J.S. Bach
15 Two-Part Inventions, BWV772-86,
15 Three-Part Inventions, BWV787-801,
French Suite No. 6 in E, BWV817,
Partita No. 2 in C minor, BWV826.
Fünf Präludien und Fughetten in C,
D minor, E minor, F and G, BWV870a,
899-902, 902/1a - No. 2 in D minor,
BWV899; No. 3 in E minor, BWV900;
No. 5 in G, BWV902. Nun kleine
Präludien aus dem Klavierbuchlein für
Wilhelm Friedmann Bach, BWV924-32-
Nos. 1-5, 7 and 8. Sechs kleine Präludien,
BWV933-38. Fünf kleine Präludien,
BWV939-43. Fuge in C, BWV952. Fuge in
C aus dem Klavierbüchlein für Wilhelm
Friedmann Bach, BWV953. Fughetta in
C minor, BWV961. Präludium in C minor,
BWV999.
Andrea Bacchetti (piano).
Dynamic CDS629/1-2
(full price, two discs, 2 hours 31 minutes).
Website www.dynamic.it
Producer/ Engineer Matteo Costa.
Dates March and September 2008.
Andrea Bacchetti's playing of Bach is fluid, fluent, flexible and melliflous. The 32-year-old pianist has an
impressive CV, with an international career and numerous recordings to his credit, including a CD of Bach's
English Suites and a DVD of the Goldberg Variations, nominated for the first prize of Italian critics in 2008.
So far so good, but one must react to Bacchetti's playing, which I am glad to get to know, as tabula rasa.
I have mentionned its virtues already, and my principal reservations about this set concern two particular areas.
One is the degree of ornamentation that he applies to the repeat of the first and second section
in Bach's binary forms, represented here by the various dances in the E major French Suite that concludes the first
disc and the C minor Partita that initiates the second one.
To decorate a melodic line is, of course, part of good
Baroque practice, but its effect is also a matter of degree. For one thing, in writing a double bar at the end of
each half of a binary piece, Bach clearly wants the repeat to be observed, and it produces an intensification even
without ornaments, by virtue of the fact that the listener has already heard the musical section once, and is now
hearing it again.
When ornaments are added, it is often a case of "less is more", because an excess of
them can eventually smother a melodic line.
This is particularly true in fast movements, even though Bacchetti's
fingerwork always makes his ornaments clear. In slower dance forms, principally the Sarabandes, such agrements
become more idiomatic, and are more
Stephen Pruslin
International Record Review - September 2009