Richard Goode is one of today’s most
thoughtful and sincere musicians, always seeking musical truth rather than
personal fame or fortune. I have had the good fortune to witness his many
wonderful performances. Mr. Goode had been absent from the Vancouver stage for
a good many years, and so it was with great anticipation that I attended his
solo recital last evening, dedicated entirely to the music of J. S. Bach.
Goode opened both the first and second
half of his recital with a Prelude and Fugue from the second book of the
Well-Tempered Clavier. He began his recital with the Prelude and Fugue in C Major, BWV 870. He does not shy away from
exploiting (in the best sense of the word) the colouristic potential of the
modern piano in Bach, and he employed a very judicious use of pedal. The
results were of course music making with a great deal of colour, a very
“pianistic” sort of playing. He played the fugue with a keen sense of motion.
The French
Suite No. 5 in G Major, BWV 816 is a work that is technically within the
reach of many piano students. It does, however, take a great musician like
Goode to bring out the true beauty and craftsmanship of the piece. After
beautifully playing the Allemande,
Goode achieved an incredible sense of lightness and buoyancy in the bubbly Courante. I appreciated his choice of
tempo in the Sarabande, where every
note was like a pearl within a precious necklace. Goode brought out a wonderful
feeling of lilt in the famous Gavotte
(another work often butchered by many young students), always emphasizing the
horizontal line of the music. There was gentleness in Goode’s playing of the Loure, and a great feeling of bounce in
the Gigue.
It is quite rare for pianists to
include the Sinfonias in a recital
programme, as Good did last evening. I personally think that the fifteen Sinfonias are, in terms of compositional
craftsmanship and musicality, just as staggering as the Well-Tempered Clavier. That the pieces were played with incredible
pianism is probably something that can be assumed, but Goode also successfully
brought out the distinct and contrasting characteristic of each individual
work. I found particularly memorable the beauty of his sound in the E-flat major
and G minor Sinfonias. The final Sinfonia in B minor was given a
performance light and fleet fingered performance that took our breath away.
After the interval, the artist began
his performance with the Prelude and
Fugue in F Major, BWV 880, where he especially brought out the humour of
the fugue with its quirky subject.
Bach’s Partita No. 2 in C minor, BWV 826 is an unusual work, since it does
not end with a Gigue, but a
boisterous Capriccio. I did miss the
sense of space and feeling of high drama in the opening Grave adagio, with its dotted rhythmic figures, as well as a sense
of surprise and wonder at the beginning of the Andante section (m. 8). I did
think that the transition to the ¾ section was beautifully done. From where I
sat, there was some blurring of lines in the Courante, but that could have been a result of the acoustic of the
hall rather than a case of over-pedaling. In the deceptively simple Sarabande, Goode beautifully sustained
the long melodic lines, as well as the feeling of the walking rhythm. I thought
that he had a real sense of the pulse of the music in the Rondeau, something that is so difficult to achieve. The closing Capriccio was played with great energy,
and a sense of propulsion, of forward motion.
I don’t know if I admired Goode’s
playing more, or that he managed to play the Italian Concerto, BWV 971 without the aid of the page-turner, an
amazing feat in itself! The opening movement had great energy. There could
perhaps be greater contrast between the ripieno
and the concertino. In the Andante, Goode had a real feeling for
the long line of the right hand, and a sense of buoyancy in the left hand. The Presto closing movement was
breathtaking, with the most incredible feeling of lightness and energy in the
left hand I have heard in a long time.
It was a truly enjoyable evening of
great music played by a great pianist. When I hear wonderful Bach playing by
pianists like Goode or Andras Schiff, I find it even more difficult to understand the great fame
achieved by that other Canadian pianist for her Bach playing, which seems to me
very ordinary, even pedestrian. That said, it may seem excessively harsh (and
picky) to say that last night’s concert was merely
very beautiful, but what I felt was that the artist did not touch on the
spiritual dimension of Bach’s music, a sense of reaching into the hereafter. At
risk of being accused of asking for the impossible, I do believe that Bach’s music
possesses these qualities. I thought Schiff was more successful in reaching
beyond the notes when he performed Book One of the Well-Tempered Clavier here a few years back. I would love to hear
Goode play the same programme many times to really get a sense of what he is
trying to achieve with these works.