In
an age where the arts celebrate the personality of the performer and the idea
of performer-as-hero, rather than the music, it is reassuring to have someone
like Andras Schiff who, in spite of his enormous talent, remains true to his art,
and refuses to be seduced by the currents of commercialism so rampant in music
today.
Last
evening, Mr. Schiff graced the stage of Seattle’s Benaroya Hall at the
invitation of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, and performed J. S. Bach’s
monumental Goldberg Variations for a
packed house and a very attentive audience (including one incredibly attentive
seeing-eye dog in front of us.)
Like
many others, I first encountered the Goldberg’s
through Glenn Gould’s stunning debut recording on Columbia Records. For me, the
impression that record made was so staggering that for a couple of decades, I
find myself unable to listen to anyone else play the piece. But after hearing
Mr. Schiff performing Book One of Bach’s Well
Tempered Clavier in Vancouver last year, I decided that I had to make the
trek to Seattle to attend this performance.
Schiff plays the Goldberg Variations observing all the repeats. On top of the technical and musical challenges of which there are many, any artist playing the Goldberg must capture the attention of the audience for an unbroken 75 minute. From the first note of the Aria to the final notes of the reprise of the same Aria at the end, his playing certain captivated my attention. Mr. Schiff creates a beautiful sound at the piano, and he certainly employs all the resources of the modern instrument, while being faithful to Baroque performance practices, to create a colourful performance of this incredible work. As I remarked in my piece on Schiff’s performance of the Well Tempered Clavier last year, his playing is certainly markedly different from Gould’s more (deliberately) monochromatic interpretation – I cannot help associate the way Gould played with his fondness for black and white movies. Both approaches are equally valid, of course, and the contrast between the two artists – much like two equally great painters painting the same subject – is what makes Bach’s great work continually valid and moving centuries after they were written. Most importantly, Schiff, like Gould, was and is able to touch upon the spiritual dimension of these variations that is, of course, the core of the music.
At
the end of Schiff’s performance, the audience (bless their hearts) remained
silent until the very last sound died away and then, as one, stood up, cheering
Bach, and the wonderful man who brought this great work alive for us.
After
repeated curtain calls, Schiff returned and rewarded us generously, playing (“With
the pedal,” he added) the entire Sonata
in E Major, Op. 109 by Ludwig van Beethoven. He indicated that it is
difficult to really play anything after the Goldberg’s, but thought this would
be an appropriate work to play. I think I understood his thinking, that he
wanted to play a work that is just as exalted and spiritually uplifting as the Goldberg Variations.
Schiff
has, in recent years, been devoting his efforts to performing and recording the
Beethoven sonatas. I have not heard his Beethoven interpretation before, but if
last night’s performance of the Op. 109 was any indication, I believe his other
Beethoven performance would be well worth our attention. It is perhaps no mere coincidence
that Op. 109 ends with a set of theme and variations, with the theme returning
at the end.
During
the long drive home to Vancouver, I was filled with a sense of gratitude, for
Bach, and for this humble and soft-spoken artist for bringing us Bach’s work
that, in Glenn Gould’s words, “observes neither end nor beginning, music with
neither real climax nor real resolution, music which, like Baudelaire’s lovers,
‘rests lightly on the wings of the unchecked wind.’ It has, then unity through
intuitive perception, unity born of craft and scrutiny, mellowed by mastery
achieved, and revealed to us here, as so rarely in art, in the vision of
subconscious design exulting upon a pinnacle of potency.”
After
a performance such as last evening’s, the world, with all its problems, does
not seem like such a gloomy place after all.