
Glass,
like Bach before him, keeps churning out new and distinctive music. The
Piano Concerto No. 3, written for Dinnerstein and premiered by her in
September 2017, is another example of late period Glass (he turned 81 in
January) that leans toward romantic harmonies while maintaining its
minimalist pulse. Dinnerstein's creamy tone and elastic phrasing gives
the music an air of Schubertian warmth and wistfulness, reminiscent of
Glass' searching, melody-driven Etude No. 20, especially in the concerto's second movement cadenza.
The third movement, dedicated to the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt,
is appropriately meditative as it works through a beautifully brooding
theme, set off with tolling bells in the piano's lowest register. The
keyboard and strings converse in a simpatico, rather than adversarial,
relationship not unlike the congenial tone Bach conjures in the slow
movement of his concerto.
Bach's Keyboard Concerto in G minor (BWV 1058), one of the first of its kind, was derived from an earlier
work and most likely revamped for one of the composer's coffee house
concerts in Leipzig in the early 1730s. In the first movement, melodies
in the strings and piano interlock, unfold and repeat in a kind of
pre-minimalist way. Dinnerstein, a singularly elegant Bach pianist,
makes the second movement sing sweetly while the final movement dances
with carefree steps, trills and virtuosic runs across the keyboard.
These
two concertos, with their multiple, alternating voices and entwined
repetitions, may reside on opposite ends of music history, but they
share a common language that needs no translation – especially in such
sympathetic performances. (Tom Huizenga)
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