Monday, 8 September 2008

Bach : The Art of Fugue - Grigory Sokolov



J.S. Bach : The Art of Fugue
Grigory Sokolov


One American critic recently described Sokolov's playing as, "a kind of pianism, musicianship and artistry one thought had vanished forever".
CD 1
01. Contrapuntus 1 [03:07.10]
02. Contrapuntus 2 [02:47.32]
03. Contrapuntus 3 [02:32.30]
04. Contrapuntus 4 [03:24.00]
05. Contrapuntus 5 [03:06.68]
06. Contrapuntus 6 in Stylo Francese [03:30.30]
07. Contrapuntus 7 per Augment et Diminut [02:51.12]
08. Contrapuntus 8 a 3 (Triplefugue) [06:46.18]
09. Contrapuntus 9 alla Duodecima [02:35.70]
10. Contrapuntus 10 alla Decima [04:34.00]
11. Contrapuntus 11 a 4 (Triplefugue) [07:48.37]
12. Contrapuntus 12a [03:16.33]
13. Contrapuntus 12b [03:09.70]
14. Contrapuntus 13a Contrapuntus inversus [02:29.20]
15. Contrapuntus 13b [02:37.32]

CD 2
01. Contrapunctus 19 (unfinished) [12:34.65]
02. Canon 14 [06:21.22]
03. Canon 15 [04:04.73]
04. Canon 16 [04:57.67]
05. Canon 17 [08:09.48]
06. [BWV 826] I. Sinfonia [04:56.50]
07. [BWV 826] II. Allemande [03:19.67]
08. [BWV 826] III. Courante [01:52.53]
09. [BWV 826] IV. Sarabande [04:22.72]
10. [BWV 826] V. Rondeau [01:28.65]
11. [BWV 826] VI. Capriccio [03:29.50]


BBC Music magazine : Nicholas Anderson
Performance : ****
Sound : ****

Grigory Sokolov made his recording of Bach's The Art of Fugue in St Petersburg 20 years ago. Its reissue is welcome, for this is a carefully considered and reflective performance, whose lucid textures reflect an intellectual rigour if, at times, somewhat at the expense of lyricism. Sokolov treats the great unfinished double fugue on four themes with nobility and a feeling for 'occasional' gesture, yet I also sensed a little too much deliberation, a spelling-out which denies the innate poetry to emerge freely. Neither harpsichord nor organ can point up the fugal strands in the way a percussive instrument such as the piano is able to do, yet the musical argument can emerge just as clearly. So much for the reservations for, in most other respects, I enjoyed Sokolov's spirited, rhythmically taut, and sometimes playful interpretation of what CPE Bach described as 'the most perfect practical fugal work'. It would be my first choice among the very few available versions on a modern piano.

The New York Times : Allan Kozinn
Tuesday, August 12, 2008

..In the same partita, Grigory Sokolov (Opus 111 OPS 529116/7, two CD's) offers a grander view, but a strongly compelling one, with plenty of contrapuntal life: the coupling is ''The Art of Fugue.'' Mr. Sokolov, no less than Gould, can be utterly persuasive in doing something odd, as in his performance of the Sarabande in detached notes, an idea he makes beautiful and moving....


