Dirk
2006-04-26 04:21:03 UTC
I'm amazed at the emotional replies to the topic of Piano for Bach's
music. The topic of actual instrumentation seems to be a springboard
for conflict between the purists and the more progressively minded.
So I'm starting this topic again in the hope that more reasonable and
constructive discussion can be had on this (... thus speaks daddy :-)
While belonging to the latter group, I can see merit in both views:
Listening to works as they would have sounded like in Bach's time must
give some people a kind of intimacy to the music, a feeling of reality
and truthfullness to the works and historical era of the time.
But Bach himself was quite progressive, experimenting with different
instruments (Like the Viola Pomposa which never really took off), and
even his organ settings were often frowned upon because they were
innovative. His preferred clavier was the clavichord, which has more
sensitivity than the harpsichord. To Bach, the pianos of that time were
lacking in sharpness of tone, were too heavy-actioned and the keys were
too large to his liking.
Andras Shiff, one of my favourite Bach interpreters, said in one of his
interviews that he thought the sound of the harpsichord 'awfull'. I
actually agree with that, the tone has no depth, and there is no touch
sensitivity. We had a harpsichord in the conservatorium, but no one,
including the teachers, bothered playing Bach on it. You can apply much
more nuance on the Yamaha or Steinway (the grand piano keys travel a
greater distance down to the keyboard bed, giving you much more control
over dynamics). The keyboard, unlike the violin (which virtually
remained unchanged), has evolved to a much more agreeable instrument in
the grand piano.
Add to that the notion that the core of Bach's music is the music
itself, with its melody and harmony. I'm for that matter quite happyly
(and gratefully) play the ninth 'Art of the Fugue' fugue on a (full
action) midi keyboard, using actual violin samples. The harpsichord
interpretation of this work misses out on all the intrinsic harmonies
held by sustaing notes.
music. The topic of actual instrumentation seems to be a springboard
for conflict between the purists and the more progressively minded.
So I'm starting this topic again in the hope that more reasonable and
constructive discussion can be had on this (... thus speaks daddy :-)
While belonging to the latter group, I can see merit in both views:
Listening to works as they would have sounded like in Bach's time must
give some people a kind of intimacy to the music, a feeling of reality
and truthfullness to the works and historical era of the time.
But Bach himself was quite progressive, experimenting with different
instruments (Like the Viola Pomposa which never really took off), and
even his organ settings were often frowned upon because they were
innovative. His preferred clavier was the clavichord, which has more
sensitivity than the harpsichord. To Bach, the pianos of that time were
lacking in sharpness of tone, were too heavy-actioned and the keys were
too large to his liking.
Andras Shiff, one of my favourite Bach interpreters, said in one of his
interviews that he thought the sound of the harpsichord 'awfull'. I
actually agree with that, the tone has no depth, and there is no touch
sensitivity. We had a harpsichord in the conservatorium, but no one,
including the teachers, bothered playing Bach on it. You can apply much
more nuance on the Yamaha or Steinway (the grand piano keys travel a
greater distance down to the keyboard bed, giving you much more control
over dynamics). The keyboard, unlike the violin (which virtually
remained unchanged), has evolved to a much more agreeable instrument in
the grand piano.
Add to that the notion that the core of Bach's music is the music
itself, with its melody and harmony. I'm for that matter quite happyly
(and gratefully) play the ninth 'Art of the Fugue' fugue on a (full
action) midi keyboard, using actual violin samples. The harpsichord
interpretation of this work misses out on all the intrinsic harmonies
held by sustaing notes.