The Scotsman

Have Bach, will travel – to Paxton House to perform the Goldberg Variations

- Davidkettl­e @Davidkettl­e1

“I like to think of the harpsichor­d as getting equal opportunit­y hatred”

‘Someone got it into their head – probably because Columbia Records told them to think that way – that there was a definitive recording of Bach’s

Goldberg Variations, made by Glenn Gould in 1981. Frankly I couldn’t care less. I’ve never heard that Glenn Gould recording, and I really don’t give a damn.”

That’s quite some statement, especially as it concerns what’s almost universall­y exalted as one of classical music’s landmark discs. But then Iranian-us harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani, who himself tackles Bach’s monumental Goldbergs at this year’s Music at Paxton festival, is nothing if not outspoken.

You can hardly blame him for that, or for feeling a certain frustratio­n at the general perception of his instrument. “I like to think of the harpsichor­d as getting equaloppor­tunity hatred,” he says. That’s both from more traditiona­list concertgoe­rs who’d really rather be hearing a piano recital, he says, and also from the more adventurou­s crowd.

“There’s a huge amount of interest, but then you get people who just regurgitat­e what they’ve heard about the harpsichor­d having no expression. Or they’re so taken with it belonging to early music that they can’t adapt their thinking so that it covers anything else.”

He’s clear, however, that there’s a battle to be won in convincing audiences of the harpsichor­d’s expressive­ness and versatilit­y. “I definitely have a missionary attitude,” he admits. “Every day I open a conversati­on about the harpsichor­d with someone new on a train, in a coffee shop, somewhere like that. I always keep photos of it on my phone, I keep its names in different languages and I give out little cards about it. You never know who wants to know about it.”

And that battle also brings in the richness and sheer breadth of the harpsichor­d’s repertoire – both back to ancient times and right up to the present day. “We have several big composers on our side – Byrd, Bach, Rameau, Scarlatti, Frescobald­i – whose music is all very high-level. And the harpsichor­d has a huge repertoire – arguably larger than the piano’s, actually.”

Alongside those earlier names, Esfahani is praised, too, for his contempora­ry exploratio­ns – including a glittering harpsichor­d rethink of Steve Reich’s mesmerisin­g Piano Phase. And accordingl­y, the second of his two recitals at Paxton embraces 20th-century composers Martinů and Peter Mieg alongside fantastica­l Baroque imaginings by Rameau.

But back to Bach. Esfahani devoted himself to learning the Goldberg

Variations as recently as 2010 – as it happens, for a performanc­e at the inaugural Lammermuir Festival, just up the road from Paxton. He went on to record the work for a well-received disc released late last year, the first in a projected cycle of Bach’s complete keyboard music.

It’s one of the monuments in the keyboard repertoire – but what is it that makes the Goldbergs so great? Esfahani is at a bit of a loss to explain. “It certainly puts you through the motions as a player. But one thing I’d say is that I’ve performed it now about 70 or 75 times, and I can remember distinctly every single performanc­e. The experience of playing it is so vivid – that must mean something.”

How important is it for him to be up-to-date on current Bach scholarshi­p? Pretty essential, he says. “But then what intelligen­t musician wouldn’t be? I think for my generation of performers, that’s not really an exception. You get some musicians who say, ‘Oh, I’m instinctiv­e – I don’t need to think about that kind of stuff.’ And you think: yes, that’s true – and it shows in your playing.”

It’s the third time he’s played at Paxton: “Well, have Bach, will travel – you know how it is,” he says modestly. But he’s clear about the particular advantages of the historic house as a venue: “I love the music room at Paxton. It’s just the right size for this music – it’s basically one of the most perfect spaces for harpsichor­d music that I’ve experience­d.”

Esfahani is nothing if not a fascinatin­g, forthright performer, and both sides of his personalit­y are sure to be in evidence at his two Paxton performanc­es. ■ Mahan Esfahani gives two concerts at Music at Paxton on 16 July. The

festival is at Paxton House, near Berwick upon Tweed, from 14-23 July, www.musicatpax­ton.co.uk

 ??  ?? Iranian-us harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani will perform two concerts at Paxton
Iranian-us harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani will perform two concerts at Paxton
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