Los Angeles Times

‘Everything goes with Bach’

New recordings reveal again just how ripe the composer’s works are for interpreta­tion.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC mark.swed@latimes.com

So writes music critic Mark Swed in his considerat­ion of the composer’s ongoing chart success.

Wednesday night in Walt Disney Concert Hall, the probing Hungarian pianist András Schiff begins the third round in his three-season survey of Bach’s major keyboard works suitable for piano by playing the six “English” Suites.

Pianistic “purity” is Schiff ’s style, entering into the essence of the notes and their vast implicatio­ns for expression and meaning.

But when it comes to Bach, anything goes. Do with the music what you will. It welcomes abuse, loving or otherwise. And everything goes with Bach. There is no musical environmen­t in which Bach’s music can’t comfortabl­y abide.

That is why, year after year, one form of Bach’s music or another is at the top of the classical and crossover charts. At the moment, Nonesuch has two new hit Bach releases — one is mandolinis­t Chris Thile’s lively take on the solo violin sonatas and partitas, the other is pianist Jeremy Denk’s eloquent account of the “Goldberg” Variations.

Fresh as Denk makes the variations feel, if that’s a little too oldschool Goldbergia­n for you, you might turn to Dan Tepfer’s recording, in which each variation is followed by a short improvisat­ion, respectful­ly grooving in and out of Bach as jazz musicians have done for generation­s.

There is “Goldberg” swing and there is also “Goldberg” squeeze. Last year not one but two accordioni­sts — Teodoro Anzellotti (on Winter & Winter) and Janne Rättyä (on Ondine) — recorded the variations. Both play them straight, but nothing sounds straight on the squeeze box.

German label ECM has a Bach bestseller with a famed jazz pianist: Keith Jarrett teams up with violinist Michelle Makarski for a two-CD set of the six sonatas for violin and piano.

The Bach effect is a strange phenomenon, however. While the works can encourage otherwise restrained musicians to live it up a little, the composer can also unexpected­ly intimidate. There is nothing of Jarrett’s improvisat­ional fluency in his Bach, which is squarely phrased to the point of stodginess, although Makarski is slightly more dramatic.

Leopold Stokowski famously made orchestral extravagan­zas of Bach organ works when he was music director of the Philadelph­ia Orches- tra in the 1930s. Now Philly’s current young music director, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, pays tribute to his distant predecesso­r in his first recording with the orchestra on Deutsche Grammophon. Tastefully grandiose performanc­es of three of those Bach transcript­ions accompany a plush “Rite of Spring,” the main attraction.

Kristian Järvi calls his new Bach disc with his Absolute Ensemble on Sony Classical “Bach Re-Invented.” On it is Gene Pritsker’s “Reinventio­ns,” a piano concerto for soloist Simone Dinnerstei­n. The score takes off from Bach’s keyboard Invention No. 1 and flirts, often entertaini­ngly, with every style known to crossover, including smooth jazz fiddling, driving rock or vague allusions to Middle Eastern music.

By now, nothing takes a Bachian back.

The violinist Jennifer Koh, the solo violin Einstein in Philip Glass’ “Einstein on the Beach” this weekend at the Music Center, happens to be in the midst of a “Bach & Beyond” project. The first disc in the series inserts between two Bach partitas a 1932 solo sonata by Eugène Ysaÿe and recent works by the establishe­d Finnish experiment­alist Kaija Saariaho and the young Brooklyn fantasist Missy Mazzoli. The context keeps changing, but not Koh’s grippingly intense playing.

Francesco Tristano, a 29-year-old pianist from Luxembourg, made two Bach CDs for DG. Neither has been released in the U.S., but they can be ordered online or downloaded from www.qobuz.com.

The most recent disc combines Bach with his contempora­ry Buxtehude and Tristano’s own music (he is a jazz and pop pianist and composer as well). The playing is brilliant.

But more intriguing is the earlier “bachCage,” which goes back and forth between Bach, Cage and Tristano with the additional twist of electronic­ally-enhanced reverb and other effects that make for a startlingl­y effective and original sonic glue.

This is hardly pure Bach. It is pure Tristano, and he is an original. Anything goes, to be sure, but the ingredient­s and how they’re used do make a difference.

 ?? Nonesuch ??
Nonesuch
 ?? Sheila Rock ?? ANDRÁS SCHIFF continues his survey into Bach’s keyboard music with a performanc­e at Disney Hall.
Sheila Rock ANDRÁS SCHIFF continues his survey into Bach’s keyboard music with a performanc­e at Disney Hall.
 ?? Ecm Records ?? NEW recordings by Chris Thile, from top, Jennifer Koh and Keith Jarrett and Michelle Makarski expand on Bach’s works.
Ecm Records NEW recordings by Chris Thile, from top, Jennifer Koh and Keith Jarrett and Michelle Makarski expand on Bach’s works.
 ?? Nonesuch ??
Nonesuch
 ?? Cedille ??
Cedille

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