21st Apr 2015
Known for his immense and influential operatic and sacred output, Johann Adolf Hasse
wrote relatively little for solo keyboard. All but two of the works on this disc
constitute world premieres, while the two-movement Sonatas Nos 4 and 5 receive their
first recordings on a modern concert grand. Not that the choice of instrument really
matters, because the music's textural dimensions and technical challenges are modest
at best; to play a Hasse sonata on a nine-foot Fazioli Model F278 is like driving a
Rolls-Royce to go get a pasty or a pretzel. Yet with Andrea Bacchetti behind the
proverbial wheel, one should be grateful.
Aside from a discreet filled-in octave or embellishment here and there, Bacchetti
plays these works simply and directly, with just enough colour and nuance to keep
things interesting without overloading the music. He enlivens the D minor organ
fugue's detached and sustained phrasings and eloquently sings out the three-movement
G major Sonata's central Largowith virtually no help from the sustain pedal. Even the
threadbare textures of the strangely proportioned F major Concerto (two short, quick
movements bookending a lengthy slow movement) benefit from Bacchetti's subtle changes
of timbre in order to delineate solo and tutti roles.
His playing always makes a strong case for Hasse's undisputed melodic gifts. The tunes
invariably lodge in your memory, such as those in the aforementioned Fourth Sonata's
long first movement: did Mozart dictate to Hasse back from the future? And Sonata No 5's
Allegro is not unlike a Handel aria supported by Vivaldi's typically churning rhythms.
The intimate, slightly dry sound befits the music to the point of magnifying Bacchetti's
occasional grunts and groans.