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SEEN AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Handel, Newman, Bach, Couperin:
Anthony Newman, harpsichord, PianoSummer Festival at the State University of New Paltz, NY 25.7.2009
(SSM)
For the last 14 years, the State University at New Paltz, NY has been
hosting their “PianoSummer Festival.” Founded and directed
by Vladimir Feltsman, it brings together young musicians for several
weeks of master classes, piano competitions, lectures and public
recitals. The music performed ranges from Bach to contemporary, often
with an emphasis on Russian music. So, it was with some pleasant
surprise, to see the Baroque specialist Anthony Newman's name as a
guest lecturer and recitalist.
Touted as “The High Priest of the Harpsichord ” (Time
Magazine) and as being “without question America's foremost
Baroque interpreter” (program notes), I wondered how I had missed
him over his 40 year career. There aren't a whole lot of globally
prominent American harpsichordists these days and many of those that
are (were) went off to perform and conduct in Europe (Alan Curtis,
Scott Ross, William Christie.) I thought back to the 60's and 70's and
remember associating Newman with Virgil Fox and his “Heavy
Organ,” (like in “That's real heavy, man,”) and with
Joshua Rifkin and his arrangements of Judy Collins albums and the
“Baroque Beatles Book” LP. Newman was known then for his
100 meter racing performances, off-beat phrasing and questionable use
of ornamentation and notes inégales.
This was all in the early days of historically informed performances.
We've heard since then umpteen performances of HIP recordings and are
clearer about what it should sound like, I hope.
Well, Baroque performance practice may not be a rigid science, but
performing Handel's Suite No. 7 in under 10 minutes (with an
improvisation to start) and without playing da capo
is about as far from HIP as Sviatoslav Richter's 25 minute recorded
performance. Scott Ross does it, beautifully, in 19 minutes. Glenn
Gould was, by all accounts, a speed demon but had the uncanny ability
to keep voices separate and distinct at all tempos. My first thought
was, “He forgot to go to the bathroom before coming on
stage.” All the movements merged together, with what seemed to be
scarcely a nanosecond between the improvisation and the overture and,
barely a deep breath between the others. The final elegant Passacaille passed me by.
A not unpleasant neo-classical style piece written by Newman himself
followed. I couldn't say if that piece was played too fast, thinking
that the composer should know best how to play his own work. Bach's Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue
was tossed off as a bonbon, played without score, quite virtuosic,
but sounding like a MIDI file at double speed. With eyelids clamped
firmly shut, Newman was living proof that some people really can "do it
with their eyes closed."
After the intermission, things got slightly better. Several pieces from François Couperin's 18th Ordre were played at appropriate tempi and the opening Allemande
actually sounded like an Allemande. The final Couperin piece Gaillard-Boiteaux
suffered from some missed notes, later explained by Newman as being
caused by the keys sticking due to the high humidity and the
harpsichord's sensitivity. The program concluded with another
technically accurate but blurred and hasty performance of Bach's Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue.
In between pieces, while the harpsichord was being retuned, Newman delivered amusing information on each piece. Seated in the 3rd
row, I felt the 2-manual harpsichord lacked depth, but having moved to the
back of the theater for the second half, thanks to a head shaker in the
row in front of me, the acoustics of the hall improved the instrument's
timbre considerably.
Stan Metzger