Larry VanDeSande | Mason, Michigan United States | 09/20/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Murray Perahia recorded three of the Bach partitas a few years back after recovery from a hand injury -- Bach: Partitas Nos. 2-4 -- and now he's back to finish the set. Again this time, Perahia uses his trademark intelligence, style, technique and beauty of sound to create a recording that can stand with any extant recording of this music. Using the limpid fragility he portrays in Chopin and Mozart, Perhaia travels through Bach's magnificent creations in an almost dream-like trance, giving you Bach's notes, his humanity, and Perahia's singular approach that combine for memorable playing and memorable Bach.
Like he did a few years ago with Partitas 2, 3 and 4, Perhaia shows you Bach's imprint and counterpoint as only he can. While he doesn't portray the prestidigation of Glenn Gould Bach: Partitas Nos. 4, 5, 6 or the manic rush to judgment by the likes of Martha Argerich J.S. Bach: Toccata, Partita, English Suite 2/ Martha Argerich, he wallows in sound while he demonstrates the left hand-right hand counterpoint that all Bach players must master.
Not everyone will enjoy this and you probably know if you don't like this way with Bach. If unsure, listeners with an interest in more mercurial playing, greater reliance on technique, and stricter adherence to counterpoint may be better served elsewhere, either by Gould or in a newer recording from Seattle professor Craig Sheppard J.S. Bach: The Six Keyboard Partitas. Sheppard is a fine player and his recording has deservedly won plaudits everywhere.
However, Perahia is at least as accomplished a player as Sheppard, has consistently demonstrated powerhouse ability across a wider span of composers and styles, and the professor is not close to Perahia as a colorist, image-maker and sound technician. Where Sheppard's playing is perfect, he doesn't project the other possibilities in the scores, nor does he seem interested in portraying the humanity of J.S. Bach in his playing.
Bach was the most intellectual of all the great composers, sometimes composing music strictly as an intellectual exercise for himself (The Art of Fugue, among others) and many players only see this side of him in their music-making. But Bach was also a dogmatic Lutheran, a strict believer in the almighty, and the father of more than 20 children. He even spent a night in jail once in a dispute over music! These qualities grounded Johann Sebastian among the rest of us and made him more of an everyman than most great composers, who tend to stride atop Mt. Olympus. These humanistic qualities must also be available when realizing the art of J.S. Bach and they are on display from Perahia.
Even though I graded this five stars, I have heard other recordings of these three partitas that I find more convincing that offer perhaps greater longlasting enjoyment. For Partita 1, I'd recommend Dubravka Tomsic's fabulous concert on an inexpensive disk Bach: Italian Concerto; Partita BWV 825; Toccata BWV 912. For the Partita 5, I'd recommend Andras Schiff's first recording of the partita in 1984 Andás Schiff Plays Bach. For the titanic Partita 6, you should heard Elena Kuschnerova's concert Elena Kuschnerova.
Nevertheless, this is a magnificent recording of some of the greatest keyboard music on this planet. Every great pianist at some point should record one or more of Bach's partitas, which have rightly been compared to Beethoven's 32 piano sonatas for the way their traverse time, space, emotion and mental processes of the respective composers. Anyone putting out the incredibly low asking price for this recording will not be disappointed, in my opinion, even if Perahia's liquid tone and trance-like approach isn't your cup of tea."
A very good thing, well worth waiting for!
Mark Hennicke | A stone's throw from Carnegie Hall | 09/01/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Apparently, the old adage about all good things coming to those who wait is absolutely true. Since reading last year that pianist Murray Perahia was including Bach's Partita #1 in B-flat major, BWV825, in his 2008/2009 recital schedule, I knew the long wait for a follow-up to Bach: Partitas Nos. 2-4 would soon be over. And I couldn't be more pleased with the present results. Bach: Partitas No. 1, 5 & 6 is the perfect compliment to Perahia's preceding volume of Bach's partita's for solo keyboard. On the new disc, this wonderful interpreter of JS Bach plays with all the thoughtful grace & elegance we've come to expect in all of his recordings of the great master's music. Perahia is technically precise & artistically insightful. His readings of Partitas Nos. 1, 5 & 6 are at the very top level of his extraordinary musical ability. Perahia is also well served by a recorded sound that is pristine in its clarity, very well balanced & vividly present. The artist could not have hoped for a better success in releasing this exceptional compact disc. Kudos to Murray Perahia for another wonderful Bach cd & here's to hours of listening pleasure for those classical music collectors who add Bach: Partitas No. 1, 5 & 6 to their audio library!"
