clarity of articulation, with sufficient flexiblity of tempo to
retain life through even the most complex musical structures, made the evening
pass quickly, leaving the packed audience eager for next Wednesday's
performance of the Second Book...A distinguished evening, even by Tudeley's
elevated standards."
Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier Bk I /Tudeley Bach
Festival
[David Inman/Tonbridge Courier, Nov. 00] |
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" This year's Tudeley [Bach] Festival reached an unforgettable
climax and conclusion last week with a performance by the celebrated
harpsichordist, Gary Cooper...There is a natural, unmannered elegance about
G.C.'s playing which singles him out as one of the finest and most accomplished
early keyboard players of our time. His is an art which conceals art [sic!]. He
seems not to be concerned with "interpreting" Bach for a new
generation but, of course, that is exactly what he achieves with all the
resources at his command - flawless technique, superb dynamic control, and an
articulation which yields power, clarity and the most delectable tones from
Tudeley's beautiful new instrument...the genius of Bach and the artistry of
G.C. took us into realms beyond the reach of words, and almost beyond the reach
of music itself [sic x2!]."
Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier Bk II /Tudeley Bach
Festival
[Robert Hardcastle/Tonbridge Courier, Nov. 00]
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" There has been a lot of Bach around these past 12 months, but
Gary Cooper's recording of the first book of the Forty-Eight Preludes and
Fugues makes a strong claim to being one of the finest offerings. Cooper
combines the intellectual lucidity of a Leonhardt with an uncanny sense of
expressive intensity, never afraid to slow the pace, to shape a phrase, to
allow the music to make its point. The textures are kept clear..and there is an
honesty about his playing that does not compromise the monumental feeling of
the whole. It feels like a cycle, for Cooper leaves us, at the end of each
prelude and fugue, thirsting for the next."
Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier Bk I CD review
[Sunday Times, Dec. 00 ] |
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" There is a real gravitas about Gary Cooper's readings of Bach's
first book of preludes and fugues, although this is never achieved at the
expense of spontaneity or a sense of forward movement."
Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier Bk I CD review
[Music Week, Dec. 00] |
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" CONDUCTOR'S ENERGY CARRIES "MESSIAH"...This year's
[Messiah], under the baton of English harpsichordist Gary Cooper, is a high
point in the ensemble's 14-year work with the piece. Cooper made his memorable
PBO debut last year, and some of the hallmarks of that performance - meticulous
attention to detail, vivid tonal color and a striking balance of restraint and
dramatic excitement - were again in evidence. Even at relatively broad tempos,
Cooper maintains a keen sense of energy. He took "He shall purify",
for example, more slowly than most conductors, but with precision and a long
crescendo..He took the section from a tender, measured opening to a quietly
thrilling finish."
Conducting the Portland Baroque Orchestra/Messiah
[The Oregonian, Dec. 00] |
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"..GC gives a sublimely spiritual, spacious yet unusually cogent
reading of the First Book of Preludes and Fugues."
1st Choice, CDs of the Year
[Sunday Times, Dec. 00] |
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" Gary Cooper, at the harpsichord, beautifully navigated the ebb
and flow of the fifth's solo cadenza."
Sonnerie: Brandenburgs/St John's Smith Square
[The Times, Dec. 00] |
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