English Suites 1-6
Audio CD; Import
Polygram Int'l
Two Part Invention
Audio CD; Import
Dynamic Italy
Of Bach’s three great sets of keyboard suites/partitas - the two composition classifications were synonymous
during the Baroque period - the English suites are believed to be the earliest. Recent research has revised
their date of writing from what was once believed to be between 1718 and 1720 to 1715. Like the French suites
and the partitas, the English suites are fixed successions of stylized dance movements, with additional
dance forms, like gavotte and bourèe, inserted before the concluding gigue. In the English suites and the
partitas, Bach adds an introductory movement in the form of a praeludium. In the French suites, only the No.4
in E moll-Major has a praeludium; the other five begin immediately with the usual allemande.
In the French
suites, Bach did draw upon certain ornamental characteristics common to the French keyboardists of the time,
but of the English suites there is nothing English. In trying to explain the inaptness of the title, Bach
biographer Johann Nikolaus Forkel speculated that the suites may have been composed for an English nobleman.
But no such name has ever surfaced. Whatever the case may be, of the three sets of works, Bach deemed only
the last written partitas worthy of being incorporated into his Clavierübung.
Italian pianist Andrea Bacchetti has been a fixture on the international piano scene since the mid 1990s. He
has appeared regularly throughout the capitals of Europe, Russia, Mexico, and South America. In 31:4, I had
occasion to review a DVD of Bacchetti in a live performance of Bach’s Goldberg Variations, which I found to be “
highly convincing and engaging.” His prefacing autobiographical sketch, however, was a piece of absurdist
theater to which I found myself shouting at my TV screen, “shut up already and play.” Bacchetti has made a
special project of Bach, and his playing of the English suites on his Fazioli Model F278 reflects the deep
thought he has given to these works. His approach leans towards the introverted and sensitive, but his playing
is not affected, and there is plenty of forward momentum and kinetic energy where needed.
The one criticism I thought I had related to Bacchetti’s embellishments, which seemed a bit
fussy and overdone. But it turned out not to be the embellishments, per
se, that were bothering me. In an A/B comparison with a harpsichord
version by Huguette Dreyfus in the Courante from the A-Minor Suite, I
realized that most of the embellishments are Bach’s, and that the only
reason they sound somewhat excessive in Bacchetti’s recording is due to
the unmodulated sound of the piano in the repeats. Dreyfus puts her
two-manual harpsichord to good use by varying registrations in the
repeats, something that is not possible on the piano. Of course,
variations in touch and articulation are possible on the piano, but
Bacchetti doesn’t seem particularly keen on the technique, so that
eventually the tedium of texture takes its toll.
Since no original manuscript of the English suites exists, we can only extrapolate from the
later partitas that a double-manual harpsichord would have been Bach’s
instrument of choice. If this sounds like an argument against playing
these works on piano, it’s not. It is, however, an argument for using a
bit more pianistic imagination in differentiating repeated sections by
means of fingering and pedaling techniques. Bach is most effective on
piano when the performer plays the instrument as a piano, instead of
trying to make it sound like the harpsichord it’s not. Bacchetti’s English
suites, I think, could have done with a bit more of a pianist’s approach.
The second entry in the above headnote is a grab bag of Bach’s kleine and nicht so kleine keyboard
works. The two and three-part inventions—or sinfonias, which is now the
preferred designation for the latter—are essentially exercises in two and
three-part counterpoint Bach wrote as learning and practice pieces for his
students. The same may be said of the little preludes from the Keyboard
Book for Bach’s eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann, and of the other assorted
collections of little preludes, little fugues, and little preludes with
fugues, all of which had a pedagogical purpose. Bach would probably be
amused to learn that 300 years later anyone would seriously take these
bicycle-training wheels to be great music. Yet such is our fascination
with Bach’s art that even such exercises intended for domestic consumption
take on greater significance than they probably warrant.
From the “not so little”
category of works in this set, Bacchetti gives us one of the keyboard
partitas, the No. 2 in C-Minor, and one of the French suites, the No. 6 in
E-Major. Part of this Dynamic set was recorded in the same venue as the
Decca set, the Fazioli Concert Hall in Sacile, Italy, and another part in
the Sala Verdi of the Milan Conservatory. Unfortunately, the booklet
doesn’t tell us which tracks were recorded where; but in the Partita and
French Suite, there is a peculiar wow and flutter that causes a slight
quavering effect on held notes. Since the same problem does not afflict
the Decca set or the other items on the Dynamic set, I’m guessing
something went awry in Milan.
Both of these releases come with recommendations that are tepid at best. All of this music has
had a number of other advocates, both on piano and harpsichord. For the
English suites on piano, I continue to favor Angela Hewitt, whose Bach is
hard to beat, and Murray Perahia as a close runner-up. For the little
preludes and other assorted keyboard miscellany, Hewitt again gets my
vote, and her two-disc set on Hyperion includes the complete French
suites. Harpischord fanciers, on the other hand, will not do any better
than with Kenneth Gilbert on an Archiv (DG) recording that’s been around
since the 1980s. All in all, Bacchetti is very good, but not great, and
neither of these releases left me hungry for more.
Jerry Dubins