Bach at its best
Ivor E. Zetler | Sydney Australia | 09/25/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Any new release by Murray Perahia should be a cause for celebration. His ventures into the recording studio are relatively infrequent but the results are invariably distinguished. This issue of Bach partitas is no exception; it is a joy from start to finish.
Perahia expertly conveys the varying moods of Bach's compositions. His approach is non eccentric and he has the ability to clearly articulate the music's various melodic strands. The pianism is alert, vivid and elegant. As with with the previous Perahia/Bach releases, the piano tone is warm, clear and realistic. Strongly recommended.
"
Strongly recommended
Anguelov Iltcho | sweden | 11/30/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have Bach's partitas in various recording - harpsichord, piano, but in piano this is probably the best available now.
A. Hewitt 6 partitas are very good. S. Richter, M. Argerich (Bach, J.S.: Toccata BWV 911; Partita No.2; English Suite No.2) recorded some
These recordings are very good indeed and especially M. Argerich Bach.
I don't like extra noise and singing Glenn Gould's is having in some of his recordings- it is distracting. Perahia recording are very good from every point of view- plying, recording- you just enjoy what you hear. I really waited for this disk to appear. Now I am waiting to have with him
Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue in D minor, BWV 903
Suite Espanola Op. 47 Albeniz
Tannhauser overture and the Rhapsodie Espanola, Liszt.
I am sure, it will be nice to have them recorded with Murray Perahia.
"
Perahia playing Bach: the fruits of a perfect mutual compreh
P. Adrian | Arad, Romania | 07/09/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"My first ever live contact with Murray Perahia's art took place some three years ago when he gave a highly acclaimed recital during the "George Enescu" International Festival - 2007, in Bucharest. The first piece in the program on that occasion was Bach's Partita No.4 in D major BWV 828, so one can say that I properly made the acquaintance with the artistry of the great American pianist through a magic door, opened by none else than Johann Sebastian Bach and its powerful music. And for me that occurrence is not simply a casual thing, as long as Murray Perahia, worldwide recognized as an indisputable Bach maestro among living pianists, considers him (like I do) the supreme authoritative figure in music and has recorded a vast amount from his keyboard output (which found a privileged place in my CD collection). And the coincidences don't stop here: my first ever CD collection items were Perahia's two CDs comprising the complete set of English Suites, released more than a decade back by Sony Classical. The same label has come recently with two further recordings in Perahia's Bach series: the complete set of keyboard Partitas, of which this is the second (Partitas 1, 5 & 6).
Speaking about Bach's music seems quite impossible for me. It's like speaking about the Milky Way or the Michelangelo's Pietà - they simply exist for ever and charm for ever without any need to explain them. Bach's music is overwhelming and all-embracing by itself, as a mysterious Universe unceasingly pulsating and breathing so much humanity. You can only marvel at it and let it traverse you without any other comment. Its logical and mighty structures - apparently monotone but so full of substance - unfold Bach's consummate knowledge of the sounds' science. But there is more than science or even art. It is a point of departure for a fabulous inward travel in searching ourselves, our most intimate thoughts, feelings, acts. Its apparent simplicity gets mere transcendence and mediates rather a mystic ecstasy. However, this giant of the baroque music, also known as the "modest cantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig", composed permanently watching God. Therefore, his music gathers solemnity, fervour, serenity, passion, humility and much love.
There is always required a great musician - and Murray Perahia is one of them - to recreate compellingly this mysterious and enthralling Universe in front of us, the inhabitants of the XXIst century. How vivid and fragile at the same time unfolds the playful Allemande in Partita No.1 in B flat major BWV 825! How noble elegance Perahia infuses in the delicate Sarabande of the same work. How magisterial rolls in his hands the counterpoint of the final Gigue of Partita No.5 in G major BWV 829 or that wonderful Gavotte of Partita No.6 in E minor BWV 830!
By completing the Partita's cycle Murray Perahia consolidates his reputation as an exquisite Bach interpreter and imposes a reliable point of view regarding the need for a fresh approach in reading Bach's work. Five stars!