Casals in 1917 at Carnegie Hall
Fritz Kreisler, Harold Bauer, Walter Damrosch and Casals, at Carnegie Hall on 13 March 1917

Pau Casals i Defilló[1][2] (Catalan: [ˈpaw kəˈzalz i ðəfiˈʎo]; 29 December 1876  22 October 1973), known in English by his Spanish name Pablo Casals,[3][4][5][6] was a Spanish and Puerto Rican cellist, composer, and conductor. He made many recordings throughout his career of solo, chamber, and orchestral music, including some as conductor, but he is perhaps best remembered for the recordings he made of the Cello Suites by Bach. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1963 by President John F. Kennedy (though the ceremony was presided over by Lyndon B. Johnson).

Biography

Childhood and early years

Casals was born in El Vendrell, Tarragona, Spain. His father, Carles Casals i Ribes, was a parish organist and choirmaster. He gave Casals instruction in piano, songwriting, violin, and organ. He was also a very strict disciplinarian. When Casals was young his father would pull the piano out from the wall and have him and his brother, Artur, stand behind it and name the notes and the scales that his father was playing. At the age of four, Casals could play the violin, piano and flute; at the age of six he played the violin well enough to perform a solo in public. His first encounter with a cello-like instrument was from witnessing a local travelling Catalan musician, who played a cello-strung broom handle. Upon request, his father built him a crude cello, using a gourd as a sound-box. When Casals was eleven, he first heard the real cello performed by a group of traveling musicians, and decided to dedicate himself to the instrument.

His mother, Doña Pilar Defilló de Casals, was born in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, to parents who were Catalan immigrants in Puerto Rico.[7][8] In 1888, she took her son to Barcelona, where he was enrolled in the Escola Municipal de Música.[7] There he studied cello, theory, and piano. In 1890, when he was 13, he found a tattered copy of Bach's six cello suites in a second-hand music store in Barcelona. He spent the next 13 years practicing them every day before he would perform them in public for the first time.[9] Casals would later make his own version of the six suites.[10] He made prodigious progress as a cellist; on 23 February 1891 he gave a solo recital in Barcelona at the age of fourteen. He graduated from the Escola with honours five years later.

Youth and studies

A young Pau Casals, by Ramon Casas

In 1893, Spanish composer Isaac Albéniz heard him playing in a trio in a café and gave him a letter of introduction to the Count Guillermo Morphy, the private secretary to María Cristina, the Queen Regent of Spain. Casals was asked to play at informal concerts in the palace, and was granted a royal stipend to study composition at the Madrid Royal Conservatory in Madrid with Víctor Mirecki. He also played in the newly organised Quartet Society.

In 1895, he traveled to Paris, where, having lost his stipend, he earned a living by playing second cello in the theatre orchestra of the Folies Marigny. In 1896, he returned to Spain and received an appointment to the faculty of the Escola Municipal de Música in Barcelona. He was also appointed principal cellist in the orchestra of Barcelona's opera house, the Liceu. In 1897 he appeared as soloist with the Madrid Symphony Orchestra, and was awarded the Order of Carlos III from the Queen.

International career

In 1899, Casals played at The Crystal Palace in London, and later for Queen Victoria at Osborne House, her summer residence, accompanied by Ernest Walker. On 12 November, and 17 December 1899, he appeared as a soloist at Lamoureux Concerts in Paris, to great public and critical acclaim. He toured Spain and the Netherlands with the pianist Harold Bauer from 1900 to 1901; in 1901/02 he made his first tour of the United States; and in 1903 toured South America.

On 15 January 1904, Casals was invited to play at the White House for President Theodore Roosevelt. On 9 March of that year he made his debut at Carnegie Hall in New York, playing Richard Strauss's Don Quixote under the baton of the composer. In 1906, he became associated with the talented young Portuguese cellist Guilhermina Suggia,[11] who studied with him and began to appear in concerts as Mme. P. Casals-Suggia, although they were not legally married. Their relationship ended in 1912.

The New York Times of 9 April 1911 announced that Casals would perform at the London Musical Festival to be held at the Queen's Hall on the second day of the Festival (23 May). The piece chosen was Haydn's Cello Concerto in D and Casals would later join Fritz Kreisler for Brahms's Double Concerto for Violin and Cello.[5]

In 1914, Casals married the American socialite and singer Susan Metcalfe; they were separated in 1928, but did not divorce until 1957.

