I'll spoil it - it's Itzhak Perlman, link below. I could have done so many others - Segovia and Bream on guitar, Bell and Menuhin on violin are first that come to mind. Who comes first to mind for you? (I'm not a big fan of Brahms' left hand arrangement for piano...)
Well, Sir, we are in a very interesting alignment here. Like you, I used to play classical guitar and I have a fondness for Julian Bream (and others). I also have a deep admiration for Menuhin, as a player and as a humanist. But, a few months ago I came across the very Perlman video that you posted to and at that moment it became one of my favourite recordings of all time. Well chosen!
One Sunday morning around 40 years ago, the host of KPFA's Sunday baroque program did a 4-hour show just on the Chaconne. It took my breath away. All the violinists you might be thinking of, plus transcriptions for guitar, piano, various ensembles, and probably cello and viola. The transcription that stuck with me was one for double bass, worked out over about 20 years by an amateur string bass player who had long been enraptured by the piece. His home recording was not perfect, but his dedication to the project remains an inspiration.
Henryk Szeryng conveys the counterpoint better than anyone else I've heard. I second the votes for Perlman, Bream. Hearing Segovia's recording 60 years ago sent me into a swoon from which I have yet to recover.
I thought I had heard every instrument that could possibly be pressed into service for the Chaconne but this one was a surprise: the Koto, a Japanese zither-like instrument. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-tsbumcyVc
The player, Maya Kimura, has a great feel for the drama and tragedy of this great piece
I also randomly saw this a few weeks ago and was really impressed — a very musical performance, and I really liked the fast runs that featured more of the eastern flavored timbre.
As always, such a pleasure to jaunt across so many genres in your rundowns, Evan. “Tilge, Höchster, meine Sünden” is new to me, and now im obsessed. Those suspensions in the solo voices!
First, I can't believe you get testy comments! People! Unbelievable!
Second, if you haven't already, listen to the Pergolesi duet, Stabat Mater Dolorosa, from which Bach took BWV 243, if I'm not mistaken. My best friend from high school and I sang that duet hundreds of times together - it's engraved on my heart. It can break you.
I feel I have to apologize for you having to "glide through my testy comments." Sometimes, my enthusiasm gets the best of me, so if I'm too much, I apologize again. Quick lines to say 1044 is in my Top 100 tracks on my phone music player. Its effervescence always reminds me of my favorite opera composer, Rossini. The slow movement sounds like the slow one from the 3rd organ trio sonata, 527.
I love Heifetz -- he's a major hero -- but I'm not sure about all of his choices in the 1004. His tempo a little faster than I want, and in general I prefer a more romantic/wet version -- Perlman never goes too far towards sentimental/maudlin, it's just what I want from a violin version. (I still go to the guitar versions first, and almost never the piano versions.)
How do you feel about the Perlman? Or the guitar adaptations? Or the pianos?
I can't listen to Heifetz play any Bach EXCEPT the Chaconne. He and Szeryng are the only ones I usually listen to. Perlman "too wet". Fire and frenzy please, no romance. Segovia for guitar (I have the original 78!) I've never heard it on piano.
I await to see which Chaconne recording(s) you will share with us next time...
I'll spoil it - it's Itzhak Perlman, link below. I could have done so many others - Segovia and Bream on guitar, Bell and Menuhin on violin are first that come to mind. Who comes first to mind for you? (I'm not a big fan of Brahms' left hand arrangement for piano...)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtyTaE7LvVs&t=830s
Well, Sir, we are in a very interesting alignment here. Like you, I used to play classical guitar and I have a fondness for Julian Bream (and others). I also have a deep admiration for Menuhin, as a player and as a humanist. But, a few months ago I came across the very Perlman video that you posted to and at that moment it became one of my favourite recordings of all time. Well chosen!
Nice - these are all sort of unimpeachably great performances.
One Sunday morning around 40 years ago, the host of KPFA's Sunday baroque program did a 4-hour show just on the Chaconne. It took my breath away. All the violinists you might be thinking of, plus transcriptions for guitar, piano, various ensembles, and probably cello and viola. The transcription that stuck with me was one for double bass, worked out over about 20 years by an amateur string bass player who had long been enraptured by the piece. His home recording was not perfect, but his dedication to the project remains an inspiration.
