Johann Sebastian Bach. Sonatas and Partitas for solo Violin
To state that Bach is a "grand master of
counter-point" would not only be a commonplace. It would also be inappropriate
for several reasons. First of all, one who applies this phrase to Bach fails to
distinguish him from other great musicians. Composer and musicologist Philip
Herskowitz, a student of Alban Berg and Anton Webern, explains, "Each great
composer before and after Bach, whether Beethoven, Wagner or Mahler, certainly
has the mastery of counter-point at Bach's level" above which no one can rise,
since this is absolute.
What then are his personal merits?
He certainly knew everything, which is
concern to the practice of his day, from teaching to structure of a
harpsichord, from performance techniques to the acoustics of a hall. He has a
perfect mastery of every instrument - from organ to voice. Being infinitely
removed from such type of "marketing", Bach invented no new genre or trend. He
is a great explorer of the nature of music, and he is a man of art. It means:
everything that caught his eye he brought to a state of perfection. He studied
and critically examined any noteworthy events, and then created the perfect
pattern whatever the genre.
For Bach Gregorian chant, English and
French suites, Italian concerto were just a cause to show "how it must be!" As
if he mumbled under his breath: "great idea, but if we base on it, the whole
must be like THIS!" All his concertos could be described as «Italian», as
the concerto was an Italian genre in his day. This description has nothing to
do with the national character, which can only apply to folk music. Just like
science, the arts are supra-national, as their aim, like in science, is to
attain a certain truth, an artistic truth in our case.
Being a child of his epoch in
the sphere of genre or form, he was ahead of the time in harmony. That's where he was
really an innovator! And here he looked extremely far. (Let's just remind same
of his chromatic compositions, for example 25th section from Goldberg
Variation, so strikingly rich in harmony). With the same diligence with which
he didn't give up any of the genres until he achieved a perfect pattern, Bach
with an exhaustive completeness studied language of music. An illustrative
example is a supercycle of "24
preludes and fugues".
What is the idea of this work (or the
whole set of ideas)?
Let's examine first the genre aspect. His
"prelude and fugue" is a two-part cycle, built by the juxtaposing two
methods of composition: polyphonic (where the underlying principle is the logic
of melody and the unit of thought is a note) and homophonic (where the unit of
thought is a chord, and the logic of the construction of the whole is a
sequence of chords). Of course in all he did, there is a pedagogical aspect:
Bach by his owns examples explained to us what is the art of prelude, what is
the art of fugue. (Isn't it a credit to Bach that Goethe introduced a
model category, as one of the most important aesthetic principles?). And last
but not least "Bach was the first absolute dodecaphonist" as Philip Herskowitz
said.
What does it mean? How can we understand
it?
In "24 Preludes and Fugues" is represented
the whole palette of (as Schoenberg said) "bisexual" major-minor system (which
was a result of the integration of five or six modes). Bach didn't
invent tonality, but method of temperament, realized by him, determined the way
of the tonality development. Tonality started to be a developing phenomenon. It
enrich itself by borrowing the harmony content from the nearest fields and then
from more and more distant relatives, what in the end led to "expanded
tonality" which, as if it were a global empire, conquered the territory of all
24. The development would come to the end, "from the bisexual major-minor
system appeared one supersex" (Schoenberg). The next step will be atonality.
But this is already by Schoenberg. As to Bach...
With a strong conviction we can say that
music in the contemporary sense started from Bach. He worked out the language
that would use all the next generations of composers (till Schoenberg). His
concept of tonality will be a departure point for R. Wagner and A. Schoenberg
innovations.
In the epoch of Vienna Classics would be
created piano compositions that will be not less important than Bach's music
for Harpsichord. Although his Organ works are unsurpassed, this genre has had a
long tradition and many significant names.
Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for solo
violin have their own place in the history of music. They occupy a
specific niche, filled to the brim, where there is no place for anything else.
They are out of comparison.
