Diapason

“Marianne Muller has taken the very idea of a dialogue and crafted it into an unusual recording, poetical and free, alternating between Tobias Hume’s adventurous seventeenth-century music and a number of contemporary ‘mini-modules’ by Eric Fischer.”

Diapason

“Marianne Muller has a gift : with just a few notes, she can conjure an entire universe that will hold you in thrall without drawing attention to her virtuoso technique, which would inevitably be a distraction from the fantasy worlds she creates. There is a touch of Kempff in her bowing and something of Couperin in her rendition of Marais.”

Diapason

“Marianne Muller manages to rouse enthusiasm with music that, in many other hands, is less than fascinating. She reveals great subtlety in her choices of tempo, extraordinary control in her phrasing, a touch of rubato and a skill of rhythmical suspension that will send shivers down your spine.”

Diapason

“Marianne Muller reveals Marais as an entirely different character, more secretive, but as moving as ever when the music glides and shivers over Eugène Ferré’s intricate embroidery on the guitar and Pascal Monteilhet’s theorbo, in one prelude in particular or in the long, deep breaths of the radiantly beautiful Sarabande in G in Book III of Marais’ ‘Pièces de viole’.”

France Ouest

“Marianne Muller is well above petty professional squabbles; her sole purpose is to serve the music, which she does superbly. This is why she has undeniably joined the ranks of the greatest. Her playing, need it be said again, is warm and full of life, wonderfully sensitive and precise, with no pointless mannerisms and just the right dose of historically informed ornamentation.”

Pierre Michel

“Here Marianne Muller demonstrates her high degree of expertise, both technically, with her remarkable mastery of her instrument, and even more so, in her interpretation. Her very ‘inward’ manner, in pieces that require restraint, can also be much more outgoing in other pieces, such as the ‘Labyrinthe’ in Marais’ Book III, where the performer, in a sense, must recreate a performance that was originally improvised by the composer.”