Although Casals made his first recordings in 1915 (a series for Columbia), he would not release another recording until 1926 (on the Victor label).[6]

Back in Paris, Casals organized a trio with the pianist Alfred Cortot and the violinist Jacques Thibaud; they played concerts and made recordings until 1937. Casals also became interested in conducting, and in 1919 he organized, in Barcelona, the Pau Casals Orchestra and led its first concert on 13 October 1920. With the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, the Orquesta Pau Casals ceased its activities.

Casals was an ardent supporter of the Spanish Republican government, and after its defeat vowed not to return to Spain until democracy was restored. Casals performed at the Gran Teatre del Liceu on 19 October 1938, possibly his last performance in Spain before his exile.[12]

Presidential Medal of Freedom

In the last weeks of 1936, he stayed in Prades,[13] a small village in France near the Spanish border, where Casals would settle in 1939,[14] in Pyrénées-Orientales, an historically Catalan region. Between 1939 and 1942 he made sporadic appearances as a cellist in the unoccupied zone of southern France and in Switzerland. He was mocked by the Francoist press, which wrote articles deriding him as "a donkey", and was fined one million pesetas for his political views.[15] So fierce was his opposition to Francoist Spain that he refused to appear in countries that recognized the Spanish government. He made a notable exception when he took part in a concert of chamber music in the White House on 13 November 1961, at the invitation of President John F. Kennedy, whom he admired. On 6 December 1963, Casals was awarded the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Throughout most of his professional career, he played on a cello that was labeled and attributed to "Carlo Tononi ... 1733" but after he had been playing it for 50 years it was discovered to have been created by the Venetian luthier Matteo Goffriller around 1700. Casals acquired it in 1913.[16] He also played another cello by Goffriller dated 1710, and a Tononi from 1730.

Prades Festivals

In 1950, he resumed his career as conductor and cellist at the Prades Festival in Conflent, organized in commemoration of the bicentenary of the death of Johann Sebastian Bach; Casals agreed to participate on condition that all proceeds were to go to a refugee hospital in nearby Perpignan.[6]

Puerto Rico

Casals traveled extensively to Puerto Rico in 1955, inaugurating the annual Casals Festival the next year. In 1955, Casals married as his second wife long-time associate es:Francesca Vidal i Puig, who died that same year. In 1957, at age 80, Casals married 20-year-old Marta Montañez y Martinez.[17] He is said to have dismissed concerns that marriage to someone 60 years his junior might be hazardous by saying, "I look at it this way: if she dies, she dies."[18][19] Pau and Marta made their permanent residence in the town of Ceiba, and lived in a house called "El Pessebre" (The Manger).[20] He made an impact in the Puerto Rican music scene by founding the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra in 1958, and the Conservatory of Music of Puerto Rico in 1959.

Later years

Casals appeared in the 1958 documentary film Windjammer. In the 1960s, Casals gave many master classes throughout the world in places such as Gstaad, Zermatt, Tuscany, Berkeley, and Marlboro. Several of these master classes were televised.

On 13 November 1961, he performed in the East Room at the White House by invitation of President Kennedy at a dinner given in honor of the Governor of Puerto Rico, Luis Muñoz Marín. This performance was recorded and released as an album.

Casals was also a composer. Perhaps his most effective work is La Sardana, for an ensemble of cellos, which he composed in 1926. His oratorio El Pessebre was performed for the first time in Acapulco, Mexico, on 17 December 1960. He also presented it to the United Nations during their anniversary in 1963. He was initiated as an honorary member of the Epsilon Iota chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music fraternity at Florida State University in 1963.[21] He was later awarded the fraternity's Charles E. Lutton Man of Music Award in 1973.

One of his last compositions was the "Hymn of the United Nations".[22] He conducted its first performance in a special concert at the United Nations on 24 October 1971, two months before his 95th birthday. On that day, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, U Thant, awarded Casals the U.N. Peace Medal in recognition of his stance for peace, justice and freedom.[23] Casals accepted the medal and made his famous "I Am a Catalan" speech,[24] where he stated that Catalonia had the first democratic parliament, long before England did.

