Firma Melodiya presents a recording of J.S. Bach’s Partitas performed by Anton Batagov.
Johann Sebastian Bach and Anton Batagov. Who could ever think until
recently that these names would cross? A promising pianist, prize-winner
and Tatiana Nikolayeva’s alumni, he refused the anticipated career in
his early youth and chose to continue with quite different music. The
first performer of minimalist music in this country and a composer with a
distinctive style, he resumed his “classical” performances not long
ago. However, he refuses to keep a beaten path again.
As a principled antagonist of “authentism,” he plays any music in a
poignantly contemporary fashion, sensing the breath of today in it.
There might be something that creates an affinity between him and Glenn
Gould, but the great Canadian pianist sensation and reading of Bach was
totally different. Batagov hears Bach in a different way, drastically
changing tempos, articulation and strokes as he repeats.
“Each note, each intonation, each chord of Bach’s music carries the
truth next to which all the rest is inessential, therefore it sounds
uncompromising and at times even merciless despite its blinding beauty.
There is no path to light that wouldn’t run over Calvary,” he assumes.
His religious rendition of Bach’s partitas (he perceives No.4 as a
Christmas mystery, and No.6 as a reflection of the Holy Passion) only
naturally includes an arrangement of the chorale Jesus bleibet meine
Freude played by the pianist between two cycles as a connecting link and
dramatic core of the recording.
Anton Batagov recorded Bach’s music on the grand piano manufactured
by Bösendorfer of Vienna (now a subsidiary of Yamaha) in a room of ZIL
Culture Centre, a memorable location in Moscow where the necropolis of
Simonov Monastery used to be.
“Batagov exploded the entire structure and texture of partitas, split
them into atoms. After a ‘big bang,’ when the dance element disappears
completely, a new universe is created in front of us, with Bach as its
dome just the same.” – Radio Russia programme “Baroque Practice”
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