Bach, Keyboard Concertos (BWV 1052, 1055, 1056, 1058), D. Fray (piano), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen (released on January 13, 2009) Virgin Classics 50999 213 064 2 6 Online scores: BWV 1052 | BWV 1055 BWV 1056 | BWV 1058 |
As usual, if one could have only one recording of these works, for me it would be one with harpsichord and historical instruments, probably Trevor Pinnock with the English Concert, which remains extremely pleasing (now at a rock-bottom price in a 3-CD set with the equally good concertos for two or more harpsichords). More recently, the ever-reliable Richard Egarr has done well with the Academy of Ancient Music, but the performances by Café Zimmermann with Céline Frisch (not all recorded yet), are the most intriguing, made with a chamber-size ensemble rather than a small orchestra. On piano with forces like the Fray recording, pride of place would still go to Angela Hewitt (with Australian Chamber Orchestra) or, more likely, Murray Perahia (with Academy of St. Martin in the Fields), with possible detours to András Schiff and even the eccentric Glenn Gould, who may leave you puzzled but rarely bored.
The drawbacks of Fray's version include some overly heavy use of the sustaining pedal, making passages like the sixteenth notes alternated between the hands not as dry as they should be. He also does nothing with the few cadenza moments, as at the end of BWV 1052's third movement -- Pinnock at least adds a little scalar flourish before the cadence that Bach notated (it is worth noting that Pinnock's recording, on the harpsichord, is even a hair faster than Fray's on 1052/3, while Gould is a lot slower). The group takes a few liberties, too, as in BWV 1056/3 where the strings play the echoed 8th notes as pizzicato (they are marked only as piano in the score). The ensemble seems artificially unbalanced, with the piano almost always in the foreground, even when the strings have the more interesting melodic material, as in parts of the first movement of BWV 1052.
Perhaps not coincidentally, Fray also served as "conductor" in these performances and, to continue the self-regarding character of the performance, Bruno Monsaingeon made a film about Fray's work on this recording (his score preparation at home, the rehearsal and recording sessions), of which an excerpt is embedded below. While Fray's humming and bee-bopping antics are on display in the rehearsals on the DVD, they are mostly inaudible on the CD. Whatever you may think of Fray's look (whose floppy hair, shirt open at the chest, and sulking frown are vintage 1980s Jon Bon Jovi), we remind you that it worked well enough for Fray, who married Riccardo Muti's daughter Chiara last summer.
62'17"
Excerpts from Swing, Sing and Think: David Fray Records
J. S. Bach, dir. Bruno Monsaingeon
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