In 1973, invited by his friend Isaac Stern, Casals arrived at Jerusalem to conduct the youth orchestra and the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra. The Jerusalem Music Center in Mishkenot Sha'ananim was inaugurated by Casals shortly before his death. [25] The concert he conducted with the youth orchestra at the Jerusalem Khan Theater was the last concert he conducted.[26]

Casals' memoirs were taken down by Albert E. Kahn, and published as Joys and Sorrows: Pablo Casals, His Own Story (1970).

Death

Casals died in 1973 at Auxilio Mutuo Hospital in Hato Rey, Puerto Rico, at the age of 96, from complications of a heart attack he had had three weeks earlier.[3][27] He did not live to see the end of the Francoist State, which occurred two years later, but he was posthumously honoured by the Spanish government under King Juan Carlos I which in 1976 issued a commemorative postage stamp depicting Casals, in honour of the centenary of his birth.[28] In 1979 his remains were interred in his hometown of El Vendrell, Tarragona. In 1989, Casals was posthumously awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[29]

Legacy

Centenary statue, by Josep Viladomat, Montserrat
Pablo Casals Museum, in San Juan, Puerto Rico

In 1959, American writer Max Eastman wrote of Casals:

He is by common consent the greatest cellist that ever lived. Fritz Kreisler went farther and described him as "the greatest man who ever drew a bow."[30]

The southern part of the highway C-32 in Catalonia, Spain, is named Autopista de Pau Casals.

The International Pau Casals Cello Competition is held in Kronberg and Frankfurt am Main, Germany, under the auspices of the Kronberg Academy once every four years, starting in 2000, to discover and further the careers of the future cello elite, and is supported by the Pau Casals Foundation, under the patronage of his widow, Marta Casals Istomin. One of the prizes is the use of one of the Gofriller cellos owned by Casals. The first top prize was awarded in 2000 to Claudio Bohórquez.

Australian radio broadcaster Phillip Adams often fondly recalls Casals' 80th birthday press conference where, after complaining at length about the troubles of the world, he paused to conclude with the observation: "The situation is hopeless. We must take the next step".[31][32][33]

In Puerto Rico, the Casals Festival is still celebrated annually. There is also a museum dedicated to the life of Casals located in Old San Juan. On 3 October 2009, Sala Sinfónica Pau Casals, a symphony hall named in Casals' honour, opened in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The $34 million building, designed by Rodolfo Fernandez, is the latest addition to the Centro de Bellas Artes complex. It is the new home of the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra.

Prades, France, is home to another Pablo Casals Museum located inside the public library. Many of the artist's memorabilia and precious documents are there: photos, concert outfits, authentic letters, original scores of the Pessebre, interview soundtracks, films, paintings, a cello, and his first piano.[34]

In Tokyo, the Casals Hall opened in 1987 as a venue for chamber music.[35] Pau Casals Elementary School in Chicago is named in his honor.[36] I.S. 181 in the Bronx is also named after Casals.[37]

Casals' motet O vos omnes, composed in 1932, is frequently performed today.

In Pablo Larraín's 2016 film Jackie, Casals is played by Roland Pidoux.

In 2019, Casal's album Bach Six Cello Suites was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[38]

