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Nicholas Angelich: Bach – Goldberg Variations (24/48 FLAC)

Nicholas Angelich: Bach - Goldberg Variations (24/48 FLAC)
Nicholas Angelich: Bach – Goldberg Variations (24/48 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Performer: Nicholas Angelich
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Erato
Catalogue: 0706642
Release: 2011
Size: 271 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Goldberg Variations, BWV988
01. I. Aria
02. Variation 1 – Allegro moderato
03. Variation 2 – Allegretto
04. Variation 3 – Canone all’unisuono (Poco andante, ma con moto)
05. Variation 4 – L’istesso movimento
06. Variation 5 – Allegro vivace
07. Variation 6 – Canone alla seconda (Allegretto)
08. Variation 7 – Un poco vivace
09. Variation 8 – Allegro
10. Variation 9 – Canone alla terza (Moderato)
11. Variation 10 – Fughetta (Un poco animato)
12. Variation 11 – Allegro e leggiero
13. Variation 12 – Canone alla quarta in moto contrario (Allegretto moderato)
14. Variation 13 – Andantino
15. Variation 14 – Allegro moderato
16. Variation 15 – Canone alla quinta in moto contratrio (Andante)
17. Variation 16 – Ouverture (Maestoso – Allegretto)
18. Variation 17 – Allegro
19. Variation 18 – Canone alla sesta (Con moto)
20. Variation 19 – Allegro vivace
21. Variation 20 – Allegro
22. Variation 21 – Canone alla settima (Andante con moto)
23. Variation 22 – Alla breve
24. Variation 23 – Allegro moderato
25. Variation 24 – Canone all’ottava (Allegretto con moto)
26. Variation 25 – Andante espressivo
27. Variation 26 – Allegro
28. Variation 27 – Canone alla nona (Un poco vivace)
29. Variation 28 – Allegro
30. Variation 29 – Brillante
31. Variation 30 – Quodlibet (Moderato)

32. XXXII. Aria da capo – Andante espressivo

“Bach has always been a great passion of mine,” says US-born, French-trained pianist Nicholas Angelich, probably best known as an interpreter of the German Romantics, and described by Gramophone as “a formidable player … whose performances … are of a wholly exceptional drama, sweep and impeccable craftsmanship.”


Now Angelich has recorded one of the landmarks of the Baroque keyboard repertoire, Bach’s magnificent Goldberg Variations, adding to a Virgin Classics discography which currently reflects The Guardian’s description of the pianist as “a master Brahmsian”.


“Bach is more central than ever to my life. Bach purifies me: he offers me a new view on life, never mind what he brings in purely pianistic terms … I strongly believe that a musician should do different things … He should explore! The pianistic language of each composer is a miracle, a world in itself … I find it the most exciting aspect of a pianist’s work, to engage with the way the great masters expressed themselves through the instrument, the bond each of them has with the piano, to identify their fingerprints on the keyboard.


“I’ve worked on Bach a lot since I was teenager — I feel that every pianist should make the most of Bach, since he really makes you think – about your sound, your technique, your approach to harmony, to form and how you listen to the music. Bach is fundamental. And, for me, he is a need. I need to play his music for my sake. There are some things that are essential for artistic enrichment.”


In a complex and monumental work like the Goldberg Variations – comprising an aria and 30 variations and lasting well over an hour – a satisfactory balance between overall architecture and structural detail is a vital factor. As Angelich says: “It is very important to take the score and ask yourself good questions about it …The more you look into it over the course of time, the more new fresh details you will see. It is a great thing, to see both the whole, the global structure, and the inside, with its often quite minor details. This enables you to grasp, to reconcile the connection between the big picture, the overall framework, and the inner detailing of the piece. If you are doing something in your interpretation – in a certain line – that might perhaps sound beautiful in a way, but which has no connection to the whole, then something is plainly not right. We always try to find out what sounds right and what is right. Is this a kind of intellectual exercise? Maybe, but I would say that it is also a matter of instinct, with the score as the leading voice for the interpretation.”

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