Two mature pianists, both renowned for their Bach interpretations and
with numerous acclaimed recordings to their names—but both of whom,
until now, have fought shy of Bach’s final, uncompromisingly
contrapuntal masterpiece. In the booklet notes with their respective new
recordings, Angela Hewitt and Zhu Xiao-Mei both admit to having put off
the inevitable: coming to terms with The Art of Fugue.
Unlike the rest of the established Bach keyboard repertoire, The Art of
Fugue’s scoring is ambiguous, each line written out on a separate stave.
For the first edition published in 1751, a year after Bach’s death, his
son Carl Philipp Emanuel is clear: ‘everything has ... been arranged
for use at the harpsichord or organ’—yet it has been argued that the
occasional awkward leap means the work is not fully renderable on a
keyboard (opening the door to some highly effective performances by all
manner of instrumental ensembles). Interestingly, though, neither Hewitt
nor Xiao-Mei cites this as a reason f
or her lack of enthusiasm for the task.
With its intensely concentrated and complex fugal writing, and devoid of
the light relief provided by the preludes in The Well-Tempered Clavier,
it is easy to see why The Art of Fugue can appear, in Hewitt’s words,
severe, daunting and completely overwhelming, even to musicians like her
and Xiao-Mei who live and breathe Bach. Hewitt says she needed ‘great
determination’ to get to grips with a work which had never excited her
very much on account of its perceived dryness, and once she had finally
set to work on it in 2012,
its technical complexity made the Goldberg Variations and The
Well-Tempered Clavier ‘seem like child’s play in comparison’; Xiao-Mei
‘has never suffered so much when practising
a work’, such are its emotional and physical demds—'I was sore all
over’.
We can only be thankful that they persevered. Each pianist brings her
considerable experience and expertise to bear, meeting the work’s
formidable challenges with individual, complementary performances. Both,
in their different ways, are deeply musical, finding satisfying and
engaging solutions to a potentially unpalatable 72 (Xiao-Mei) to 84
(Hewitt) minutes’ worth of fugues and canons in a single key, D minor,
all based on a single portentous theme.
Hewitt’s account, characteristically, is clean and precise but always
pianistic—she never seems, like some pianists, to be imitating a
harpsichord, whereas her delicate touch means that the music is not
burdened with undue heaviness. Her ‘Contrapunctus 2’, for example,
dances with (relatively) carefree abandon. Hewitt is fluent and
homogenous, her effective expressive and dynamic contrasts made subtly
within an overarching, unifying concept, solemn but not overbearing.
Xiao-Mei is more robust, and more extreme in terms of dynamics. In her
hands the austere fugal theme often grabs attention from within the
texture with prominent weight (occasionally too forcibly), but this
is tempered with flowing gentleness—the opening of ‘Contrapunctus 3’ and
the ‘Canon alla decima in contrapunto alla terza’, for example, softly
caress the ears. Xiao-Mei is consistently faster too, but she never
feels rushed or perfunctory (just as Hewitt never feels too
indulgent—perhaps proving that
The Art of Fugue stands outside usual measures of time). A direct
comparison with the piece in which the two versions differ most widely
duration-wise—‘Contrapunctus 11’ (5'30" against 7'03")—reveals Hewitt to
be dreamy and possibly a shade pedantic, while Xiao-Mei is alert and
forthright, taking the bull by the horns. Both versions work in the
context of their respective wholes.
To maximise the variety,
Xiao-Mei intersperses the 14 ‘Contrapunctus’ fugues with the ‘Canons’,
which, in the score, follow; Hewitt plays everything in published order.
In both versions, ‘Contrapunctus 14’—by far the longest of the
fugues—is cut off abruptly in its prime, unfinished as Bach left it.
It’s an arresting conclusion—a powerful reminder of mortality following
such ethereal music—but for those who need closure, Hewitt offers the
chorale prelude BWV668a, which C. P. E. Bach inserted on the last blank
page of the score, as a cathartic final track. This is especially
fitting for a performance, recorded at the Jesus-Christus Church in
Berlin, which, despite its clear textures, is above all contemplative
and other- worldly. Xiao-Mei, recorded at the Leipzig Gewandhaus’s
Mendelssohn Hall, and also well defined, is more exciting and more
alive, gripping where Hewitt is entrancing.
Both versions,
highly recommendable, have much to offer. If your budget will stretch
only to one (both are full price—Hewitt’s comes on two CDs for the price of one), I would edge towards Xiao-Mei for the vitality she brings to
potentially prosaic music—heavenly, yes, but also very human. It’s a
personal choice, though—both views of the work are valid, and you won’t
go wrong with either. (International Record Review)
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario