Bach: English Suites Nos. 1-6, BWV 806-811. Andrew Rangell, piano.
Steinway & Sons. $24.99 (2 CDs).
Bach: Inventions, BWV 772-786; Sinfonias, BWV
787-801; Aria Variata, BWV 989; Jesu meine Freude, BWV 753; Little Prelude in D
minor, BWV 926; Menuett—arrangement by Egon Petri; Sheep May Safely Graze, BWV
208; I Step Before Thy Throne, BWV 668. Andrew Rangell, piano. Steinway & Sons.
$17.99.
The many undeniable merits of historically
informed performance practices for Baroque works can obscure the circumstances
that render less historically accurate renditions of this music attractive. It
takes a musician of considerable sensitivity and unusual temperament to find a
way to make Bach’s music effectively communicative when performing it in a
manner that is not in accord with Bach’s wishes, plans or instrumentation.
Andrew Rangell’s new recordings for Steinway & Sons will certainly not
satisfy listeners who prefer that these works be heard as Bach intended them to
be heard, on the instruments he knew and for which he wrote the material. But
an audience interested in going beyond historically accurate playing – perhaps
one already familiar with it and looking for something additional – will find
much to admire and enjoy in Rangell’s readings of the six English Suites, the Inventions
and Sinfonias, and a potpourri of
other material.
There is something pleasantly “retro”
about Bach performances that focus on warmth, as Rangell’s do – ones in which
the pianist does not hesitate to use pedals liberally, paying attention to the
music’s central and crucial contrapuntal elements but also bringing forth its
emotional warmth by employing the piano’s distinctive aural world and not
attempting to make the modern instrument duplicate or even approximate the
sound of a harpsichord. For example, the chords in Courante I from the first English
Suite, in A, are here just as important as the music’s forward progress,
and it is the overlay of the lines in Courante
II that Rangell emphasizes. The Sarabande
is genuinely moving, while the concluding Gigue
has the harmonized bounce of a dance of a later time. The second suite, in A
minor, features a delicate and well-balanced Allemande and a Sarabande
in which the broken chords provide a firm melodic foundation. The third suite,
in G minor, has a particularly sprightly Prelude
and a Gavotte I that sounds ahead of
its time in bits of insistent dissonance. The fourth suite, in F, has a
particularly gentle Sarabande and a Menuet I that is expressive more than it
is danceable. The E minor fifth suite has unusual intensity in its Prelude and, as a result, a particularly
strong contrast with the following Allemande.
And Rangell makes this suite’s two Passepied
movements quite jaunty. The sixth suite, in D minor, has the longest Prelude of all, and Rangell presents it
as something of a mini-fantasia, providing a strong contrast with the delicacy
of the two Gavotte movements that
occur later. Throughout this two-CD set, Rangell shows a firm grasp of Bach’s
elements of contrast, adding to them the piano’s ability to sustain notes and
chords readily and therefore provide a contrast with the separate lines, laid
one upon the next, that characterize Baroque counterpoint. The result is performances
that view Bach through the lens of a later time while still incorporating, and
indeed emphasizing, the ways in which his English
Suites offer contrasting moods and emotions among their movements, not
merely differences of rhythm, style and tempo.
Rangell
maintains the same approach in a single-CD recital called “A Bouquet of Bach” that
features all the Inventions and Sinfonias and, equally significantly in
terms of Rangell’s approach to Bach, three transcriptions by pianist Egon Petri
(1881-1962) that very much partake of 19th-century sensibilities
even though they were composed in the 20th. Petri’s arrangements of Sheep May Safely Graze, I Step Before Thy
Throne, and a set of three minuets that Petri combined into a single piece,
all predate the historical-practices movement and, accordingly, have warmth and
fullness that are quite pianistic and not much in keeping with the clarity and
linearity of the original material. Rangell’s performances of these pieces are
certainly not as full-blown Romantic as Petri’s own, but there is a clear line
of descent from the earlier pianist to the younger one, with Rangell seeming
quite comfortable indeed in presenting Bach in the guise of a much later era –
and using Petri’s transcriptions to display the emotional rather than
structural underpinnings of Bach’s work. The other music on this CD gets
somewhat less full-blooded treatment but partakes of similar sensibilities. In Aria Variata, for example, the fast
repeat notes are challenging on the piano and sound quite different from the
way they do on the harpsichord; here, Rangell focuses more on combining and
blending the two hands than on keeping them separate and distinct. Jesu meine Freude is a lovely and moving
work whose emotional core Rangell uses the piano to emphasize. The Little Prelude in D minor, in contrast,
is really a trifle, just a minute long, and Rangell makes it into a kind of
“appetite cleanser” amid the more-substantive material. Most of the Inventions and Sinfonias are also quite short, and Rangell uses the piano’s
sonority to distinguish them in ways that go beyond what Bach built into these
brief, beautifully balanced bits of polyphony. Rangell’s playing is not exactly
a throwback to that of Petri’s time and earlier – it is, rather, a
reinterpretation for the 21st century of the thinking that went into
approaches to Bach that sought to “update” his music on the grounds that it
sounds good on modern instruments and would have been written for the piano if
Bach had only had one available. In reality, that argument is specious: Bach
would have written for the piano, no doubt, but he would have written very
different music for it, not what he wrote for the far greater linear clarity of
the harpsichord. And Rangell does not make any such argument overtly: his performances
themselves constitute an assertion that playing Bach keyboard music on piano,
and utilizing the modern instrument’s capabilities in ways that Bach never
intended, can be satisfying in ways that are different from those offered by
the original instrumentation – not better, certainly, but different. Rangell’s
fine performances are a bit of an anomaly now that we do know so much more
about what Bach’s music was supposed to sound like. But they certainly have
pleasures of their own, and audiences that especially enjoy the sound and
emotive capabilities of the modern piano will find them highly satisfying.
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