Bach & Beyond, Part I—Bach: Partitas Nos. 2 and
3, BWV 1004 and 1006; Eugène Ysaÿe: Sonata No. 2; Kaija Saariaho: Nocturne;
Missy Mazzoli: Dissolve, O My Heart. Jennifer Koh, violin. Cedille. $16.
Bach & Beyond, Part 2—Bach: Sonata No. 1, BWV
1001; Partita No. 1, BWV 1002; Bartók: Sonata for Solo Violin; Kaija Saariaho:
Frises. Jennifer
Koh, violin. Cedille. $16 (2 CDs).
Bach & Beyond, Part 3—Bach: Sonatas Nos. 2 and
3, BWV 1003 and 1005; Luciano Berio: Sequenza VIII; John Harbison: For Violin
Alone.
Jennifer Koh, violin. Cedille. $16 (2 CDs).
It is scarcely news that Bach’s six Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin, BWV
1001-1006, are seminal compositions for the violin and, in many ways, for
classical music as a whole. It is not news that they have been arranged for
many other instruments – Bach himself apparently played them as keyboard works;
Brahms did a partial transcription for piano left hand, Busoni for piano solo,
Marcel Dupré for organ, and so on and on and on. And it is not news that these
pieces have been enormously influential both on later composers (notably Bartók
and Eugène Ysaÿe) and on innumerable violinists, both those using modern
instruments and those opting for Baroque violin. Nevertheless, Jennifer Koh’s
approach to these works, in a series of recordings on the Cedille label, is
noteworthy and genuinely new – and while it will scarcely be to the taste of
Bach purists and cannot be recommended as a first choice for those interested
in owning this repertoire, it is an exceptionally interesting and very, very
personal attempt to absorb this music and provide it with a context that is
meaningful to Koh (and hopefully, through her, to others) 300 years after the
works were created.
Nothing is traditional or particularly historically
informed in Koh’s performances, but they are all exceptionally well played and delivered
with enthusiasm, rhythmic vitality, a strong sense of the structure of the
music, and – most importantly – determination to place Bach’s works in a
context that Koh has chosen carefully and that includes, among other works,
pieces composed especially for her. The six buildings blocks of Bach’s series
are disassembled and used by Koh as component parts of her own structure. The
first entry in “Bach & Beyond” opens with Partita No. 3 and concludes with Partita No. 2; the second starts with Sonata No. 1 and finishes with Partita
No. 1; and the third begins with Sonata
No. 2 and ends with Sonata No. 3.
This is a complete hodgepodge of presentation if one cares about the way Bach
ordered these works and about their relationship in terms of key structure (G
minor, B minor, A minor, D minor, C major, E major). But it is inescapably true
that what interests Koh is something else, something beyond the internal
workings of the individual Bach works and the intersections among them. Her
focus is as much on the pieces she plays between
the opening and closing elements of each “Bach and Beyond” volume as it is on
Bach’s own music.
Thus, Koh’s entire sequence starts with
the very last of Bach’s six works, emphasizing her notion that Bach was a
starting point for much that would come later. Right after the concluding notes
of the Gigue from Partita No. 3, which Koh plays with
considerable verve, she enters into Ysaÿe’s Sonata
No. 2 of 1924, whose first notes are identical to those of the Prelude to Bach’s Partita No. 3 but whose atmosphere is very different and whose
exploration of tonality and violin capabilities also differs significantly:
this is a work with movements marked Obsession—Prelude;
Malincolia; Danse des Ombres—Sarabande; and Les furies. The influence of Bach on this music is undoubted and,
indeed, obvious, but Ysaÿe’s handling of the material is even further removed
from Bach’s sensibilities than would be expected in a work written two
centuries after Bach’s. Koh then offers the Nocturne,
in Memory of Witold Lutoslawski by Kaija Saariaho (born 1952), which
contains only a passing reference to Bach; and then Dissolve, O My Heart by Missy Mazzoli (born 1980) – a work written
for Koh, who premièred it in 2011, and again one with only slight ties to Bach,
although those are clearer than in Saariaho’s piece. After all this material, Koh returns to Bach for Partita No. 2, which ends with the
massive and always impressive Ciaccona
that is a highlight of the entire set of Bach’s solo-violin works. Koh plays
the whole partita skillfully and effectively, but it comes as something of an
afterthought when handled out of context this way – although Koh’s performance
of the Ciaccona is undeniably
impressive.
