Fiona Maddocks 

Classical home listening: Bach’s Goldberg Variations/Reimagined; Errollyn Wallen

Bach’s miraculous work is given outstanding expression by Vikingur Ólafsson, and a bold baroque treatment by Rachel Podger and friends
  
  

Víkingur Ólafsson.
‘An abundance of expression’: Víkingur Ólafsson. Photograph: PR

  • Even Wikipedia cannot keep up with the bulging catalogue of Bach’s Goldberg Variations (1741) on disc. The long list – the first recording was made in 1933 – includes recent excellent accounts by Igor Levit and Pavel Kolesnikov. Now there’s another: the Icelandic pianist Vikingur Ólafsson (Deutsche Grammophon), who, after studying the work for a quarter of a century, has embarked on 88 concerts of the Goldbergs on six continents, with a recording to coincide. No one can blame him for wanting to inhabit, with brain and fingers, this miraculous work. Ólafsson’s interpretation is outstanding. He plays the same Steinway model D he chose for his Bach (2018) and Debussy/Rameau discs. Supple playing, flexibility in speed and mood, contrapuntal clarity, a singing bass line, an abundance of expression but no intrusive mannerisms: all make this a Goldbergs for repeated listening. The culmination of the 30 variations, especially the finger-flying 29th, provides a fitting climax before the opening aria returns.

  • The first published version of Bach’s Goldbergs, soon after its composition, calls the work a keyboard exercise for harpsichord with two manuals. Now more often played on a piano with one manual – as per Ólafsson – this description has never limited other musicians. Guitar? Cimbalons? Saxophone ensemble? All done. The violinist Rachel Podger leads a “new” instrumental version: Bach Goldberg Variations Reimagined (Channel Classics), with the ensemble Brecon Baroque, directed from the harpsichord (double manual) by Chad Kelly, who made the arrangement. Heard “blind”, you might mistake it for an extra Brandenburg concerto – no bad thing. Podger is a supreme baroque player, and this is a bold and different way to think about Bach’s unfathomable genius.

  • Composer of the week: Donald Macleod’s subject is the Belize-born British composer Errollyn Wallen, whose music is infused with dance, jazz and calypso, as well as the classical tradition in which she was educated. Monday to Friday, 12-1pm Radio 3 or BBC Sounds.

 

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