Partial discography

Pau Casals bust, Wolfenbüttel, Germany
External audio
audio icon You may hear Pablo Casals performing Antonín Dvorak's "Cello Concerto" with George Szell conducting the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in 1937 Here
  • 1926–1928: Casals, Jacques Thibaud and Alfred Cortot – the first trios of Schubert, Schumann and Mendelssohn, the Beethoven Archduke, Haydn's G major and Beethoven's Kakadu Variations (recorded in London)
  • 1929, Brahms: Double Concerto with Thibaud and Cortot conducting Casals' own orchestra.
  • 1929: Dvorak and Brahms Concerti
  • 1929: Beethoven: Fourth Symphony (Recorded in Barcelona)
  • 1930: Beethoven: Cello Sonata Op. 69, with Otto Schulhof
  • 1936–1939: Bach: Cello Suites
  • 1936: Beethoven: Cello Sonata Op. 102 No. 1; and Brahms: Cello Sonata Op. 99, both with Mieczysław Horszowski.
  • 1936: Boccherini: Cello Concerto in B-flat; and Bruch: Kol Nidrei – London Symphony conducted by Landon Ronald.
  • 1937: Dvořák: Cello Concerto – Czech Philharmonic conducted by George Szell.
  • 1939: Beethoven: Cello Sonatas Nos. 1, 2, and 5, with Mieczysław Horszowski.
  • 1945: Elgar and Haydn Cello Concertos – BBC Symphony conducted by Sir Adrian Boult.
  • 1950: The first of the Prades Festival recordings on Columbia, including:
    • Bach: Sonatas for Viola da Gamba, BWV 1027–1029, with Paul Baumgartner
    • Schumann: Fünf Stücke im Volkston, with Leopold Mannes
    • Schumann: Cello Concerto, with Casals conducting from the cello.
  • 1951: At the Perpignan Festival, including:
    • Beethoven: Cello Sonata Op. 5 No. 2, and three sets of Variations, with Rudolf Serkin
    • Beethoven: Trios, Op. 1 No. 2, Op. 70 No. 2, Op. 97, and the Clarinet Op. 11 transcription; also
    • Schubert: Trio No. 1, D.898, all with Alexander Schneider and Eugene Istomin.
  • 1952: At Prades, including:
    • Brahms: Trio Op. 8, with Isaac Stern and Myra Hess
    • Brahms: Trio Op. 87, with Joseph Szigeti and Myra Hess
    • Schumann: Trio Op. 63, and Schubert: Trio No. 2, D.929, both with Alexander Schneider and Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Schubert: C major Quintet, with Isaac Stern, Alexander Schneider, Milton Katims, and Paul Tortelier
    • Brahms: Sextet No. 1, again with Stern, Schneider, and Katims, plus Milton Thomas and Madeline Foley
  • 1953: At Prades, including:
    • Beethoven: Cello Sonatas Nos. 1, 3, 4, and 5, with Rudolf Serkin
    • Beethoven: Trios Op. 1 No. 1, and Op. 70 No. 1, with Joseph Fuchs and Eugene Istomin
    • Schumann: Cello Concerto in A minor, Op. 129, with Eugene Ormandy conducting the Festival orchestra
  • 1954: At Prades (all live performances), including:
    • Beethoven: Cello Sonata No. 5, and Op. 66 Variations, with Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Beethoven: Trios Op. 70 No. 1, and Op. 121a, with Szymon Goldberg and Rudolf Serkin
  • 1955: At Prades (all live performances), including:
    • Brahms: Trios Nos. 1–3, with Yehudi Menuhin and Eugene Istomin
    • Brahms: Clarinet Trio Op. 114, with clarinetist David Oppenheim and Eugene Istomin
    • Beethoven: Trio Op. 70 No. 2, with Szymon Goldberg and Rudolf Serkin
  • 1956: At Prades (all live performances), including:
    • Bach: Sonata BWV 1027 for Viola da Gamba, with Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Schumann: Trio No. 2, with Yehudi Menuhin and Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Schumann: Trio No. 3, with Sándor Végh and Rudolf Serkin
  • 1958: At Beethoven-Haus in Bonn (all live performances), including:
    • Beethoven: Sonata Op. 5 No. 1, with Wilhelm Kempff
    • Beethoven: Sonatas Op. 5 No. 2, Op. 102 No. 2, and the Horn Op. 17 transcription, with Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Beethoven: Trios Op. 1 No. 3, and Op. 97, with Sándor Végh and Mieczysław Horszowski
    • Beethoven: Trio Op. 70 No. 1, with Sándor Végh and Karl Engel
  • 1959: At Prades (all live performances), including:
External audio
audio icon You may hear Pablo Casals conducting the Marlboro Festival Orchestra with Rudolf Serkin, Peter Serkin, and Alexander Schneider performing:
Johann Sebastian Bach's Brandenberg Concertos No 1-6 in 1965
Here on Archive.org
  • 1960: At the Festival Casals in Puerto Rico
  • 1961: Mendelssohn: Piano Trio No. 1 with Alexander Schneider and Mieczysław Horszowski (Recorded live 13 November 1961 at the White House)
  • 1963: Beethoven: Eighth Symphony
  • 1963: Mendelssohn: Fourth Symphony, at Marlboro
  • 1964–65: Bach: Brandenburg Concerti, at Marlboro
  • 1966: Bach: Orchestral Suites, at Marlboro
  • 1969: Beethoven: First, Second, Fourth, Sixth ("Pastorale"), and Seventh Symphonies
  • 1974: El Pessebre (The Manger) oratorio