Leopold Auer writes on this subject:
"Bach's Sonatas and Partitas, unlike Corelli's and Tartini's Sonatas were not
born directly from the violin itself. They were not violin's offspring but rather
the result of pure inspiration, a great artistic concept. Sometimes the limited
possibilities of the instrument were ignored; therefore they made a violinist
resolve difficult technical problems".
Well, not only Bach's works for violin
demand solving difficult technical problems. In fact, creating perfect
compositions Bach would not be led by the instrumental stamps, believing that
resolving technical problems is a duty of an instrumentalist. And here a
question comes to mind worth considering.
How can we understand the fact that great
masters like Wagner, Mahler or Schönberg created orchestral music, in which you
cannot separate composition form the orchestra (their music is being born by
the orchestra and it cannot be performed by different instruments), and Bach
created his "Das Musikalische Opfer" not specifying the instruments?
Therefore in his "Das Musikalische
Opfer" he is only a composer, «pure (separated from the
interpreter) composer. As if he said: "the thought has been expressed, and the
fact that it wasn't instrumentalised is not essential. To determine the
instruments is a task for an interpreter, not for composer". But on the other
hand, when Bach wrote a score assigning the instrument, his instrumental
thinking is impeccably exact. Otherwise we could be playing without any loss
"Ciaconna" on the Piano.
Generally Bach used to believe an
interpreter. He has a respect towards the performer and he never overloaded his
score with author's commentaries. Do many performers deserve such respect?
Each well performed composition should to
arouse a felling of originality and authenticity. That's why all deep
interpreters we can call «authentists». Let's hear like Heinrich Neuhaus
literally «reanimated» Brahms! We feel the authenticity effect as a real
artistic impression - a vivid delight from experiencing an author's
thought.
Unfortunately in the contemporary
performance (and not only contemporary) we can hardly find a good understanding
of the tasks. Someone aims to «express oneself» and forget about the
composition itself. The other, quite the contrary, aims to reconstruct an
«objective historical truth», forget about himself and instead of performing
this present work he plays probably "style of the epoch". Though, historical
and artistic truths are not the same. I don't believe that «new music» we
should play in a modern manner, and «old music» - in an old fashion. It's easy
to hide one's own lack of understanding of the form under the archaic traits of
the performance. The explanation: «I play it in such a manner, because it was
established in those days» doesn't make an impression as well. The only
justified explanation is: «I play it in such a manner, because it's an artistic
truth». Music can be neither old nor new at all. It's either temporal or, to
the contrary, timeless.
A performer, whose aim is to reconstruct a
historical truth, can only show us, what from his (contemporary) point of view
seems to him historically authentic. It's ridiculous when someone wants to open
"antiques" (when neither he nor we haven't seen the original). At best he can
make a copy of the antiques, or in other words counterfeit. We can create the
effect of antiquity but we don't know if the composer wished it. After all if
this result had satisfied musicians, no one would have improved the instruments
and no one would have invented the new ones.
«If we perceive a classical work of the
past as old-fashioned, says Heinrich Neuhaus, it means that we lack a
historical perspective (culture), it's the doleful fact of our biography not a
history of music. For an educated man three or four thousand years is a
ridiculously short period».
When we perform Bach's music we,
essentially, should ask and ask ourselves if we don't deserve his trust. We
cannot achieve the effect of authenticity with the external means. The only
thing that can help us with it is a harmonic hearing and sophisticated sense of
form. Art is a thing in itself. It cannot be explained with words. We cannot
explain it with things, existing out of it. On the contrary, music can
explain us a lot. Maybe that's why it's always relevant. All the more Bach's
music. He is always into the future if three hundred years before the
advent of genetics; he discovered that in music "organism", everything is
constructed by only one theme.
His discovery; «all from one and according
to one rule» - is it not a universal philosophical view?
Let's however listen to Bach as Michael
Vaiman hears it.
Leonid Hoffman
Moscow,
14.10.2007
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