Product DescriptionBach saved my life... You always feel in his music that God is present somehow. This is not empty declamation. It is a deep confession of harpsichord player Zuzana Riková, a survivor of the inconceivable horrors of the Nazi concentration camps of Terezín, Auschwitz and her Bergen-Belsen. She always felt that Bach's music was one of the things that helped her survive. In a certain way this is also true the other way around: Zuzana Riková gave new life to Bach's music by persistently promoting the use of harpsichord (as opposed to commonly used piano) in performing Bach repertoire in concert. She was the very first person to initiate the gigantic project of recording the complete harpsichord concertos composed by Bach. This project included the Supraphon recording she made with conductor Václav Neumann and their ensemble at teh unsettled time of the Prague spring of 1968 and the subsequent invasion of the Soviet Army into Czechoslovakia. ""The sessions had to be interrupted due to the occasional crack of gunfire or the rumble of tanks passing by the Rudolphinum."" One thus might be tempted to label the recording ""a historical document"" and put in the archive drawers.