It
is to the insomnia of Count von Keyserling, former Russian ambassador to
the court of Saxony, that we owe the birth of the Goldberg Variations.
Johann Sebastian Bach composed them in 1741 and the first public printed
edition appeared the following year in Nuremberg bearing the title
Aria mit verschiedenen (30) Veränderungen: air with 30 variations.
With a clear specification as to the instrument intended to interpret
them: Vors Clavicimbal mit 2
Manualen (for harpsichord with two manuals). Only three of the 30
Variations do not carry an indication as to which of the two registers
they should be played on.
For
relief from the anxiety of ever-elusive sleep, the Count asked Bach to
compose (if it was an excuse, it was an ingenious one) new music: only
music, it seems, could bring respite from the diplomat's disorder. Bach
- the anecdote is true - accepted the commission and seemed to comply
with the singularity of the request: the work opens with a motive, a
cell; there follow 30 mutations of that idea, persistent as an
obsession, bewitching and lulling like a call continuously repeated,
though always different.
Up
to the last ingenious spark: a quodlibet - a free song, at will -
constructed beginning from two popular canzoni: Ich
bin so lang nicht bei dir gewest (I have been so long away from you)
and Kraut und Rüben haben mich
vertrieben (Cabbages and turnips have driven me away): a humorous
self-mocking allusion to the possibility that, reaching the end of the
journey the fistener, and maybe the first consignee, might have
forgotten the initial theme - which at the end is restated exactly -
perhaps preoccupied by the vastness and heaviness (cabbages and turnips)
of the work.
Johann
Gottlieb Goldberg (1727-1756), a pupil of Bach dear to von Keyserling,
was to play the work in the room next to the bedroom of the noble
insomniac. To its first interpreter we therefore owe the name, the
definitive title assumed by these Variations, that Bach inserted in the
Clavierübung as a fourth part.
On
this occasion the two peaks of Bach's art come together: invention and
exercise, didacticism and creation: a movement in dance-form, a piece of
open, virtuoso character and a canon regularly come one after the other,
following up on the initial Aria, conceived as a bass in the form of a
chaconne.
Order
and immoderation. We do not know if the piece worked as a sleeping
potion; but we knowthat since then it has never ceased to attract the
inspiration, the intelligence of interpreters.
But
now it is time to hear about the reasons, the motivations, the choices
of the 30-year-old Genoese pianist Andrea Bacchetti, who with the
Goldbergs continues his own intense Bachian journey.
Let
us start with the logistics and production conditions of this recording.
Did knowing there were TV cameras play a role in your “reaction”?
I
don't think so. Just at the beginning it took some getting used to.
After a few bars, though, the mystic atmosphere and the frescoed walls
of the Villa Marzotto - Trissino - helped me in the effort of
concentration that Bach asks for and the natural daylight made me feel
even more at home.
Bach
has been a star on your horizon rightfrom the very beginning. How did
the choice of the Goldbergs come about?
I
wanted to study the Goldbergs for many years. I was fascinated on the
one hand by the instrumental challenge the player faces, on the other by
the mnemonic complexity required, and especially by the “spiritual”
pleasure the interpretation brings. Having aIready taken on the whole
English and French Suites gave me the chance to look at the Goldbergs
with an eye to those variations which are dances (few in reality), and
this convinced me that I was dealing with an essentially instrumental
work, that is one of great virtuosity, written in the late period of
Bach, many years after the other collections of keyboard compositions.
What
is the dividing line between study exercises and artistic creation in
this work?
I
don’t think there is a distinction between the two aspects. I have
never thought of separating inspiration from technique, neither when I
was preparing the studies of Czerny for the fifth year Conservatory
exams, still less for Bach. In the case of the Goldbergs I think there
exist various phases of ‘exercise’: one above all is the
construction of the arch that links all the 30 variations within which
the other phases play a part: imaginative fantasy, strength of the
fingers, polyphony.
Bach
insists, from the titIe onwards, on the concept of “variation”; what
significance does he give to this word?
The
concept of variation can be understood from various points of view. The
“compositionaI”, which we cannot stretch too much: we just have to
take note of the infinite fantasy and the science of reason of Bach.
That “required of the interpreter”, for example, to “vary” the
touch; a concept which opens a whole world, considering that in much of
the execution of Bach on the pianoforte “touch” plays an essential
part. Another aspect can be the “variation” of the embellishments,
which are already a variation in themselves. In this regard I follow my
own inventive whims, according to Baroque practice, naturally.
Then
there is the “variation of characters”: one of the fundamental
aspects in building the arch we talked about before. The contrast of
characters in the alternation of the diverse variations avoids boredom
and helps especially in finding that essentiality which is very
important in the music of Bach.
The
choice of instrument: using the pianoforte, how do you resolve the
problem of the two “Klavier” which Bach insists upon with such
precision?
The
problem of the two keyboards is a bit awkward at the start. On the
single keyboard of the pianoforte you have to bear in mind two
principles: playing on two different points of the key - as if there
were two keyboards available - and, when crossing over, never letting
the hands touch, since if that happens the percentage of error rises
enormously.
