Sergey Khachatryan's
unaccompanied Bach is decidedly "old school" in its tapered phrasings
and dynamics, with an emphasis on nuance and tone color rather than
linear shape. You immediately glean this from the subito pianos,
tenutos, and oozing legatos of the C major sonata Fugue. Yet if this
particular style of Bach playing holds appeal, then Khachatryan's
attractive, sweetly singing timbre and generally spot-on choice of
tempos will satisfy on their own terms, to say nothing of the
violinist's brisk yet relaxed delivery in fast, virtuosic movements like
the G minor sonata's Presto, the B minor partita's second Double, and
the E major partita's opening Prelude. However, for an ideal fusion of
tonal allure and contrapuntal cogency,
James Ehnes remains first choice, notably in the fugues and the stronger
architectural unity that distinguishes his pacing of the great D minor Chaconne. Excellent annotations and sound. (Jed Distler)
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