Thanks for sharing all of this
Henryk Szeryng conveys the counterpoint better than anyone else I've heard. I second the votes for Perlman, Bream. Hearing Segovia's recording 60 years ago sent me into a swoon from which I have yet to recover.
I'll throw in a lesser-known favorite of mine: Arnold Steinhardt! https://open.spotify.com/track/0VIoLEx8IspjA3TITs8hvB?si=2b58cc46bfa04b6b
Really interesting interpretation from Steinhardt, I liked it a lot. Warm but reserved, very private feeling.
This will be new to me - will check it out.
I thought I had heard every instrument that could possibly be pressed into service for the Chaconne but this one was a surprise: the Koto, a Japanese zither-like instrument. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-tsbumcyVc
The player, Maya Kimura, has a great feel for the drama and tragedy of this great piece
I also randomly saw this a few weeks ago and was really impressed — a very musical performance, and I really liked the fast runs that featured more of the eastern flavored timbre.
As always, such a pleasure to jaunt across so many genres in your rundowns, Evan. “Tilge, Höchster, meine Sünden” is new to me, and now im obsessed. Those suspensions in the solo voices!
Yeah, it's great. Another commenter here shared that Bach adapted this from of a duet by Pergolesi:
https://open.substack.com/pub/yearofbach/p/december-2-miscellaneous-and-reconstructed?r=s8ze&utm_campaign=comment-list-share-cta&utm_medium=web&comments=true&commentId=79974752
First, I can't believe you get testy comments! People! Unbelievable!
Second, if you haven't already, listen to the Pergolesi duet, Stabat Mater Dolorosa, from which Bach took BWV 243, if I'm not mistaken. My best friend from high school and I sang that duet hundreds of times together - it's engraved on my heart. It can break you.
The bulk of the comments have been quite nice. There's also a pretty good internet heuristic: never read the comments.
I didn't know Bach copped that piece! So great...
I feel I have to apologize for you having to "glide through my testy comments." Sometimes, my enthusiasm gets the best of me, so if I'm too much, I apologize again. Quick lines to say 1044 is in my Top 100 tracks on my phone music player. Its effervescence always reminds me of my favorite opera composer, Rossini. The slow movement sounds like the slow one from the 3rd organ trio sonata, 527.
You're not testy! It's been great to have you here in the comments.
I will re-listen to 527 to hear what you're alluding to.
Evan Shinners (who you turned me on to) has a nice podcast about BWV 1076: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qpgic2W-f4w
Zing!
I'll miss this when it's over. Been very meaningful to me.
I'm partial to Milstein's Chaconne, but looking forward to listening to Perlman's next week!
Thanks Will, it's been a true pleasure.
Thanks again. Can you let us know who the oboist is on the clip of BWV 1059?
This is the Scottish oboist Douglas Boyd. It's a really strong and pleasurable recording from 1990 available to stream everywhere:
https://www.deutschegrammophon.com/en/catalogue/products/bach-oboenkonzerte-boyd-9668
Thank you.
How do you feel about the Heifetz Chaconne? (My favorite.)
I love Heifetz -- he's a major hero -- but I'm not sure about all of his choices in the 1004. His tempo a little faster than I want, and in general I prefer a more romantic/wet version -- Perlman never goes too far towards sentimental/maudlin, it's just what I want from a violin version. (I still go to the guitar versions first, and almost never the piano versions.)
How do you feel about the Perlman? Or the guitar adaptations? Or the pianos?
I can't listen to Heifetz play any Bach EXCEPT the Chaconne. He and Szeryng are the only ones I usually listen to. Perlman "too wet". Fire and frenzy please, no romance. Segovia for guitar (I have the original 78!) I've never heard it on piano.
Only romance for me on this one (and most stuff). (You may like Sato: https://youtu.be/7y4lcQ7BTLw?si=4VqigqMwEfqC1L_A )
I like Szeryng’s more than Heifetz.
Check out Bream on guitar too.
On piano: Grimaud on the too big Busoni version and trifonov on the better but too small left hand Brahms version.