Johann Sebastian Bach began work on his six sonatas for violin and 
harpsichord (BWV 1014-19) while at the courts of Weimar and Köthen and 
returned to the compositions over several decades, revising and 
polishing until the years before his death. C.P.E. Bach would later 
pronounce the pieces “among the best works of my dear father.” 
Prefiguring the classic duo sonata, violin and keyboard meet on equal 
terms in this music, and both are challenged by Bach’s compositional 
demands. The group of sonatas was conceived as a set – six sonatas in 
six keys, three major and three minor. Bach’s first biographer Forkel 
wrote that the six sonatas “may be reckoned among Bach’s masterpieces in
 this genre. They are fugued throughout, and even contain characterful 
natural canons in dialogue between the two instruments. A master is 
required to play the violin part, for Bach knew the possibilities of 
that instrument and spared it as little as he did the harpsichord.”
Michelle Makarski is the violinist here. A player of exceptionally broad
 interests, committed to ‘classical’ repertoire from the pre-Baroque to 
New Music, but also experienced in jazz and improvisation, Makarski 
first came to ECM via Keith Jarrett. She appeared on his New Series 
album “Bridge of Light”, recorded in 1993. It featured Makarski as 
soloist on the “Elegy for Violin and String Orchestra” and as Jarrett’s 
duet partner on the “Sonata for Violin and Piano”. That recording led to
 other discs with Makarski at ECM ranging from a series of recital discs
 – beginning with the solo album “Caoine” – to experiments with Tomasz 
Stanko, John Surman and Dino Saluzzi on the prize-winning “From The 
Green Hill”, and playing alongside the Hilliard Ensemble in Stephen 
Hartke’s “Tituli”.
Through the years, Makarski and Jarrett have remained in contact. They 
first played the Bach sonatas together at Christmas 2008, and returning 
to the music became a theme of their weekend meetings over the next two 
years. “Every time she visited we played it again.” Jarrett tells Ethan 
Iverson in the September 2013 issue of Down Beat.
As Makarski has noted, the approach was the opposite of ‘casual’. “Think
 of it as the musical equivalent of a time-lapse exposure,” Makarski 
suggests, “with the camera focused on a process in Nature; planets 
moving, wrinkles appearing, trees leafing. You don't need to decide 
anything; you just watch. In our case, we just listened.” 
One thinks here also of Jarrett’s early statement when recording Book 1 
of Das Wohltemperierte Klavier: “This music does not need my 
assistance.” The intention, then as now: not to inflict interpretive 
‘personality’ on the work. “It’s nutritious because it’s not me,“ 
Jarrett says. “I’m just throwing myself to the other guy, and asking him
 ‘Show me something I still don’t know about music’.”
The idea of documenting the music came late in the process: in November 
2010 Makarski and Jarrett recorded the sonatas at the American Academy 
of Arts and Letters in New York. “Even after deciding we’d like to 
record, the process didn’t much change,” Makarski notes. “What you have 
is a window on an organic long-term process of exploration and deep 
listening. It’s a kind of momentary document of a joyously renewed 
friendship – not a strategically planned project.“

 
 
 
 
 
Gracias por compartir esta hermosa interpretación de Bach por Jarrett y Makarski.
ResponderEliminarun abrazo, K.
may you reposte it please ?
ResponderEliminaryour blog is just great
thank you very much and best wishes
muchas gracias, amigo ... !
ResponderEliminartodo lo mejor para tí, tu blog es excelente
Hi, any chance of these Jarret' classical gems can be reuploaded ? Unfortunately I found classical music, and this great blog, too late. Thanks.
ResponderEliminar