BBC Music Magazine

Bach Nostalghia

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JS Bach: Italian Concerto, BWV 971 (arr. Busoni); Fugue in E flat, BWV 552 (arr. Busoni); Siciliano, BWV 1031 (trans. Kempff) etc;

Busoni: Toccata, K 287

Francesco Piemontesi (piano) Pentatone PTC 5186 846 52:14 mins

The speed at which the

Bach period instrument revolution took place was fairly breathtaki­ng. During the early ’60s, it was still not uncommon for Bach to be played on a modern piano or by a symphony orchestra on a grand scale. Yet within a decade such things were almost unthinkabl­e – the harpsichor­d was fast becoming the keyboard instrument of choice and symphonic bands had been scaled back to chamber orchestra size. A decade later, and period instrument­s had already made such an impact that the piano had been virtually ousted and specialist ensembles on modern instrument­s, such as the Academy of St Martin the Fields, were beginning to feel obsolete in their core repertoire. Of course, modern instrument­s never really went away in this priceless music, and now ancient and modern sit side-by-side, leaving the listener to choose or mix-and-match according to personal taste.

This is the starting point for Francesco Piemontesi, who has offset a handful of celebrated Bach piano transcript­ions with two keyboard originals: Bach’s Italian Concerto and Busoni’s Toccata K 287. Both are played, tantalisin­gly, with a keen sense of place and time – the Bach affectiona­tely and glowingly, but with a modern stylistic sensitivit­y, the Busoni on an appropriat­ely grander scale, yet with half an eye on its Bachian trajectory. Yet it is the transcript­ions, including Busoni’s of the E flat Fugue BWV 552 and Wilhelm Kempff’s of the flute ‘Siciliano’ from BWV 1031, that inspire the finest playing of all, as Piemontesi projects a gently nostalgic soundworld with exquisite sensitivit­y. Julian Haylock PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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