References

  1. "25 October 1971- Pau Casals made a speech in the UN".
  2. "Fundació Pau Casals". Archived from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  3. 1 2 "Casals, the Master Cellist, Won Wide Acclaim in Career That Spanned 75 Years". The New York Times. 23 October 1973.
  4. "Sinfinimusic - Deutsche Grammophon". www.emiclassics.com.
  5. 1 2 Honors To Be Conferred On English Composers: Series of Concerts Devoted to modern Englishmen to be Given in London, The New York Times, 1911-04-09, retrieved 1 August 2009
  6. 1 2 3 "Classical Notes - Pablo Casals - the Musician and the Man, By Peter Gutmann". classicalnotes.net.
  7. 1 2 "Proyecto de Recuperación de la Casa Defilló" (in Spanish). Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña. Archived from the original on 25 January 2007. Retrieved 25 January 2007.
  8. Zapata, J. Gabriel (14 May 2016). "Pilar Defillo House Museum: A Jewel to be Found". Her Campus at University of Puerto Rico Mayagüez. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  9. Siblin, Eric (2010). The Cello Suites: J.S. Bach, Pablo Casals, and the Search for a Baroque Masterpiece. Atlantic.
  10. "Pablo Casals - Cello". Ovation Press.
  11. Mercier, Anita Guilhermina Suggia, retrieved 1 August 2009
  12. Abella, Rafael La vida cotidiana durante la guerra civil: la España republicana p. 422 (published by Editorial Planeta, 1975)
  13. René Puig (Casals' doctor in Prades since the end of 1936) in "Pablo Casals", Magazine Conflent, 1965, p. 3
  14. Baldock, Robert (1992). Pablo Casals. Boston: Northeastern University Press. p. 161. ISBN 1-55553-176-8.
  15. Benet, Josep (1978). Catalunya sota el règim franquista (1. reedició ed.). Barcelona: Blume. ISBN 847031064X. OCLC 4777662.
  16. "Cello by Matteo Goffriller, 1700c (ex-Casals)". Cozio. Archived from the original on 22 November 2007. Retrieved 22 January 2007.
  17. "Master cellist Pablo Casal marries 21-year-old pupil". The News and Courier (Charleston, South Carolina). 5 August 1957.
  18. Gardner, Jasmine (20 March 2012). "Julian Lloyd Webber talks music and marriage". London Evening Standard.
  19. Amis, John (6 February 1993). "Master of the Cello: Pablo Casals". The Tablet. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  20. Festival Casals de Puerto Rico: Historia Archived 27 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 1 August 2009 (in Spanish)
  21. "The Sinfonian December 2002" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 May 2012.
  22. "United Nations – Fact Sheet # 9: "Does the UN have a hymn or national anthem?"" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 June 2006.
  23. Pau Casals Foundation, United Nations Peace Medal Archived 23 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  24. Video of Pablo Casals "I am a Catalan" speech, 1971 on YouTube
  25. Dudman, Helga (1982). Street People. The Jerusalem Post/Carta (1st ed.), Hippocrene Books (2nd ed.). pp. 21–22. (ISBN 978-965-220-039-6)
  26. "הישראלי המאומץ – פבלו קזאלס והסימפונית". 1 July 2013.
  27. "Casals Dies in Puerto Rico at 96". The New York Times. 23 October 1973. Retrieved 23 January 2015. Pablo Casals, the celebrated cellist and conductor, died today at Auxilio Mutuo Hospital of complications from a heart attack suffered three weeks ago. He was 96 years old and lived in nearby Santurce with his wife, Marta
  28. El País/Sociedad Estatal de Correos y Telegrafos 2003
  29. Lifetime Achievement Award Archived 26 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Grammy Award official web site, retrieved 1 August 2009.
  30. "Eastman, Max, Great Companions, Ch. 6, p.136". 1942.
  31. Adams, Phillip. "Why We Need a Revolution Now" (PDF). Our Community. 2004 Communities in Control conference convened by Our Community and Catholic Social Services. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 August 2006. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  32. Adams, Phillip (2004). "The emu's bum, or "The situation is hopeless, we must take the next step"". National Library of Australia. Moonah, Tasmania: Tasmanian Peace Trust. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  33. Adams, Phillip (26 September 2015). "Tweet". Twitter. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  34. "Pablo Casals Museum". 13 September 2021.
  35. "Casals Hall" (PDF). Nagata Acoustics. Archived (PDF) from the original on 8 November 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  36. "Pablo Casals Elementary School" Archived 13 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Public Schools. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  37. "Directions - I.S. 181 Pablo Casals - X181 - New York City Department of Education". schools.nyc.gov.
  38. Andrews, Travis M. (20 March 2019). "Jay-Z, a speech by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and 'Schoolhouse Rock!' among recordings deemed classics by Library of Congress". The Washington Post. Retrieved 25 March 2019.