The second “Bach & Beyond” volume
offers more-interesting material between the two Bach bookends. After the fine
fiddling with which Koh concludes the final Presto movement of Sonata No. 1, she moves into the 1944 Sonata for Solo Violin by Bartók – a
work with considerable heft in its own right as well as one whose ties to Bach
are clear from its movements’ designations: Tempa
di ciaccona, Fuga, Melodia and Presto.
Hearing how Bartók, near the end of his life, expressed himself in Bach-like
ways, while still stamping the sonata with his own sensibilities, is both a
moving experience and an intellectually bracing one. However, there is
considerably less Bach and less of interest in the work that follows, another
Saariaho piece called Frises,
composed for violin and electronics. Another world première recording, this
certainly reflects Koh’s personal commitment to the music of this composer, but
the work is much too long (21 minutes) and sounds much too much like other
acoustic-plus-electronic pieces to provide evidence of original compositional
thinking, much less of tie-ins to Bach: it is simply self-indulgent. Koh, of
course, is welcome to indulge herself in constructing such a personalized
experience as “Bach & Beyond,” but this specific piece does very little to
connect Bach’s music with that of later centuries. Therefore, when Koh moves to
the concluding work in this second part of “Bach & Beyond,” the Partita No. 1, the shift in sound and
expressiveness is particularly welcome. The seventh of this work’s eight
movements, Tempo di Borea, is a
particular highlight for its delicacy and sprightliness.
The third “Bach & Beyond” volume again has intriguing works sandwiched between the two Bach offerings. After playing Bach’s Sonata No. 3, Koh moves into a 1976 Luciano Berio work, Sequenza VIII, which the composer structures using chaconne-like techniques. Interestingly, this piece is about the same length as the famous Bach Ciaccona from Partita No. 2, although not juxtaposed with that work by Koh. The Berio material is not self-consciously contemporary even though it most assuredly has the sound of a modern work and uses up-to-date techniques – including violin expectations that build on those of Bach. Going back to Bach immediately after this Berio work would provide a highly intriguing contrast, but in line with the overall structure of “Bach & Beyond,” Koh does not do that, instead moving to another modern piece – the world première recording of For Violin Alone by John Harbison (born 1938), a work written specifically for Koh. This seven-movement dance suite is a particularly welcome element of “Bach & Beyond,” very clearly derived structurally from Bach’s music but equally clearly adapting all the major elements of it (themes, rhythms, tonality and more) to a contemporary violin idiom. Harbison does not adhere to Bach-derived movement titles or forms – the middle movement of this suite, for example, is a decidedly un-march-like march – but his debt to Bach’s approach to violin writing and playing is clear throughout. Harbison’s short concluding Epilogue comes across as a quiet farewell to Bach’s style and era – making Koh’s next move, into the opening Adagio of Sonata No. 3 in the bright key of C, all the more effective. Whatever the merits of separating and mixing up the Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin as Koh has done may be – and the decision is certainly a debatable one – this particular contrast is highly effective. The justly famous Fuga of this Bach sonata comes across particularly well in Koh’s sensitive and well-paced performance, and the final two movements, Largo and Allegro assai, end up sounding like summations and encores for the entire “Bach & Beyond” series. This is scarcely what Bach planned or intended for these movements or for the totality of this fifth of the sixth elements in BWV 1001-1006, but in the context that Koh has created, this conclusion works very well. The entire “Bach & Beyond” series – which needs to be heard as a totality to attain its full effect – is a testimonial to the effect of Bach’s music on Koh, more than to its well-known effect on composers who came after Bach’s time. The elements that Koh mixes with Bach do not always work well, and the rearrangement of the six Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin is an arguable one. But as an experiment in performance, presentation and juxtaposition of disparate material, “Bach & Beyond” is a fascinating endeavor. It is not for listeners unfamiliar with the Bach works around which it is built – but audiences who already know those works intimately and appreciate what Bach did with them will find Koh’s rethinking of the music thoughtful, stimulating and, much of the time, emotionally trenchant.
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