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Johann Sebastian BACH
(1685-1750) The Art of Fugue, BWV 1080 [95:10]
Vladimir Feltsman (piano)
rec. 12-14 March 1996, American Academy of Arts and Letters
NIMBUS NI 2549/50 [50:47 + 44:23]
How on earth do you decide on a design for a series of CDs of
Bach played on the piano? Nimbus have gone for the bolts, cogs
and gears look, which might lead detractors to remark on this
as a reinforcement of the old-fashioned view of Bach as rather
remote and mathematical. Thinking up alternatives is more difficult
than you might think however: the antique look would seem a
bit of a fraud, and any alternative to a portrait of the pianist
of one kind or another has been ‘done’ so often it seems unlikely
to generate much interest. The image for this recording in its
former incarnation seems to have been a close-up of a fossil:
’nuff said.
Enough meandering about the look of Vladimir Feltsman’s re-release
series from the MusicMasters catalogue, the Goldberg
Variations of which having already been favourably reviewed
on these pages. The Art of Fugue is probably a less common
prospect on the piano, though Glenn Gould’s partial recording
makes for fascinating listening, Grigory
Sokolov’s box set is very much worth having, and Pierre-Laurent
Aimard has made a very good case for it on Deutsche Grammophon.
Chamber music versions are more likely finds these days, with
numerous quartets of a variety of instruments trying their hand.
I was recently fortunate to hear the Combattimento Consort Amsterdam
in their leader Jan Willen de Vriend’s arrangement, which adds
a quartet of reeds, oboe and cor anglais and two bassoons to
the more typical string quartet, with the reserve forces of
a harpsichord for added texture and variety. Initially less
impressed by this setting, I soon came to agree that ‘less is
more’ in many cases with this music – the clarity of Bach’s
counterpoint being a paramount consideration, and certainly
more important than too much artificially imposed orchestration
or interpretative licence. This is not to say that stuffy old
recordings on stuffy old organs are necessarily the best solution.
Numerous musicians such as harpsichordist Albert
Jan Roelofs and organists Bengt Tribukait and Gerhard
Weinberger have however all proved how this music can be
brought to life from the keyboard.
All arguments about suitable vehicles for this remarkable monument
to counterpoint aside, Vladimir Feltsman’s performance is generally
very pleasing. His rhythmic sense in the faster Contrapuncti
is infectiously crisp, and he keeps a healthy separation
to the notes even where they run in swift passages of sixteenth
notes such as the canonic Contrapunctus 12, where you
get the feeling he would even separate the notes of the trills
if this were possible. These movements keep everything moving
along and feeling fresh, but Feltsman is also awake to the use
of gentler sonorities in the piano for warm readings of pieces
such as the Contrapunctus 5. This kind of softer texture
leaves space for the leading voices to emerge without being
forced, though I would sometimes find myself wishing that he
would introduce a greater fluidity of line here and there. Even
where the music invites more legato lines Feltsman sometimes
comes close, but seems reluctant to emphasise this potential
aspect. Contrapunctus 11 has something of this, and is
in any case not needlessly spiky, but the glory of the horizontal
connections in the lines does become more subservient to their
vertical relationships as the piece progresses. There are a
few occasions on which the motor-motion of the music becomes
rather distorted, and it is in slower pieces such as the Canon
per Augmentationem in Contrario Moto where it becomes hard
to follow Bach’s musical argument even in its thinner two-part
texture. Feltsman doesn’t want to go backwards or forwards in
this particular piece, and the result is a rather strange mix
of difficult peaks and turgid troughs. The following Canon
all Decima suffers less in this regard, the running figures
preventing too much opportunity to stray from a unified tempo,
though Feltsman’s playing is somewhat unyielding here.
There are beautiful moments to be found in this recording, and
I listened with everything open to Feltsman’s Inversus. Alio
modo Fuga a 2 Clav. This has a wonderful suspended quality,
and the melodic lines are given a fine but understated expressive
weight. The same goes for the 13 minutes of Fuga a tre soggetti,
although there is often a reluctance about the forward momentum
which I know will bother me more on return visits.
Feltsman’s ordering of the pieces in his Art of Fugue deviates
from the standard published order, but in general doesn’t run
against the grain of scholarly opinion in this regard - for
1996 at least. I didn’t have any problem with the order of pieces
until the final sequence. The Fuga a tre soggetti is
followed by an extended break of 54 seconds, and movements 13a
Inversus and 13b Rectus are stuck on like a kind
of encore. I miss the more commonly added valedictory chorale
Vor Deinen Thron tret' ich hiermit, Bach’s final piece
written in 1750 when he was already blind and confined to his
bed. Leaving this out goes well enough with Feltsman’s rather
unsentimental approach to the unfinished bars of the Fuga
a tre soggetti, but leaves sentimental souls like myself
cut adrift and lacking ‘closure’. The rather jolly pair 13
is more like being poked in the eye with a stick than a
resolution of the Art of Fugue, and my instinct says
some re–thinking of this idea might have helped with this recording.
Vladimir Feltsman’s recording of the Art of Fugue has
many fine qualities, and I’ve enjoyed hearing this release.
I am reluctant to be too critical, but have to conclude that
this is a qualified success, likely to go well alongside the
other volumes in his Nimbus set, but probably not a first choice
as a solo piano version if sheer quality is your prime objective.
For me, Pierre-Laurent Aimard receives the laurels in this regard.
Even he doesn’t have all the answers, but he does manage to
make the music not only noble and expressively potent but, with
the aid of a pretty vast church acoustic, also exciting. That
is a feature I do miss in Vladimir Feltsman’s recording, which
by comparison doesn’t explore quite the same imaginative range
which Aimard manages.
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