GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2010
Instrumental
Seven Toccatas - BWV910-16 Andrea Bacchetti pf Dynamic [ F ] CDS658 (80' • DDD) Andrea Bacchetti's sensitive performances enter a competitive field
In his recent Goldberg Variations, DVD (Arthaus),
Andrea Bacchetti discussed his pianistic Bach style as playing
"slowly, in a controlled manner".
This applies to the Toccatas as well. When Bach indicates no tempo.
Bacchetti tends to unfold the music at a leisurely pace, sustaining attention
through his carefully organised dynamic designs and keen harmonic awareness.
To cite a few instances, sample the D minor's second-movement fugue's build-up
and the subsequent Adagio's chromatic accentuation, or notice how Bacchetti's
stone-cold-sober deliberation over the C minor's Allegro and the D major's
concluding fugue contrasts to lighter, more playful accounts from Glenn Gould
(Sony, 9/94) and Angela Hewitt (Hyperion, 10/02). Bacchetti accurately addresses
the F sharp minor third movement's Presto e staccato directive, yet so do the
aforementioned competitors by way of crisper, better-contrasted and more
characterful articulation, On the other hand, Bacchetti's pearly legato touch
and contoured delineation in the G minor's much-slower-than-allegro.
Allegro convincingly defend the pianist's unorthodox pace. For a piano version
of all seven Toccatas on a single disc, Hewitt remains first choice, although the
present disc offers separate tracks within each toccata, as opposed to Hyperion's
stingier one-track-per-toccata policy. The recorded sound is robust and full-bodied
but takes on a unattractive stridency in louder moments.
Jed Distler |