Further reading

  • Pablo Casals, Robert Baldock, Northeastern University Press, Boston (1992), ISBN 1-55553-176-8
  • Pablo Casals, a Biography, H. L. Kirk, Holt Rinehart and Winston, New York (1974), ISBN 0-03-007616-1
  • "Pablo Casals : l'indomptable", Biography, Henri Gourdin, Editions de Paris – Max Chaleil, Paris, (2013).
  • Conversations with Casals. With an Introduction by Pablo Casals. With an Appreciation by Thomas Mann, J. Ma. Corredor, E. P. Dutton, New York (1957)
  • Joys and Sorrows; Reflections by Pablo Casals as Told to Albert E. Kahn, Pablo Casals, Simon and Schuster, New York (1973) ISBN 0-671-20485-8
  • Pablo Casals, Lillian Littlehales, W. W. Norton, New York (1929)
  • Song of the Birds. Sayings, Stories and Impressions of Pablo Casals, Compiled, Edited and with a foreword by Julian Lloyd Webber, Robson Books, London (1985). ISBN 0-86051-305-X
  • Just Play Naturally. An Account of Her Study with Pablo Casals in the 1950s and Her Discovery of the Resonance between His Teaching and the Principles of the Alexander Technique, Vivien Mackie (in Conversation with Joe Armstrong), Boston-London 1984–2000, Duende Edition(2006). ISBN 1-4257-0869-2.
  • Arnold Schoenberg Correspondence. A Collection of Translated and Annotated Letters Exchanged with Guido Adler, Pablo Casals, Emanuel Feuermann, and Olin Downes, Egbert M. Ennulat, The Scarecrow Press, Metuchen (1991). ISBN 0-8108-2452-3
  • The Memoirs of Pablo Casals, Pablo Casals as Told to Thomas Dozier, Life en Espanol, New York (1959).
  • Cellist in Exile. A Portrait of Pablo Casals, Bernard Taper, McGraw-Hill, New York (1962).
  • Casals, Photographed by Fritz Henle, American Photographic Book Publishing Co., Garden City (1975). ISBN 0-8174-0593-3.
  • Virtuoso, Harvey Sachs, Thames and Hudson, New York (1982), chapter six, pp. 129–151 is devoted to Pablo Casals. ISBN 0-500-01286-5.
  • "La jeune fille et le rossignol", Henri Gourdin, Editions du Rouergue, (2009) [around the arrival of Pablo Casals in Prades and the beginning of his exile from Spain].
  • La violoncelliste, Henri Gourdin, Éditions de Paris – Max Chaleil, Paris, (2012) [reconstitution of Casals' life in Prades under German occupation – 1940–1944].
  • "La jeune fille et le rossignol", Historia, no. 739, July 2008.
  • "Un écrivain fasciné par Pau Casals", Le Violoncelle Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, no. 32, September 2009, pp. 16–19.
  • "La musique à l'heure de l'occupation : l'engagement politique de Pau Casals", Le Violoncelle Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, no. 44, September 2012, pp. 18–19.
  • "Lutherie. De la courge au Goffriller : Les violoncelles de Pau Casals", Le Violoncelle Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, no. 45, December 2012, pp. 24–25.
  • "Une biographie de Pau Casals", Le Violoncelle Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, no. 48, September 2013, pp. 14–16.
  • "Biographie : Pau Casals, l'indomptable", L'Accent Catalan, no. 80, January–February 2014, p. 33.
  • "Casals vivant", Classica, no. 159, February 2014, p. 132.
  • "Passion Casals", Diapason, no. 623, April 2014.
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