Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1
gramophone.co.uk GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 79

frontofanaudience.Thestudioambience
underminestheGminorPrelude’schains
oftrills,whichgaindefinitionthanksto
thelivetraversal’stighterpickup.Jarrett’s
fluidlyunderstatedstudioAminorFugue
retainsitsbasictempothroughout,whereas
thepaceslightlyspeedsupinthelive
version.Ontheotherhand,therelatively
dutifulandsquarestudioBminorPrelude
comesoutofitsshellamonthlater,replete
withanaltogetherlightertouchand
archinglineonJarrett’spart.Theleaner
liveengineeringalsoconveysasenseof
transparentlinearinterplayinboththe
BflatminorPreludeandFugue.
Otherinterpretativevariantsinthe
presentrecordingcanbeascribedto
Jarrett’sfreewill,orperhapsit’sthe
adrenalintalking.Howelsemightone
explainhisCsharpminorPrelude’s
newfoundfreedomandrhetorical
flexibility?TheAminorFugueremains
buoyantlyunderstated,exceptthatthe
tempogetsatadfasterasthemusic
progresses(betterthantheopposite!).
ThebrisklydispatchedAmajorFugue’s
cross-rhythmicphrasesbecomeless
emphaticandmoreconservationalnow,
whileboththeFmajorPreludeandFugue
trulytakewing.
ForallofJarrett’sseriousnessand
concentration,Imissthecolour,the


nuance,thefinelyhoneddegrees
oftouchandtherangeofexpressive
varietycharacterisingagoodnumberof
Book 1 pianorecordings;EwaPobłocka’s
extraordinaryrecentreleaseisacase
inpoint.
Thenagain,canthegreatestBach
pianistsdeliveratotallyimprovisedsolo
concertfromscratchonJarrett’sstunning
creativelevel?JedDistler
Selectedcomparisons:
Jarrett(10/88)(ECM) 835 246-2
Pobπocka(3/19)(NIFC)NIFCCD062/3

Busoni
‘PianoMusic,Vol11’
JSBach/BusoniTenChoralePreludes.Prelude,
FugueandAllegro,BWV998BusoniPreludio
alcoralee fugasopraunframmentodiBach
(EdizioneminoredellaFantasia
contrappuntistica,K256a). SonatinaNo5,
‘SonatinabrevisinsignoJoannisSebastiani
Magni’,K280
WolfHardenpf
NaxosB8 573982(69’• DDD)

Busoni’s music can
on occasion remind
me of that quip by
Eduard Hanslick when

he encountered Brahms’s Fourth
Symphony for the first time: ‘All through
I felt I was being thrashed by two terribly
clever men.’ When it’s played with true
understanding, with mental and physical
virtuosity held in perfect accord, it comes
truly alive – think of Hamelin, Levit or
Ogdon. Unfortunately, though Wolf
Harden is absolutely committed to his
music, it frequently sounds overly earnest.
He begins with the Fifth Sonatina, giving
its striking discord with due élan, but
the fugal writing (from 1'42") is pretty
unyielding; Hamelin by comparison
is much more supple in effect.
From here, Harden moves on to the
Preludio al corale e fuga sopra un frammento
di Bach – not the one we know from the
Fantasia contrappuntistica but rather an
‘Edizione minore’ – which he plays with
absolute conviction, although again there’s
a relentless quality, particularly in the
fugues, that prevents the music from
coming to life. The transcription of Bach’s
Prelude, Fugue and Allegro in E flat for
lute sets off more promisingly, with a freely
flowing Prelude, but the Fugue’s voicings
are less than subtle and some of the
semiquaver fingerwork in the Allegro
is a touch uneven.
Wolf Harden ends with the glorious set
of 10 Chorale Preludes, making slightly

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