What
characteristic must a Bach pianoforte have, a pianoforte for the
Goldbergs?
I
think a Bach pianoforte must have an extremely soft and luminous sound:
in my case I have chosen an instrument, the Fazioli model F278, of a
darker and more muffled timbre to give a more introspective possibility
in the “nocturne” variations such as XXI and XXV. In addition, the
moderate tempi that I have adopted need as varied a dynamic range as
possibie.
Then,
given that I make assiduous use of the tonal pedal, that also needs to
be part of a very well regulated pianoforte. In conclusion I am very
satisfied with the Fazioli made available to me.
Work
on the dynamic of the sound is a characteristic peculiar to your
interpretation. To what effect and affect?
Effects
are not what I am looking for. The expIoitation of the dynamic
colouristic resources of the modern instrument aims to express
characters and affects of the Baroque musical taste: aesthetics, great
landscapes, courtly gallantry and in some cases, as in variation XXV,
also a little “night demon”.
All
this with the humility and the “humanity” of a young interpreter who
has reflected on the world for only a few years and has been able to
imagine “that other worId” by means of paintings, churches and, why
not, listening to period instruments.
Variation
number VIII: is that the most brilliant, the most salon-like? And is
this the dominant character of the Goldbergs, starting with the initial
Air and so on, in French style?
We
need to distinguish properly the characters of the variations. There are
introspective, poetic ones in which the personality of the interpreter
best versed in this way of playing emerges, as in my case.
Thus
the theme, the gigue of variation VII, all the canons, become
explorations of the “romantic spirit” of Bach and, as in the
sarabande of variation XXV, of its extraordinary chromatic daring.
Naturally in several of these we can see a little of the “salon”,
that is of German courtesans of the early seventeenth century without
forgetting, though, the refined taste and linearity of the music.
Then
there are the brilliant variations, those which are more exquisitely
instrumental, among them number VIII, written to alleviate the Count’s
insomnia, where the technical difficulties pursue each other and in
which I dont find elements of the salon. Everything, that is, must be
connected by a coherence that allows the alternation of these factors
with imagination, constructing the tesserae of a great mosaic.
How
did you resolve the problem of number XXI, the canon at the seventh, for
which Bach prescribed neither one nor two registers?
I
believe Bach had in mind one keyboard alone, even if the daring
chromaticism is misleading. Harmonically it is one of the most beautiful
because it is founded on an arabesque in the right hand mixed together
with a descending chromatic scale in the left hand, in an atmosphere of
extraordinary mysticism which contrasts with the brilliant preceding
variation. It is astral and prepares the resurrection of XXII, a bit
like the passage between the canon of IX and the fughetta of X.
Why
30 Variations: is there a significance then in this number?
In
the seventeenth century as well as in other centuries for that matter,
the concept of the Trinity was highly thought of, and everything
connected with it.
Bach,
on the other hand, was a Lutheran. Then there is also the succession of
canons every three variations with the “epicentre” in number XV, a
canon at the fifth in the minor of extraordinary ghostliness.
In
this project, so vast and also so varied, is there a favourite moment?
There
are many of them. I think that for a performer there are many ways to
love his or her own work: personally, I love playing the brilliant
variations as much as the most reflective. Of the former I include in
particular I and VIII, of the latter most of all XXV.
Furthermore,
I believe very much in the final climax that starts from XXVI, because
it is like dawn, the Resurrection after the Passion. A new life begins,
the matter is sealed by the spirit which triumphs over the evil of the
world, to purify it after the journey of the 25 variations in which
everything happens, and to immortalise it.
Is
it preferable for the view of a young interpreter to be virgin, or is it
inevitable to have, to perceive within oneself some interpretation of
reference?
Naturally
I have different performances of reference, which I have listened to and
continue to hear without however, trying to copy. The first encounter
with the GoIdbergs was - obviously - the recording of Glenn Gould of
1955, which I have always admired for its sensational technique. Not so
much for its ability to communicate: forgive me if I am critical!
Then
in 2001 the second version of András Schiff, which for me, at least as
a foundation, is little different from the first. I listen to him in
concert, he is extraordinary for everything: perfection of timbre - and
without pedal! - dare I say Olympic, with a principle of
aestheticism.
Then,
and this is an audition from compad-disc, I would add Murray Perahia. A
maestro, not only of the pianoforte, but also of Schenkerian theories.
It is very interesting to analyse how from a cell, more precisely an
interval, a cathedral can grow.
Another
experience was getting to know the last version of Rosalyn Tureck, which
preceded the start of my studies. And perhaps it was that which
influenced me most: moderate tempi, impromptu invention of the
embellishments in the ritornelli, the mysticism combined with a
stupendous “youthful” freshness.
Finally,
a little listening to the harpsichord. The recent marvellous version of
Ottavio Dantone has made me discover in the GoIdbergs, even here, quite
a bit of the demon.
Interview
with Andrea Bacchetti: Sandro Cappelletto
English translation: Charles Searson |