inkpot com : by Jonathan Yungkans
But this disc is perhaps the most valuable jewel in that treasury, reissue of what is probably the greatest Bach keyboard recording ever made.
Born in 1950 in what is now Saint Petersburg, Grigory Sokolov (left) showed musical promise early on. Enrolled at age seven in a conservatory program for exceptionally gifted students, giving his first public recital at 12 and winning the 1966 Tchaikovsky Competition at 16, he has concertized considerably but recorded little, preferring the atmosphere of live music-making. Our loss.
Though Sokolov's performing style has many things in common with other Russian pianists - strong passagework, impeccable finger work and an array of tone colors that is literally off the scale - it is his musicality and imagination that put him in a class by himself. Able to rethink virtually everything he plays and deliver it with phenomenal mastery, he can seem eccentric at times, though never sounding contrived.
He also plays counterpoint like no one else since Glenn Gould, with phenomenal clarity and independence of phrasing. Take, for instance, Die Kunst Der Fuge (The Art of Fugue). Sokolov opens Contrapunctus 1 with a hushed intensity of expectation, yet quickly gives each line not only its own color, but often its own phrasing and rhythm, as though four different individuals are playing the same music. These four characters interact with one another, combining, harmonizing, going off in their own directions, but without any sense of anarchy whatsoever and with consummate taste.
As the sequence of fugues progresses, Sokolov maintains this ever-changing dialogue of voices, unearthing fresh details right and left while unifying the whole composition into one overreaching arch. He brings quite a spring into the march-like figures of Contrapunctus 2, whose cadence is mirrored, at a slower tempo, in the dancing Contrapunctus 3. The vivacity of this fugue, in turn, enlivens the next in a shower of half-lights and arabesques that continue to glow, with different colors, though the elegant, longer lines and more measured tempo of Contrapunctus 5. Sokolov continues linking the fugues rhythmically and coloristically in as masterly a fashion as Bach does thematically.
At the same time, this is not Bach on piano as usual. Sokolov is not afraid to use the resources of a concert grand to illustrate his points, but does so judiciously. He follows a mid-way course between Angela Hewitt's gentle tints and the bright Romantic hues of an Edwin Fischer or Alfred Brendel, allowing broader washes of sound than in Baroque practice but without sacrificing clarity or illumination of musical architecture.
None of this is done in show or ostentation. There is an extreme probity of thought and depth of emotion working side-by-side that would suggest a monk in an in-depth, personal convocation with the Creator of the universe about how and why the cosmos works in the way that it does. As Johann D'Souza mentioned in his review of this work with the Amsterdam Loeki Stardust Quartet , Leonard Bernstein claimed that one has to look for God in Bach's works because all of Bach's life revolved around God. If that is so, then Bach was on the hot line with the Almighty while writing the Art of the Fugue, and Sokolov is evidently using the same phone.
He changes the order of fugues in one crucial spot, opening the second disc with Contrapunctus 19 (the last one Bach wrote) and continuing from there to Contrapuncti 14 through 17. While some purists may wonder about this practice, it is understandable. Since Sokolov makes no effort to complete Contrapunctus 19, reordering the fugues in this way allows Bach's edifice to be convincingly rounded off while remaining true to the music at hand.
It also gives a much-needed emotional release. The concentrated passion Sokolov brings to Contrapunctus 19 is nearly overwhelming (I have yet to hear it without tears coming to my eyes), and when that thread suddenly snaps where Bach leaves off, some sort of closure is desperately needed (hence the efforts from Donald Tovey, Ferruccio Busoni and others to "complete" Bach's final thoughts). Sokolov provides that closure. Though the transition from the end of Contrapunctus 19 to the beginning of Contrapunctus 14 can seem a little strange, not to mention rough, he holds things together admirably without losing either his concentration or our interest. It is not a perfect solution - nor perhaps could there be an entirely satisfactory resolution - but it is an extremely workable one.
The Second Partita that follows The Art of Fugue is as masterly as what preceded it, with an excellent sense of flow, pointed rhythms and imaginative characterization of contrapuntal lines married to an unerring sense of drama and a noble tone. Sokolov will change a tone color, bring out a counter-rhythm or end a phrase in unexpected ways, though in no way jarringly. Everything is done with grace, charm and a captivating sense of fantasy.
One thing missing is the serenity that Angela Hewitt brings to this Partita. Everything is moving constantly. There is no true sense of relaxation; even in the Sarabande, a tension pulls the listener along, even at times when a momentary respite would be welcome. Nevertheless, Sokolov's version has many things going for it. He opens the Rondeau with a resolute elegance and sway to its rhythms that can be intoxicating, and carries that grace into the concluding Capriccio, along with a snap in its step.
If you have thought that The Art of Fugue was something dry, academic or esoteric, or gotten that impression from other recordings, I would urge you to give this disc a listen. It may not only change your mind, but will introduce you to someone who is not only a world-class pianist, but one of the few today who could honestly be called a phenomenon in music.

Posted by Ice

5 comments:

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toma ghiveci said...

thank you very much for re-uploading :)

v4v said...


Originally posted by Ice on September 8th, 2008...

Bach: The Art of Fugue - Grigory Sokolov

https://mega.co.nz/#!ntJDDQwC!9zbuc3_pMC14k9W10QtW62Uhn-qiDePKeZy8uDNYNNA

P.W : iceshoweronfire